GREETING TOW. J. BRYAN New York Harbor Dotted with Craft Bearing Admirers. { OVATION GIVEN BY THOUSANDS | 1 ee City Filled With Democrats From | Many States, Among Them Being Governors, Senators and Congressmen. da | Receiver of Defunct Trust Company Makes the Charge. Examination of the securities held by the defunct Real Estate Trust Company of Philadelphia developed the fact that Frank K. Hipple, presi- dent of the HIPPLE EMBEZZLED | | who commit- | ted suicide, was an embezzler. The authority for this statement is George H. Earle, Jr., receiver for the trust company. Mr. Earle declined to say what securities are missing, but he declared that Hipple had hypothe- cated $65,000 worth of the paper, se- | | 1 institution, curing $50,000 for the securities, Unparalleled in the recent history of | which he never returned. the port of New York was the wel- | come extended William J. Bryan, who | returned on board the steamer | Prinzess Irene from his tour of the old world. He arrived at Quarantine at | precisely two minutes after 3 o'clock | p. m. Sirens from every craft with-'| in the eyesight gave him a rousing | welcome. And the Nebraska “home | folks.” who had gone down the bay | to meet him, shouted heartily. | Mr. Bryan did not enter New York as was at first planned. He was tak- en off the ship at Quarantine on the private vacht of Louis Nixon. After landing at Stapleton, Staten Island, | Mr. Bryan, his wife and daughter were | at once driven in an automobile to Mr. Nixon's home. Here Mr. Bryan spent the night, the evening being devoted to a conference with intimate personal friends and men of prominence in his party. No especial political significance was at- tached to the conference by those who | attended it, and who declared its pur- | pose was merely to learn Mr. Bryan's | wishes regarding the plans which have | been made for him during the next few | weeks. and to acquaint him with the | drift of affairs at home. NEARLY MOBBED BY THE CROWD Twenty Thousand People Shout Them- Hoarse at Madison Square Garden. William Jennings Bryan's entry into New York was a series of ovations, | beginning with his landing at the Battery at 4 o’clock and reaching an early climax when he arrived at the Victoria hotel, and hour later. | Here the home-coming Nebraskan was fairly mobbed by the thousands of persons who had gathered outside the hotel entrances and the hundreds who had forced their way into the corridors. Such a welcome as seldom in this country’s history has been accorded | a private citizen was given to Mr. Bryan at Madison Square garden in | the evening. As the guest of the Commercial Travelers’ Anti-Trust league Mr. Bryan was greeted by more than 20 000 persons, who filled the structure from floor to upper gallery. | selves At the same time the streets and avenues outside the garden were | choked for blocks by other thous- | ands who stood patiently for hours for the privilege of even a fleeting glance at the distinguished visitor. The interior of the garden was a wav- | ing sea of color. Every person in the | audience had been provided with a miniature American flag and every cheer from "20,000 throats was accent- uated by the waving of 20,000 tiny | staffs bearing the stars and stripes. In his speech Mr. Bryan told of his observations while abroad, and | compared the systems of government of other nations with that of our own. Mr. Bryan in concluding this feature of his address, remarked: “14 return home a better American than when I went away.” | He discussed many topics of Na-! tional interest and declared himself | in favor of government ownership of trunk lines, an eight-hour day for | workmen, and arbitration of labor dis- putes. Blind Man Receives Sight. James Wrentzler of Manchester, | Pa., who for several years prior to his | death a few days ago had been to- tally blind, recovered his sight just before his death. Deceased was 69 years of age. Some days ago he suffered two strokes of paralysis and at the second stroke his eyesight re- turned. FIRST REBATE SUITS | that President Hipple embezzled the | George H. Earle to turn all of his real | second | of steel raiis. | nearly $500,000 worth of material for fuse on the canal. P. R. R. Made Defendant in a Suit Asking for $500,000. The first suits for damages for al- leged discrimination and giving of re- bates to favored coal corporations by railroad companies following the re- cent investigation by the Inter-State Commerce Commission, were filed in Philadelphia by nine retail coal deal- ers. more than $500,000, and the Pennsyl- vania Railroad Company is the sole defendant in the concerted legal ac- tions. Reform Spelling Introduced. Superintendent Chancallor of the District of Columbia public schools announced that he would introduce the simplified spelling system alter- natively in the higher grades. The pupils will be given their choice of the old or the new. In ihe lower grades the old system will be continued. John Sparks, Governor of Nevada, was renominated by acclamation by the Democratic State convention. Jewish Children to Be Deported. The case of the 40 Russian Hebrew children. who arrived in New York on the steamship Amerika, was heard by the board of special inquiry at the fmmigrant station on Ellis island, and the board after deliberation decided that the children should be excluded from this country. Accordingly their deportation was orderd. Frost was reported in Towa August 27 for the first time this season. It is not thought that the great Iowa corn crop will suffer. The charges asked aggregate Receiver Earle further declared | $5,000,000 he loaned to Adolph Segal, the promoter. These loans, he assert- ed, were personal transactions. LANDS FOR RUSSIANS Peasants to Be Given a Chance to Buy 4,500,000 Acres. More than 4,500,000 acres, forming part of the crown lands which consist | of 20,000,000 acres including 12,500, | 000 acres of forest lands, are to be | sold under the imperial ukase of August 25 to peasants through the medium of the Peasants’ bank. The lands are mostly situated in the pro-! vinces of Samara, Saratov and Sim- | birsk. The government has been gathering statistics of the result of the recent | reign of terror. They gave out the figures showing that during the week just past 101 public officials lost their lives. In addition to this 92 gendar- mes, policemen, soldiers and other | public servants, were wounded. Added to this is a total of 291 citi- zens, who either lost their lives or were injured. PROMOTER FRIGHTENED Offers to Turn ail His Property Over to Receiver. Frightened by of criminal prosecution as well as by threats of rumors | bodily harm, from depositors who lost | mgney in the Real Estate Trust Com- pany crash, Adolph Segal of Phila- delphia made a proposition to receiver estate and wildcat schemes into ready cash for the use of the company. In his estimates are included var-! ious properties which he claims to be | worth from $8,000,000 to $10,000,000, but on which Philadelphia bankers de- clare they would not loan a million. | | Mr. Earle flatly declined to entertain the proposition saying that he had an- other plan. Manufacturers Want Surnlus: | Stock Absorbed. The United States Glass Manufact- urers’ Association decided not to start | the fall fire until October 15, to per- | mit the company to absorb the sur- | plus glass on hand. Nearly 1,160 | pots were represented. It was decid-! ed that hereafter each member of the organization be assessed $35 a pot annually and that the money be plac- Glass | ed in the treasury as an evidence of | good faith. A wage committee was appointed | to meet representatives of the unions !in an effort to arrive at some under- | | standing regarding the scale. Astor to Be Made a Baronet. William Waldorf Astor tc ‘report net by King Edward because his son, John Jacob, a subaltern in the life guards, gallantly rescued one of his troopers, who was drown- ing in the Thames at Windsor. The son’s lieutenancy is made perma- nent. The Panama canal commission called for bids for 40 additional mo- aul freight locomotives and 5,000 tons The contract calls for The locomotives are to be used in the dumping work. They will be substituted for the old French engines. PACKERS WILL OBEY LAW Secretary Wilson Reports Meat Plants in Good Condition. Secretary Wilson, of the depart- ment of agriculture, has returned from his trip through the West and North- | He inspected personally many | meat packing plants in various cities, | west. and in a majority of instances found good sanitary conditions. The pack- ers everywhere, he said, seemed dis- i lieves that the majority of the pack- | grammar | posed to meet the requirements of the inspection law without quibble or pro- i test. By October 1 the secretary be- ing plants will have completed their, arrangements for full observance of the new provisions. Railrcads Talk Back. The railroads of Ohio have sent to the state executive committee in ans- | | wer to a request for rates to the Re-! publican ccnvention at Dayton, a let- | ter stating that as the Ohio legisla- ture established a two-cent fare the railroad cculd not be reasonably ask- ed to further deplete their revenues by conceding reductions from this i rate. P. R. R. Mileage. with its announcement sev- azo... the place on In line eral weeks Pennsylvania railroad sale a trans- ferable mileage book at the flat rate of $20. The holder of such 1,000-mile books are privileged to allow mem- bers of their families or persons de- pendent upon them to ride on mile- age from the same book. It is not expected that the passenger rate will on the Pennsylvania before Novem- ber 1. will { ribly | hour, | one of the loyal force says that his men! | cessful. Ossawatomie, according | will soon be made a baro- 214-cent regular | become effective | TROOPS KILL INSURGENTS Cuban Rebels Routed in Battle Near Campo Florido. THE REBELS WERE VICTORIOUS Battle Also Reported in Pinar del Rio; Danger to Travel Growing. In a three-hours’ conflict between 150 rural guards and volunteers and an insurgent band estimated to num- ber 300 near Campo Florido, 20 miles east of Havana, the insurgents were routed. An official report of the fight says the combined forces of Captain Col- lazo’s rural guards and General Re- go’s volunteers, totaling 130, attack- ed 400 rebels, fought two hours and | charged and completely dispersed the enemy, who left 15 dead prisoners. Captain Collazo hurt. One of the prisoners captured says that probably 40 insurrectionists were killed and that many more were ter- slashed with machetes in the charge of the rural guards. Fighting in Pinar del Rio and Ha- vana was reported and the govern- ment forces in the latter province were defeated, but with small loss. The loss in Pinar del Rio has not been announced. The fighting in Havana took place near Calabazar, less than 20 miles from this city. An outpost of 15 rurales was attacked by a force of 50 insurgents. who were well armed. | There was sharp firing for a half when the rurales retired with man wounded. The commander ammunition. still some in the ran out of There is la fighting Cienfuegos. lively DREAM OPENS AN OLD SAFE Man Figures Out Missing Combina- tion in His Sleep. A safe in Allegheny City | which had heen locked for 16 years, has been opened. The last time it was | opened was during the administration of Mayor Richard Pearson. The com- bination had been lost for years. Messenger Willliam Farrell says he dreamed the combination was 16-5-12- 48. Next morning in the presence of Chief Clerk George J. Schad he tried that combination and it proved suc- There was nothing of value ree in the safe. | START FALL FIRE OCTOBER 15 | Insurance Losses Paid. Thirty-five insurance companies out of the 120 involved in the San Francisco disaster have paid in the aggregate $55,193,863.22, to their office records to date. The Royal, of Liverpool, is credited with $3.804,000.41, the Hartford with $2,- 013,705, the New York Underwriters with $3,496,787, the Aetna, of Hart- ford, is down for $3,126,502 and the Liverpool and.London and Globe for $3,721,258. upward of $2,000,000 apiece, while an equal number have exceeded $1,000,- 000. Honor for John Brown. An impressive service was held at Kan., the anniversary of the battle of Ossawatomie, at the monument of John Brown. A chorus of 60 voices sang the ‘“star-Spangled Banner,” the strains of which were taken up by 4,000 spectators. Cavalry- men then drew up in line saluted amid cheers, and the national colors were run up on the flagpole, 80 feet high. Civil Marriages Restored. A royal decree publised In Mad- ria restores the civil marriage for- malities and tion on the part of parties desiring to get married to declare their relig- icn. This is directly oposed to the papal nuncio’s claim and it is expect- ed will arouse a political struggie when parliament reassembles. Six of the Crew Drown. The steamer City of Selkirk arrived at Selkirk, Manitoba, Aug. 29, from the porth end of Lake Winnipeg and reported that the steamer Princess, , with 16 hands on board ran into a rock near Swampy island Sunday night and six of her crew were drown- ed. Those drowned were: Capt. Hawes, Miss Flora MacDonald, stew- | ardess, Miss Johanass, stewardess, | William Grayeyes and two Icelanders. The vessel was engaged in the fish trade. Comer Nominated for Governor. Returns from Alabama’s Demo- cratic primary indicate B. B. Com- er’'s majority for governor will be between 15,000 and 20,000. The re- sult for lieutenant governor is in | doubt, the fight being an open one between H. B. Gray, D. J. Meader and Emmett O'Neal. After taking 434 ballots the Repub- lican conventiom of the 18th Congressional district, adjourned sine die after the adoption of a resolution to refer popular primary vote of the Repub- licans of the district. Three Spanish Ships Bring $103. Three Spanish ships captured Admiral Dewey in Manila Bay, May 1, 1898 were sold by the Navy Depart- ment for $103. The three ships are the Albay, Manileno and Mindanao. They are simply old hulks, practically useless for any purpose of the navy. Announcement is made by | Missouri Pacific Railway Company that it intends to extend the third mortgage 7 per cent bonds of the com- to maturing on November 1, 102 1J08. | pany, {July 1, and three | was | wounded in the arm, but not seriously | guerril- neighborhood of | Hall | according | Six companies have paid suppresses the obliga- Ohio | the nomination back to a | by | the BIG BANK WRECKED Rea! Estate Trust Company Philadelphia Closes Doors— President a Suicide. The Real Estate Trust Company, of Philadelphia, organized in 1885, the depository for nearly $1,000,000 of the funds of the Presbyterian Cliurch, holding $300,000 of the money of the city of Philadelphia ed its doors. The failure was caused by heavy loans made by the late President Frank K. Hipple to Adolf ‘Segal, a promoter, on insufficient security. A desperate effort was made directors through an appeal to Clearing House association, but that body declined to subscribe a guaran- sufficient security. The liabilities are placed at $10.- 000,000, with quick assets of $3,500, 000 and doubtful collateral amounting to $8,000,000. the Finance Company vania, was appointed of receiver, and pressed the hope that he may soon depositors that will better serve their interests and terminate his ser- vices.’ : President garded as but following his sudden death a few days ago an investigation by the di- rectors developed the fact that his loans to Segal had been made re- Hipple was always re- directors of the bank’s Friends of the president express the belief that Segal exercised a notic influence over Mr. Hipple. Persistent rumors that President Hipple committed suicide were borne out when it was authoritatively stated that he took his life at his | home Friday morning, August 24. Mr. Hipple is said to have taken a | dose of laudanum with suicidal in- | tent. While still conscious he filled his bathtub with water and later was found apparently drowned. RESCUED FROM BURNING BOAT | Thinly Clad, They Waited to Be Taken Off Lake Steamer. Twentv-one persons, including the captain’s wife and two little children, were rescued from the burning steamer Charles A. Eddy by the De- troit and Cleveland line steamer City of Mackinaw, off Port Lake Huron. The fire broke out in the | | | 1y that several members of the crew had to break the windows over their bunks and crawl through as the regu- lar means of egress were blocked by | fire and smoke. Captain Elsey's wife was forced to two baby The second fur overcoat and stockings. and the | girls wer almost nude. | mate had on only a | when rescued. AUTOS COLLECT MAIL Place of Larger Cities. Automobiles are to be for one-horse wagons in tion of mail from letter Baltimore . Will Take Wagons substituted the collec- boxes in large cities. is the city in which a contract for collection | wagons will terminate. Two automo- biles will do away with four wagons and will compete experimentally with 15 wagons to be retained. and $175,000 of State deposits, clos- | gardless of proper security and that | he had made false statements to the | condition.’ in! 10], save the Institution by the board of | 1 1500I%, the | | bates from seven tee fund of $7,000,000 because of in- | INDICTME | Total of 6,428 Counts Returned | by Federal Grand Juries. FINES TOTALING $128,560,000 With Jamestown, N. Y., Indictments It Faces Possibility of Paying $131,080,000. In the longest indictment known to the Standard Oil Company was charged by two Federal grand juries at Chicago, with accepting re- railway companies. The charges are contained in 10 dictments, comprising offences. The charges are brought under the in. 6,428 separate » fs, | interstate commerce law and the com- George H. Earle, Jr., president of | Pennsyl- | in a statement to the public he ex- | | fine of from $1,000 to $20,000. be able to recommend a plan to the | a conservative financier, | hyp-! Sanilac, | forward | end of the boat and spread so rapid- | y : no promise of immunity leave the boat clad in a night gown first | Baltitacre is a hilly city and the au- . tomobile collection service will be tested there under somewhat unfav- orable conditions. If it proves suc- cessful the service will gradually be established in other cities. Russia's Death Score. Official statistics of the terrorism of last week show that 101 officials, gen- darmes, police and soldiers were kill- ed: 92 were wounded; 291 private per-: sons were killed or wounded; 34 spir- it shops were plundered; private and individual institutions were robbed of $180,815 and State institutions of $34,981. Besides this there were over 156 armed attempts to rob banks, houses, ete. The Boston Wool Market. The weol market is firm, with fair trading. Large purchases are looked for immediately by the trade with an accompanying revival of interest in the market. Pulled wools are in fair demand. A supers continue to move at 62 toc 64c, while B’s sell at 52 to 55c.. For- eign grades are steady. Leading quotations follow: Ohio and Pennsyl- vania XX and above, 43c; X, 21 to 22 No. 1, 40.10 41e¢: No. 2, 38 to fine unwashed, 25 to 26c: half blood unwashed, 33 to 34c; 2 blood unwashed, 24 to 35¢; quarter blood unwashed, 32 to 33c; delaine washed, 36c; delaine unwashed, 271 to 28c. Cc; 39¢C; 2) Exoress Companies Ask Time. Every one of the carriers under the recently enacted railroad rate law is seeking an extension of time in which to file with the Inter-State Commerce . Commission its schedule of rates pro- vided for by the act. All of them represent to the commission that it has been impossible, thus far to com- ply absolutely with the requirements of the law, because they have not had the time necssary to complete their schedules of rates. O!d Eggs Worked Over. Health of Chicago ered a big factory devoted to the “‘re- processing’’ of malodorous eggs. The establishment officials uncov- closely was Beggs beyond all hope of sale in the markets are mixed in great vats, run wooden rollers, 1 ¢ and sifted and finally shipped baker to s all over the country for | cooking purposes. Owing to the na- ture of the business only the initials | of the firms buying the stuff were put | upon the packages. guarded. | i the deodorized, | | possibility | States the vast pany is liable to be fined from $6, 428,000 to $128,560,000 if convicted of all the offences. The statute fixes the punishment for each offence at a Added to the indictments returned at James: town, N.'Y., the oil trust faces the of paying . the United sum of $131,080,000, as punishment for the offence of mo nopolizing the oil industry, by means of rebates secured from railroad com- panies. All cof the indictments save one, grow out of the shipments of oil from Whiting, Ind., to various points in the | South, Southwest and central portions of the United States. The exception is the indictment charging the com- pany with having accepted a rebate | in the form of cancelation of storage charges at Chicago from the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern. It is charged that the oil trust ac cepted from the seven railroads named net rates upon its oil ship- ments to the South, Southwest and | central sections that were from 12 to 27 cents per 100 pounds less than the rate published by the roads, and charged to other shippers. Each count of the indictment rep- resents the shipment of one car of oil or other petroleum = products from Whiting, Ind. It is shown that on 6.428 cars thus shipped. the Standard paid approximately $847,690 less than its competitors were required to pay on the same shipments. No indictments were returned against the railroad companies. They are the Burlington, Alton & Terre Haute. Illinois Central, Southern and Lalie Shore. Such indictments are likely to come at a later time, and it is stated that was made for the purpose of getting testimony from the roads. Attorney James S. Miller, for the Standard Oil Company, said that his client had not decided as yet what its course would be. PRESIDENT ADOPTS REFORM All Public Papers Will Be Spelled According to the Simplified Forms. President Rooscvelt’s correspond- ence is now spelled in accordance with the recommendations of simplified spelling reform board, which Brander Matthews is chairman. All of them escaped uninjured and Professor were brought to Detroit on the City | of Mackinaw. ed. An official list of the 300 reformed words reached the executive The Eddy was destroy- spelled in accordance. This list will be the official dictionary of the exe- cutive staff henceforth, and when the committee shall add new words to the list its recommendations are im- mediately to be adopted. The President's spelling order re- garding simplified spelling will be ex- tended to all parts of the Govern- ment. 3y his direction all public documents are to be printed with that form of spelling: called by the chief clerks of the various partments a committee was appoint- At a meeting cd to formulate rules for carrying out | the order. HUNDREDS MADE HOMELESS Disastrous Floods Sweep Over Region | of Mazatlan, Mexico. Several hundred persons have been rendered homeless by the disastrous flood which swept over the region about Mazatlan, Mexico, for the last few days. . Twenty days of incessant coast has made the whole lower coun- try a vast sea of water. of the bay have been supplemented bv torrents which poured down from inland. the beach were swept away. A broad boulevard which connected the city with the sea has been destroyed. The losses to sugar planters will be very heavy. Five Skeletons Uncovered. The skeletons of five persons were | found within a radius of 10 feet by | workmen who are laying the water line for the Pennsylvania Railroad Company at New Florence, Pa. It is believed that the remains were those of Johnstown flood victims. They had been covered with several feet of sand. . Eight Killed; 32 Hurt. After a meeting of workmen Yudooka, Russia, which was address- ed by ex-Member of Parliament Michailchenko, shots were fired. Ths resulted in an encounter between the workmen and Cossacks and police, latter firing nine volleys, which killed eight persons and wounded 32. At Carioftcha, near Yenidje, Aug- ust 26, a band of Bulgarians defeated mixed Greek-Turkish band, kill- nine of the latter, including a a ing | Turk. NTS OF STANDARD. the | of | office | and all letters mailed since have been | Public Printer Stillings of | de- | rain | throughout this region of the Pacific | The waters | Scores of houses located on | at | INDICTMENT HAS 126 COUNTS | Standard Oil Company and Railroads | Held by Grand Jury. Two additional indictments were | returned by the federal grand jury, at | Jamestown, N. Y., one against the | Standard Oil Company of New York | and the other against the New York Central railroad. The indictment | against the railroad contains a single { count, failure to file with the inter- state commerce commission the rates lit is claimed the railroad maintained. The indictment against the Stan- dard, however, has 126 counts, each for a specific violation of the law. The charge is the Standard accepted an unlawful discrimination from the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, the New York Central and the Central Vermont railway, in that during the vear 1904 the rate from Olean, N. YX. to Burlington, Vt., was 15 cents per hundred weight, while the rate for like shipments from Bradford, War- ren. Struthers, Clarendon. Oil City and Titusville, Pa., was 33 cents. INSURGENTS INCREASING Government ‘Trcops Ambushed Several Killed. The Cuban Government reports announce that a detachment of the forces of Colonel de Strampes, num- bering 33 men, at Guines, province of Pinar del Rio, were dispatched to dis- lodge the insurgent forces of Colonel Asbert, camped on the hill “Flor de Mayor,” near the town. The insur- gent comraander, having 87 men, sent part of them to the base of the hill, | where they amb ished the Government killing four and capturing one Other renoiis give the number The survivors retir- and forces man. of dead as ine. ed in disorder. Insurgent bands are multiplying in Havana and Pinar del Rio provinces, many small parties having left Havana to join them. All are well armed and | mounted. All the insurgents are re- | ported to be mounted. REBELS DEFEATED | Cuban Government Forces Cut Up Insurgent Band. | At the moment when the govern- | ment was issuing its proclamation of- | fering pardon to rebels who would l1ay down their arms, its forces were dealing the most telling blow that has vet been struck against the insurg- ents. For several days it had been stated that General Gazman’s force of in- surgents, which was variously esti- mated at from 200 upward, contem- | plated an attack on Cienfuegos, | Colonel Valle, with a detachment of | rural guards and volunteers, was dis: patched to engage Guzman. They met and the encounter re- suited in the worst reverse the in- surg ; have yet sustained. They lost 17 men killed and many wounded, while (he loss to the government force wus one man killed. Two High Military Officers Kilied by Russians. True to their promise to continue | the work of assassination till the gov- ernment grants the reforms demand | ed, the Russian terrorists killed two high military officers and attempted the life of a third. The first assassination tool place at | Warsaw, where General Venliarliar- ski, the acting. military governor gen- | eral of the city, was shot to death as {he was driving through one of the main streets. His slayer escaped. Following almost immediately upon this news came tidings that Colonel Riemarn, of the Seminovsky regi- ment, had been murdered at Luga. An attempt was made upon the life of Baron Stahl in the grounds adjoin- ing the palace at Peterhof, but failed. Fatal Boiler Explosion. Harry Mautz was killed and Evan Carter, Ben Johnson and Charles Staker were injured when the boiler in the sawmill of Jacob Staker, near Duncan Falls, O., blew up. The build- ing and machinery were wrecked. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. Captain J. Frank Gregg, who was with Quantrell in the famous raid at T.awrence, Kas., died at his home at | Grain Valiey near Oak Grove, Mo. | ‘Mr. Miyaoka, the Japanese charge | advised Acting Secretary of State | Adee that Japan will open Dalny to the commerce of all nations after | September 1. Four Greek laborers were killed and another man was fatally injured by a Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern train at Symmes, three miles from Love- land, O. Miss Deane, a well-known actress, plaving at a summer. theater at | Williamsport, Pa., fell down an ele- vator shaft at ‘the Park Hotel and was killed. President Roosevelt apointed Basil Miles of Pennsylvania as first sec- retary °F the American embassy at St. Petersburg. Mr. Miles was pri- vate secretary to Ambassador Meyer. | Through the explosion of a boiler a locomotive of the New York Central near Little Falls, N. Y., two persons were killed. The dead are Chris. Wagner, engineer, and Fireman Hall. : Japan has entered into a compact ; with the Diamond Match Company ito form an international trust in { matches: on two continents. An Eng- lish match concern dominated by Bry- ant & May will also be taken into the combination. Paul O. Stensland the missing Chi- oY il, according to a report made by the Pinkerton Detective agency to the bank directors. A similar report was made to Acting State’s Attorney James Barbour The Pennsylvania Lines West and all other railroads doing an interstate trafiic in Ohio have met the demands of the Ohio railroad commission by announcing that beginning October 1. or earlier, all interstate fares will be based on the two-cent rate within the state of Ohio. | | | cago banker, has been located in Bra- Rs A i.e North Da North I the key t¢ ‘we protec manufactt which is ages, mat A new lav fect desig to deceive and adult pression paint, viz. seed oil. The Nc not atten che inferi pigments. “Let the the peop wished. Under f to buy a1 quartz a which are so-called object; fo open. B white lea be sure « the genui which say In all © ten sold contain white lea It woul principle and all ot .deception er, the qu would les: pleased, unwitting want. Sui There district of suicide. rough us daily with from Bim evening, as usual, mule’s al plunged the man breaking also flung torrent s the bridg when a p Seeing es capture i the old ur stopped, at a gre: side leap abyss.-—N c ¥ One go out of the perience. nounceme tillation fume will single ro more dea injurious The fume quitoes i human b be an ex to use at approach system of pyrofume a house, their bre great bu stinging, some pla ed this d . Vv The 22 the rail represent $16,000,0(¢ ‘al value country i 2lection. 100,000 a imes tl revenue nent. J ols is 1 ‘he coml Lineviteh ime of t ailroads hing wt heir leg t hard 1 lustry Neekly. Results It it some pe isfy an A Mic using co have a and fro hundred “My t of biliot weeks At ever fered in death tc ing. 11 ache, a1 tarrh of awful d; “For ers and was the I finall] Postum with mj left me health 1 “No tea. NC critical use of nounced but non gince I ¢ tum I a heartily suffer ¢& Postum Read ti i Wellv 11 c