HE & GAIN MADE IN MEMBERSHIP RTHOUARE DAMAGES | = oom SOUTH MERIC CITY 225 xr e following officers were chosen : : | at the annual meeting of the Grand Disaster Falls upon Valparaiso | Army of the Republic at Minneapolis: With Terrible Effect. | Cammander-in-Chief R. B. Brown, | Zanesville, O.; Senior Vice Comman- | der, William H. Armstrong, Indianap- SHOCK WAS FOLLOWED BY MANY | olis; Junior Vice Commander, E. B. | Fenton, Detroit; Chaplain-inChiet mr ! Archbishop John Ireland, St. Paul; The Disturbance Was General Surgeon General, W. H. Johnson, Throughout Chile and Was Felt Lincoln, Neb | The strongest : opponents of Mr. in Argentine Republic. P . { irown for commander-in-chief were ima | C. G. Burton of Missouri, and Cap- At 7:02 o'clock last Thursday even- | tain P. H. Coney of Kansas. Both of ing Valparaiso, Chili, experienced an | these withdrew when it was seen that earthquake of great severity , and the election of Mr. Brown was a cer- during that night 82 shocks were tainty... Brown was then chosen by felt. | acclamation. Several candidates Most of the buildings of the city | Were nominated for senior and junior either were ruined or damaged. The | Vice commanders, but at the last in- loss will be enormous, probably stant ail withdrew in favor of Arm- reaching $250,000,000. strong for the senior position, and Two thousand persons killed is |Fenton for the junicr place, and both of | men were chosen unanimously. Arch- bishop Ireland had’ no rivals for chap- lain-in-chief. considered to be a fair estimate the casualties. Most of the damage was due to fire, which started imme- diately after the first shock. The The new commander-in-chief of the whole population is sleeping in the | Grand Ariny R. B. Brown, was born in hills, the parks or the streets. | 1845, and has always lived in Ohio. The towns of Vina del Mar, Petor- He enlisted in the Fifteenth Ohio In- | ca, Elerrho, Viejo, Llai Llai, and |fantry at the age of 16 years, and Secupallar, Chile, have been destroy- Served in the Fourteenth Army Corps ed the earthquake. in the Army of the Cumberland until | In the city of Santiago much dam- he was mustered out in 1864. He age was done. Many public build- | then re-enlisted as a veteran soldier, ings, particularly churches, were dis- and served as such until the end of He was a private through- mantled. The buildings of Congress, | the war. the municipal buildings, the normal out the first three years of his serv- | ice, and then became a non-commis- sioned officer. He has always been active in the work of the Grand Army. Mr. Brown is now editor of Courier. school the courts, the Peruvian lega- tion, the resitence of President Ries- co, the central market, the prefec-| ture of police and the National tele- graph office all were seriously dam- | the Zanesville aged. In his annual address, Commander- A message from Buenos Ayres in-Chief Tanner said, among other avs: | things" The disturbance was general “Notwithstanding the fearful inroads throughout Chile and was felt at some | of death upon the comrades of the points in the Argentine republic. | Grand Army of the Republic, the or- News of the disaster is extremely ganization to-day, is 3,500 stronger meager owing to the fact that tele- than at the cncampment in Denver graph communication is cut off, the | last year.” shocks having thrown down the tele- | graph lines. port gives the total membership of The shocks seriously affected the |the Grand Army as 235,823, an in- towns of Rosaria Aranas, Rio Ja San | crease of 3,368 during the last six L.uis and Tucuman. months. From the few details obtainable it| year ended December 31, 1905, were appears that there were five shocks, | 9,205, or 3.90 per cent of the total the disturbance passing south ‘along | membership. the Pacific coast and crossing the! Judge Advocate General C. L. Clark Andes. The shocks were severe ac- | submitted a synopsis of the decision cording to the registration of the seis- | prepared by him during the last year. mograph instruments. The \property | Among them is this one: loss is enormous. Many houses were “Members of the Pennsylvania mil- thrown down including government | itia who served during the emergen- houses. | ey of the Gettysburg campaign are During the night the volcano of | eligible for membership in the G. A. the Tupungato was heard roaring and | R.” the people fled to the churches to | The Grand Army of the Republic pray for safety. At San Juan de | completed its fortieth encampment Andes high winds accompanied the | and adjourned to meet in Saratoga, shocks. IN. ¥., in 1907. CANNON RENOMINATED MANY EARTHQUAKES IN CHILE Valparaiso Was Wined Out by Seismic Disturbance—An | Important City. | . Valparaiso is a fortified seaport of | Was Chile and is the most important com- | eighteenth mercial town on the western coast | ponullican of South-America. It is situated on | + (1o miohteenth President Also. tional house of term in congress by congressional Illinois miles northwest of Santiago. | gates setting forth their nearly 1,700 feet ascends from the | y « sider “ti o | bay and 5 considerable poriton of the | ty for president of the United States city is built on these heights. The| "4, ‘jovnote sounded by lower central section of the city 18! cnunon In his stated Tos constituted by the Almendral, with | convention A es pat.’ are the principal business houses, | Sy ar ? a 5 raised the te f i ; regular and attractive streets, where I he tariff of the Dingley bil the city park, Plaza Victoria, and Na- only when revision would tional Theater. Northwest of this | i gection is the quarter known as the So) un harm to the great mass of puerto or port. There are the great- | = Sol a ie i i { ——— a — . er number of public buildings and | EXPLOSIONS KILL 15 the vast warehouses which line the quays and docks. The newer sections of the city liave an attractive modern appearance, the business section being massively built. Its industrial establishments | the Second Disaster—All the Victims Mexicans. . Twelve persons, two women, chine shops, sugar refineries, brew- eries, distilleries, large bottling | All the victims were Mexicans. works and various factories. | Two cars of dynamite were blow The population of the city in 190 |to atoms. A. L. Lewis, an America was 142,282. | employed by Earthquakes are of common occur- Company, was injured. sion were annihilated. This explcsion caused tral and northern regions. Valparaiso itself has been a severe sufferer from such more than one occasion. More than a score of great terres- tial upheavals have been recorded in Chilean annals. In 1570 the city of * La Concepcion was destroyed with a | loss of 2,000 lives; in 1647 Santiago. the capital, was overwhelmed and = 1,000 lives were lost. The terrible earthquake two blocks away. of this factory three persons wounded. The factory was wrecked. of 1730 Concepcion and Coquimbo, and every THAING CRASH TOGETHER Seven l.ose Their Lives in Rail- road Wreck at Sang Hollow. FIRE ADDED TO THE HORROR Rescuers Begged to End Sufferings by Immediate Death—Orders Were Disregarded. Plunging through a: blinding rain- storm at the rate of 45 miles and hour a fast freight train on the Pennsyl- vania railroad at 5 o’clock in the Adjutant General Tweedale in his re- | The losses by death for the | = in 1730 | The Convention Endorses Him for | Joseph G. Cannon, speaker of the representatives, s renominated unanimously for an the convention Do dis NE Yo district. a large bay in the Pacific ocean {2 | Credentials were voted by the dele- 3 tov: Af ta unanimous An amphitheater of heights rising | jf (hat Speaker Cannon is the fit- | test candidate of the Republican par- Speaker address to the He and said the tariff should be revised do more Thirty Factory Employes Injured in two | comprise foundries, railroad and ma- children and eight men, were killed in a dynamite explosion at Chihuahua. the Robinson Mining Several steel rence in Chile, especially in the cen- cars and all buildings near the erplo- another ex- disturbance on |plosion in the Andrescobelite factory, In the explosion were blown to pieces and 30 others were The shocks were felt over the entire city. { POWER PLANTS CHANGE HANDS | morning crashed into a wrecktrain | at Sang Hollow. As a result seven and seven seriously probably fatally. | The dead:George W. Meade, | poleon street, Johnstown, watchman | on the wreck train, crushed to death; | Edward Stevens, Mike Todish, Miliny Patish, Miliny Mokure, Tanko Srei- moe, Tanko Samuli, all of Cone- maugh. - The Conemaugh work train was called out to clear away a collision west of Sang Hollow. When this work had been completed the train | started for home, but stopped at a plug to take water. The Fort Wayne freight No. 2, loaded with perish- able goods and in charge of Engineer Woods and Conductor Martin Lego was stopped by signal at ““NR’’ tower | east of Seward and given orders to deliver to another freight crew. The | orders were carried out according to instructions and the freight con- tinued on its way. When Engineer Woods approached the water pans he | Increased the speed of his train so | he could scoop the water into the tender, despite the fact he had been ordered to run under a green block until the wreck train was out of his way. ; Woods, owing to the heavy rainfall at that time, did not see the work | train until he was almost upon it. He | jumped, receiving injuries which will | probably result in death. His fireman stuck to the engine and was not in- dead three men are injured, Na- | jured. | © With terrific force the engine crashed into the wreck train. All of | the killed were asleep and never | knew they had been struck. The engine piowed its way through the wreck ‘cars as though they were pa- per. In a minute the cries of the wounded, the burning cars, the over- | turned engine and the sound of es- | caping steam combined to make the | morning hideous. The crew of the | freight made a gallant effort to res- | cue the men from the cabin car, but | it was several hours before entrance | could be gained. Four men were | dead when taken out. George Meade died while being taken to the 'hos- pital and Edward Stevens, and Miliny | Patish died soon after being admitted | to the institution. [Ae A NEW POSTAL CARD 1 | Designs Have Been Decided on for Card Different from Present One. G. A. R. HOSTS MARCH Thinning Ranks of Veterans March to | Music They Heard in the Days of °61. For the fortieth time since, their work was finished and their glory won, the men of the Grand Army of the Republic were in line at Minne- apolis, Minn. Never was a parade more appealing and impressive. The parade was notably well-han- dled, quick-moving and inspiring. Countless flags. snapped in the breexe and the soldiers passed for miles be- tween buildings gorgeously decorated. The day was ideal. Several sharp showers . during the night dispelled the oppressive heart of the day before and a soft, cool breeze swept over the city, The parade formed at 9 o'clock and moved exactly an hour later. At the head of the column was a splendidly mounted platoon of police, the ling filling the streets frem curb to curb. Next came the chief marshal of the parade, . former Governor Van Sant, and his chief of staff, General Fred B. Wood, adjutant general of Minne- sota and then with their formation superbly kept throughout, the entire parade, came the first old soldiers, | the Columbia post, of Chicago, acting as the personal escort of, Commander- in-Chief Tanner. Behind Columbia post came Com- mander-in-Chief Tanner mounted on a spirited and handsome steed and attended by his personal staff. Following the officers of the organ- ization, rank on rank, came the men of the grand army. The States march- ed in order of their admission to the organization, Illinois having the right of the line, followed by Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Ohio and New York in| the order named. Twenty other States followed these. { Thomas A. Martin, senior vice com- | mander of the department of the Fo- tomac, became ill while marching in the parade and died while being re- moved to the emergency hospital. Colonel Charles W. Keeting, of New Orleans, for 10 years commander of the department of Louisiana and Mississippi, after heading their divi- the heat and exhaustion and died an hour after reaching a hospital. Brooklyn Transit. One girl is- dead and another badly injured as the result of assaults and ejectments from the cars of the effort to collect the additional five- cent fare to Coney Island which Jus- tice Gaynor has declared illegal, and additional payment are still subjected to violence and brutality. passengers from assault are now aid- Fisherman have found and creek, the first tragedy of “bloody Sunday,” when they came upon the body of Miss Fannie Rodin- ski, the daughter of a rabbi of Brook- The postoffice department is about lyn. to issue a new postal card. 5 Designs | for it have been passed upon by Third | ion Edna Sininger, had been thrown | | A-sistant Postmaster Genera: Madden | from a car by inspectors in spite of you, who is expected to Washington nexts month. the one now in ordinary use. the late President McKinley on face and tbe usual inscription. ‘change will b2 in which it is printed. wants something similar harmonious in character card now in use.. _ type used will be different. and the final selection of the design |the fact that they had paid double rests with Postmaster General Cortel-! fares. return to £ The new | Island, card will nct be very different from Fannie Rodinski was knocked off by | walk to the the trestle They then tried to ~nd in crossing It will have a medall’on head of| body when found was covered with | 1t8 | bruises. indicating that she had bee The | roughly the manner in| struck by the train. The department | ELE — end more | ‘than the The size of the | ap erican handled before she was . Uncle Joe on Black List. President Samuel Gompers of the ! Federation of Tabor has | put Uncle Joe Cannon on his black list, but the fact does not seem to NEGRO RIDDLED WITH BULLETS yj, worrying the speaker in the least. Contrary to showing any anxiety, Mr. : = ; | | Mob: Waited Til} Governon's Speech | cannon intends to point out what he Was Ended Before Acting. A Governor D. C. Heyward, who went t n de a negro girl, 14 years lynched at Greenwcod, S. an -effort to prevent the lynching. | Governor vociferously bullets. riddled him with NEWS NOTES. 3 : | = | wiped out Valparaiso, L.a Senena, La New York Concerns Bought by Pitts | oo he- | burg Reduction Company. | John H. Rothermel, of Reading, Pa. ! Within the shadow of the home of | attitude toward ‘his victim, Jennie Brooks, after hav- Republicans who have ling been identified by her, and after animosity The speaker is on the federation’s the scene of the trouble, had address- influ- ed the mob in vain, “Bob” Davis, the ; ence in the house in preventing the negro who murderously attacked Miss | Brooks, and who arterward maltreat- a old, was C. At the conclusion of his speech the cheered. | the fallacies of Gompers’ himself and other incurred the federation. considers of the 0 blacklist because he used his more stringent eight-hour tracts. Governor Heyward reached the scene shortly after the negro had been To Wipe Out Pulajanes. captured. He addressed the mob in Yovernor Ide returned to Manila after a conference at Tacloban Colenel Taylor, of the constabulary The presidentes promised to support the ex Gov the American authorities in | termination of the Pulajanes. ernor Ide has decided to commission consisting of | wounded. | large number of arrests were made. | been created in St. Petersburg by the | guardsmen was | Nevski sion in the parade was overcome by | repeated it DOUBLE FARE CAUSES TRAGEDY | cavalrymen Body of Girl Found Undsr Bridge of | squadron and gave the command to Brooklyn Rapid Transit Co., in the | | knives by patrons of the road who resist the. * The police instead of prtecting the | ing the road to collect the extra fare. | under the | Culver route trestle over Coney Isl- | The girl with a 12-year-old compan- | a passenger train into the creek. Her | passage of the anti-injunction bill and law as applied to work on government con- Island of Leyte, with Major General appoint a Governor BOMB THROWING CAMPAIGN Number of Russian Police and Soldiers Killed and Wounded. COSSACKS LASH YOUNG WOMAN Brutal Punishment Inflicted Because She had Made a Remark About the Chevalier Guards. Acting apparently with a definite plan and at a signal the terrorist and revolutionists inaugurated a carnival of murderous attacks with bombs and revolvers on the police and troops in various cities in Poland, August 15, echoes of which are heard from Sa- mara, Ufa, Yalta, Kiev and even far- away Chita, where Acting Chief of Police Gorpinchenko was slain almost on his own doorstep. The revolutionist campaign flamed out with especial virulence at War- saw, where over a score were slain in the streets and many more were Among the killed, accord- ing to the latest official advices, were two sergeants of police, eight patrol- men, three gendarmes, five soldiers, a Hebrew merchant and a woman. Policemen and soldiers were shot down like rabbits in the streets. Their assailants, almost all escap- ed among the terrorized, but sympa- thetic populace. The only consider- able capture was a band of 10 men, who had invaded a grog shop and killed a soldier. These were taken by a passing patrol. Cossacks from Poltava perform police duty at refused to Tiflis. A Intense popular indignation has brutal treatment of Mlle. Smirnoff, at the hands of the crack Chevalier guards. While a squadron of these passing along the prospect. Mlle. Smirnoff, who was accompanied by -another voung woman remarked: “They are as gay as if they had captured Port Arthur.” Pedestrians, hearing the remark. and quite a crowd joined in the jeering. The ccmmander of the suddenly wheeled his Mlle. were drawn whips. companion charge with Smirnoff and her captured and taken to the barracks, where troopers, in the presence of two officers, administered to Mlle. Smirnoff 27 lashes with their whips. DEMANDS OF PERSIANS Practical Abolition of Real Power of the Shah. According to advices received from Teheran, the complete demands of the Involve Progressives far surpass the scope of the reforms proposed by the Persian government. These demands involve the prac- tical abolition of all the real power of the shah, leaving him only a figure- head ,and even propose the abroga- tion of the so-called “divine law’ on which his authority is based. They provide also that the national as- sembly shall have competence in all questions of state and that the min- isters shall be bound to put its de- cisions into immediate effect and that the ministers and officials shall be re- sponsible to the assembly, which can demand their dismissal. The conditions further include com- plete amnesty; freedom of the press “in order that the shah may learn nothing but the truth’; the enact- ment of a new code and the right of habeas corpus. MORE ICE MEN INDICTED Seventeen Boston Comnanies and Dealers Charged With Conspiracy. Secret indictments against 17 ice dealers and six ice companies, which were returned by the Suffolk county, (Mass.) grand jury, were made pub- lic in the superior court. The ice dealers are charged with having un- lawfully conspired “to regulate, ad- vance and fix the price of ice for public sale,” and the ice companies are charged as corporations with con- spiracy. The dealers indicted include Presi- dent Lewis G. White of the Massa. chusetts Ice Dealers’ association, and Secretary Charles Hallustrum of the association. The companies indicted are the Boston, Independent, Union, Fresh P. Cambridge and Hamlin Co- operatives. The dealers when ar- raigned pleaded not guilty and were held in bonds of $1,000 each.” 4 OVERPRODUCTION OF GLASS % Western Association. Vote to Delay Resumption of Autumn Work. At a special meeting of the West- ern Glass Association in Chicago, a resolution was adopted declaring for a delay in the resumption of autumn work in all glass factories in the United States. : Acocrding to John Shroeder of De- triot, who presided at the meotino there has been an over-production and in order to prevent a falling off in prices the stock now on hand will The girl’s clothing was cut as if by the wire thongs of her flesh was horribly Her recovery is doubtful. whips, and | lacerated. | iE | WILL Government Will Take a Hand in the ice Sauabble at Toledo. Clover I.eaf of which Chairman | Shonts of the Panama commission is president, is to be investigated by the interstate commerce commission. | The investigation is being made at | the request of the president, to whom | complaint has been made that the Clover Leaf, in common with other | Toledo lines, has been discriminating and giving rebates in making rates on ice. The investigation which begins at | Toledo, O., promises to be one of ex- | traordinary interest. Already 45 wit- | nesses have been summoned and papers have been issued for 15 or 290 | others for whom the United States deputy marshals have sought for in vain for over a week. It is thought some of the most prominent Toledo railway officials have taken up at least a temporary residence in clutches of the commission. POPE REJECTS FRENCH LAW Objects to the Lay Management of Ecclesiastical Affairs. The principle of the submission of the management of church affairs to lay organizations, as provided for un- der the French law for the separation of church and state, is unhesitating- ly rejected by Pope Pius X in bis in- structions to the French clergy for | their guidance under the new regime. | The important document outlining | The regular quarterly dividend of 2 the | | the course to be followed by French clergy was issued August 14 Its form leaves open the possibility for an understanding to be reached | holders of record August 15. in the near future on the basis of the | the | INVESTIGATE RAILROADS With the other Toledo railways, the | Canada to escape the interstate commerce | have to be disposed of before the fac- | tories commence operations for the | fall and winter trade. TELLER IS $100,000 SHORT. Return From Vacation Arrested With Him. | Confesses on —Brokers Alexander R. Chisholm, paying | teller of the First National bank of { Birmingham, Ala, was arrested charged with the embezzlement of $97,000 ~¢ tha bank’s funds. During the afternoon W. L. Sims and C. M. Hays, manager and assist- ant manager of one of the chief stock and cotton brokerage houses in Bir- mingham, were arrested charged with aiding and abetting the embezzle- ment of National bank funds. They were released on bonds. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. Mrs. Craigie, better known as Jahn Oliver Hobbes, the authorist, died suddenly in London of heart failure. William Jennings Bryan has issued an answer to the refusal of Ro-e Sullivan to resign from the national | committee. | Supt .Edwards of the Pittsburg bu- | reau of health is taking every pre- caution to prevent the spread of ty- phoid fever, which has now reached the epidemic stage. A riot occurred at Ciclana, Spain, over local taxation. The mayor and | an alderman was stabbed. Civil guards fired on the rioters, wounding several persons. we Frank E. Grimes, former State Treasurer, of Kansas stated that he was willing to pay $7,000 into the State Treasury and compromise the chorges in the expert’s report of an alleged shortage. per cent has been declared on the’ stock of the North Pennsylvania Rail- road Company, payable August 25 to In a fit of insanity Emil Berner, a - | complete sevnaration of church and | mechanic of Batavia, Ill, murdered was i a Tou |The mob then removed the prisoner Wood. Brigadier General Lee, Gov from the view of the Governor and ernor Deveyra, 15 presidentes and , state. Boston Wool Market. The wool market shows also that ine coming season will improve- | ‘ ment. the conservative trade holding | In e a9 be | clared a quarterly dividend of $2 a his brother-in-law, Ernest Franzen, slashed. Mrs. Berner so severely that she will die and then cut his own throat, dying in a few minutes. The North Butte Company has de- town and village on the coast . ! 2 . ] je : tween La Concepcion and Coquimbo. The Pittsburg Reduction Company was nominated for congress by the! vovra, Brigadier General Lee, Col- marked by steadiness. It is stated share, piven. Seber 20 to stock In 1835 La Concepcion was again has cbtained absolute control of the | Democrats of the Thirteenth Penn- "mo "1d three presidentes to | that only a few mills have a fair | Of recor eptem er 19. ome stock- raed and five oiher siyjes were lev- ‘extensive el circ power facilities at | sylvania : , Lisit the disaffected districts and sunply of 3% Tansy tot Mon- | i had looked for an increased eled to e ground. her serious | is 1 Vv BAAD | Twenty-six thousand miners at hold ti of the town 1 « | tana is said to be cleaned up, w ! Su-o0, Sains : t ~|Mnszena, N. ¥. The c par bought | J ! hold meetings 0 W CONNCLS kr Wi i seismic disturbances occurred in 1837, Fei oF 2 > Y a wt yy Abertillery Wales, struck owing to to impress the people with the neces- the exception of five to seven million | Announcement vas made from 1851 and 1871. je can at Cc the employment of non-union work- sity of co-operation pounds. Territories are in fair de- | Jamestown Exposition headquarters Valparaiso itself was the scene of Loi DH al ne Lill men in the mines. mien mand. A good business is dene in | a he Naga Bint Dont ha i oF : : n | y, capite ,000; e . Law- | . . : 3 tes, wW eadquarters olorado earthquakes in 1822, 1829 and 1851. El Water Company, capital $100, North Carolina’s governor has in- Student Interpreters Wanted. pulled Joos Tg foreien grades are nan Colo. a0 old wi 1907. ‘con — | structed the sheriffs and militiamen, Examinations will be held at the steady. gading quotations follow; ! vention in Norfolk, Va., the date yet 1000. snd the Massena Electric Light of the state that the latter are to fire State Department at Washington, Oc- Ohio and Pennsylvania, XX and above to be fixed. Fatal Fight Among Miners. '!& Power Company, capital $50,000. 34 25e¢: X. 31 to 32¢; Np. 1 ( One man is dead; one is severely! The Pittsburg company recently upon mobs whenever it is necessary tober 1 to szlect six student interpre- > Kay 5 a8 : 2 : 2 > 20 The belief of the people of the beaten about the head and shoulders; puichas:d the St. Lawrence River to enforce the laws and prevent lynch- ters to serve in the American consu- ° 1 os Bo: to 57 ited 2s an South in the unwritten law was evi- Ame is a captive in the hands of strik- Power Company, which owns the ings. ilar service in Javan, and one interpre- Nashee 03 ? f° ne th 008 4 Erik | depced at New Orleans when Peter ing union miners, and. a fourth has canal be'ween the St. Lawrence and Charles E. Browne, former examin’ ter for the service in China. Under oa e neni 2 ao aroo CIB | yronales’ acquittal of the charge of disappeared—all as the result of a Grasse rivers, now daveloping 35,000- er of silks in the government customs the dip’omatic conzular act passed by Slood-£ unwashed.» DS 290, -9 | murder of his faithless wife and the . collision between union and non-un- horsepower, with tn= ultimate capac- service in New York city, was order- the last Congress sixteen student in- Frm | serious shooting up of her faithless The dividend on the common stock | jon miners of the Creighton mines of the Pittsburg Plate Glass Company at Kiskiminetas Junction on the West Penn railroad. ity of 150,000 horssrower. The Pittsburg lons. Alcoholism a2 Disease. Physicians of Washingt'n testifi Acting under instructions cabled ; from England, John P. O'Brien a lab- the death of H. Reduction Company is controlled in Pittsburg by the Mel- before the Police Tr al B-ard, which ed released from Sing Sing prison by Judge Hough of the United Stat court on a writ of habeas corpus. For the first time in its history the es | East, and there are in the ccrps. SHORTAGE OF MILLION common stock of the Southern Pa- cific Railroad received a dividend of rr edit ner cont Stensland's Career Most Remarkabl J.ounis Foltz of Milwaukee, the man 4 in History of Banking. Bank Examiner Jones, in a repoi terpreters are provided fcr in the Far seven vacancies creased from 6 to 10 per cent. Reported Websters Speeches. Francis H. Smith, one of the first | official reporters of congressional de- Conn., e t | bates, died at Washington, of the Union Pacific Railroad was in- paramour was greeted with such ap- plause that the court officials had dif- ficulty in restoring order. “Shot Up’ the Town. Evidently angered because of a search made among them for a negro who attacked Mrs. Leon Evans and orer employed in the wrecking of the | jg investigating Plu assauite y ot : : ! > world’s. fair buildings, at St. Louis. Totten, a contractor from Bluefield, he AM i to the state auditor of public ac- | where he was born March 11, 1829. | who. she asserted, was a negro sol- has unearthed an alligator bag con- Ww. Vv. that alcoholism is a dis2ase, {at the county jail from iia ronans counts on the Milwankee Avenue | For many years he had been a bank-| gjor members of a battalion of negro taining jewels valued at $50,000, ‘and should ba treated as such. Conoired in the fight State bank of Chicago, estimates the or, Daniel Webster was one of the Poderal trooos taty a which were stolen from Mr. and Mrs. maa | receive Bit total detalcations through the manip- | first men Mr. Smith reported in Con- ps stationed at Fort ; k | gress, and later he revorted the court- | Brown entered Brownsville, Texas, Kiiled His Baby Brother. P. Henry Clayton of Devonshire, Playing burglar with Eng., during a visit to the Louisiana | Purchase exposition two years ago. i volver, cheeks | years. Claude also shot kissed each other on both { through the hand. when they met at Cronberg. a loaded re- Claude Lanciano, eight years | old, of Philadelphia, shot and killed King Edward and Emperor Willlam | his baby brother, Edmund, aged three In himself Fresh fighting is reported at Loc where the Cossacks are said to ha English residents. the entire Crimea district t peasants have risen against the la | owners and anarchy looted the houses of Americans and iz, | ulation of the affairs of the ian ve | by President Paul O. Stensland to be | Exam- the closing of the $1,000,000 and possibly more. iner Jones rays he | bank was the nd | career, the most cqnsummation of reigns supreme. | history of banking. remarkable in the | Sickles, martial Surratt Another famous Attorney Key. of the Lincoln conspirators | and the subsequent trial of John H. trial he a | covered was that of General Daniel for the killing of District became unruly and fired several vol- leys down Main street. As a result Frank Natus, a barkeeper, is dead, and Policeman Joseph Dominge’s arm and hand were shattered by a bullet. 4 .thos ‘thro tt rays rays tone poor In c your gray the prod whic yellc (like blue tue | irres the the } whit but whit of a uine tion mat Pe the are fres] espe excl exce they * glee] spite suffe It si dwel with slee;j ed ¢ be & obta the payi who of Ili ing vent thei: coun acco fres! Trar In mine Unit 50,0( 75,0( ship: year pens its « expe eral esta’ on i ers taur Tang worl othe
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers