The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, January 11, 1906, Image 2
ee —————— An. tr "THREE KILLED IN WREK Train Collides with Locomotive | . in Snow Storn. | ENGINEER FORGOT ABOUT TRAIN | mittee military a | two officers on | screaming and i building over the wet pavement in front, and through a long | A Searching Investigation Will Be Made to Find Out Who Was to Blame. } Three trainmen are known to have | been killed and 21 passengers injur- ed, 19 seriously in a wreck on the ¥hiladelphia & Erie railroad at | orns siding, 10 miles east of Corry, | a. i The dead: Thomas Finn, engineer | of the passenger train; home at Erie. ¥red Herman, fireman of the passen- | ger train; home at Erie; buried under engine. body horribly mutilated. tA. Neil, fireman, buried under en-| gine and body not recovered; home | at Kane. | Passenger train No. 4, running 45 | miles an hour, collided head-on with | a light engine. The smoker and day { coach, which were filled with passen- | gers, were telescoped, and women and | children were byried under the wreck- age in the cars. Conductor Morgan | and the brakeman worked heroically | and with axes cut several of the in- | i jurcd from the wreckage. One Wwo- an and three little children were | Pe under seats and their cries! were pitiful. Both wrecked engines | were thrown several rods into a field. A brakeman ran two and a half! miles to the nearest telephone to get assistance and .it was: 11. o'clock at night before. a relief train arrived | with doctors from Warren, Erie and | Corry. After the doctors dressed | some of the injured they went on their way. . Maj. of internal’ affairs of Pennsylvania, | was on the train and worked heroical- | ly. When engineman Cavanaugh, whose. locomotive, running wild, crashed into passenger train No. 4. was asked how he happened to be on the main track he is alleged to have’ exclaimed: <I"forgot all about the passenger train.” = . it is.said that after a searching in- | vestigation into the cause of the | wreck the person responsible will be prosecuted. © - I. B. Brown, secretary | TAKE CASH, LEAVE BONDS. Rob Safe of Iron Company and Take Funds Belonging to Church. : Burglars entered the cfiice vf the Ohio Iron and Steel company at | Lowellville, O., and, drilling into the gafe, used nitro-glycerin and exploded | ft when a train was passing, wrecking | g¢he safe and vault. i They secured $600 belonging to the company and $100 belonging to the: Presbyterian church. 4 The burglars cxamined $100,000 of registered bonds, but were careful not to take any through fear of discovery. Until recently the safe contained mealy $1,000,000 in negotiable bonds belonging to members of the company. em nm mm i PLOT TO KILL THE CZAR A Trusted Artillery Officer and Two : Students Arrested. A plot to assassinate the Czar ef Russia, at Tsarskoe-Selo has been dis- covered there in the pick of time and by mereest accident. : { Several artillery officers, most | trusted men, upon whom the Czar de- | pends for his personal safety, are | implicated. The chief conspirators | are a student named Wassiljeff, the | son of a professor in St.”Petersburg | University, and another student | named. Altonowski, the son of a high | udge in this city. They. and the ar- | illery officers have been arrested. $350,000 Fire in Kansas City. Fife in the retail quarter of Kansas City, Mo., caused a loss of $350,000, | destroving the three-story brick build- fng of the Columbus. Buggy .Company fn Walnut street; near Tenth; the ad- oining building, occupied by the imball Piano Cempany, and the Hettinger Brothers’ Manufacturing Company, and damaged the Commerce building. , WABASH CHANGES PLANS. Gould Interests Decide to Put Pitts- burgh on .Branch. The Gould lines will reach the tide- water by way of Wheeling. Union- town,. Pa., Cumberland and Baltimore, instead of through Pittsburgh, as was originally intended. The hardest engineering problem fnountains between. Cumberiand -and Meyersdale. The purchase of the George's Creek & Cumberland rail- way provided an vutlet through the arrows. 5 \ The road will then proceed up Wills ¢reek fo Kreigbaum and through Barrelsville to Mt. @nd on to Frostburg. The 1 be practically a straight line Cumberland and Uniontown. thence The additional troops being sent to ,the Philipines will be in readiness to deal with Japan in the event of trouble in China. | A proposal is before congress for the rcduction of railroad fare to two cents a mile on al: lines east of the Mississippi river. Express Company Loses $18,000. Ti has developed that about $18,000 was taken from an express pouch between Augusia, Ga.. and New York® The Southern Express Company re- ceived the package at Augusta; from there it went to Columbia, S. C., and ft arrived in Washington early Sun- day morning. The Adams Express Company then sent it to New York and there the loss was discovered. a AR en Earthanake shocks caused buildings to tremble and frightened inhabitant fn Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska. l-cablegram © announcing | cally at an end. DRAGGED FROM WHITE HOUSE Officers Eject Woman Who Insisted on Seeing President. For insisting that si President and decla not leave the White House til she had seen him, Morris, a sister of Cons of Towa, chairmun of the duty there, protesting. from the and underground corridor the whole width of the White House Eastern entrance to are admitted to the visitors levees, which official where she was bundled into a cab and | Mrs. | taken to the house of detention. Morris resides with her husband, who physician, on Massachusetts avenue in the. most fashionable part of the city. Mrs. Morris bore every external indication of being a woman of refinement and while she showed some excitement when insisting on her is a | right to remain in the White House office until she could see the Presi- dent. no one could have mistaken her for an ordinary crank or a dangerous person. Her husband, Dr. Morris, held a | position in the army medical museum | until recently, when he was removed for striking a superior during an alter- cation. It was for the purpose of re- questing his reinstatement that she sought the interview with the Presi- | dent. ee em MORALES CRUSHED Five Generals, Including Rodriguez, Fall in Battle in Santo Domingo. After two days’ heavy fighting against Santiago and Puerto Plata, | the forces ‘of Gen. Demetrio Rodri- guez were entirely routed, losing 120 men in killed and wounded here. Gens. Rodriguez, Lico and Perez were kill- ed. Among the Caceres forces, Gen. {* Calderon | Perdo Vanéga and Antonio | were ‘killed. American cruisers prohibited the gunboat from bombarding, oI the fort | from using artillery. The rey olution- ary forces re-enibarkeéd on their gun- boat in the harbor. Mr. Joubert, the Dominican repre- gentative at Washington, rec i that Gen. | Rodreguez was killed at Puerto Plata: | that the fighting there had three days but that the couniry was | quiet and it.was hoped the situation would be soon cleared. Mr. Joubert communicated this . information to Secretary Root. 2 ’ Cable advices received at .the State department from: San Domingo an- nounce that the revolution is practi- _The troops are Gis- persing to their homes and the coun- try is again becoming quiet. SUITORS PAID $5 EACH Failed to Get Introduction to Reputed | Widow Worth $100,000. J. C. Farrington, head of an alleged | fraudulant matrimonial agency in New Orleans, was arrested in New York. He was indicted there for advertising: alleged | a $100,000: a hus- the matrimonial offer of an creole widow who - owned sugar plantation. and wanted band. : : The widow was described as beautiful and hundreds of men duction to the widpw. . On complaint of- a man: Velasco, Tex., and another culted from the fee, Farrington - escaped from Louisiana. Harper Must Pay Millions. A verdict for $5,280.32 | cinnati, was affrmed in the | States circuit court. i age Harper wi dragged | muddy | grounds to the! eived a | lasted | very : ans- wered the offer, writing to the agency at New -Orleans, which Farrington is | said to. have condugted. { asked these correspondents to contrib- ute a'$5 fee each to seciire ‘an intro- The agency from from Sinope, Pa., that.no introduction re- was arrested. He forfeited $1,500 ¢dsh and against Ed- ward. E. Harper, once vice president of the Fidelity National bank of Cin- United Eighteen yuars as convicted of causing TWENTY-THREE PERISHED Terrific Exolosion Followed by Stifiing Gases. BODIES ALL RECOVERED | | Force of Explosion Shattered Timbers | ard Mins Cars Blown Out of Opening. | Twenty-three miners in the Coal- | shaft at Coaldale, W. va. were r killed by an ex- plosion. The explosion was of ter- | rific force and caused intense excite- ment throughout the surrounding | country, many peopie believing an | earthquake had necurred, | i i | dale company’s Great crowds were attracted by the disaster and a large rescuing party | soon began work. They were unable to accomplish anything until new fans | were put into position to force the gases ahead so the rescurers might | enter the shaft. { The bodies of all of the 23 miners have been recovered. The bodies were found by the rescuing parties | | after several hours work. They were carried from the shaft to a house ad- | joining the big tipple at the mine en- e T trance, where they were laid in a row. The big timbers for holding | up the top from the dr a narrow i trees on the j cars were blow | and wrecked ab material, tools | scattered about were hurled | going across | 1g down small side. Mine »f the opening entrance and i "appliances were confusion. Four Ht 3 Kiuedq. of t owned = Cooper brothers, Mill creek and { companies. is considered one in the field. | operation is BURTON AND DEPEW STICK Both Deciare They Will Not Resign from the United States Senate. | United States Senator J. R. Burton f Kamsas, i that he. would re- sign his seat in the Senate as the re- ult of his conviction in court on the a enied g as an attorney before a de- | partment in Washington in the inter- (ests of a private corporation. Senator Chauncey M. Depew de- | olares that he will not resign from the | United States Senate, and that he | has no intention of doing so. The | lenial resulted from questions as to | | what cognizance he intended to as | | of the agitation for his retirement as |a restit of the exposure.of his deal- | | ings with the ‘Equitable Life Assur- | | ance society. | { een | NATIONAL CAPITAL NOTES. i { Senator Foraker introduced a bill | providing that the citizens of Porto | | Rico shall be citizens of the United States. . y Representative McCall (Mass.) in- | troduced a resolution providing for an nnual appropriation of $15,000.to be | ‘used by the President for. traveling | { expenses : - A committee representing the tariff | managers of the Eastern trunk lines |asgpred the ‘inferstate commerce com- | mission that the roads have indicated ja desire to: step Tebating. wil The Sendte in executive session con- | | firmed the- following - nominatigns: William R. Warnock, pension agent tat Columbus, O.; Charles E. Hixson, } pestmaster. at. Ieechburg, O. . - | ~Senator. Teller reintroduced in the | Senate a petition “signed ‘by’ Estes G. | Rathbons praying a full investigation {| of Ris conviction of acts. alleged: to Have -bean committed while serving as | director 11898. Congress for a.large amount of legis- | the failure-of the bank and served six; lation affecting various branches of { | years in prison. vice president | ure. Harper is, { general manager of the Union Iron & Stee] Company. 3 KILLED 100 WORKMEN . Commander Bombards Avenge Dragoons Murder. A telegram from Riga states when the workmen and closed in the Provadnik manded to be libera ed so that they | could obtain food Colonel Mevdel, ir did not deliver the dragoons wiic were he would open fire Ww utes. C1 five were 100 workmen : and ic ensued the fire of tl others had murderers Meydel, who women to go 1 A deputation of 40 Colonel Meydel d asked leased. but they were told that unless the ot were delivered they would ! be hanged. | Turks Conquered Revolution | A return issued by the T | thorities shows that 1,022 { resulted from the fight | donia between Turkish troops | Bulgarian, Greek and Servian casuail The verdict he was ! ordered to pay grew out.of this fail- and Factory to that | women en- finiore do factory Ge- i, was that of getting the line over the | charge of the troops, replied if they | up the murderers of | ecently slain |’ min- 1g in Mace | and | 8L revol- | One re-establishes the grade of mmodore and another au- thorizes the construction of an armor- i od cruiser to be called the: Constitu- tion.- : | the service. a 9 ® | Congressman Champ Clark of. Mis- | { souri kept the house of representa- | tives. in an uproar by a characteristic | speech on the Philippine tariff bill. of officers of the United Stateg! army. are rearranged in.a bill | introduced by Senator Scott... Among | the changes are: General, $35,500; eutenant general, $11,000; major n | 500; colonel, $3,500; lieutenant col- onel,. $3,000; major, $2,625. Governor Lie has cabled from i ypon the . unanimous of the Consolidated the commission by fi five years the which ° the be used courts. »duced in the Representative in the $100,000 for the building at Knox also $2,000 to the Brethren in for damage to sult of its oc- ng the war. official report is- 1ast case of yel- from Hav- According to an | utionary bands during 19905. Alto- | | gether 119 encount took place in were the vilayets of Saloni tir and | Uskub, in which the | 520 men killed and 2 | addition the troops | prisoners. TY t | and 145 woun ! f Mis | cae of 60 years ago. | blown | vorce trial at Wooster, | attracted much attention, has zensral of posts in Cuba in | The navy department has petitioned | al, $7,500; brigadier general, $5,- | H to legalize Mobile & Ohio and | W&S convicted each time. i | under sentence to life imprisonment i ~ FAMINE, IN JAPAN Poor Classes Are Forced to Subsist on Shrubs, Roots and Bark. Thousands are starving in Japan on account of the famine there, according to advices received by the Impress of Japan. North steamer A gov- | ernment report says Miyaga, Fukushi- | ma and Iwate provinces, with a popu- | lation of 2,821,557, are confronted by {he worst famine since the So great is the clamity in Miyaga | that famine investigators report that «the sentence of death has been pass- ed on one-third of the people of the pxovince.” Already thousands in these three provinces are obliged to eat shrubs, roots and bark of trees to sustain life, and a million people are in extreme condition. The misery arising from the famine is indescribable. Committees of for- eign residents have been formed to arrange systematic relief. TORNADO IN SOUTH in Albany, Ga.. Wrecked and Many Killed. A tornado of terrible force passed over Albany, Ga., spreading ruin over portions of a dozen blocks. Several persons are dead, others may die and many are hurt. Buildings The known dead are Ben Jones, a | machinist, and Jake Johnson, a 9- year-old boy. Among those fatally hurt are Luta Gladden, Jesse Davis, Annie Davis and Jessie Woodall. The list is incomplete. Hundrgds of negroes are homeless and many have lost their household effects. The Virginia-Carolina Chemical Company is the principal sufferer, its destroy- ed buildings and machinery worth $60,000. The total loss will exceed $150,000. The Southern Bei: Telephone Company's lines: were down. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS Death of Charles H. Edwards at | New Haven, Conn. is still shrouded | in mystery, although A. Maxcy Hiller is held in custody by the coroner. The majority of the 6,000 members unions in New York City struck. They demanded an increase in wages from $4.50 to $5 a day. Rev. D. rt io J ‘has been elected superintendent of the ceiving compensation for [yest Virginia Reform school, to suc- teed O. E. Darnell, resigned.. Mrs. George Batson of Pruntytown, suc- ceeds Mrs. Darnell as matron Four men blew open the Spargur- deadly | | vinces is still critical. 1 i { | 1 being | lof the housesmiths’ and bridgenen’s | S. Hammond of Weston, | Mulitt bank at Bainbridge, O., during’ the night, but failed to get to the money in the safe, apparently being frightened by the explosion. Three regiments of United States infantry, two batteries of artillery and under San Francisco for one squadron of cavalry are orders to leave the Philippines during this month. Action will be brought in the Marion County Circuit Court against Daniel EB. Storms, Secretary of State of In- diana, to compel him to vacate office. demand of He refused to resign on the Governor. At the annual meeting of the Pacific | Express Company all the officers and directors were re-elected except that F. A. Delano was made a director to | replace Joseph Ramsey, Jr. Maj. Elmore F. Taggart, whose di- ordered to the Philippines. Winifred Marshall, 1 i | corpus proceedings. presented to incriminate him. rebates. nial. Dr. 8. M, 0Q., recently been He will | sail from San Francisco on March 5. charged with the killing of Deputy Sheriff Thomas | | Hardy last October, was released from | jail at Cumberland, Md., on habeas No.evidence was The Pabst Brewing Company of Milwaukee, Wis., Nas ‘filed its answer in the Government case, wherein the | company is, charged with receiving The answer, is a general de- . King of Alliance, oO. committed suicide while lying in bed by shooting himself through the head. Dr. King several months ago sued Letters found of the dead man indicate that reconciliation was his wife for divorce. among the belongings about to be effected. Bristol, Pa., were | the swamping of a rowboat cued. Wedding Day Announced. The President and Mrs. Alice Roosevelt to Nicholas Longworth of William Smith and Philip Jones of drowned in the | Delaware river late Monday night by ee near | Twenty-five Killed and Many Wound- | Burlington Island. Samuel Bell, also f i : of Bristol, clung to the boat until res- ] Roosevelt | 10-day announced that the wedding of Miss Representative | out a train at Orloff, has been hanged. REBFLS STRONG IN BALTIC | bgt rot Several Attempts Are Made To Wreck a Military Train. I i eetommrmereeem eee NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS Shook Hands With Thousands at White House. Washington enjoyed 2a beautiful New Year's day without war or rum- ors of war. The placidity of the round : of réceptions and calling was in strik- WITTE’'S MOTIVES IMPUGNED Reform Will Not Be Abandoned by Premier, Though *‘Reds” Are Defeated. situation in the Baltic pro- The military | at Reval, Mitau and Riga are adopt- ing the most energetic measures. A statipnmaster, who refused to send The | The insurgents made several attempts | to de.ail a military train between | Libau and Hazenfoth. * Arrests of extremists in St. Peters- { burg continue. An editor and others | charged with . distributing revolution- ary literature among the soldiers have | been detained by the police. The “Molva” (Russ) says that {| Count Solsky’s commission has de- | cided to change the council of state ! into an upper house consisting of 100 | members, 50 of whom will be appoint- {ed and 50 elected. The “Slovo,” the conservative or- | gan, which recently turned upon | Count Witte, delivers a broadside, not | | only impugning the motives of the | premier in the present war against the “reds,” but openly attacking the records of members of the cabinet. | It says: «Witte is a good deal of a broker | | and something of a journalist, but at heart he is a political gambler and | lacks the ring ©f sincerity. No gov- | ernment without honesty can inspire | confidence. | The government's strongly worded | announcement that it proposes to | pursue to the bitter end the policy of | putting down the “reds,” following on i i the. heels of the crushing: of the re- volt at Moscow, demonstrates the confidence of Premier Witte’s govern- | ment that it has the ability to com- plete the task it has undertaken. The main cause of this confidence is the | fidelity displayed by the troops. Despite the rigorous, ruthless fash- lion in which the war against the | | “Reds” is conducted the government | {is taking every opportunity by word | | and act to try to prove to the “pub- | lice that the represssion of the revo- | | lutionists aoes not involve the aband- | | onment of ‘the: reform program, but | eh the new regime may be realized. 1 1 { M'CALL RESIGNS | LE | | Board of Trustees Reduce Number of | Vice Presidents. | John A. McCall resigned the presi- | dency of the New Yori Life Insurance ! Company, and ‘Alexander E. Orr was | appointed in his place at the salary of $50,000 a year. (Mr. McCall's sal- | ary was $100,000, The board of trus- | tees | also cut down the number of second vice. presidents, so that here- | after there .will be but two of these! officers instead of three. 3 Mr. McCall, who has for 14 years held the office which he resigned, | sent a letter to the trustees in which | he stated his errors probably segmed } greater to him than his critics, but he | vas comforted to think ‘of the com | Misses His: Mark | pany’s unprecedenied achievements, and to know no officer or trustee had profited improperly at the policy hold- er's expense. i VICTIM OF “CANNIBALS ° Dr. Stewart, of Nigerian Government, Eaten by Natives. The steamer Olenda of the Elder Dempster line, brought to Liverpool a story of cannibalism in Nigeria, of. which Dr. Stewart, of the Southern Nigerian government was the vietim. The doctor accompanied an expedition to the interior, missed the main Toad and ran into the village of a hostile tribe. : 88 % L The carriers returning found Dr. Stewart’s bicycle and later parts of his body. Investigation showed - that the body had been horribly mutilated and there was undoubted evidence that it had been partially eaten. PUERTO PLATA ATTACKED ed in Fight. The State department has received | the following dispatch from Puerto | Plata: | | Revolution broke out here late (January 2): = Gen. Rodriguez fought his way into the town and then retired. No fewer than 25 have : Cincinnati, | been killed and many were wounded. will take place Saturday, February | Gen. Caceres is holding the” fort. 17, at 12 o’clock ncon in the east room ! pighting continues. of the White House. { ee renin ie en it BANKERS INDICTED The troops under command of Gen: Rodriguez are those of the fugitive president of Santo Domingo, Morales. | The revolutionists retired to prepare Bills Returned Against Former Trust | for a fresh attack on Puerto Plata. Company Officials. The grand jury, which has been | portion of the town has declared in favor of Morales, and Rodriguez has | He ran upstairs to | law. ing contrast with the tensity of the holiday two years ago, when Russia and Japan were on the verge of hostilities, and 12 months ago, when the brilliant assemblage at the Presi- dent’s reception thrilled with the first news of the fall of Port Arthur. As usual, everyone in the morning went to the White House, where the President, fresh from the outing at Mrs. Roosevelt's farm, «Plain Deal- ing,” in Virginia, shook the hands of more than 9,000 persons, beginning with Lady ladislaus Hengelmuller von Hengervar, the Austrian ambas- sador and acting dean of the diplo- matic corps, attired in a rich mag* var dress, and ending with a plain American citizen, who brought up the rear of the procession, which stretch- ed blocks from the portals of the White House. Released from the duty of extending greetings to the President and wives of meinbgrs of the cabinet, official- dom spent the rest of the day receiv- ing or being received. All the cabi- net members, with the exception of Attorney General Moody, who is a bachelor, kept open house. The call- ing was limited almost entirely to men. JILTED LOVER SLAYS FAMILY. Breaks Into House and Kills Sweet- heart, Sister, Mother and Himself. Matthew Styver, infatuated with Pearl Wheaton, daughter of S. N. Wheaton, a wealthy farmer, broke into a window of the Wheaton home, | near Caledonia, Minn., shot and killed the girl and then fatally wounded her sister Ruth, her mother and himself. Styer is a dental scudent at the Uni- versity of Minnesota. Pearl Wheaton had refused to marry him. : : Ruth Wheaton, with ‘a revolver, tried to protect the family. Styer wrested the revolver from her and shot her twice through the breast. He then turned upon Mrs. Wheaton, shooting her in the throat ‘and arm. Pearl’s room. Breaking in the door he shot her through the heart, and then shot him- self.” The only other immate of the house, a child escaped by leaping through the window Styer had brok- en. a NEW YORK LEGISLATURE Governor Higgins Advises Passage of Strict Insurance Law. The 129th session of the New York legislature began January 3d. In his message Governor Higgins urged the necessity of a drastic life insurance Other measures recommended included a mortgage tax law, and electoral reform. ; Senator Bracketf introduced a resolution demanding, the resignation of Chauncey -M. Depew from the United States Senate on the ground of disclosures in the Equitable investl- gation. = The resolution was with- drawn. for the time being. - EAGLE ATTACKS HUNTER . the Bird Starts Battle, and Man is Worsted. i While hunting in the woods near Arlington, O., Carl Stevenson was at- |'tacked by an eagle and a bitter fight | ensued. The bird scratched the man | about the body, tore out his left eye {and left him unconscious. | His family was alarmed at his non- | appearance and 32 searching party | found him. He says he shot at the | bird; missing it, and had mot time to - ars i TT | John H. Atkinson Dead. - i John H. Atkinson, sole. surviving | nember of Virginia's delegation to the Republican nominating: convention in 1856, died at his home in New “Cumberland, W. Va. Mr. Atkinson was born in Ohio in 1803, and when | 7 years old located at New Cumber- { land. He was active in the events of _ ithe Civil war, but for many years had {lived a retired life. SCHOOLS LOST MILLIONS | Shortage in Superintendent’s Accounts | Covering 18 Years’ Speculations. | The report of the "Company on the defaications of N. C. | Dougherty, the former city superin- ! tendent of schools at Peoria, Ill, who |is now serving an intermediate sent- | ence, shows a shortage for seven years of $541,408.50. The audit com- | pany gave out the opinion that the | total shortage for 18 years would fall i slightly short of $1,000,000. The report holds the board and its officers responsible for all shortage | which cannot be collected from | Dougherty and the Peoria National bank, of which the latter was presi- | ‘dent. It declares that the bank is 1i- { able for every cent. investigating the affairs of the Mary- | announced that if his campaign is| 1and Trust Company, of | of the former officials. president, under a bond of $10,000. two have not been { names are withheld by the | attorneys office. . Howard Must Serve Term. The supreme court of the United of the Kentucky court of appeals ig refusing | located near irance of | a new irial in the case of James B. State of Kentucky. was tried three times in the | aged 16, all dead. and the daughter, had been murdered A single barrelled shot and the States affirmed the decision Howard vs. the Howard circuit Kentucky, ing Governor William i Kentucky, 6 on January 30, court of Franklin Goebel, 1909, State’s | they were county, on the charge of murder- of | gun lying near his and | fact that hit head was almost entire- He is now i 1y blown off, showed how Barnum had p Baltimore, | successful he will proclaim himself a returned presentments against three One of them, Henry J. Bowdoin, who was the vice was arrested and released | candidate for the presidency of San- | to Domingo. 1 | { i { { them from while and toy houses attempting windows | rebels. Michigan Farm House Tragedy. Rochester, Mich, | | with an ax. corpse | met-his end. 1 ten. Caceres is the temporary presi- | den. of the republic and the people of | The other | Puerto Plata showed their hostility to arrested and un- | his soldiers by firing on til they are taken into custody, their r to repulse the | Japan and that 101 Neighbors broke into the farmhouse of Clarence A. Barnum, who recently and | found Barnum, his wife, his daughter | whether there | Louise, aged 23, and his son, Clinton, 1a combination or agreement between The wife, the son ! the Pennsylvania railway system, the ! 101 BURNED TO DEATH 1 BE Explosion Sets Fire to Mine at AKita, in Japan. A dispatch from Tokio to the L.on- | don Daily Telegraph says that. on | January 4 an explosion set fire to a | mine at Akita on the main island of persons were i | burned to death Railroad Investiaation. Representative Reeders of Kansas, introduced a resolution in the Hwuse | requesting ' the Attorney General to | investigate and report to the House exists or has existed | Norfolk and Western, the Baltimore and Ohio, the Baltimore and Ohio Southern and the Chesapeake and | Ohio, or any or more of these com- anies, in viclation of the anti-trust aw. reload, but used his rifle as a club. : Everett Audit : wd n W € 1 8: a W ° d © Cl 0 d *b E ADEN EN ME ree BO ee EN bal bed 0 8 wT Ml Bd NS MOM OER A hd od ik lt A ped beth pd DE ap od pd edd 1