TT TER / RESCUED FROM THE EA —— Somes . Pas engers and Crew of Liner Landed by Life Savers. TERRIBLE STATE OF ANXIETY Huddled About Single Fire Through Night—Many Persons Wit nessed the Rescue. After spending 24 hours in terrible anxiety lest they be wrecked. and swept into the sea, the passengers and crew, 60 in all, of the Cldye line steamer Cherokee, bound from San Domingo for New York, which went aground on the Brigantine shoals Friday, were rescued laté Sunday af- ternoon and landed at the inlet at Atlantic City, N. J. -Captain- Archi- bald, two mates and .the ship's car- penter elected to remain aboard the stranded steamer. : 0 3 The rescue was accomplished by Captain iark Casto and : a picked crew in the sloop yacht Alberta. All night the life guards of the three stations, watched for a slight moderation of the storm, but it did not come until noon, when there was a pereeptible fall in the wind. The life-savers ‘deemed it folly to attempt to go to the steamer in the sea that was running, and it was decided to send two men in a launch. This was done and when it was about to go over the bar at the mouth of the Inlet the launch’s machinery became disar- ranged and it drifted about helpless- ly. Another launch was sent out and brought back the men and the dis- abled launch. Then ‘it was decided that the staunch sloop Albert, with Captain Casto at the helm and a picked crew, should make an attempt to reach the Cherokee and if possible, take off those on board. The Alberta got over the:inlet bar in safety and then MRS. CHADWICK Former Woman Clerk There Identifies . Her as Former Prisoner. Mrs. Cassle L. Chadwick arrived at the Ohio penitentiary January 12 from Cleveland to begin a sentence of 10 years for conspiracy to wreek the Citizens National bank, of Oberlin. No special preparaticns were made in the woman's department of the prison for the reception of Mrs. Chadwick. She will be compelled to sleep on a cot in the corridor of the prison, and the women’s department is filled and every bed occupied... The prison officials are firm in the belief that Mrs. Chadwick is Madam De Vere, for after she had filed her name with the clerk the following was made in the book at the prison: «Mrs. Cassie IL. . Chadwick, . alias Madam De Vere—10 years—conspiring to wreck a National baink—Cuydhoga’ county—redeived January 12, 1906; expires.January 12, 1916—good time— November, 1912.” : ot The prison officials say that she will be treated as any other prisoner in the female department. They think the reports that she has heart trouble aré groundless, and after an exami- nation, if it is found she is able, she will be .put to work to washing or other heavy work. If not, she will be placed in the sewing department. An ex-woman clerk in the secre- tary’s office of the penitentiary identi- fied Mrs. Chadwick as the same wo- IN PEN penitentiary from Lucas county be- ginning in 1901, for forgery, under the name of Madam De Vere. 350 KILLED OR INJURED Cossacks Make Attack on Armenian Seminary. : Nearly 350 persons were killed. or injured. in an attack made by. Cos- sacks at Tiflis, Caucasia, on _ the Aremenian seminary, following the throwing of two bombs from that in- stitution at a passing patrol. Four went pitching up: the - coast toward the stranded. vessel...Her progress. | was followed by hundreds of persons | with marine glasses. Whén abreast | of the stranded steamer, the sloop | put out and came to the leeward. A | small boat wag launched and several | of the crew, made the perilous trip to the steamer. : They found the passengers and | most of the crew in a terrible state of anxiety: The women were-weeping and the men were pleading, that something be done. Captain Archi- bald and, Captain Casto decided to make the attempt to transfer the passengers. Though terribly anxious to be released from théir perilous | position, some of the passengers fear- ed to make the trip in the small boat. At the time the sea was rough with a fairly stiff wind blowing. The first to leave the steamer were a Syrian woman and stewardess and the Syrian woman’s daughter, who were lowered to the little boat by means of ropes. Sixteen different | trips were made with the little boat | between the steamer and the rescuing | yacht. . “ Only four or five persons were talk- | en at a time, and. after ‘nearly two hours work all but the captain and | three of his crew were safely aboard | the Alberta. The crew of the Alberta | displayed able seamanship in keeping their yawl afloat and -were warmly | thanked by the passengers. { a SAE r | MUCH SPOTTED FEVER | —— . | Seven Naval Apprentices Die at New- | port and Others are lll. Seven deaths -from spotted fever | have occurred among -the draft-of 350 | naval apprentices who were brought | to the training station at Newport, | R. I., last November.” Harry G. Bot- | | TROOPS .Cossacks were wounded and a boy was killed by the explosion of the’ bombs. Artillery was ) called up and the séminary was sur- rounded and shelled The ‘building soon burst into flames and the bombs and cartridges stored therein ex- ploded.. . Thirty-three persons perish- ed during the conflagration while 300 were injured by fire or wounded by shells. The troops subsequently . shelled another Armenian house where bombs and weapons were hidden and killed eight revolutionists. FIGHT REVOLUTIONISTS Insurgents’ Are Attacked After They estroy Railroad Track. News” has-just reached Riga, Livo- nia, of a daring -attempt of the rev- olutionists to capture a millitary train conveying a large sum of money from St. Petersburg to Libau. A band of revolutionists, having advance infor- mation, gathered at Hazenpot, burn- ed two bridges and tore up the tracks. Two companies of infantry which were escorting the train left the cars and were joined by a detachment of dragoons. Thi force marched against the revolutionists, who from behind improvised defenses: opened. fire on the soldiers. :The infantry, after fir- ing two volleys, which killed 65 and wounded nearly 100 of the revolution- ists, charged “with the: bayonet and the dragoons’ completed the rout: The prefect of police of Dragomiroff has been assassinated. The murder- er escaped. @ FALSE PROPHET ARISES Porto Are Following Him. - Emanuel’ Paris, colporteur to the man who had served a term in the | immediately | Ricans - Numbering Thousands | GIBINTIC STOCK SHINDLE Counterfeit Certificates Issued to Amount of $4,000,000. A CLEVER SCHEME UNEARTHED At Present Quotations the Bogus Cer- tificates Would Represent Over $4,000,000 Following the arrest of Charles Augustus Seton at Turkeytown, Md., in connection with the counterfeiting of 100-share certificates of Norfolk & Western common stock Samuel Hum- phries was arrested for complicity in that crime in Brooklyn, N. Y. i The capture of Seton led to many startling disclosures. It is now known that. 500 .counterfeit certificates were struck off, and that the lithographing was done unwittingly by the Hamilton Bank Note - Engraving & Printing Company. At the present market val- ue of the Norfolk & Western common the counterfeits. cover $4,300,000. It came out that the Bank Note company itself disclosed the fact that the certificates had been lithographed by it after a conference of its offi- cers held in the law offices of Lester, Graves & Miles, counsel for the com- | pany, Mr. Graves telephoned to the office of the Norfolk &. Western Company Tuesday asking some one in authority to come to his office at once, saying that his. presence was wanted at an important conference. One vf the. chief officials of the | railway responded. In Mr. Graves’ | office he found President Tonyes of the Bank Note Company and Mr. Hemphill, Vice President of the Guaranty Trust Company, and one of the transfer officials of the railway company. Mr. Graves informed the railway officials that he had discov- ered that the counterfeit stock certifi- cates had been made by the Bank Note Company for Seton on what appeared to be a legitimate order. When Mr. Hemphill demanded to know the nature ‘of the "order Mx. Graves said it was in the form of a letter directed to Seton and signed “C. B. Franklin”. This letter was ‘typewrilten on a sheet of Waldorf- Astoria letter paper and is said to have beén dictated by Seton himself to one of the stenographers at the hotel. teu Tg No such man as C. B. Franklin has ever been President. of the Norfolk & Western. The railway officials*are convinced that it was Seton’ himself who wrote the letter on which the Bank Note Company executed his order. : : | GIBBONS IN M. E. CHURCH There Attends Prohibition Meeting in Baltimore. Cardinal Gibbons occupied a seat on Cardinal the platform: of the Eutaw Street Methodist Episcopal church, Balti- more, in which a public mass meeting was held under the auspices of the city committee of the Prohibition party. The principal ~ address was made- by William H.: Berry, state treasurer of Pennsylvania... Mr. Ber- a plea. for prohibition of the liquor traffic. : to secure a public hall large enough and was compelled to select the Eutaw street church. A member of the commiitee wrote to Cardinal Gihbons, who has consented to act as { wished’ to have his name withdrawn. { The eardinal wrote that ‘the holding of ‘a eivic meeting in. a Protestant | church does not .excite any religious | seryple in me.” Bishop Luther B. tenburg of Roanoke, Va. died, and | American Tract Society, states that | Wilson of sthe Methodist Episcopal Frederick Friend is very. ill. Three | in Ponce, Porto Rico, a false prophet | church was a vice president. other boys are less seriously ill. The | has appeared, representing himsplf | ne $l — body of John F. Rolife, was shipped | as the spirit of St. John the Evange- | body of John F. Rollife, was shipped | Quarantine regulations were extend- | ed to all the 1,600 apprentices. | A. Doran, of «St. Paul, doing James business as a broker under the firm | name of James Doran & Co. nounced his suspension. Mr. Doran | list. : He commands people to follow him and to wear three crosses hanging from their necks so that Satan may not carry them away. In this manner a great part of ‘the country people an- follow him, something like 3.000 leav- ing their labor. He announced a ser- says his liabilities will exceed $200,- | vice, and there met to hear him about 000. Erench=-American Trade. The total commerce between the United States and France, during the fiscal year 1905 amounted to about $166,600,000, of which $76,000,000 was the amount of the exports to France and $90,000,000 the value of the imports of its provisions and bread- Stuffs from her colonies and exports | mainly high grade manufacturers and | exported wine. The United States to France nearly all ihe copper and the cotton used by that country. Piates Made in Pittsburg. Secret Service Operatives of Philadelphia, and Walsh, of Scranton, arrested John Rimos and | Litzenberg | Joseph Getner, Slavs, at postoffice, Luzerne county, Pa. The men are charged with attempting to counterfeit Austrian money. They or- dered from a Pittsburg engraver plates of a 20-kromer Austrian note. The engraver’s suspicions were aroused and he notified the treasury department. Cassini, formerly ador to the United States, and o the same post at Madrid, Emperor Nicholas at conference. iwether Charged With Hazing. pman Minor Meriwether, Jr. iana, who attained much no- of Louls toriety by engaging in a fist fight with Midshipman James R. Branch in which. the latter receix xd fatal in- juries, has been placed er arr ’ ] h Ti of [ Griffin, | Russian | 1 10,000 peoble. HADLEY 1S SATISFIED | Has Secured Valuable Evidence in i ; Standard Oil Hearings. | Attorney General Herbert S. Had- souri, who is in New York ! ley, of Mis | conducting the Standard Oil company testimony to use in the suit to oust the Standard from Missoliri, said: «I am well satisfied with the results I. have obtained in my investigation of | the Standard control of the oil busi- oss in Missouri. I have secured some IT of what I came here for, and I did not expect to secure everything. | The testimony given by Mr. Jockel | and Mr. Hardcastle, former employes of the Standard, and Mrs. Ida M. { Butts, of Marietta, O., establishes to my mind the connection which T seek to show as existing in Missouri be- tween the Standard of Indiana, the | Republic Oil company and the Wat- ers-Pierce Oil Company. These, | maintain, are constituent companies | of the Standard Oil trust. The rs- | fusals to answer on the part of H. H. | Rogers, BE. T. Bedford, Wade Hamp- | ton and others I had examined go { further it seems to me to bulwark i my than the evidence of my own es Wounded by Bombs. hurled at Chernigoff Two bombs Khovostoff, governor of province, Rus home f ‘nor were ia, as he was driving cathedral. 1 and The gov- his wife , who | hearing for the purpose of securing | { Gen. Flames Damage Windsor Hotel. | A section of the Windsor hotel, at | Montreal, Que., was destroyed by fire | causing a loss of $150,000. The fire started in the kitchen and’ destroyed | the center square, which included the | | dining room, grill room, bar and other | | public rooms. The guests had plenty | of time to remove their belongings | and at no time was there anything like a panic. SE ———————————— Dr. Hamnett Honored. January 10th at Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa., was almost entirely given up to celebrating the ninetieth | birthday of Dr. Jonathan Hamnett, for | 61 years an instructor at the college. {In 1835 Dr. Hamnett, with two other young men, walked from Pittsburg to Meadville to enter Allegheny Col- lege. He was graduated in 1839, and | in 1845 returned to be professor of { Latin ‘language and literature. His | service as professor has been contin- | nous since that date. He is person- | ally known to every living alumnus of | the institution. CAPITAL NEWS NOTES | Senator Foraker's bill to appropri- late $200,000 to mark the graves of | Confederate soldiers who died in {Northern prisons was passed by the | Senate. The President nominated John H. | Stover to be postmaster at Waterville, {O., and Henry H. Hawkins to be postmaster at Spring For Pa.. The | Senate confirmed the mination of | Glen H. Salkeld to be. postmaster at Perry, O. Torpedo Boat Destroyer Damaged. During a heavy blow in Hampton | Roads the torpedo boat | Worden and Lawrence of { torpedo flotilla, | Point, came { | Worden was rammed conveyed to the Nor y the Lawrence, destroyers lying Sewells ry spoke on “Civic Virtue,” and made | The ccmmittee found itself unable HORRIBLE DEATH Officer Who Found Body of Woman Goes Insane. Mrs. Lena Able, 27 years old, was murdered at her home, 652 Browns- ville avenue, Pittsburg. Her throat was slashed in 16 different places. Then the dead body was dragged from. the second floor of her home into the cellar and thrown into a corner. A kerosene lamp had been smashed be- side the body, which was frightfully burned. Andrew J. Able, 20 years old, hus- band of thé murdered woman, was committed to the Allegheny county jail by Chief Deputy Coroner Harry W. Lowe, on a charge of murder. Able was arrested at the morgue, where he came to view the remains of his wife. He told so many conflicting stories about his whereabouts at the time of the affair that Lowe was led to believe that he knew about the crime. : Officer James B. Boyle, a sub-police- man who was on the beat on which the Able house is, helped to carry out the body of Mrs. Able. The sight was so revolting to him that a few hours later he was a raving maniac and had to be taken to the insane ward of St. Francis hospital. CIVIL SERVICE INCLUDED Governor Pennypacker Issues a Sup- plemnetary Call. Gov. Pennypacker issued a supple- mental call for the coming extra ses- sion of the Pennsylvania legislature, so as to include uniform primary elec- tions, a civil service system for state offices and the regulation of cam- paign expenditures among the sub- jects that may be considered by the legislature. He also amends his pre- vious provision for a bill to permit the consolidation of Pittsburg and Alle- gheny, so as to enable the legislature to adopt a constitutional bill to that effect. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS The Kentucky Legislature formally elected Judge James H. Paynter to the United States Senate, succeeding J. C. G. Blackburn. After having been unanimously nominated by the Democratic cau- cus for State Treasurer of Maryland, Murray Vandiver was. re-elected. Mrs. Anthony Morrow sued for di- vorce at Coshocton, O., alleging that her husband, a farmer, tried to sell her three children for $30. Susie Johnson, 60 years old, of 21 Cass avenue, Allegheny, died at the Allegheny General hospital from burns received at her home on Jan- unary 3. } . A detachment of infantry surround- ed the town of Novominsk, Russian Poland, at daybreak and captured a large number of revolutionists. Anthony Ascia, 8 section hand on the Bessemer and Lake Erie railroad, was killed by a train on his way to work, near Butler, Pa. A limited interurban street car near Youngstown, O., crashed into several cars standing on a siding. Motorman Henley was cut and bruised. After forcing an entrance into the feed store of D. M.:Klepser & Co., at Altoona, Pa., and breaking open the desk, the thieves were rewarded with eight pennies. At Youngstown, O., a conference between the Republic Iron and Steel company and the 40 machinists who have been on a strike resulted in sat- isfactory concessions. vice president, and asked him if he | the First | Aurelio Herrera, of ~ Bakersfield, | Cal., knocked out Young Corbet, of | Denver, in the fifth round of a fight at the Pacific Athletic club pavilion at l.os Angeles. The Northwestern Hemlock Asso- ciation has decided upon another in- crease in the price of hemlock lum- ber. The raise. will vary from 50 cents to $1.50 per thousand feet. All matters relating to the Panama canal and the government of the ca- nal zone and the management of the | Panama railroad will be investigated | by Senate Committee on Inter-oceanie Canals. Jewelry valued at $10,000, belong- ing to the wife of Dr. A. Ravogli, of | Clifton, a suburb of Cincinati, was stolen, according to a report made by her to the police. | | | | Negro Weds White Girl. William Bruyn, a negro and Frances Courter, a white girl, returned to Washingtonville, N. Y., from New- burg and announced that they had been married. The girl’s father knocked them both down and the an- gry villagers attacked Bruyn and threatened to lynch him. He es- capted, but later he and the gir] were placed in jail. | Sentiment Against Chinese. | The Chinese minister at Washington | has telegraphed his government that | any satisfactory legislation on the ex- | clusion question is improbable. He i says that the majority of the Con- | gressmen favor greater liberality, but i that the influence of the laboring | class is too strong against the Chi- i nese. | War Cost Russia $1,050,000,000. The budget statement®* for 1306, | shows that it will be necessary to | raise $240,500,000 by credit operations | to balance the estimated receipts and | expenditures. The latter include | $202,500,000 for the liquidation of the | expenses of the Russo-Japanese war. | For the first time the total cost of | the war, $1,050,000,000, is revealed. EIGHT DIE IN HOTEL FIRE Rush of Flame and Smoke Caus- es Panic Among Guests: MANY LOWERED WITH ROPES Captain of Firemen Meets Death While Trying to Save Life of Aged Woman. i» Eight persons dead of suffocation or of injuries sustained in leaping from a “fireproof” hotel building, 2 score of persons injured, and a build- ing damaged $25,000 by fire, smoke and water is the loss caused by a dis- aster which befell the West hotel, Hennepin avenue and Fifth | street, employes into a panic. \ The dead: Fire Captain Jo win, fell from the fourth floo W. G. Nickels, Minneapolis; Fhomas Summerville, Springfield, Mass., salesman; J. E. Wolf, northwestern: agent for Sperry & Alexander Com- pany, of New York; Clinton B. Lamme, New York, traveling man; J. B. Peisniger, New York traveling man; Mrs. M. E. Hodges, Minneapo- lis; William Black, New York. The fire was confined to the eleva- tor shaft and the two top floors in one corner of the building, but a dense smoke pervaded everywhere, and the wild excitement which fol- lowed the first alarm hurried people selves. There was so much choking smoke the windows to avoid suffocation. with hands or feet. Capt. John Berwin of a hook and ladder company, having broken open he had reached by means of scaling a ladder, stumbled on to the body of Mrs. Emeline Barlow, an aged Wo- man. He strapped the unconscious form to his back ladder. : When midway and sixth floors the strap broke. Bending over to balance the body for a moment, he then leaned, at the risk of his life, and threw the woman toward a projecting ledge on floor below. Apparently being reviv- ed by the fresh air or by the shock, the aged woman grasped the projection and held on. Capt. Berwin lost ‘his balance and fell to the pavement. He was instantly killed. The excitement was so intense that J. B. Peisniger of New York and Mrs. M. E. Hodges of Minneapolis, who ley, not being encouraged by ° the were in window ledges mear the al- crowd in: Fifth street, leaped from the seventh floor’ to the pavement. Peisniger’s clothes caught fire and he avenue side of the hotel. DEATH OF DR. HARPER Was President of Chicago University, and a Noted Scholar. oF America. and ‘efually renowned as an cancer of the intestines at his home on the university campus. ‘Although’ his death was known to be inevitable within a comparatively short time, the end of his life, due to physical ex- haustion: came suddenly. He was 49 years of age. «1 . t« Dr. Harper came of Scoteh-Irish stock. He was the eldest of five children of Samuel and Ellen E. Harper, and was born in New Con- cord, O., July 26, 1856. ‘He was a precocious student, and: while yet a child entered Muskingum college,” a United Presbyterian institution, where he took the degree of bache- lor of arts at the age of 14. He took a post-graduate course at Yale’ from which he received the degree of Ph. D. Want Health Officer in Cabinet. The legislative council of the American Medical association form- ally adopted resolutions recommend- ing that a Department of Public Health be established with a repre- sentative in the Cabinet, the repeal of the canteen law, government con- trol of wandering consumptives and the establishment of ° sanitariums where théy could be cared for by the government. To !mprove Municipal Affairs. The Municipal: Voters’ IL.eague of Chicago has issued a call for a con- ference of the various non-partisan organizations now existing .through- out the country for the promotion of better municipal government by prac- tical participation in city . elections. The conference is to be held in Chi- cago January 11 and 12. China in a Ferment. Reports from the South and from the Yangtse Valley region show anti-foreign sentiment to be strong. China undoubtedly is in a ferment of political excitement, but the movement is directed as much against the Government as agains the foreigners. /l FATAL DUEL. Sheriff Killed by Man He Defeated at | the Polls. | of La { Plata county, Col., was killed by Po- | liceman Jesse Stensel of Durango, in pistol duel on main Stensel] is fata 2d a | ‘Sheriff W. J. Thompson ont ial the fa i Dh wounded. na exis the whe street of | feud between | | P.R.R. Lets $2,000,000 Contract. f { Contracts involving an expendituf |of about $2,000,000 were awarded } United States, involving the Chinese §* the Pennsylvania Railroad Compa’. | | The work will include improveme! lat Mt. Union, Newton Hamilton, R [I {and Vineyard, and will ( 1g, erecting 1 | tening the tracl { zonsist of ges and strath Minneapolis, throwing 700 guests and n Ber-| while ; attempting to save a woman’$ od ls Breaks Out | Again When Prin- that guests, the moment a door was Lounty jail. opened, were compelled to crawl out, keep the survivors fro a window on the seventh floor, Sin of Burning Dwelling; and started down thej a between the seventh H thef§ o1. tumbled. burning, through the air.’ He |. struck a railing near the Hennepin | William Rainey Harper, presidenig of the University of Chicago since itss | as the foremost Hebrew scholar in: 3 educator and business man, died of? REZARM IN Bo Gov rior Calls for Correct Wghith Permit Over-Capita' Tle | 130th session of the New Jeu sey St ate legislature opened,January 9. 'Thye most interest centered in the Re ude of the Colby-Fagan Re- publjeans§ in the house, who put up Austin Cdplgate as their candidate for speiker afgainst Samuel K. Robins, the regufliar Republican nominee. Robins waf$ls elected. Gov. Stdokes in his message ad- vocites theg granting of limited fran- ! lines, . water, gas, lighf®and tele phone plants, or pipe OT AT PEJACE MEETING J Folpais Get A ' generat’ wfight hountains of Wayn ween James Bell, in county, Ky., be- his two brothers, Alfred and Wayne and’ Levy Dobbs im one side, and Joghn and Ben Deam ind Porter Price ony the other, in which Wayne Bell w§as shot and in- ltantly killed and Ja§mes and Alfred )y the combatants and Hbout 50 shots rere fired. There Home of the Deans are in\ the Wayne Efforts are Many were hurt by breaking windows : N AMILY OF SEVEN Cc EMATED nable to Escape From Second Floor Ishac Saylor, his . daughter, Mrs. chises, urg2§ntly recommends legis- lati to relmedy what he describes as e evil % of over-capitalization. Pubfe utlity } corporations should re- porto some \ state afficial as to the: cost®of * const! ructing and extending eleetric ! is a feud of I§ng standing ® into halls and out on window ledgesl|letween the Bell and I Peter Martin, and her five children = ° bre burned to death at their home in pasant View, Juniata county, Pa. arles Saylor and his wife of Al- hna, who were visiting at the Say- {lf homestead, escaped. $ \d a room on the first floor, while :¥: fire victims slept on the second Mr. Saylor was awakened by eams and found = the house) in ¢] nes. He and his wife escaped ough a window, but were unable ) render aid to the seven members the family upstairs. The children o fell victims to the flames were y@na, aged 12 years; Earl, 10; Alidge, Stella, 6, and Charles, 10 month=- Yin Saylor and. hig wife oceu- | MORALES A REFUGEE # | eflirned to San Domingo Wound d iand Resigned Presidency. el} ¥ © ago. Morales was brought to egation under cover of the dark- Hé was helpless, one of © having been broken during rn in the mountains west of t He appealed to United Stat ster Thomas C. Dawson for |a antee of safety. : mn. Mordles’ resignation as pregi- of Santo Domingo was tendered accepted. on board the United States g Dubuque bound for Porto Rico ce President Caceres, who inception: in 1891, regarded by many’ i ibe i pd! Congressman Joseph C. Siblgy, of he Twenty-eighth Pennsylvary di riet, announces that at the expilf@ tic | of his present term he will tip «from office and does not anti: p oT being a candidate for a poitlcal position. H DWICK APPEAL REFUSED & Li§a¥Hope of Escaping Ten-Y | entence to Penitentiary. © “1p ‘motion for a rehearing of t apjeal for a mew trial on behalf §& 444 Cassie L. Chadwick, of Cle | 1afl, was denied in the United Stas lett of Appeals at Cincinnati. lo rl of Appeals some weeks ago 8 tofed the judgment of the Distr | edt at Cleveland, which found Mri chdwick guilty of - conspiring’ |v pck a National bank and sentencd {h to serve 10 years in. the O | phitentiary. "he matter is closed so far as | ited States Circuit Court of | this ‘is concerned. he barn belonging a fice, of Snydertown, Pa., was bur JF oes vt ssredate roc Douglass for Tariff Revision. | statement declaring himself ire vedly in favor of immediate) re- jon of the tariff and stating that /the interests of Massachusetts | de- hand the admission duty free! hides, sole leather, coal, lumber, iron ors and wood pulp. | Exclusion Act in Force. The case of Hong-Wing against the oxelusion act, was decided in favor of the Unied States in the United Skates Circuit Court of Appealsyat Jincinnati, the court holding that continued ~F act olf 1 Congress exclus April 7, 1904, act in force, T x anto Domingo, wounded a lagging other evidences of the mis-; tfjpes ,2which have pursued him ; heed he fled from the capital three * o 4" {| Former Gov. W. L. Douglass issted of # of uw = is 3 i. em We A In PEt PEERY A iby dm iy ! t : : be n Poi t £ 1; - - o ‘ t bg q | b { a { oo +h | t + F PET Ratan a aaa Sh Sh ube aia NA a Bi all 7G a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers