nm | WAH OTHERS URED | ~ PRESIDENT ANSWERS i GOVERNOR HASKELL'S DEFENSE Declares That He Was Merely Carry- hite House, prepared and to W. candidate reply J. Bryan atic TIN MG GOES; CHUNG MEH YEW COMES HE WAS CONSUL AT MANILA ea ing Cut Order of Former | Sino : eo Secretary of interior. . i : : Snow Causzs Wreck on Northern | py mm | Chinese Minister's Successor Has Facific in Mortana. gton.—President Roosevelt | Started for Washington. Mr i g upen a I ged confer-| | nh members of the cabinet at 1 | represented Standard Oil inter- in Chio and Cklahoma. an had manded proof thay in of the | their vould si the Ohio c€&se, which invelved azn allegation of attempted bribery. with the explanation that he had made no direct charges against Governor Paskell as regards that par- ticular instance, President sing blinding takes up the matter of ihe ri The ex 0il & Gas Company, ar- {he smok that Governor H talities stepping legal prceeedings in that ca the attorney general of Ok raised over ncnstrates conclusively that he was corporation “to ing car and controlled by the great the seats away. which the Oklahoma company was the smoking subsidiary. jury. cars €8 | Governor Haskell's Reply. Taking up the Roosevelt arraizn- ment in detail the governor declared that it is ridiculous. | “In condemning me fer my attitude toward the Prairie Oil and Gas Conv pany,” said he, «Mr. Roosevelt is im ning the acts of his former Secre- tary of the Interior, Mr. Hitchcock. It was Mr. Hitchcock who granted the Prairie Company its rights 10 build a pipe line in what is now Okla- 21s, In one tiaht'y difficulty. gor the in 5 : upon the d¢ and I have done nothing more i a. s The known dead are: } spect the vested rights, that own dead are: he Praide company i : Colonel Bonson, Utah; John Paulus he Brains COMPANY had when the Hines M 3 a State was admitted to the Union. Billing Mont.; Robert Ander “ 1 oe Hart nont.: Lorenz A. Stewar I could pursue no other legal ara; Mont. 1.0renz . Blewdlil, 1 Dean, Mont.; . Gomble, Ministin course I stopped the company from fo 8 1 ' Pymuek Denver: D T building a gas pipe line into the State because it had no right to build it. but Hitchcock gave the company the Bane Seattle: &. M. Konsick. Ana- conda, Mont.; Ora Babcock, Billings, | i. hr : LT ORL: § Chingdon, Chico Si right to build an oil pipe line. Mont.: Charles E. Johnson, De r, eo district 2t Nickel Plate CHOLERA CAUSES PANIC Anacol- | poosian Plague Invading the Aris- torcatic Precincts. St. Petersburg.—Not only has the number of cases this city increased, but the disease has invaded the aristorcratic precinets of St. Petersburg. It has even reached the winter pal- ace in which extensive preparations are going on in the expectation that the emperor and empress will spend Sichemram, | unidentified coal miners; R. E. Vick- ors. - An Ban a OD. ong the injured are: Westnery, may die; Sam Slomowitz, may die; Anton Roweits, Helena, may die; John Burke, Boston, Susan Ccr- dea, Flathead Indian mission; L. E. Cordea, Flathead Indian mission; John Cordea, Flathead: Indian mission. ital. (Other cases have been discovered in the palace of Grand Duke Nicho- las Nicholaivitch, the Tauride palace and the palace of Prince Alexander Oldenburg, a cousin of the emperor. A number of diplomats and promi- nent society people have hurried their departure abread, but the exodus has been checked to a considerable ex- TWENTY DIE IN COLLISION Charged Rails Adds to Terrors Berlin Elevated Rrailroad Wreck. Berlin.—Two trains on the Berlin elevated railroad were in collision. As a result 20 persons are dead, 19 seriously and nine others hopeless in ly injured. Most of the deaths result- ed {rom contact with the electrified tent by the prospect of being held in | rails. quarantine at the frontier. ’ The accident was caused by a mis] That panic prevails among certain placed signal. One of the cars, | classes is illustrated by the fact that | many well-to-do people have wcrdered their newspapers discontinued during the epidemic. A grand duchess re- siding abroad, who is one of these, explained that she feared contagion through the mails. In order to was thrown to the street, 40 feet be- which was crowded with passengers, | greatest | low, and shattered. The mortality was in this car. The collision occurred in the heart of the eastern commercial district upon what is known as “The Trian- gle,” ‘a notable piece of railroad con- ora in + cholera cases, several | . 4 ~ 1 3 ors o struction where three double tracked gradua e singents of St. Phioprne . . 1\ Vy 1 J B n1- lines cross. A model of this cross university voluntarily permitted them Louis | &71ves 10 be vaccinated, after which ing was exhibited at the St. exposition. Among the dead is Rich- ard Wendt, an architect. HASKELL RESIGNS | they drank a solution containing cholera germs. The sccumulation of corpses at the graveyards continues. They were 92 unburied bodies at the Preobrashen- skoe cemetery, and the regular mor- | tuary train brought down 146 more. Treasurer of Democratic Campaign Committee Steps Out. { Chicago.—Governor Charles N. Has- | kell resigned as treasurer of the Dem- ocratic national commitiee. His res- ignation was announced after his ar- rival in Chicago from Guthrie, Okla., | and after he had con red. with’ of- | PLATOON OF FIELD ARTILLERY Ordered to Louisville for the Military Tournament. Washington. —In compliance instructions from the war | . Sn oo A innal v ficers of the national | ment, General Grant, commander c2 headquarters. : xr the Department of the East, has or- In giving ont his ¢ Mr. Has- | dered Colonel Hatficld, commanding | cell declared he & responsible for c to be rassment i the post at platoon cf fi artillery at that post which might 1 Demoeratic | {5 Louisville, Ky.. for the purpese df party by retail ce of treas- | taking part in the military tourna- | ment to be held at that place during the week commencing October 5. On completion of that duty the platoon | wiil return to its proper station Fort Myer. Cets Order ¥ Dunkirk, N. ngines was placed irty Locomotives. 20 for Bre Y-—An crder at the ! nt of the American Locomotive Cholera. npanv for delivery in November. s the Dbegin- vis, with other WOrK in sight, will +c have been | keep the plant running until the holi- cholera re- | Manager Macgarvey declined 7.102 deaths. Tt | yrders. ing officially ad- | for withhelding it for the present. stating there Ww Ss reasons r Q t S, e have been and 1,875 deaths repori- Lock Up the Water. Youngstown.—At Mineral | which has 1,000 inhabitants, padlocks have been placed cn public and pri- vate wells to prevent thefts of water. The village is Ridge, + Harrisbuny. 1 puddle mill Works, jale since May, will] with 200 men | Harrisburg in- » 1 ofl 1 Nil which has been be put into operation of emergency. on the rolls. Other ing dry in the village leaving it with- dustries are increas forces. | out fire protection. — SL | pelled from Stock Exchange. | girl in Peonage Is Freed by Court. w York.—A. O. Brown and Lewls | New vork—Justice Stapleton, in | $ Fr IT B «+ sah c b Ginter Young, t = ek exchar 22 | the Supreme Court of Brooklyn, h members of the sus] snded firm of A: | get free a Pavanese girl of 19, Ww i C rere : 0. 1 & C0. were ’ according to the habeas corpus pro- ¥ ho on- : : the 1e an- | ceedin in her behalf, had been held nou 1 a r0s- | jp peonage in the home of William H. trum b ‘eslae 1 | Stone, president cof the Porto Rican npany. Stone fought £O the ex- to ci the girl on { Tang of Asiatic cholera in | part of the coming season in the cap- | test the efficacy of vac- | with | depart- | Fort Myer, Va.. to send a | at the name of the railroad plac- | three miles from a | creek where water is secured in case Wells are rapidly go- | 3 1 Coming, Too, With Letter of Thanks from Emperor for Boxer Remission. Peking. —Wu Tang-fang, the ent Chinese is to be replaced in November or De- cember. His successor 1s Chung iMen Yew, who was Chinese Consul He start ed for America. : Chang Men Yew is a member of the present Opium Com- General at Manila in 1904. nission. : Accompanying the new minls.er to Washington is Tang Shao Yi, who goes on his much-hearalded trip . 5 around the world. Wu Ting Fang will receive Tang Shao Yi cn kis arrival at the Ameri- ‘can Capital, after which he will re- tire from the post of Minister. Tang is bearing a letter to the DeO- ple of the United States from the hand of the Emperor of China thank ing them for the remission of a por- ticn of the “Boxer” indemnity by the Washington government, and will try to interest American capital in the development of Northern China. Fror America he will continue his travels to Great Britain, France, Germany, Russia and home through Siberia. Severa! Carleads of Presents.« Tang is taking with him a number of valuable presents for American of ficials. These include ten ancient porcelains, relics of the Manchu cons quest, taken frcm the palace of the present ruling family at Mukden, and other valuable porcelains and jades cbtained in the Peking markets. The Dowager Empress is sending special presents to President Rocsevelt, as well as several valuable jades to Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, the President's daughter, in remembrance of Mrs. Longworth’s visit to Peking in 1905. The Dowager Empress recently presented a rare Yungching vase to the Smithsonian Institution in ac- knowledgment of the res‘oration bY the United States, cf one of the an: cestral tablets of the reigning family that was looted from Peking in 1900. The mission will spend a fortnight in Shanghai and three weeks in Jap an, where Tang will confer wih the Tokio authorities on Chino-Japanese questicns. Chung Men Yew, who is to succeed Wu Ting Fang as Chinese Minister at Washingtcn, is widely known in the United States where he has spent much of his life, first as a student and later in the diplomatic service at Washington. Mr. Chung was edu cated at Harvard University. Later he became interpreter at the Chinese embassy at Washington. Mr. Chung is a widower with one son, who has | received his education in the United States. _———— CARNEGIE EXTENDS HERO FUND | Subjects of Great Britain Will Be Included in Plan. : | ILondon.—Encouragad by dhe suc- cess that has attended the establish- ment of his “hero fund” In America, Andrew Carnegie has decided to found a similar fund in Chis native land.” To this end he is about to hand over to trustees the sum of $1,250,000. Mr. Carnegie bas selected as the | administraters of his new benefac- tion the trustees of the Carnegie Dun- fermline fund, to which he made over $2,500,000 in 1903 for the purpoze of | introducing “more sweetness and | light into the monotonous lives of the | toiling masses Of Dunfermline.” | In a letter to the trustees dated | September 91 Mr. Carnegie says: | “The success cf my herd fund upon the North American continent has been so great that I have decided to extend land.” its benefits to my native Carnegie then lays down at general plan uron which ires the fund to be administer- 1e benefit of heroes and hero- ines injured in attempts to preserve or rescue their fellows, or in case of death, for the benefit of those who were dependent upon them. “Such o the heroes of civilization.” Mr. ie writes: “the false heroes of m maimed or killed their fel- ng interest cont to the value of $1,2¢ be placed in the hands of { The heneficiaries of this fund are | te confined to followers of “peaceful | vocations in the British Isles an the waters thereof.” i Mr. Carnegie especially recommends | to the care of the trustees the widows | and children of victims of heroism and | of doctors and nurses who volunteer | their services during epidemics. | “No action could be more heroic than that of such doctors and nurses,” he writes, “and railroad employes al so are remarkable for their heroism.” King Rdward, with whom Mr. Car negie consulted relative to the ‘estab- lishment of this fund, has given it his warm approval. five per will CHARGE RANK COWARDICE | | | Skipoer ~f Star of Bengal Denounces Tug Captains. | Seatttle, Wash.—A | Fort Wrangel, | Captain Wagner | of Bengal, | AVS: e bark Star wrecked loss of for an hour which was | coronation Island with a was unconscious rescued. He charges the captains of the | Kyak and 1 tugs lcose lives | after 1 i | | { pres- Minister to Washington, { | | BRINGS TAFT INTO CASE Lakor Leader Asserts Effort Was Made to Buy His Influence. Washington, D. C.—Samuel Gomp- ers introduced the name of former Secretary of War Taft and made serl- ous charges against W. J. Van Cleave, president of the National Assoication of Manufacturers, as part of his tes- timony in connection with the pro- ceedings against himself, Vice Presl- ent John Mitchell and Secretary Frank Morrisen of the Federation on the charge cf contempt in viola'ing the injuncticn decree of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia di- recting them not to publish the Bucks Stove and Range Company of Louis as “unfair.” Mr. Gompers, in effect, charged that Mz. Taft had supplied the sentiment behind the injunction decree, while the direct charge was made that Mr. Van Cleave had had Mr. Gompers and other Federation officials shadowed by detectives and had undertaken -to have Mr. Gompers bribed to desert the cause of organized labor and join its enemies. Mr. Ralston, Mr. Gompers’ counsel, endeavored to show counter conspir- acy by the manufacturers to destroy’ trades unionism; and in the course of his questioning of Mr. Gompers read the porticn of MT. Taft’s presidential nominaticn acceptance speech bearing on the anti-injunction* plank; and com- menting upon the : extract. Mr. Gomperss aid: «Tt is substantially the basis of this injunction suit and these coniempt proceedings under that injunction.” After giving the details of his own pursuit by detectives, Mr. Gompers told of being approached in, New York by a man named Broughton Brandenburg of New York, who, he said, had attempted in 1907 to bribe him in the interest of Mr. Van Cleave. James W. Van Cleave said tonight: «I have never employed detectives or intermediaries to shadow Mr. Gomp- ers. Neither have 1 offered him a bribe, nor have I ever had any con nection with the men he. claims that shadowed him and offered him a bribe.” eet ee en RIOT IN STATEHOUSE When Indiana Lawmaker Calls Tem- perance Man “Liar” Trou- ble Comes. Indianapolis. — What might have been a dangerous riot occurred in the House of Representatives here. ~ The house had adjourned when nearly 100 temperance workers In vaded the hall and Horace Murphey of Muncie, mounted a chair and be- gan to speak. Several members were seated at their desks, among them being Representative Coble. Dubois county, but they paid little attention to Murphey’s speech till he began to berate the opponents of the local op- tion bill. Warming up to the sub- ject Murphey declared that the men who opposed county local option ‘“‘are saloon bums and brewery representa- tives.” As these words were utter- ed Mr. Cole, rising and pointing his finger at Murphey, declared: “You are a liar, sir, and you know 3.2 The words were scarcely uttered when pandemonium broke 100g from the excited temperance workers. Maur- phey jumped from his chair and started toward the member from Du- bois who stoed with his fists doubled up and his attitude indicating that he was ready for anything that might come, but Rev. Mr. Everson of Mun- cie, jumped in between the two men and pushed Murphey back. Police arrived in time to prevent a | demonstration against Coble but the | workers refused to leave the hall and | had to be ejected. NINE LIVES LOST. Schooner Bertha Left Providence Sep- tember 18—Some of Wreckage Found. ’ Mobile, Ala.--Nine persons are be- lieved to have perished in the wreck- | ing of the Brifish schocner E. M. Ber- tha off the coast of North Carolina. Previous report of the finding of the wreckage was made by the master of the Cherokee upon York. Three cn board the vessel, who are believed to have perished, with six members of the crew, here. It is believed that the Bertha turned turtle and went down all on beard and later went to pieces. From a postal card received here, it appears that the Bertha, on. Sep- tember 18, left Providence, where she had delivered a cargo of antique furniture from Savannah, Ga. MILLIONS BURNED UP Great Loss by Fire in Michigan and Minnesota. Washington.—Raymond W. man, of the forest service, who is in Minnesota investigating forest conditions for the government, e mates the loss in that State at from $5,000,000 to ires 11 burning. He reports a heavy rainfall lasting five hours, but says 36 hours of rain is necessary to hut out all fires. Detxoit, ich. — through the fire-swept Northern coun- try, Prof Filbert Roth, of the forestry department of the University of Mich- igan, estimates the damage done t season at $40,000,000. He decl: that over 1,000,000 aeres of timber land has been devastated. Bulls Kill Five Persons. Lisbon.—Twenty-two bulls escaped Pull- After yiie >a from the arena at Mola and ran amuck through a crowd assembling to witness a bullfight. Five 1 were killed and some 20 wounded, troops shot the animals to death. Nearly an acre of he north side of in thi SW away by arrival at New have relatives | with | R11. $10,000,000, with the | traveling | ped the conflagration | 110 MEN DROWNED IN PACIFE WRECK Bark Driven on Rocks in Great | Gale on Northwest Coast. FORCED TO ABANDON VESSEL ee ere ENTIRE GUN CREW KILLED Explosion Wrecks Turret of French Cruiser—Thirteen Dead and Many Injured. Toulon, France.—During gunnery drill one of the big turret guns on the French armored cruiser La Touche Treville exploded with terrific vio- lence, completely wrecking the after turret and killing the entire gun crew of 13. A number of men were seriously injured, some of {hem prob-- | ably fatally. Tugs Towing the Star of Bengal Com- | aboard the pelied to Cut Loose and Seek Safety. Seattle, Wash.—Advices received from Alaska by the United States sig- nal corps say that 110 men, including nine white men, were drowned in the wreck ‘of the American bark Star of | Bengal on Coronation jcland, west of | the Prince. of Wales archipelago. Twenty-seven of the vessel's crew and ‘passengers were saved. The Star of Bengal belonged to the Alaska Packers’ association, and was on the way. from Fort Wrangel to San Francisco with a cargo of 45,000 of salmon. In addition to the crew 100 Chinese and Japanese who were employed in the canneries of the-com- pany, taken aboard at Fort Wrangel. Forced to Abandon Rescue. he Star of Bengal was peing towed to sea by two tugs and Was blown | ashore on the west side of the Coro- nation island. The tugs were obliged to abandon her in order to save them- | selves. Telegrams received here state that a small tug in the service of the | Alaska Packers’ association standing by the wreck for many hours | waiting for the weather to moderate, and the United States steamer Burn- side, a cable ship, also went to render assistance. Vessel Strikes on Rocks. The steamers were finally compell- | ed to cut the tow line to save them- | selves. The bark then s‘ruck on the rocks. The condition of the weather has been such ever since that the steam- ers were unable to get close enough to be of any assistance. The Star of Bengal was an jron | bark of 1,004 tons register, 282 feet long, with 40 feet beam. She sailed | from Fort Wrangle on April 22. she carried BIG ORDER FOR STEEL PLATE | it Will Take Homestead Mills Two | Weeks, Running Double Turn, to Fill Contract. | What is said to be the largest sin- gle order for steel plate ever received | by the Carnegie Steel Company, came from the Pittsburg Steamship Com- | pany, the general “offices of which | are in Cleveldnd, when that firm or- | dered 80,000 tons of steel plates to be | used in building cre vessels at the | Loraim, O., docks. i It will take the Carnegie steel | | mills two weeks, working double turn, | {n finish the order and work in the plate mills, previously closed was be- gun last night. Most of the structural | mills also will resume operations as a result of the order. | | WHOLE VILLAGE FROZEN | . siberian Esquimaux Starved to Death i and Bodies Congealed. Seattle, Wash.—Frozen stiff and evidently dead for a long time all the inhabitants of a village of Siberian | Esquimaux were found on the Siber- ian coast by a party of Indians who went in a canoe last June to see their | comrades. Their provisions exhaust | od the Esquimaux had eaten the wal- rus covers from their houses and the clothing that covered them. This tale is told by Rev. Edward 0. Campbell, who is Presbyterian mission station at St. Lawrence Island, near Nome, Alaska, lin a letter received by Rev. Wallce | Lee of Seattle. FUNNY CHRISTMAS GIFT | Agreement to Separate Presented to Husband, Wife Getting $25. Hollidaysburg.—Charles G. Baldwin, charged in «court with deserting his wife, offered in defense a written agreement of separation, signed by | his wife. was » | tions closed during the past : alty has The accident was similar to -that gunnery schoolship Cour- onne off Les Salins d’Hyeres, August 12 last, when, by the bursting of the breech of one of the guns, six men were killed and 18 injured. The drill had been proceeding for a considera- ble time when, without warning, the | whole turret socemed to blow out. Dizmembered bodies were thrown in all directions, and several of them were hurled into the sea through the great breach caused by the explo- | sion. The spectacle Was horrible, the dead and wounded together with shat- tered arms and less littering the decks. A call to quarters was sound- ed and a speedily as possible the wounded were cared for. The gun that exploded was 7.6 inches bore, of which the cruiser carried two. Hap- pening so soon after the accident on the Courenne, the explosion has caused a sensation in naval circles and doubtless will lead to a moSt rigid investigation. : The La Touche Treville carries a complement of 170 men. - IRON MOVEMENTS Shipments of Raw Material Increas- ing and Finished Products Are in Demand. Cleveland, O.—The Iron Trade Re- view says: Among the important new transac- week are line 20,000 tons of gas pipe for a new | from Cincinnati to West Virginia, and 56.000 tons of sheet bars for port. The Oliver Ircn Mining Company is calling for proposals cn a large con: | centrator plant cn the western end | of the Mesaba range, involving and ex penditure of $1,500,000. The St. Paul railroad will build 5,000 steel underframe cars, for which | bids for steel underframes for half that number announced last week. Iron ore is now being moved by the were | Steel Corporation lake fleet at the rate | ot about $00,000 tons a week. LocomoTRE GOES WRONG Two Killed, 36 Hurt, When Passenger Train Plunges Into River. Carthage, Mo.—A gt. Louis and San Francisco passenger train was derail: od a mile and a half west of Carth- age at a curve close to Spring river. The engine and the baggage car went into the river and all of the other cars left the track and turned over. Lew Blood, the ‘engineer and Harry= Gerrouse, the fireman, were pinned under. the wrecked eigine in the stream and instantly killed. Thirty- six passengers were purt, one of whom will die. . Something went wreng with the.en- gine when the sharp curve was reach- ed. The engine turned over twice before it made its plunge. The smoker and the day coach also turn- ed two somersaults before they land- ed 15 feet from the tracks. Bank Examiners Scored. Washington.—Severely arraigning the methods of bank examiners, de- claring that they have failed to dis- cover embezzlements, defalcations and dishenesty, and frequently failed | to approximately estimate the value of bank securities, Comptroller of the Currency Lawrence O. Murray, before a conference of bank examiners rep- | resenting the entire territory east Of | Ohio, delivered a 3 |-pointing out needed reforms. in charge of the! i spirited address AUSTRALIA TO HAVE A NAVY Nucleus to Be a Flotilla of Destroy- ers and Submarines. Melbourne.—The British Admir- given its general approval to the scheme of the Australian Com- mcnwealth for the formation of a flotilla of six torpedo boat destroy- ers, nine submaries and two dispatch ° | boats as the nucleus of an Australian i navy. r Mrs. Baldwin testified that she was | induced to-sien the agreement os. a Christmas gift to her husband, and | that the only consideration received | by her was $25. and that Baldwin must contribute to | his wire’s support. Rain Quenches Forest Fires. ~Milwaukee, Wis.—Dispatches report that ‘forest fires which have been rag- Judge Bell decrees | | that the agreement was non-operative | | ment in time of peace. American Navy's Big Meat Order. The United States Navy Depart ment has just ordered 1;275,000 pounds of canned meats from the Schwarzschild & Surzberger Company, This is the largest single’ contract for meat ever made by the govera It will re: quire the slaugher: of 28,000 head -of | cattle: and 6,000 hogs to fill the oI ing in Upper Michigan and Northern | Wisconsin for some time were quench- ger for the present is removed. Will Furnish Work for 800. Nesquehoning, Pa.—The man moth new breaker of the Lehigh Coal and gation Company in the Panther Creek Valley will begin’ operations, civing employment to about 300 men and boys. Nearly one-third of the immigrants who arrive in the port of New York never go beyond the city for a home. Fire Loss $1,000,600 .a Day. Washington.—Dr. W. J. McGee, of the geolog A to this city Adirondacks, states that a conserva- | tive estimate of the damage being | done in that section by the forest | fires is $1,000,000 a day. Rob Bootblack of $3,325. Springfield, Ma George bootblack, to | son, a the ! po- lice ( : im ime Ww ed by heavy rains and that all dan- | der: the meat, when ready for delivery about 45 carloads. and to packed will amount TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS. Adam Rinchart, retired coal dealer of Lima, O., captured his runaway 14-year-old daughter, Martha A. Rine- hart, disguised as a boy in St. Louis, | and took her back home. : The Utah Democratic State conven- 2: tion: nominated Jesse Knight of Pro: vo, for Governor by acclamation. | {3 er.gaged to marry Ii is reported that the President’s oldest son, Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., Miss Carrie Loaise Washington, sister Munn, of of one of his Harvard classmates. rvey, who has return- | after a visit to the | Reno, Nev.—Nat C. Goodwin, the actor, filed a sealed complaint for ai: vorce against his wife, Bessie Hall Goodwin, better known as Maxine | Elliott. Nichol- Hackensack, N. J.—August on trial for the murder of his Mrs. Otillie Eberhard, chan: ed y and was sentenced to serve 30 irs in state prison. A. Rus Peabody, ene at-’ | torneys who had a leading the defense of Harry K. Tha the murder of iY dannly at Babylon, L. 1. of 1 v Eber: » ¢ - ~ n -~ - F . x LC) ce Berle . Try fobs i 4 i = { | { | N . . a A Se 5 ~ re. x e . A - 5 x, g “>. i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers