ay TR Ew er SN A Si en a iB i MANY KILLED IN A WRECK Passenger Train Collides Head on with Freight. MOST OF THE VICTIMS NEGROES Thunder Bolt Descends Crowd Gathers for Baill Game—Many Other Spectators Are Hurt. as 44 on the Seca- with an extra train No. board Air Line collided freight train let.iN. C. The wreck occurred at 7:30 Sunday evening. The head-on. Engireer IE. B. Hamiet and his were engers, most of Passenger one mile west of Ham- o'clock collided Lewis of Tom Hill, pass- trains firer killed and from them negroes, lost their lives, while the list of injured is reported to reach 20 or more. Only a few of the dead have been identified. A special was made up to carry the dead and injured to Rock- ingham. The wreck was caused by misunderstanding of orders. Both gines, nearly all day coaches and cars demolished. Tracks com- : blocked. Hamlet is one of the principal sta- tions on the Wilmington, Charlotte & Rutherfordton division of the Sea- board, and is 110 miles west of Wil- mington. Five persons were instantly killed, five seriously injured and 20 slightly injured when lightning struck the grand stand during a ball game at Manitowoe, Wis. Of the injured two will be permutiontly crippled. The dead are: Albert Skuhra, ried, aged 28; Walter Hand, 18; Klauk, 13; Irving Woellert, 20, Willie Knutzen, 10. The fatal bolt Gos? ended during a nan, 18 25 to mar- Tony and violent electric stor which preced- ed a severe ar at 2:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon at the ball grounds. The bolt siruck the top of the grand stand, following the beams down to the door at the entrance, where oll those now dead or injured had cor 187 gated. DEATH OF RUSSELL SAGE New York's Veteran Financier Suc- cumbs to Maladies of Olid Age. Russell Sage died suddenly at his country home, ‘‘Cedarcroft,”” at Law- rence, I.. I. The immediate cause of death was heart failure from a com- plication of and incident to old age. The veteran financier celebrated his diseases have ninetieth birthday on August 4. Mr. Sage had been in ex- ceptionally good health since his ar- rival at his summer home about six months ago. At noon Sunday he was seized with a sinking spell and collapsed, falling into unconsciousness aboul two hours would before his death, which occurred at body on the railroad track to obliter- | 4.30 o'clock. ate the evidences of their crime, were Russell Sage was in his day a found guilty of murder in the first de- HIGHER WAGES FOR MANY New England Textile Mills Announce Voluntary Advance in Opera- tives' Pay. The milis of Manchester, N. H., which give employment o fully 15,090 operatives, have posted notices an increase of 5 per cent. in wages. This to the Amos- Manufacturing Co., including 1e original plant and the Amery and Manchéster corporations and print works, which were recently taken by the Amoskeag company, and Stark mills, which are a part of can Duck Co. These var- s have a weekly payroll of approximately $110,000, and the in- cl posed will amount to more than 0,000 in the amcunt paid operatives for the ensuing year. The increase, which will take effect Mon- day. July 30, is entirely voluntary. Notices have been posted announc- ing an advance of 5 per cent. in wages at nearly all of the Lewiston, Me., cotton mills. This advance af- fects several thousand operatives. At the Bates mill the advance will go imo effect July 30, while at the An- droscoggin the 5 per cent. increase will begin August 6. An advance in wages of 5 per cent. to take effect on July 30, has ween announced to the 3.000 operatives of the Pepperill mills in Biddeford, Me. The advance is entirely voluntary on the part of the management, and means a total increase in wages of $60.000 a year. Notices of an increase wages have been posted also. at the Lockwood cotton mill at Water- ville, to take effect July 30. About 1,200 employes will be affected. Notice 5 per cent. raise an- nouncing applies Loag { keag ‘ease pro in of. a b in wages was posted at the Nashua, N. H.., cotton mills this morning. Three { thousand operatives are affected by | the increase. OUR FOREIGN TRADE imports nd Exports Exceeded Other Year. commerce of the Unit- Both Any a foreign ed States in th regated $2.970,000,000. Po Rico and Hawaii, in our foreign nexation, were added, excesd :3.000,000,000. exports exceed thowe of r+ year. | The total imports of the year were $1,226.000,000, exceeding the highest record of any earlier year (1905) by $109.000.000 and the exports were $1.- 744,000,000 exceed’ng these of the high aggy witl h est record vear (1ul5) by $225,000.000. The excess of exports over imports was $517,000,000. exceeding that of] 1905 by $116,000,000, but falling below | ‘that of each year of the period 1898- 1901. TWO CONDEMNED “Biack Hand” Men of Murder. vani Grazano and Georgio Qua- Italians charged ers of a “Black Hand” Jury Convicts society, meni: and with killing Angelo Capibianca, a Braddock fruit dealer, and placing his | grocer, congressman, railroad man gree, at Pittsburg. The jury was out and financier. He was born in the all night before arriving at a verdict. little village of Vernoa, Oneida coun- Capibianca was killed near Blair ty, N. Y., August 4, 1816. staticn, April 5, having been stabbed Mr. Sage was a member of the and shot to death. The two men convention that nominated Abraham Lincoln, being, of course, Seward. in He street and gre would speak bednne associated with eat financiers, of him as a’ nancier. - He was never seen exchange. He was never associated with the conception or conduct great enterprises so far knew. or for William He retired from Con- ly 1856 because of his business Wall but few great fi- upon of 1 as the public But he could take hold of al- were Jeft t crime. the scene of their TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. The United Typothetae of America declined to confer with officials of the International Typographical union in regard to the strike inaugurated near- y a. Ve ago for an eight-hour day and the closed shop. At the Inoeling of the Ohio Repub- a1 . ae ‘Nn . is 2 T . 1 : mat any niohs 2} or tere! % ond Hein lican State Central Committee Dayton i omer, Ano 43 fe yo. was decided upen the place for the was toddiing along he v ain Su- AF Tis Sale echioent] 1 x i ting of the State convention, anc preme charge and insure a solid bas- yi 11 and 12 as the time. is. His fortune of $505,000,000 was x i v gained not by speculation, but from T'wo men were kliled and two others . eH J i sly injured at Ironton, O., interest and dividends. He was a Se ontits ou the constant loaner to bankers and | ox Bp io he bro! ind his fees as a director in began shooting okots an Ss 3 as a > i ) Bron: & if at a crowd on the more in which he served were very large. INSU RANGE BUSINESS SUFFERS ecrcase of $151,724,354 in New York State Alone. than a score of corporations shore. SCOTS ARE JEALOUS Want Parliament to Deal Legislation. he lack of With Local opportuni- Tha disastrous effects upon the life ties to: A Scottish questions in insurance business of the sensational ihe house of mons and jealous ot disclosures made during the investi- | the promises of greater control of local gation of that business last fall by the imittee is shown wal report of the New York made public by Superintendent Otto Kelsey. the com- State in 1905 amount of in- showed 2a | Moreover, in and $98,548,766 special legislative con in the an: state insurance department, According to the report, panies doing business in that issued $3,396 fewer policies than in 1904, and the surance written last year decrease of $151,724,854. 76,924 more policies terminated 1905, than in 1904 more insurance. “The New York says Superintendent Kelsey, 697,379 policies, i i and term ted 450,2 ing gis other ates issued 420,338 insuring $766,252,613 and 50 policies, JAPAN UPHOLDS STOESSEL Military Opinion Is That He Earned Gratitude of His Country. to deatn by Russia, the public sentiment of ary opinion. from the e lowest, conscientiously : verdict wrong. Facts as- certained by the besieging party at Port Arthur would not only have ac-| quitted the General, but have gatiet] him the gratitude of his country. State companies,” “issued $966,838,898 | insur- | The companies of policies, | terminated ! 226,909 policies, insuring $410,519,413. The report that General Stoessel has to Ireland in the king's opening of parliament, members have selected Liberal member tor the on of Aberc_en, to intro- for the establishment of a for Scotland. This provides for the creation of a single-chamber legislature to deal with purely Scottish legislation. Tears will be eligible to membership and the exe- cutive power will continue to be vest- ed in the crown. The bili also pro- | vides for a revival of the old Scottish | pri council as it existed prior to | the union. It is proposed the Scottish { parliament shall have power to impose taxes, except customs and excise du- ties, the king to bas represented by a lord high commissioner and the seat of government to be at Edinburgh. Outside of the friends of Mr. Perie, i local self-gcvernment for onali of the United King- project is not taken seriously. Hearst to Make Case of New affairs made at speect the the dom the Fails general for tute proceedings New York city. He de- William R. Hearst has not showing his title to a case » heen placed by the Erie any for 1,600 new eo of which are to be ember of this year. a fiscal vear just ended! If the trade | which | commerce | with being | identified as having been with him in Braddock and having hurried- | ; York ! »d that there is not sufficient | of Mayor George B. Mec- |° PEACE TREATY WAS SIGNED Tranquillity is Restored Between South American Nations. ROOSEVELT AND DIAZ THANKED { History of the Trouble That Once Thrzatened to Embroil Ameri- can Republics. between Guate- and Honduras was United States high seas A treaty of peace mala, San Salvador signed on board the cruiser Marblehead on the off the Guatemalan coast. There was some difficulty in reach- ing mutually acceptable conditions. The Mexican minister, Senor Gamboa, was active in assisting in bringing about an agreement. The peace commissioners adopted esolutions thanking the presidents of bedi d States and Mexico for their intervention. The central American war which bade fair to involve four or more republics in addition to the two origi- nally concerned, Salvador and Guate- mala, began in May with the depart- ure of expeditions from Salvador to assist. a Guatemalan revolution under the leadership of General Toledo. From the moment the trouble passed beyond the phase of an internal dis- turbance the government at Washing- ton set about instituting measures for the re-establishment of peace. The cruiser Marblehead was ordered from Panama to La Libertad, with di- rections to report to Leslie Combs, American minister to Guatemala and | Honduras, and Mr. Combs and Will- iam I.. Merry, minister to Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Salvador, were in- structed to use their best endeavors | with the belligerents to bring the war | to an end. At the same time David E. Thomp- son, American ambassador to Mexico, ras instructed to make such repre- sentations to the Mexican government as might enlist its efforts for the same ends, Mexico's desire for peace be- tween its neighbors being well known Mexico entered heartily into the project. and its diplomafic representa- tives in Guatemala and Salvador were instructed to co-operate with Ministers Merry and Combs. Guatemala, Salvador and Honduras 1greed to an armistice beginning July 18, in order that representatives of those governments might meet with i the American and Mexican diplomats { on board the cruiser Marblehead to consider terms for a treaty of peace. HASTE IS DISASTROUS Workman . Causes Threatens Explosion That to Destroy Entire Plant. While helping to get the McClure tin mill, at Washington in shape for | the summer shutdown, Antonio | Fentero, an Italian, almost burned down the factory. The workmen were cooling a tank of molten tin when Fentero the speed of the process, dashed water | {on it. An explosion followed. Small plant was soon in flames. The local | fire department after two hours suc- ceeded in saving the plant although a loss of $4,000 was sustained. Sever- al workmen were slightly injured by the scattering of molten tin. | ICE MEN BREAK PROMISE Toledo Combine Continues to Sell Under Weight. Despite the fines and jail sentences given the members of the Toledo ice combine some time ago, it developed that the companies are charging the same old rate for ice and a nouse-to- house canvass conducted by newspap- er men showed that in every case but one the ice deliv sored was anywhere from two to pounds under weight. After the ice jail they securued promising to sell ice to allow the customers a rebate for the excess prices charged during the regime of the ice combine. DRAGOONS ¢ SLAY PEASANTS Soldiers Charge a s Peaceful Meeting— Agar:an Strike Spreading. The agrarian strike in Russia, con- tinues to spread, and it now extends over several governments where the harvest is threatened with destruction. government spirit stores have been destroyed by revolutionaries. Dragoons attacked a peaceful meet- ing of peatants in the village of Ko- cherovka, in the province of Tamboff, killing 80 of the participants. dragoons fired s ral volleys into the crowd, also charging with drawn swords. dealers were sent to their release by at $7.20 a ton and IS STOESSEL'S REWARD Penalty For the Port Arthur. The commission which was appoint- ed to inquire into the surrender of Tort Arthur to the Japanese during the recent war, has filed its report The commission proposes that General Stoessel, who was in command during the siege of Port Arthur, to death, and that General Fock, who | was a member of Gen. Stoessel’s staff, | and urged his chief condemned to 20 in the galleys. DEATH Captial Defender of years’ confinement Sewer Pipe Combine Quits. The Sewer through its at Harry Alvan Hall, Pittsburg, promised that federal grand jury investigation which had been started in Jamestown, N. Y., would discontinue the trust would be torney. | | { | tanks of oil were set on fire and the | | { | | who was not satsfied with | Pipe Trade association, | The | be sentenced | to surrender, be | | if a] dissolved. This, in effect, was plead- {ing guilty to the maintenance of a secret contract to limit the territory | and control 1 s for sewer pipe. Dis- trict Attorney Brown accepted the ition and adjourned the grand Lil Aug { Corftinuous Stream of Structural Con In. The “Iron Age” of iron and steel who have been hold- market a IRON AND STEEL MARKET ing few light seem to have uncer of mid-year matter of comment sett Th e tracts Coming says: it Revolutionists Carrying on Cam- | aloof weeks on lines have nage is | books. buyers tated are now The of structural now commit “Reports tenor—-that not yet in sight. ever market, from the scale of buying cently the obstacles “In Eastern rolling mills of iron workers the bar iron trade stand some The “Iron “Prosperity shown not an increase of earnings of more than 10 per cent. compared with last year, but also in continued he rails and leg Louis A. Gourdain, 9098,” as he prefers from heen » bar from imme iate o 5 ago the put tainties ‘ contracts on sit is no the crop aside the their about the that in a few finished | led and the manufacturers’ | ation buyers consumption of The railroads, what- prevailed, and are tracts indica fea still is in steel ted. waiting for outlook doubts. removal | were all ton- | in particu- 1 ir has greatly strengthened and some | who hesi- are of one state of give no signs of letting that has months is the bond down re- making con- of financial T unsettled, the strike a position to cnrtailment.”’ Trade of only the b rolling stocl Review” iron y reports says: trade is indicating Hn OUTRAGES REPORTED paign of Terror Through- out Russia. MUTINY SPREADS AMONG POLICE | | Monastery at Moscow Looted and $17,- 000 Taken—Revolution Affects Regiments and Cavalry. Reports of outrages and disorders {from various parts of the Russian empire pouring into St. Petersburg. The revolutionists are carrying on a npaign of terror and the peasants provinces are applying the Ce in many | torch and otherwise destroying prop- but | avy buying of | The officials | seem to entertain no Toor that recent | islation will be disastrous.” STRANGE PLEA REFUSED Man Appeals in Vain to to Prison. who is making | penitentiary | Chicago to extraordinary | to be reincarcerated in the Joliet, Fished and Ww ashington, | ington to New York or to who Be Sent Back “Convict No. call himself, and York to Narragansett Pier present to Justice White of the United | States Supreme Court his petition im- | ploring the authorities him up, failed in Lis mission. White refused to grant his re Gourdain ing a lottery and four an tiary at tained his release on a writ of super- sedeas. wishes, ised to ser felt in honor bound to reque d a Jo But efforts Til, from | -om Wash- from New i n order to erty. In St. Petersburg the spirit of mutiny has spread to the police force, and considerable excitement and alarm is occasioned in consequence. In strike. Another squad break up a meeting, threw arms and went home. refused down their This is the list of disorders, murd- | ers, ete., received in one day: Warsaw—Gendarme killed and cen- tral police office robbed. Natskahino, Simbirsk Three hundred houses, including the town" hall, set on fire and destroy- ted. to again lock | Justice quest. was convicted of conduct- half liet, IL. he says, incarceration. JURY FREES JUDGE HARGIS dict of has had for charged Marcum. In May the back courthouse. End of Stubhornly Contested Case ntenced to serve years in the peniten- all that ve the His Kentucky. 1903, and killed Curtis At Beattyville, Ky., Hargis-Callahan trial not guilty years. with the after was ttorney ob- against his and as he nad prom- ntence imposed he st his re- in the jury in the returned a ver- being out 22 minutes. The case was one of the most stubbornly contested a Kentucky court Marcum in The murder men were of J. B. was shot in the Jett and Jackson ‘Tom’ | White were convicted and given life Jett, after his | terms for the murder. conviction confessed that he shot Marcum and that his act was inspired Callahan and Hargis. by ness stand the confes responsible. however, on and The he said he alone was acquittal followed On the wit- largely on this repudiation. SMALL DIVIDEND Creditors of Defunct Bank Will According office of the currency aker, terprise Pa, cate a larger month ago. all comptroller estimate been probability, at his amo pe the Get Much. reports from in charge National the creditors tution will receive a dividend of from | 18 to 25 Recent that dividend than w Another di be 1 the to the comptroller Examiner affairs of the En- Bank of bank, of th 3r cent. developments received at repudiated of the of Allegheny, e seem will creditors CASES GO 1 fi declared, time S viled insti- | to indi- in but the unable TO CHICAGO Federal Grand Jury at Cleveland Has No Jurisdiction to Indict. The Federal grand jury, investigating cof the interstate anti-railroad rebate laws, adjourned dictments. rected particularly without which has alleged violations commerce laws and at Cleveland bringing any in- The investigation was di- ard Oil Company railroad. is The failure to return indictments, it | stated, wa officially and the Lake Shore S d ite’ to fact that the court was without juris- diction of the of the evidence secured is ferred to the Federal officials at Chi- cago, where the cases are cuted. cided to purchase December 1, | 000.000 in five per cent bonds, redeem- ! It is believed that | disturbed able in five years. alleged offenses. All to be trans- to be prose- Japan Will Buy Six Railways. The Japanese government six the market will not be | the transaction. I ady paying for has de- railways by | them 3125,- by Death of Lady Curzon. Curzon, the former | been il 18th | from | castl { weather tack zon | of the J. in wa of 1 for st. her e, Kent, late i $3,000,000 in the last bre SEN viceroy of some She never serious in 1904, an wht ig Pierpont for thr Morgan of Kedleston, India, died on quite pa days illnes on intings mont SS d ti 13. wife of who had the recovered | at Walmer paid 31 more recent hot ounced at- l.ady Cur- dang r i ago. nic than 1d antiques | looted the Monast | $17,000 | fastened to the ties and the train was | Not | Rin- | receive | as expected a idend will, to against the Stand- | . the | Rostoff, Province of Yaroslav— Work men killed a cial; Turkish woman murdered after being baptized in Greek Church. Sosniba, Province of menian engineer stoned bank looted. Lublin, Russian man suspected by being a spy, killed. Two cashiers employed by the spirit monopoly, urdered and robbed. Spirit shops are throughout Poland. In Moscow the and Poland —Working- m being looted of the Nativity, in cash, jewels and sacred relics of great value being carried off. Six guard regiments, 26 line, seven | cavalry, six artillery and five sapper regiments are more or less affected | by the revolutionary propaganda, ac- cording to a report made by investi- gators. From Berlin comes the report of an attempt o assassinate the Grand Duke Viadimir. According to the story, had arranged to travel from Frank- tort to Paris at night by the express which passes through Coblenz, and an | attempt was made to wreck the train | between Coblenz and Trier. A watchman found heavy metal ob- | structions laid across the rails and stopped just in time. The grand | duke was not on board, having taken | another route. An order has been issued by the czar declaring forfeited the colors presented to the Seventh reserve cav- alry regiment on April 4, 1904. * This is the regiment which mutinied in Tamboff on July 9 last, barricaded it- self in its barracks and defied loyal troops sent against it. It surrender- ed on July 11 and expressed contri- tion for its conduct. The assassin of General Kozloff, has not yet been captured. Neither has his identity been established. He is said to be a Hebrew. The bill of the lower house of par- llament, which was adopted by the upper house, appropriating $7,500,000 for famine relief, has been approved ! by the czar. Partial or total failure of the grain | crop is reported from many pro- inces. In some provinces peasants have driven nobles from their estates, | saying they would harvest the crop themselves. Chief of Police Martinoff, while | | driving in the street of Tiflis, was| i mortally wounded by a bomb. His | log and arm were blown off. The bomb was thrown from the Georgian Nobles school. M. DMartinoff was | much hated on account of the s itv of the measures he adopted putting down meetngs and for | maltreatment of natives. | — in BRAZIL. WELCOMES ROOT Secretary of State Reaches Para and | Receives Message of Welcome. The navy department has received a | from nouncing the Root and his cablegram Para, Brazil, an- safe arrival of Secretary party at that city on the United States cruiser... Charleston. Upon his arrival at Para, Mr. Root | received the following dispatch from Baron Rio Branco, the Brazilian min- ister of foreign affairs. “At the moment of ing on Brazilian shore, pleasure 1 send your excellenecy cordial reeting of the go at and to express conviction that your vo) | South America will be of great bene- i fit to the interests of our continent.” 1 have the Brazilian my deep ge around cated dissolving ment and fixing the time for two districts the police went on | to | province— | government offi- | Sosniba—Ar- | shot; | revolutionists of | revolutionists have ! he | ver- | the | your first land- | great | An imperial ukase has been promul- | the Russian parlia- the 2) — HOT SPRINGS BECOME HOTTER Columns of Smoke From the Lava Fields and Other Volcanic Mani- | festations Are Reported. Earthquake shocks numbering bee | tween 50 and 60 have practically | made ruin of the town of Socorro, 160 | miles north of El Paso, Tex. No loss of life is reported. E. M. Fink, a cattle buyer, who came in from Socorro, declares he | was sitting at dinner at the Winckler hote! on Monday when the entire side wall of the dining room fell in and guests and waiters scattered in every direction. The people are in a pan- | ic, and all who can do so are leaving | the town. | There is a crater of what is thought | to be an extinct volcano not more | than eight miles from Socorro and the | inhabitants think that perhaps the | volcano has something to do with the | i remarkable series of shocks. - Water.in the hot springs at Socorro has increased over 10 degrees in tem- perature and it is thought that this furnishes a new evidence of internal upheaval which is of a local nature | and that the earth is disturbed at great depth in the immediate vicinity - of the town. The National railroad sent box cars into the town to take the people away. Many are going to Santa Fe and Albuquerque. Observers reported thin spirals of smoke in the lava fields in the direc- tion of Alamo Gordo, probably from hot sprngs or other volcanic mani- | festation. A drenching rain passed i over the valley adding to the discom- | fort of campers. MEDIUM ARRESTED | Councilmen = Charge Woman With “Predicting Future Events.” Mrs. Celia Crawford, a spiritual medium if Pittsburg has been arrest- ed in Charleroi, Pa., on information made by several members of the bor- ough council charging her with vio- | lating a state law by ‘‘telling fortunes and predicting future events.” For several years past Mrs. Craw- ford has been well known in all the | Monongahela valley towns, having | made it a practice to journey from [town to town in a houseboat accom- panied by, her husband. They carry a tent which they pitch on the riverside {and hold spiritualistic seances in it in the evenings and on Sundays. Mrs. Crawford also gives readings in the boat. She gave bail for $500 and states her intention of fighting the | ‘case. MINERS ACCEPT TERMS Hard Fight Against Open Shop and Arbitration. The organized miners of District No. 2, embracing. all the soft coal | counties of Central Pennsylvania, will | return to work according to the terms of the settlement signed by the lead- ers at Harrisburg on June 13. Delegates representing all the locals of the district met in convention at Clearfield, Pa., and after discussing the matter decided to accept the set- tlement by a vote of 377 to 242. The opposition to the provisions | conceding ‘‘open shop” and arbitra- | tion of local troubles was bitter and | vigorous, and it reauired all the elo- | quence of National Secretary-Treas- urer W. B. Wilson and District Presi- dent Gilday to win the convention over to the concessions. The Wool: Market. The improved conditions shown | in the wool market are a distinct en- | couragement to the trade. A hopeful | symptom is the disposition on the part of the Western wool growers to accept fair prices for their clips. The | finer grades of pulled wool are in | best demand and a fair business is | being done. Territories are moder- y active. Foreign grades are steady. Leading quotations follow: | Ohio and Pennsylvania XX and above, {33 to 34c: X, 31 to 32c; No. 1, 37 to No. 2, 37 to 38¢; fine unwashed, | 25 to 26c; one-fourth blood unwashed, 32 to 33c; three-eighth blood, 23c; one-half blood, 32c¢c; unwashed, 32 to three-eighth blood, CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. 29 - 33c; Henry | feller Rogers and William Rocke- resigned as trustees of the Mu- tual Life Insurance Company. John A. Aylward of Madison, Wis., announced himself as Democratic candidate for Governor of Wisconsin. Armistice between Guatemala and Salvador was arranged and peace commissioners will negotiate on the | cruiser Marblehead. | | The Russian cruiser Novik, which was so badly damaged by two Jap- anese cruisers August 21, 1904, that she sank off Cape Enduma, Sakhalin, has been floated. During a severe storm that swept the Virginia coast, the battleship Rhode Island was in collision with the Norwegian steamer Guernsey. Both vessels are said to be badly damaged. The Buddhists and Shintoists in Tokyo have decided to contribute to- ward the rebuilding of the Christian i convocation of the newly elected as- | places of worship which were de- | sembly as March 5, 1907. | stroyed hy a mob some time ago. i ee ee Mrs. J. Samuel Piza, wife of a New Peace terms agreed on by Central York business man, who jumped from | American countries provided for ar- @ window on the sixth flcor of the bitration of future difficulties by preési- dents of United States and Mexico. MORE SMALLPOX AT COLON Eleven New Cases Renorted,: but Hotel Touraine, -Boston, . effects of her injuries. A dispatch from St. Petersburg says in view of political considerations necessitating his presence in Russia, died from the no | Emperor Nicholas has abandoned his Americans Are Infected. | intended tour abroad and informed « i) Smperor Willi i Eleven new cases of smallpox nif} BOO William iq that effect. | Colon were reported to the Washing- | 3 oo fvosmsiony brick hutiding ees ton office of the canal commission by Poa a1 by thie wholesale fm or Governor Magoon. One new Joey of | ta ¥1 . i £ fetiog hot at) Avalon, ras struck by jnfeation has piso developed, THe 10= nye thot di 2200 FA tal number of. cas now is 9 i : a vis Sarah Bernt has been decorates No Americans ve the di : : : Tab thore 1 2a ’ » and | with the Cross of the Legion of Hor co fi sve has heen no de wal 3 . yay Thove Nas Soen ho deaths. No |gfter years of agitation on the ques- cases xist In the isthmus outside of | tion whether that distinction could be | Colon. i | conferred on her. for 2c bos plo Weg leti fro: Na sci Ww hov life son Gra tite the no tert istr tho alm usis tim on | imy lost new 1208 gre Nut fool reb and by or Gra nig son give in j mal fam We
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers