— on i — ys TRIG i ——————— RA SI AT ET STEAMER REPUBLIC GOES T0 BOTTOM Ttaalian. Ste:mer Florida, Which D.d the Damage, Took All Hands on Board. OTHER SHIPS TO THE RESCUE Captain of Republic Waits to, See His Proud Vessel, Disappear Below the Surface. Nantucket, Mass.—In groping her was through the dense fog off Nan- tucke lightship at dawn, the steamer Florida of the Lloyd-Italiano line, bound to New York from Naples, dealt a death blow to the- outward- bound steamer Republic, of the White Star line, laden with pleasure-seek- ing passengers for southern Europe and with supplies or the United States battieship fleet. The steamer Florida, proving to less seriously injured than the other steamer, took aboard the Republic passengers almost immediately, and 12 hows later all the officers and crew of the Republic, with the excep- tion of Captain Sealby, of thal ves- sel, who in his gig refused to leave the sight of his beloved vessel until she had disappeared forever beneath | the waves. That there was loss of life attend- ing the collision was not known un- | til an early hour Sunday morning. Then the wireless, which had had its firs great trial and proved its util- ity, brought the news that two pas- sengers on the Republ and fou: the Florida's crew had members of «met death. The dead—Mrs. Eugene Lynch, of Boston; W. J. Moone] banker, of Langdon, South Dakota; Four mem- bers of Fl The inju wife of the Union Central 1's CTEW. —Mrs. M. financial ag Life Murp of Y, nt the Eugene Lynch, cf Boston. The Republic was cn her course for the eastward, but the Flor- ida was 30 miles off the prescribed track for inward-bound steamers. While the possengers and the crew of the Republic were saved by the Florida, the fact that the Republic had been seriously injured and was sinking was spreod broadcast over the Atlantic for a distance of more than 100 miles by means of wireless | telegraphy. The mystic hand of the Marconi waves touched the s.eamers Baltic and l.a Lorraine cn their way to New York and brought them oround to the aid of the sinking liner. The Republic had 761 people on board. The collision, being amidships, al- mcst immediately flooded the engine room of the Republic and, of course, rendered her absolutely helpless. Fortunately, her wirel=ss equipment was well supplied wih storage bat- teries and there were used for more than six hours, until they gradually became exhausted. After that, re- course in signalling by means of submarine bells was adcpted. The Republic finally sank below the waves. GREAT LOSS OF LIFE One Hundred and Six Men Drowned Like Rats in a Rand Gold Mine. Johanneshurg.—One hundred and seventy-three persons are known have lost their lives, as a the floods which are general through- out the Transvaal colony and North- ern Natal. Great damage also has been done to property mining plants Raving suffered heavily and houses and railway bridges being swept away or inundated. The floods are the result rains that have fallen all the rivers have been con to roaring torrents. The r 3 telegraph 5 are disorganized iniall directions. 7 ’ By the bursting. of. the Knight's dam, the Witwaters Rand gold mine, in the southwestern part of the Traugyaal, yas flooded, and 10 white men and 150 natives were drowned. The water’from:this dam also flooded the lower. section of the town of Els- burg, where a number of houses were recently and Services swept away and 13 persons perished. “A gold “dredger, valued at $69,000 broke, adrift on the Kaap river, and was wrecked. Sues for Salary. Chicago. — Prof. Edward Capps, formerly an instructor in Greek in the University of Chicago,” but now a | member of of Princeton University, -the University of Chicago for alleged to be dve as back salary. asserts that when he resigned university - withheld one-third of salary due him and also some of salary he earned during the summer. the faculty ed the Lincoin Memorial Road. Washington; * D. C.—The senate adopted a proposition by Senator Knox for a survey looking to the con- struction of the Lincoln Way, a mem- orial road from the White House to the battlefield of Gettysburg, and au- thorized an appropriation of $50,000 to pay the expense of this survey- making plans for construction and es- timates of the cost. Anti-Japanese Bills. Sacramento, Cal.—Governor has promised that he will veto the four anti-Japanese bills now before the California Legislature should they be passed. This decision is the re- sult of the message from the dent, urging him to do all in his 1 er to prevent hostile legisiation against the Japanese. Insurance Com- | pany, of Grand Forks, North Dakda; | | regular to | result of | ia of heavy ted in- and | has brought suit against | $2,500, | He | the | the | Gillett | i- | judicial appropriation TO CLOSE BREWERIES Another Drastic Step War on Liquor in Legislature. in Nashville, Tenn.—By a vote of 60 to 36 the lower ‘house: of. the legislature passed the bill to prohibit the manu- facture of intoxicants in Tennessee after January 1, 1910. The bill has already passed the senate and now goes to the governor, who is expected to veto if, as he did the bill prohibiting the sale of liquor. Like the latter, the manufacturers’ measure will probably pass over the governor’s veto. Consideration of the: bill created bitter discussion. An amendment was offered providing for the appoint- ment of a commission composed of the governor, the treasurer and comp- troller, whose duty it would be to ap- praise the: property and assess the damages that would accrue to the dis- tillers and brewers. This amend ment was voted down by practically the same vote as that recorded on the final passage of the bill. An amendment extending the time until January 1, 1911, was aiso tabled. RUBBER PLANTS TO CLOSE Whole Industry to Be Idle During Most of February. B:ston, Mass.—About 5,000. opera- tives employed in the subsidiary fac- tories of the United States Rubber Company, and by one or two smaller concerns, will be idle during the greater part of February, according to notices which have been posted at various plants. On January 27 the | Woonsocket Rubber Company's boot mill at Millville, the Boston Rubber | Shoe Company's factories in Malden {and Melrose, the Goodyear Metallic | Rubber Shoe Company's boot and shoe shops and the Goodyear India Rubber Glove Company's factory, the latter two plants in Naugatuck, Conn., will he shut down for four weeks. All controlled by the United States Rubber Company. The curtailment fare is due to an accum- | vlaticn of unso.d stock, ja condition | largely caused by fine weather in November, December and the early part of this mcnth. HILL SEES ROSY OUTLOOK Railroad Magnate Changes Vicws on Commercial Situation. New York.—James J. Hill reveal cn his return from an extensive tour cf inspecticn of the Great Northern system. Mr. Hill, who not long ago express- ed fears as to the immediate com- mercial future, declared that the pres- ent situation looks healthy. “Best of all,” he said, “there pienty cf money in the country. There has not been so rapid a recovery as some people looked for, but that just as well. all I'nes this spring. “Perhaps the most the west.” FEAR JAP TROUBLE About Proposed Legislation. Washingten.—President Rcosevelt told Californians summeoened to the pending in congress nor even the dif ferences between himself and congress were of half the improtance of i ia question, now cld issue of threa ws aimed at the enormol | poprlaticn cn the coz he Japan in California v ences between t | ator Fiint of C b lv as possik might be r ERUPTION OR CLOUDBURST onfiicting Stories of a. Peculiar Phil- ippine ‘Disaster, f dispatches give but a Manila.—Brie abas province idea of a di uary 19, and fram Tay- , confused I Jan- ined whether it was nic icn of { Mount l.agnas or a coludbu One telegram said a volcanic eru real ly occurred, but that it on Mount Hanajao. . A large fissure mas made | through an old crater, r part |of a large lake which | there. Torrents of down the mountain side tI fons and ravines and. floo streams. Cnly one death, tha | child, - has been reporte INLAND WATERWAY | BOOM White House that he thought nothing | | There | he mcaned, after he was taken to the ed himself in the role cf an optimist | is | | { is | ribly burned their faces. There is always some | tims were taken to the new tubercu- increzse in certain kinds of business, | losis hospital, which had just been and I lock for a healthy revival in | ccmpleted. noteworthy | partly feature of the situation is the increase | entire in building operations, particularly in | 420. | President Confers With Californians | men’s ward. { mod | - | taken from the Empire of Japan for {cne of the larger i be 1,000 | National Board of Trade Goes cn Rec- | | ord for Big “Appropriation. { Washington, D. C.—The National | Beard of Trade adopted .a resolution {favoring ¢ department of fhe Federal { Government which shall have charge iof all public improvements... Other | resolutions opposed Federal inspec- | tion of grain, favored an annual river {and harbor bill appropriating $50,000,- { 600 for internal waterways, and inter- | national arbitration. | The board went in a body to the | White House ard were received by |the President. The annual banquet {was given at the New Willard. Judges’ Salaries Increased. Washington.—Consideration of pro- | house apparatus, motors | This is the first vnit of electrification | ing cities: | railways | eliminating steam railway traction in | : . i posed increases of salaries of Federal | judges was resumed by the senate the legislative, executive and bill was taken By a vote of 38 to 31 the sala- of 29 circuit j $s were ir 3- 0 to $10,000. iter red this act { when { up. ries {ed from $7.C | i | Japan has recéntly completed a most | exhaustive report INMATES OF ALMSHOUSE SEIERELY BUBNED Employe Makes Heroic. Rescues When Paupsrs Try to. Save Trifl:s. WAS STARTED BY A MATCH | Bed on Third Floor of institution _Scon Ablaze, Threatentag 250 Persons. Pe Youngstown, O.—Rushing" back to save their. ‘little . belpagihgs, from flames that destroyed the men’s ward of the Mahoning county infirmary, pear Canfield, 14 inmates were seri- ously burned, three probably fatally. All had been removed to safety, when one dashed baek for a coat, an- onther for a kitten, a third for a dol- lar watch and the others for various trifles. : The injured—Jchn Davis, aged G6, Youngstown; expected to die; Steph- en Kelley, aged 64, Youngsiown, ex- pected to die; Harry Hird, aged 60. Young:town, expected to die; John Davis, Dennis Mahoney, Thomas Pritchard, Arthur J. Evans, Joseph Alexander, Phillip Eckert, Charles Williams, Christ Scrub, Jacob Baum- oarten, Andrew Linguist, Charles Bailey. : Farmer Hero Makes Rescues. Bailey is employed at the institu- tion as a farmer and he risked. his life to rescue the poorhouseé charges: The blaze was started by an inmate throwing a match on a bed in the THREE KILLED Trains on Pennsylvania Railroad Col- lide in Dense Fog. Altoora, Pa.—In an impenertable fog" on the Pennsylvania railroad at Summer Hill, 25 miles west of this city, two sections of the Chicago and St. ‘Louis express, westward bound, collided, killing three persons, seri- susly injured one and injured in a lésser degree nearly every person on the first section. # The killed—S. L. Taylor, Brook- lyn, N. Y., employed by “Charles .E. Rung, broker, of New York; M. J. Kelly, Pullman car conductor, Jer- sey City; Charles Coleman, colored, a Pullman porter, Philadelphia. The injured—W. F. Johnson, Sec- ond and McKean streets Cincinnati; Mrs. Adam Rankin, 214« Green street, Anderson, Ky.; W. D. Kissell, fireman, Pittsburg; four mail clerks, not seri- ous. The second train was composed en- tirely of Pullman cars and was drawn by two engines. The porter of a Pullman closest to an engine was killed, as was the. con- ductor of. the Pullman section. One passenger of the first section was killed. . ELOPES WITH PATIENT Dispensation Asked for Nurse Who Ran Away to Wed. Cincinnati.—Pope Pius will be ask- ed by Archbishop Moeller to grant a special dispensation for Sister Adelia of the St. Francis Hospital corps, who, in the disguise of a cook's garb elop- ed last August with Jacob Waller, a patient, who fell in love with the sweet faced nurse during his illness, the fact of the elopement just leaking ut. Waller left his bed one morning on the plea of illness and Sister Adelia third floor of the building and in a few did not go to early mass in che minutes the flames -had spread | chapel. Instead she went into the throughout the entire structure. | Kitchen of the hospital and exchanged fire-fighting institution was inadequate equipment and the entire seemed dcomed. The 250 inmates and as soon as they Kelley rushed back kitten. “I couldn't were helped out got ‘to safety to save a pet see it burn to death,” hespital. Hird had recently bought a dollar watch and that drew him back. Robert Tayler, the head of the in- stitution, was in Youngstown attend- ing a meetiag of infirmary directors. Mrs. Taylor, Charles Bailey, Chief Nurse Ida Ruff and Hospital Nurse. Adam Nixon got the men out of the” building and did their best to prevent the panic, when Kelley started the rush back. The men were all caught on. the second story landing and. the flames ate the clothes from their bodies, ter- The vic- The loss from the fire is $110,000 covered by insurance. The institution was burned 12 years The Youngstown = fire department sent a steamer and hose. wagon to Canfield, which is eight miles away, and the blaze was confined to the The county commis- sioners will meet tc arrange for the erection of a new building. WIDOW SUES FOR $500,000 Penn Mutual Is Party to Action for Insurance Money. Okla.—Mrs. Susie M. who was the victim 5 assassination at Eu- 1906, filed suit in the circuit court here for of $500,000 insurance te’s life. : Mutual Insurance Com- hiladzlphia, the American 1 Insurance Company of Gal- the Provident Savings Life Assurance Society of New York, the Mutual Life of New York and the Fi- delity and Casualty Company of New York are defendants. > Burdette’s body was found in a well zt his farm. Near by on the ground was a revolver. For a time it was believed. Burdette had committed sul- cide, but an investigation resulted in the assassination theory being official- lv adoptéd. Judge Campbell set the case for trial February 8. JAPAN PLACES CONTRACT Will Spend $7,000,000 in America for Electrical Material. New York.—The largest order ever electrical apparatus for the conver- sion eof a steam railroad to electric power was signed in this market by construction engi- neering corporaticns. The units will kilowatt turbine generator The whole contract for power line material, ear and supplies is = $7,000,000. sets. of an imperial line of railways that serves Tokio and &even manufactur- One of. the engineers here from Japan said: “The -Imperial Engineer Corps of ipsn the practica- bi‘'ity and economy of electrifying all in the Empire. The work be the Teckio zone is to at cice.” begun Woman Makes Torch of Self. Hagerstown, Md.—Insane with grief over the death of her child, Mrs. Hi- ram Hulzell of Boonsboro saturated her uniform cf one of the cooks. ried by a club rooms. for the street clothing They were mar- iustice in the Duckworth ASIA MINGCR SHAKEN Seismic Distudbance Particularly Se- vere in Neighborhood of Smyrna. Smyrna, Turkey.—So #ar as can be ascertained eight persons were killed by a sharp earthquake which occurred at Phocaea, 25 miles northwest of this city, and at cther neighboring towns. Considerable damage was done to buildings at Phocaea. The shock was very strong at Chii, where the population became panic- stricken, though no serious damage resulted there. This city also experienced the earth- quake, but there was no loss of life and no damage was done. The American battleships Louisiana and Virginia are at anchor in this harbor. _ONE MAN CAPTURES, WARSHIP Angered by Being Fired Upon, He Boards Cruiser With Gun. Hongkong.—The Chinese harbor guard boat Samstui fired two shots at the British steamer Chempo for foul- ing a wood raft. This angered Captain Lewington of the Chenpo, who, arming himself with a revolver, boarded the Samstui in a small boat, arrested the commanding officer and turned him over to the Captain of the British gunboat Robin. The occurrence is being investigated by the Captain of the Robin and .the British Consul. SPEAKER SILENCED House Stops Tirade of Abuse Against President. : Washington.—In the course ‘of a speech severely denunciatory of Pres- ident Roosevelt as an officer of the government and as a man, made un- der; the general license permitted in debate on the penscns appropriation -bill, Representative William Willett, Jr, of New York, was stopped from further utterance by a point of order that his language seriously reflected upon the chief executive, and that ac- cordingly he was proceeding in viola- tion of the rules that govern debate in the lower branch of Congiess. Emerson’s Daughter Dead. Concord, Mass.—Miss Ellen Emer- son, the eldest daughter of the late Ralph Waldo Emerson, the poet, died n®ar here at Milton. She was seven- ty years old and had - been in ‘poor health for some time. Through her father she met and entertained many literary personages. Harvard President Confirmed. Boston.—The board of overseers of Harvard college confirmed the nomin- atien of Prof. Abbott Lawrence Low- ell as president of Harvard Univers- ity to succeed President Charles Will- iam Eliot. : Chamberlain Is Elected. Salem, Ore.—Governor George E. Chamberlain, Democrat, was elected United States Senator to succeed C. W. Fulton, receiving a each House of the Legislature, which voted in separate session. > Bismarck, N. DM. N. received the vote of the Republicans in both houses of the Legislature for United States Senator to H. C. Hansbrough. The Democrats voted for John Cashel. Twenty-four Hurt in Wreck. Coffeyville, Kas.—A southbound passenger train on the Missouri Pa- cific railroad, collided headon with a freight train near Coffeyville. Twen- her clothing with oil and the applied a match. Mrs. Huzell’s body was burned to a crisp before the could be extinguished. She was 30 | years old and is survived by her hus- band and two children. Little imself flames | | | ty-four passengers were hurt, but only Mr. and Mrs. P. S. Howell of Nowa- ta, Okla., are in a serious condition. Na val Increase. a majority of. -| vote. Johnson succeed OVER FIFTY MEET DEATH IN BURNING GRID Scores Blown to Piecss, Burned or Drwned in Lake, EXPLOSION STARTS A BLAZE Many Are Missing and the Number of Fatalities May Bes Increased. Chicago.—Blown to pieces by ex- ploding powder, burned to death by the resultant fire or drowned in the waters of Lake Michigan was the fate of some 53 workmen who were work- ing on a submarine tunnel at a wood- en crib a mile and a half from shore. The crib was used in the construc- tion of a new submarine water tun- nel connecting with the south side shore of the city. at Seventy-third street. It is known that 95 workmen were employed in the crib and the connecting tunnel at the time of the explosion, which started the fire and blew or drove men into the water. The work of the destroying ele- ments was begun so unexpectedly and reaped its harvest of dead and injured with such swiftness that the contract- ing firm of George W. Jackson and the rescuers have been unable to ar- rive at anything like an accurate list of those who perished, or of others who escaped the fury of the flames or the icy waters of the lake. When the fire tug Conway and its crew had finally quenched the flames, 53 bodies had been carried to the shore and placed in morgues in South Chicago, awaiting identification. The bodies of the victims in the majority of instances were unregnizable. Owing to the difficulty experienced by small craft in reaching the crib during the winter, most of the work- men employed on the work, particu- larly those who had no families, slept in temporary bunks at the crib. It was just as these men had been awakened for the day's work that the explosion and subsequent fire caused the pandemonium which resulted in the great loss of life. FIRE RAVAGES RUINS Persons Still Alive in Afflicted Town Are Prey to the Flames. Messina.—A serious fire broke out the earthquake-wrecked city. The remains of the Pennesi palace fell in and added to the.conflagration. The flames spread in spite of the work of the soldiers to control them, and the situation was serious for a time, but the fire finally burned itself out. An odor of burning flesh mingled with the smoke, and it is feared that persons_ still alive were consumed. The flames had their center in the Pennesi palace, but they spread over the ruins of the City hall and the Bank of Italy. Tongues of fire leaped upward, while sparks fell in a heavy shower for a considerable distance. A terrific hailstorm later in the day swept over the afflicted town, follow- ed by torrential-rain. The sheds where the survivors are sheltered were flooded. Earthquakes continue almost hour- ly. THREE DIE IN FLAMES Bodies Are Found in the Ruins of Their Home in Breoklyn. New York.—Three persons, a wom- an and her two children, were burned to death in a fire in a one-story and basement house on Bergen street, Brooklyn. here January 19 among the ruins of | PUBLIC LAND FRAUD Startling Facts Come to the Knowi- edge of Secretary of Interior Garfield. washington. — Information of. a startling character of alleged whole- sale and astounding frauds upon the public lands has colle into the pos- session of Secretary of the Interior Garfield through special agents in the field. The serious allegation is made that approximately 11,000,000 acres of land west of the Mississippi river have been fraudulently acquired with- in the past two years by corporations and indiviffuals. " With a view of recovering these lands, Seretary Garfield sent letters to Chairmen Hale and Tawney, of the Senate and House appropriation committees, respectively, asking for an additional appropriation of $500, 000, which, if. granted, with that al- ready asked for, will give the depart- ment $1,000,000 for that purpose. The specific purpose of the appropriation | requested is for preventing “depreda- tions upon public timber, protecting public lands, examining swamp lands, ete.” = TONS OF DYNAMITE GO uP Five Killed, One Dying, Many Injured in Explosion. ? : * Newark, N. J.—Four men were kill- ed and ten others injured, one fatally, when several tons of dynamite in a building of the Forcite powder works, at Lake Hopatcong, blew up. The detonation shook the country for miles around and blew the building to atoms. Of the 14 men working in it not one escaped death or injury. The dead are Louis Barth, aged 50, Lederwood; Charles Henderson, aged 30, Netcong; Joseph Sestak, aged 23, Hopatcong Landing, and Stephen CGladdes, aged 28, Netcong. The bodies of the men nilled were mutilated beyond recognition. Several other workers were blown considera. ble distances, and it is considered re- markable that only James Boyle re- ceived fatal injuries. The Forcite powder works belong to the Dupont Powder Company and maufacture blasting dynamite. WILL ISSUE LINCOLN STAMPS One Hundred Million Red Twos Martyr's Centenary. Washington, D. C.—To commemor- ate the one hundredth anniversary .of the birth of Abraham Lincoln, Post- master General Meyer announced that one hundred million new two-cent postage stamps will be issued on or before February 12. The design is a portarit of Lincoln in an ellipse, the only decoration be- ing a spray of laurel leaves and the inscription, “U. S. Postage,” at the top, with the numerals ‘“1809—Feb- ruary 12—1909,” at the bottom. The color will be red. The profil was taken from a copy of St. Gaudens’ statue of Lincoln on Riverside Drive in Chicago. on PAY IROQUOIS DAMAGES Man Who Lost Wife and Three Chil. dren in Fire Accepts Cash. Chicago.—After five years of hotly contested- litigation, settlements have been made outside of court for 30 of the nearly 600 deaths caused by the Iroquois theater fire. In each of the 30 cases $750 is to be paid by one of the firm responsible for the construc- tion of the theater. One of the cases thus settled was for a man who lost his wife and three children in the fire. Many other suits against firms and individuals in- terested in the theater are still pend- ing. The number of unsettled cases is estimated at more than 400. PLATT’S TOGA FOR ROOT Secretary of State Nominated by Re- publicans Unanimously. When ‘the firemen arrived the house was a mass of fiames. The blaze was quickly subdued and it was sup- posed everybody in the building had escaped. When the ruins were searched, however, the bodies of Mrs. Maria Diazand, her two children, a boy of four and a girl of two years, were found. SENATORS ELECTED Salt Lake City.— United States Sen- ator Reed Smoot was re-elected. Denver, Col.—Charles J. Hughes, Jr., Democrat, of Denver, was elected United States Senator by the Colora- do Legislature to succeed Henry M. Teller. Hartford, Conn.—United States Sen- ator Frank B. Brandegee, of New London, was elected by the General Assembly of Connecticut to succeed himseli. Raleigh, N. C.—The General As- sembly of North Carolina veted sep- arately for United States Senator. The jecint session will be held Thurs- day and Senator Overman will be elected to succeed himself. Guthrie, Okla.—The House and Sen- ate voted separately for United States Senator. . Senator Thomas P. Gore, Democrat, received the straight party He will be formally re-elected in joint session. Dakota Senate Gives Women Ballot. Pierre, S. D.—The constitutional suffrage amendment giving women the right to vote passed the senate withcut debate and with but two dis- senting votes. Powder Explcsion Injures Twelve, Philadelphia.—An explosion in the mixing building of the Dupont Powder plant at Gibbstown on the New Jersey side of the Delaware river, 20 miles south of Philadelphia, injured 12 men and destroyed seven iron buildings. The explosion cccurred at 7:20 o’clock and was felt within a radius of 30 miles. The most seriously injured an emj hh is Jcel Bates, es Sen- Albany, N. Y.—Secretary of State Elihu Root was the unanimous choice of the Republican legislative caucus to succeed Senator Thomas C. Platt, whose term will expire March 4. The Democratic caucus named for- mer Lieutenant Governor Lewis Stuy- vesant Chanler, who was the Demo- cratic candidate for goVernmor at the November election. Mr. Root’s nom- ination is equivalent to an election, as the legislature is overwhelmingly Re- publican. ROCKEFELLER’S BiG GIFT Magnate Gives Another Million to University of Chicago. Chicago.—John D. Rockefeller has given another $1,000,000 to the Uni- versity of Chicago. In a telegram to the board of trustees, John D. Rocke- feller, Jr., announced that his father had set aside on behalf of the univers: ity, securities that will yield an an- nual income of $40,000. The endowment fund of the uni- versity is new $15,000,000. Mr. Rockefeller’s total contributions to the university aggregate $24,800,000 for endowment and other purposes. Venezuela Makes Peace. The Hague.—Jcse J. Paul, the Ven- ezuelan envoy, had a lengthy confer- eign minister, and an agreement was reached on the principal points at is- sue between Venezuela and the Neth- erlends. © This will enable the com- pletion of a protocol dtiring the com- ing week restoring diplomatic rela- tions. : Governor Sends Troops. Wilmington, N. C.—The local mil- itary company at Clinton, N. C., was called out by Governor Kitchin to pro- tect the jail there from the attack cf a mob of citizens who threatened summary vengeance upon William Ward, a negro, who made an altempt Jones | to assault Mrs. W. J. McLeod, wife | of a citizen of Moltonvile, four miles | from Clinton. The ro was cap- tured after some re in 1a Lo ence with M. Van Swinderen, the for- i ak I acts out he 08S) ak To effi Qen C SOLD | The was si dividir Caroli countr covere south They that f reside: she el that N state E Pazo | case of Piles i : | ‘Wh taking Young body met life. of thi caugh knocl secon the el finish Mrs. | teeth tion, d Tf see 1 looki OF rt | em rn 0Q C50 AD an bet ht 1 i a I EE a TT
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers