SUBSCRIPTION 15 CLOSED Secretary . Cortelyou Annbunces that Issue is Disposed of. NOT TO BE EXTENDED Improvement in Business Conditions | Renders Such Move Unnecessary. Cutlook Is Bright. Owing to the large amount of sub- scriptions received, the Secretary of the Treasury announced that the sub- scription to the 3 per cent certificates of indebtedness of the act of June 13, 1898. invited by the circular of No- vember 18. 1907, is closed and that no subscriptions hereafter received will be eonsidered. The several assistant treasurers of the United States have becn instruct- ed nol to accept any further offers. The decided improvement in business conditions throughout the country makes it quite possible that the sec- retary will not extend his allotments further than these already made. Announcement by Sceretary Cortel- you that further subscriptions to the one-year treasury certificates will not be received is regarded here as indi- cating that the secretary considers the crisis in the money market to be practicaily over. The amount of the made said to be about and {his is probably the limit unless strong reasons are presented from | banks which have already made sub- gerintions why allotments should be | made to them. All individual been cied. it neariy whole allotted i'l he used issues of bank notes. these is- sues will Le retired within than a year, thoy. will not constitute a per- manent inflation of the bhank-note cir- culation. Effect of the new future of the treasury of the mongy market ceiving attention at the in banking circles. The amount nominally added to the cach ance of the i{reasvry will be about $85.60 - 000. of which $50.000000 will sent the two-per cent Panama and $33,600,000, the = one-year ficates. This amount would increase the present nominal balance from about 241.393.2117 ‘to a total more than ,.000,000. A small additional amount will be derived from the premium on the Panama bonds, but even if this should average as high as five per cent it would ameunt to only $2,500,000. With a nominal balance of more than $325,000,000, the {reasury will not have anything like that amount inimediately available. This is be- cause of deposits in national banks and other deposit items. These items amounted yesterday to $231.- 930,389, leavink an actual working balance of $6,643,628. allotments 235.000,000, | is subscriptions having iz anticipated tliat of the $35,000,600 to secure new yeoi the less the an loans upon resources is already re- treasury and repre- bonds corti- MINERS ENTOMBED Explosion May Have Caused Many Deaths in Pennsylvania Mines. From 20 to 60 lives are believed to have been snuffed out in a flash by a terrific explosion in the Naomi mine of the United Coal Company, two miles. north of Bellevernon, Pa. Just what caused the explosion is unknown. but it is supposed to have been the ignition of the deadly fire- damp. = The force of the explosion was felt for three or four miles around. Every window in the houses and company buildings near the ruins were broken. Some idea of the force of the explo- sion can he gathered from the fact that a concrete wall extending from the. mouth of the mine in to a depth of 80 feet was completely shattered. One body has been recovered. The man was known as ‘Pumper Joe.” He was a foreigner and worked at pump- ing. His body was found about 700 vards from the mouth of the mine. An imposing military demonstration marked Seccretary Taft's arrival ot Moscow. Papers of that city m Lise him as o statesman of international fame. MANY TRIED; NONE CHOSEN Butler Congregation Cannot Find One Minister in 68 to Suit. After hearing 68 ministers since the resizmotion of the Rev. A. R. Rob w of the Sixth Church, Pitis- atler (Pa) Unijed Presby- congrezation has decided to call. A sensation was address of Attorney J. W. Hutchinson, who is quoted as saving: “If the ministers. we have heard are samples of what the church has to offer; we need son I the denomination.” inson, nr burz. the terian extend no ed by the cals- Illinois Cengressman Dies. Georee \W. Smith the y h Hlinois district, di at his home in Murphysboro, Ill. typhoid fever. He had been sick tw weeks, but his condition was not con- sidered critical until Friday night, when he heeame suddenly worse. He xas a Republican and was serving his twentieth vear in Congress. Repurts on commerce on the great lakes during the month of Oetcher ghow that tonnage was much heavier than in the same month of 1906. 0 ROUTS MEXICAN BANDITS CONDITIONS IN GERMANY. Immorality Rampant ' Among the Troops, Ceclzre: Bebel—Indus- trial Crisis Near, + In the budget debate in the reichs- tag Socialist Leader Bebel voiced a warning that an industrial crisis was at hand in Germany, the evidences of which were very. patent, and at the | same time answered Chancellor von Buelow's speech of yesterday with a declaration that a court camarilla did exist and that immorality in the army was rampant. The expose re sulting from the von Moltke libel proceedings, he asserted, was but an inkling of the disgraceful truth. “Bring all the guilty parties to trial’ the socialist leaa%er declared, “and you will have pared to which the Dreyfus affairs will be as nothing. Already the unemployed in Berlin alone, Herr Bebel said, numbered 40,000. Because of bines the day cf low. prices had passed and the high tariff added to the burden of the workingmen, Ger- Panama and many was paying the highest prices | in the world. FIVE PASSENGERS KILLED Their Car Struck in the Middle by a Freight Locomotive. factory employes were killed Five ‘at a railroad crossing in Waterbury, I into the middle | factories | sengers | another ear, which had passed | They would not relinquish it. | people must continue to realize that | the Little Father had their welfare | | at heart, the premier said. Railroad Agent Kills Ons, Wounds Another; Third Man Gets Away. Santa Fe Agent Perrine Nebo had an encounter with three Mexican bandits. In the shooting one Mexican as killed and another wounded in y leg. The third escaped, but is being pursued by a posse. The wounded man and the dead bandit are believed to be members of a gang who for weeks have been raiding Santa Fe cars and depots. at freight trean crashed of a trolley car con- 5 persons bound for the pin in OQakville. All the pas- killed were badly mangled. Six others were badly injured. The dead .are: Saruh Ryan, Annie Cor- corry, Robert French, Jane Kelly and Conn.. when a taining 2 | Walter Hayes. Flagman John Flavin and Conduce- tor John Dilton of the trolley ear were arrested. It is said the wrecked trol was following closely behind safely over the crossing. It customary to drop {[i® gates eon the approach of a train, but.in this instance the were up. The flagman, it is alleged, waved the fiag, showing a clear track. It is allezed the conductor failed to ohey the mle to run ahead of his car and whether or not a train vs approaching. There was absolutely no chance the ongineer of the train to ston train in time to prevent the accident. oy eur is oat gate gee for 1 CZAR STILL AUTOCRAT. Move of Ccnstitutional Democrats to Abolish Title ls Net Acceptable. The newly elected which, supposedly representing the Rus- sian people, dared to question the title of the emperor to be tocrat of all the Russias,”” was given a rude jolt when Premier Stolypin, answering the resolution which em- anated from the Constitutional Ijen- ocrats, declared in no uneguivocal terms that the czar still was autocrat -—and would continue so. That ti- tle of supreme authority ever had been the dearest treasure and the proudest boast of the douma, The tempt on their part ro solve own troubles, which took the form of disorder, would mean the laying on of the iron hand which has been felt through many generati=ns. BIG SUM WANTED | $400,000 000 Principal and Interest of | Amount Left With Bank in 1772. According to the St. Bourse Gazette, the Bank of Engi: nd is to Lie called upon to repay a sum lodeed with it about the vear 1772, which, at compound interest, - now amounts to §460.000,000. This depos=it never has been claimed, though the receipt for it was, “it said, payable at sight. it was ledged, Bourse Gazette, by local governor, in a tussia, north of Kieft. Folubotko. and he held 1722 to 1724. New {he representatives o Vv is to man. ma according the the het district 11is name was office or of f 40 noble families. descendants and relatives of | sked to: mee Little have heen of Starodnb, to to Polubiotko, in the town sia, in order to be taken (60, agreg unon measures procure the £400,000. OFFICERS OF HOU Incumbents All Chosen Again Excent Postmaster. The Bon. Joseph G. Cannon of Ill nominated hy ers of for The a caucus atfended by Ron SE Present nois was the Republi- } Hi third nomination practically. all members. Rep: sentative Hepburn of Towa j ided, The other officers chosen w Mad, Alex: McDowell, vanin, clerk: 1 York, Wiseons Samuel nas With 11 the iption of the his can Im Nise sentatives term as speaker. was made the 226 thlican lor Penn rank 3 dooriteontr: Frenry cergeant-af-a Langum, Minnesota ster. adonted the cccupy the offices which v are desigtiated, except mein, who is a new man. Serres 1] Marabout Bouthich has preclaimed a holy war, and his emissaries busy stirring up the frontier tribes. WEDS AT AGE OF 102. Woman, Now 109, Waited on Gallant Third Husband. Mrs. Samuel Decker, of and ninth birthday November having been born November 27, her married when served to her a portion by was was was on constantly to whom she Her dinner china which marriage in 1810. a scandal com- | industrial com-, Romanoffs. | Any at- | their ! Petershurz | Littls! from | Rus | of Repre- with- 1 for Mr. are By Seneca Falls, N. Y., passed her one hundred 9= “dy NO RACES WERE SPARED | Mohammedans and Armenians Killed and Robbed. PEOPLE ARE WITHOUT FOOD | Missionaries Are Doing What They Can to Relieve the Suffering, but Need Help. Ibraham Pasha, better known as “The Notorious,” is responsible for a campaign of murder, arson and robberies without its equal in the history of the world. Originally it | was supposed the outrages of this bandit leader, sometimes called the “Despot of Kurdistan,” were directed solely azainst the Armenians, and + that religious or racial prejudices | were the cause for them. Now it is known definitely that he plans and | causes murder and robbery without | regard to the religion or race of the | victims. Turkish villages are suffering | equally with ‘Armenian homesteads lin the plains around Diarbekir and | Jezirsch-1bn-Omar. One village after | another has been burned within the last month, while eight: villages in the Sert district have met the same fate. In some of the villages de- | stroyed there were no Arnienians, the population consisting wholly of Mohaminedans. While the lives of the inhabitants | were in some cases spared, all the possessions of the residents were taken, leaving the people absolutely destitute and without food or means | of securing it. The Kurdish tribes seem abso- lutely under the domination of Ibra- ham Pacha, and they have now rav- aed the Armeno districts of rum, Bitlis, Van, Kharput and Diar- bokir. IForeien embassies are taking great interest in the renorted condi- tions and insisting that the govern- nent protect the lives of foreign sub- jects even if it views with unconcern the deaths by violence of Turks. Searcity of food, owing to the dep- redations of the robber bands, is boing felt everywhere. Missionaries are: doing their best to mitigate the miseries, but they need outside help, as their efforts are entirely inade- quate with the desperate sitnation. OF THE PAST “AUTOCRAT” IS | steads, or 320 acres of land, from the Erze- | Douma Decrees Title Held by Czars | for Centuries Must Go. decreed that The the title donuma which Russian of autserat, cenfnries. is no longer tenable within the Russian state, and is incompat- ible with the regime inaugurated by the manifesto issued by Emperor Nicholas on October 30, 1905. The Russian parliament, by a vote of 112 to 246, rejected the word “autocrat.” and then adopted a reply to the address from the throne unanimously amid scenes of intense excitement. KIiDNAPING BY WHOLESALE. Mexicc City Mystified by Thefts of Forty-Nine Children. Police of Mexico City are at work lop one of the biggest kidnaping cases they have ever had. For two months an organized gang of Kkid- i napers has been city. Forty-nine children, | daughter | and Lieutenant Ulysses S. has been | borne by the emperors of Russia for | = “5° o “xgvember 27, at the edi | . «yy NO VEIL “i, 83 FORTY THOUSAND DUG UP. Thousand Persons Fight Over Treas: ure, and Police Recover Only Fraction of It. Told by an old woman that she be- lieved money was buried in a vacant lot at Green and Powell streets, San Francisco, where a lodging house had stood before the fire of last vear, Leon Thomas and another boy went to work to-day with pick and shovel to find it. They had not been dig- cing long when they uncovered an old trunk erammed full of gold, sil- ver and currency. Within a few minutes a thousand persons were fighting for ‘the money. The police arrested 24 persons, who had in their possession about $5,000. Dozens who had made larger hauls escaped. The two boys who made the discovery, carried off $4,000, but this was confiscated by the police, who recovered all told about $12,000. The police estimated that the trunk had held $40,000. The money had been buried by an old woman who disappeared at the time of the earth- quake. INCREASE IN COMMERCE. Several Legislative Innovations Fore- shadowed in Speech From the Throne. The Dominion parliament was opened at Ottawa, Ont., November 28 by Lord Grey. The speech from the throne referred to the great increase in trade and revenuc of the Do- minion. The last fiscal period closed by reducing the public debt by 23.000,000. Mr. Oliver's land bill, which will permit of settlers getting two home government will be reintroduced. A bill is promised to give old age annuities. and telegraph and tele: phone companies will be placed under the railway commission. There will be an amendment to the election act, “and the provinces of Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec will have their boundaries increased- to extend to Hudson and James bays. parliament will be asked to ap prove the French treaty and the ref erence of the fisheries dispute to The Hague tribunal. Miss Root Wed—Daughter of S tary of State Is Married to th Grandson of Great General. The of Miss Edith Root, Secretary of Stade. Grant HI. United States in Washi cre- e wedding of the engineers, selemmnized of was corps army. of Secretary Root. Rev. Herbert Shin- man. of New York, formerly chaplain at West Point. officiating. In the bridal party were the bride's cousin, Miss Ruth Wales, of New York, and the bridegroom’s cousin, Potter Palmer, of Chicago, as maid of honor and best man, and the fol lowing groomsmen: Elihu Root, Jr, and Edward Wales Root, brothers of the bride: Lieutenant Robert Ralston and Lieutenant M. W. Howze, brother officers of the bridegroom; Gustav Schwab, ©f New York, and Edward B. McLean, of Washinzton. President and Mrs. Roosevelt were present, and the former escorted the bride to the dining room, where he offered a toast to “the long life and { happiness of the couple.” operating in the 22 boys | land 27 girls, have been stolen from | | their homes. : What is done with them, or who might be taking them away, and by what means, is not*known. The age of. the children varies between 2 and 12 years. MORE THAN 200 DROWN made | | Storms Play Havoc With Shipping cn the Black Sea. Recent storms on the have resulied in terrible | and great loss of life. Among the disasters to the ship- | ping is the foundering off Eregli, Asia Minor. of the steamship . Kaplan. The 110 persons cn board perished. Nunrerous smaller crafls have been overwhelmed, and these disasters, {o | gether with the loss of the Kaplan, ‘bring the number of casualties to | more than 200. Black Sea suffering FORAKER WILL ACCEPT. | Ohio Senator Willing to Be a Presi dential Candidate. letter made public Senator Benson Foraker of Ohio, an- nounces in effect tuat he didate for the Republican Lin tion for President and will accep support to that end. announcement of Senator Foraker's candidacy is contained in a letter written by him to Conrad J. Mattern, Viea President of the Ohio Repnhlican league of Clubs, ack- 1d notification of the ac Advisory and Executive of the r.eague taken at on November 20, when Sona Foraker was indorsed for the office of Prezident and Senator. ile accepts the support of the league for the presidential nomination. but declines it for the senatorship. In Joseph a tion of the Committees y Columbus Smckes Pipe 96 Years. Mrs. Catherine Snay passed hundred and sixth birthday home in North Oxford, Mass. bedridden and almost “blind. Spay has smoked a pipe since | 10 vears old. her one at her She is Mrs. she was Twelve Killed in Spanish Wreck. An express train from Valencia | with many passengers on board fell | from a bridge into the water below | on the outskirts of Barcelona. Twelve | persons wera killed and 22 injured. 1768. ] She is bedridden now and is waited | third husband, 102; on of the gifts received at the time of her first | was opemred 12 years. {The Jeferson | lottesville, Va.. and a colored ~Bap- | by fire. The Hotel after a hard fight. insurance $10,000. a can- | Big Plant Has to Violate i December 2. Auditorium at Char- | tist church in the rear were destroyed { Gleason was saved | Temple, London, was The opera house | interruptions from congregation when Loss $40,000, | he said story of Christ feeding multi | himself. BUSIEST TIME IN HISTORY. Rule of Shutting Down Thanksgiving. The National Tube works at Me- Keesport, Pa., is busier than it hag heen for 25 vears. For the past quar: ter of century the officials have al lowed men emploved in the tube works to have Thanksgiving a holiday. They stretched a peint at times to do 30. Thursday the tube works was running in full Much as the officials desired to let the men lay off. orders of importance prevented this, and for the first time in 25 years the mills were working. as Chicago clcar $25.600 worth burned, and lowed daily shall have Wi currency. 12 house ordered that of its certificates be the action will be until the entire issue beeri paid back. Banks MOORS INVADE ALGERIA. French Troors at First, Are Socn Driven Back. Official advices raceived from Oran. ~oria, deelare a part of the DMo- armv invaded Algeri The French wer and in the { A men Filled and 15 men wounded ator. being reinforced, they back across the frontier. Defeat bat Weanes- fight drow i Arabs Mills Will All the finizhing tion the puddii vallev. plant and ‘two fini ni and one puddie mill of the Brown Ponncll plant, Republic Tron & Ste Company. at Youngstown. O., will sume: operations, fter having 1 ehut down for a davs. of hing Orders. far the torpet which is Pacific vy departmeitt - flotilla th » the OAs sued make were i at The destrovers, which are to stop al a ereoater number of pvorts tham the battieships. will leave Hampton Roads 9 the Banker Kills Himself. Howard Maxwell, the former presi dent of the Borough bank of Brook- lyn, who was under indictment on grave charges, went to his home upon being released from jail and - killed Fis one-time friends desert ed him in his adversity and he lay in jail three or four days The Rev. Dr. R. J. Campbell in City met by angry tude should not be taken literally. ‘able to 11 shortly resume the payment of REPORT ON PANAMA CANAL Nearly One Hundred Millions the Cost to Date. NOT DONE BY CONTRACT The Report Favors Policy of Hiring Workmen Instead of by Con- tract Labor. work done on the Panama canal during the fiscal vear 1907, with a showing of what has been accomplished since the pro- ject has been in American hands are disclosed in the annual report of the [sthmiun Canal Commission, made public recently. It is the first report made of opera- tions on the isthmus since construc- tion work has been in charge of army ongineers. Aside from the $50,000,000 paid to the French company and to Full details .of the Panama, an aggregate of $48,285,110 | has becn expended by the govern- ment on the pruject, which it was es- | timated by the board of consulting engineers would ultimately cost $139.- 705,200. This estimate, however, did not include. sanitaticn and expenses of the Zone government, waterworks, sewers and paving in Panama and Colon, and the re-equipment of the Panama railroad. There is no reference in the report to the proposition which has been brought forward to extend the width of the locks to 110 feet, so as to eommodate without difficulty the ex- treme breadth in the development of shipbuilding, and this will be made the subject of a special communica tion from the commissi A strong position a continuati of doing the work bs of by contract labor. a step at one time seriously considered by the ad- ministration, and = many © arguments are presented to justify the commis sion in its conelusicn that the canal can be built better, cheaper and more quickly by the governmer Sanitation, upcn i § pends for the comfort and the emploves, is treated of in ctatement is made of done and the decl there was no yellow isthmus during ac- n. taken of ‘the policy hired instead favor- is I health the re port, has been made that yriginating on the year. As bearing on suitability of the proposed lock si from the conclu ns of a ronsuiting engi wo personal examination of the at the lock sites and which that «il of the locks of the “dimen sions then propesed-—an S5-foot level —would rest on such a charaeter that wonld furnish a fo and stable foundation. a ration fever the the the the foundation 3 report quotes board = of made a material fourd anestion of s for he I'S, an ROB BANK OF $2,200 COIN Three Bandits Lock Bankers in the Vault, and They Are Nearly Suffocated. bank at Clinton, Hi, and robbed of $2,200 before o'clock in two men. Just: a few niinutes after closing time the men appeared in the bank. and with The state was held up in coin, shortly the afternoon, by 14 drawn revolvers forced President Cashier Murphy and bookkeeper Jol Young to: en: ter the bie vault hich they locked. The bulk of the money had already baen placed in the curreney safe in the vault, but $2,260 in gold and silver remained on the counter. This the robbers shoveled into a bag and took with them to the Hotel Henion. where they had previously engaged a room. Officers learned of their presence there and attempted to break in the door. . Defore they ceeded. however, the robhe ed from a window fo an. t roof, taking only $700 leaving $1,500 in It was dark frem the hotel was lost. William: Arguc, Su jump djoining in eonld, in the Men: ¢ sijver rooin the all t when and race pBanks ing to -r and. cleaving house ha a thing of the i the week. Mactori down two or three starting up with can do. BLUNDER FATAL TO FOUR Crew of Halted Train Forget to Back -a Flagman. trainmen Three Were hoy killed stealing was fatally who a injured two clphia astern dead, Allentown, are and C coection all of who: H. 1 Loudens Bryant in 1 a o¢ standing on curve. Th 1 to send gman back, THREE GO DOWN WITH TUG Fatal Collision Off Niagara Point on L.ake Ontario. The fug Bscart of Port Dalhousie was struck. by the barge Harris ff Niagara Point and sunk. Harry Dunlap, Eng Dunloy and na canal Charles Christmas bert nained drowned. were Alderman Convicted of Asking Bribe. Former Alderman Wm. C. OKkers- hauser of Milwaukee was found guilty of having solicited a bribe connection ‘with a city ordinance, and was to year. in the House of Correction. A stay of exe-| until. January was granted. in sentenced one o cution The tional tions, weeks. ployed. Syracuse branch of the Na Tube Company resumed opera- after being closed for two! Three hundred men are em- | i “Asia Minor, SURVIVORS FLED TO MOUNTAIN Massacres Attended by Frightiul Tor- ture of Victims—Children Slain Before Parents’ Eyes. Sweeping the province of Diarbekr, with a force of Kurds and irregular Turkish troops, Ibrahim | Pasha has plundered and burned 151 , villages and massacred hundreds of Armenian Christians. Survivors of the slaughter fled to the mountains, where have those | who are not yet hunted down by the soldiers must die of cold and posure. Ibrahim was sent to Diarbekr suppress trifiing local disorders, instead marched through the entire province, “apparently bent on com- pletely wiping out the Armenian Christian population. The massacres were attended by frightful tortures of the victims, wo- men being outraged, men mutilated and children butchered by scores be- fore their parents’ eyes. eX- to but SENTENCE COMMUTED Americans Condemned to Death in Mexico Get 20 Years Instead. Moved by a mother's tears and pleadings, Ambassador Creel of Mex- ico wired to Jose Marc Sanchez, governor of the state of ~Chihuahna, Mexico, recommending that sen- tence of Dr. Charles -S. Harle, Wm. Mitchell and Leslie Hunter, the Americans condemned to be shot there, be commuted to 20 vears’ im- prisonment. The execution of the three men, wlio were condemned for two murders in connection with insurance frauds, has Licen for December 6. The appeal that may save the lives of the Americans was made by Annie Harle of Abilene, Tex., mother of Dr. Harle. the set Mrs. WHISKY IMPURE FOOD? st Test .Case of the more Under Acting under Departinent of Ho barrels seized at Webb & Fir Kind in Balti- Law. instructions from Azriculture of Bourbon the est Son 1 ne ton, 45 Yero A Yi: 3 food pers cl that the illed f at of Charles A. ‘We ki composi know out act. whisky from { \Welh nothing whatever n of the wh ; that it is Ton tha Amer Company of New York wo have the branch whiskv is manufactured leans. the firm is by UNITARIANS IN SYNAGOGUE. and Christians Conduct Service of Thanks. For the first time in the history of New Iingland Jews and Christians united in worship in. a synagogue at the Temple Adath Israel, Boston, on Thanksgiving. There was a predom- inance of Jewish people present. Rabbi Charles Fleischer = conducted the service, and Rev. Thomas Van Ness, of the Second church, Congre- entional Unitarian, the members of which 2athered in the temple to wor- ship with the Jews, preached the ser- mon. ! Prayers Jews Joint were offered © by both ! Rabbi Fleischer and Dr. Van Nes which both ‘Hebrews and Unitarians stood. with bowed heads. NAVAL SH OW CALLED OFF, Fleet for Pacific Ordered to Report at Hampton Roads December 9, The idea of assembling the greater of the Pacific-honnd Atlantic New York harbor and pro- wedineg in squadron formation to vanton Roads has been abandoned edch of the hig vy vessels may 1d gs long time eT at navy yards. Ord heen all vessels of the el to Hampton Roads v Mon- 3 0 We prior to nortion floet ia a a for rio ad December 17. date fie of of rape ver: storage turkey. allows nhout | und of al food bird fo: man-jack for Christm: dinner. mont the Bandits Ki!l Minister. Details received at St. Petersburg, rom Dokhara, Central relating the treasury ther Y robbed, bandits attacked the pals of the Ameer, killed the inanece- and their with a su I minister ‘ape on qual mney CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. The , our 3 ( F the PLi iansport Canadiapn that Canadi Ho from were’ men as a students. Japanese sending t=, who, to mater in den not as by chari- Thanksgiving was usual throughout fensting, religions ties to the poor in the 1] ths nntry services anda reichsta erman rpitz said are an- will In address io Admiralty Secretary Von that many of country's ships tiquated and built now be useless in 25 years. veasel President Roosevelt officiated at a lottery in the White House, at which the distribution of federal patronage between the fwo South Dakota sena tors was decid=d. Pr. Wilfred M. Barton, ict and alienist, testified that in hig opinion Mrs. Annie M. Bradley was insane when she killed former Sena the special | tor Arthur Brown of Utah.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers