. THE BULLETIN. FLORIN, PA. g0 Ji ESOHROLL Editor and Publisher | i SUBSCRIPTION: Fifty Cents Per Amnum,. . strictly in gion pros tasd AVANCE, Six Months... ..: -. Single Copies," * ~~ . eH “Sample Copies Free. 1 Speoial Rates to Yearly Advertisers. Address all communications fo" JHE BULLETIN, - Florin, Pa. 25 Cents. 2 Contes. . - "Britered at the Postoffico at Florin as sevond-vlads mail mattér. “The extraordinary prosperity of Kéhsas is revealed this year in the récord of births, in which an unusual number of triplets appears. Now who will dare say that Chica- go has no eyes for the beautiful. She is going to spend $25,000,000 to im- prove the looks of her lake front, Question is raised as to the per manency of American humor. Why, when the jokes of mother-in-law and the boarding-house are enduring, world without end? ; The recent Spanish election was at- tended by riots and murders. Con- sidering how little an election in Spain really amounts to, it seems un- reasonable to have so much difficulty over it. The regularity with which the bobo- links return annually to their New England summer resorts seems to ex- cel even that of the featherless bipeds. An elderly citizen of Kensington, N. H., who has kept a diary since his boyhood, says that the bobolinks “came around” this year on the 13th of May, and that they have never ap- peared later than that date in the last 50 years, nor earlier than the 7th of May. # sjtria is planning a system of for internal transport as com- that which is being developed ny. The plan calls for a .ntinuous waterway from the North and Baltic seas to the Adriatic and the Black sea, to cost 750,000,000 crowns. It is proposed to begin work in 1904 and it will take 20 years to romplete the system. The object of Wese capals is to increase the impor tange of Budapest and Fiume as cen treS of international traffic. ~ af While in ¥ngland no income tax is levied on incomes of less than $800, in Prussia, on tho. other hand, the limit of exemption is drawn at in comes of less than $225. Yet even with this only 8.46 percent of the jjopulation of Prussia are income taxpayel's, over 91 percent having to live on less'than $225 per annum. Again, the prope:ty of over $1500 capital value shows that only 14,000 individuals out of a total population of 32,000,000 possess prop | erty of over $175,000 value. The death of “Gentleman Joe,” tramp, musician, poet—some of whose verse had the note of genuine inspira. tion—and that of Skoog, the expert counterfeiter, who was of good family and posessed fine talents, are sad ip that their perversion to evil seemed wholly uncontrollable. With such ex: amples of life's failures the effort now being made by the schoolauthorities tc deal intelligently with abnormal chil dren—the apparently incorrigibles, as well as the dull and deficient—seen worthy of encouragment. The menta’ twist if discovered in early youtt might be treated like a bodily ill til! health of mind may perhaps be finally restored. It is an experiment wel worth trying, thinks the New York Herald. At the present rate of the manufac ture of spools and other articles of women’s use, the immense white birch forests of Maine cannot last many vears. Although the birch forests are extensive, the fact that 17 spool mills and a large number of so-called novel ty mills are eating up the timber ai a rate of from 35,000,000 to 40,000,002 feet annually excites the apprehensior of foresters and manufacturers. The spool mills use about 30 cards of birch annually, turning out 800,000,000 Each spool is large enough to carry 200 yards of thread. The amount of thread that could be wound upon these spools would- reach 3600 times around the equator and leave a little for mend: ing. About as mugh spool wood is sent. to Purope ev year as is man ufactured into spools in| Maine. Las year. Maine exported about 15,000,00¢ feet of spool bars, chiefly to Scotland. and of this quantity about one-half was shipped to Bangor. / Several million . of spool bars are also shipped te parts of Ue United States, where hills. notably those | ADELBERT HAY ~~ KILEED' BY A FALL ‘Oldest Son of Secretary of State Meets With Patal Accident. : ) ‘SERVED'AS U. S. CONSUL AT PRETORIA Hie Falls From a Third-Story Window of ‘the i . New Haven Houge to the Sidewalk, Fifty .Feet Below~-Desth Almost; lnstantageous-=, His Father Breaks Down: om Reaching the, Scene of the Tragedy. Jpn at Ai New Haven; Conn. (Special.)-—Adel bert Stone. Hay, former. Consul of the ‘United States at Pretoria, South Africa; ‘and eldest son of. Secretary of State | John Hay, fell from a window ‘inthe third story of the, New Haven House in this city shortly before 2.30 o'clock Suixi- day morning and was instantly killed: Tie death oecurred on the eve of the Yale comméncement, and in which, by virtue of his class office, the young mar wotlld have heen one of the leaders, = i: The tragedy has cast a gloom over the whole. tity, and will undoubtedly “be felt. throughout the ‘day, - which has heretofore been so brilliant and full of happinéss for Yale and her sons. i ‘he full details of the accident may never be known. Hon John Hay, Secretary of State; arrived here from Washington at 5.43 p. m. Mr. Hay was unaccompanied and gave signs of great grief. He entered a carriage and was driven immediately to the residence of Seth Mosely. out with the long trip and once within the walls of the house that sheltered the remains of his son, the Secretary col- lapsed. His prostration was so com- plete that Dr. Gilbert was summoned. FOURTEEN DEAD AFTER EXPLOSION. Flames Spread and Cremated Inmates of Tenement--House Wrecked. Paterson, N. J. (Special).—Fourteen people are believed to have been killed and a number injured as the result of a fire following an explosion among a quantity of fireworks in the store of Abraham M. Rittenburg. The store was on the ground floor of a tenement | building. The cause of the explosion 1s nat known and the property loss will not exceed $35,0co. he explosion occurred shortly after noon and many of the occupants of the building were out at dinner. The build- ing in which the fire took place was a frame tenement, four stories high, with stores on the ground floor. The midd'e store was occupied by Rittenburg. Ten ! families occupied flats in the building. . So great was the force of the explo- | sion that a boy playing in the street half | a block away was lifted from his feet and | hurled against an iron fence. A trolley car was directly in front of the building. | The burst of flame blown out into the street scorched the sides of the car and singed the hair of the passengers. A number of those who were on the upper floors of the building were either stunned and then burned to death Se found escape cut off and were suffo- cated. After the first explosion there were a series of smaller ones and then came a second big explosion, which was muffled and deadened and probably oc- curred in the cellar. Terrible Leap of Sing Sing Convict. New York (Special.)—John Coogan was taken to Sing Sing prison from this city to serve a nine-year sentence for | burglary. Iie had served time there be- fore. Being left alone in the barber shop for a moment he darted up three flights of stairs to the fifth gallery and | leaped over the guard rail onto the | flagging, five stories below. He landed | upon his feet and badly sprained both | ankles and then pitched forward and | struck has head against a door, cutting | it badly. He is in the hospital. Coo- | gan will have to serve out his good con- duct allowance from his last term be- | fore he can begin his new term. | Thousands Are Destitute. Kansas City, Mo. “(Special).—Thou- | sands of people—men, women and chil- dren—camping on the border of the | Kiowa-Comanche-Apache reservations in ! Oklahoma awaiting the opening of that | land to settlement are in destitute cir- cumstances, according to Dr. J. J. Mec- | Kenna. who has just returned from the | scene. ‘Dr. McKenna said: ‘Twenty | thousand men, women and children are | massed on the border, and half of them are utterly destitute. At leagt 5,000 of | them have been there a vear and a half. V'reck on Atlantic Coast Line. Spartanburg, S. C. (Special).—The | north-bound train on the Atlantic Coast Line from Augusta jumped the track | below Roebuck, Spartanburg county. The engine, tender and all the cars were derailed. Engineer Zeigler was severely injured in the head and chest. His recovery is doubtful. Baggagemaster Wallace was | hurt internally. Three other employees were badly bruised and otherwise in- jured. The train was two hours late, | aving broken down at Troy. Sulcide in a Cemetery. Columbia, S. C. (Special).—]J. Frank Clyburn, 25 years old, went to Elmwood Cemetery at 6 o'clock and, going to the inclosure where the Confederate soldiers | are buried, shot himself through the heart. He was a son of the late Colonel | Clyburn, of Lancaster, commander of the | Twelfth South Carolina Volunteers. In! his pocket was a letter to his mother | telling of the praise given his father by | the veterans returning from Memphis. | Cape Rifles Captured. i Cradock. Cape Colony (By Cable). — ! In an engagement at Waterkloof, June | 20, the British lost eight men killed and two mortally wounded. and had four | men seriously wounded. In addition, | 66 men of the Cape (Colonial) Mounted Rifles were captured. The captain of a Boer squadron is reported to have been wounded, and one Boer was killed. Men Fall From Niagara Bridge. | Niagara Falls, N. Y. (Special.)—A ladder on which three men were engag- ed in painting the iron work of the steel | arch bridge over the Niagara Gorge slipped irom its fastenings. % One of the rien was dached to deata on the bridge | abutments, is body falling into the | rushing waters of the rapids, another | was caught by the legs in the lattice- | work of the bridge and escaped with a ! | | 1 | | | i broken leg. and the third escaped un- injured by clinging to a rope for what seemed to the spectators to be hours, but whieh. it reality was only a few a J t 1 { ‘| row aboard’ a Worn | | dynamite the | the joints. | ers hissed the | stoned a monastery. |an axe at Cadun, B. C. i i "SUMMARY OF THE NEWS, fis vq Domestic. : The Pynchon National Bank, .of Springfield, Mass., was found by the ex- aminers to be insolvent and was closed by ‘order; of the Comptroller of the Cur- rency. and ‘a number of persons wounded in a train catrying colored Baptists to ‘a picnic near St. Louis, Mo: An express trait, ;rom Pittsburg for Cleveland was wrecked, the fireman and baggagemaster killed and a number of the passengers injured. : Gregoria Cortez; a Mexican, was ar- ‘I rested in the mines above Laredo Tex., and admitted having killed iwo. sheriffs and a posse man. |. “The commencement exercises at the | Virginia Military Institute included an {artillery drill and dress parade and a final german at night. All work on the Pacific Mail steamers and other lines at the Newport News shipyards was stopped by the machin- | ists’ strike. Richard Freeman, | of insanity, shot his sister | killed himself. Rev. Clarence Young, of Newark, N. J.. was sent to State prison for five years for bigamy. The Baptist ministers Norfolk of Boston, in a fit and then in ture “Nana.” | Richmond, was sold to the Virginia Club. John Harbolo, 20 years of age. was igrowned in Codorus Creek, at York, a. The registration of Chinese in Hawaii shows that there are 27,000 there. | ing Railroad continue to spread. A let- | ter from President Baer in reference to | the strike situation was not well re- [ ceived by the strikers. | Cleveland Holster, Ira Dowain, and | George Walker, sons of prominent fam- ilies of Newport News, Va., were arrest- ed on suspicion of having set fire to the | Hampton Sash, Door and Blind Factory. Rev, Franklin H. Kerfoot, D.D., cor- responding secretary of the Home Mission Board, died at Atlanta, Ga. A number of resolutions bearing upon vse of money in elections and school finds were introduced in the Virginia | Constitutional Convention. Collisions have occurred between the striking miners and the guards in the Thacker-Matewan coal fields of West Virginia, and the strike is assuming serious proportions. The controversy between the town officials of ‘Winchester, Va.. and county officers over a pile of bricks re- sulted in the arrest of county. employes by a police officer. Senator Chauncey M. Depew wrote an ting him about withdrawing from his { third-term interview and defending the third term. Miss Adeline L. Mayo, a Richmond (Va.) society girl. eloped to Washing- | ton with Lloyd A. Turner, of San Fran- cisco, and sent a telegram announcing her marriage, | Sheriff S$ iker and posse arrested six men near Mount Jackson, Va. on sus- | picion of having set fire to the mill of S. H. Lonas and to have killed Lonag’ son. An attempt was made to wreck with First Methodist Church of Manhattan, Kan.,, whose pastor, re- | cently elected Mayor, has waged war on A receiver was appointed in and Guarantee Company, for the Nash- ville Street Railway. Mrs. Louise Thomas, tion being that her property was to be taken from her, Mrs. Emily Heck, of Allentown, Pa, | | sued to recover $10,000 from Mrs. Alice Hitchings, who shot and stabbed hei. Opposition has developed among the Harvard graduates to the granting of a degree to Secretary of State Hay. Foreign. Serious anti-clerical disturbances oc- curred in Spain. In Madrid the riot- Infanta Isabella and At Alicante a moo attacked a religious procession, wrznch- | ed a crucifix from the priest's hands and tore it to pieces. Jean de Bloch, member of the Rus- sian ministry of finance, in a paper read at the United Service Institution in | London, stated that the South African War had proved that military service as/ practiced to-day was absurd. J The trial of the Marquis de Lua Sa- luces, a well-known Royalist, who rje- turned to Paris after having been bain- ished, was begun before the Frenich | Senate as a High Court of Justice. / M. de Witte, the Russian finance njin- ister, says Secretary Gage does not/ un- derstand the situation with referenjce to | the countervailing duty controverky, Lieut. L. Greenshields, jof the { Shropshire Yeomanry Cavalry, ,died in London from wounds received in the South African War. Z Charles Kensington Salarjan, the composer, died in London. / A Chinaman killed five gardeners with Six men were lost with the British | bark Falkland off the coasf of France. A Russian dispatch sAys ignorance | among females in some Sections of that country is at such a pfemium that one who can read is jeered fat as unwomanly. Spain is making yAgorous efforts to repair her depletion fof armament. Earl Russell will be tried at the next session of the Cemdtral Criminal Court on a charge of contracting a bigamous marriage. Emperor William emphasized his opinion of Bismfarck and his displeasure of Von Buelowfs tribute to he Iron Chancellor by dejpositing a wreath at the | foot of the statue bearing the inscrip- | tion of “To the} Great Emperor's Great ! Servant.” Another lot : fof $3,000,000 Russian railway bonds i offered to American investors. Pennsylvania J& Northwestern net éarnings for AY were $17,182 and for four month #301, an increase of $2701. Na I'he production of Cody in Scotland in 1900 was 19,000,966 tons; against 17,- 749.504 tons in 1899 and 17,020,468 tons in 1808. The Pennsylvania Railroad has paid off its $20,650,000 loan in the purchase of B. & O. 3 ties. Mrs. Samuel Hart, colored, was killed’ assed resolutions denouncing the pic- p | | The historic Van Leer property, in| The strikes in the shops of the Read- | Baptist | suffrage, reform of the judiciary. the | the | open letter to General Grosvener twit- | Nashville | Z i i e FUSE |. pee ” at the instance of the Baltimore Trus | S'x Hundred Insurgents, With Arms, Stie- of Newport | News, Va., became insane, her hallucina- | 4 “SIXTY LIVES LOST Several Towns Swept Away By Floods at Night in the Pocahontas Valley and Elk Horn Mining Region in West Virginia. PROPERTY LOSS WILL REACH MILLIONS OF DOLLARS. Roanoke, Va. (Special).—It is now reported that not over 60 people are mis- sing in the coal fields as a result of Sat- urday’s flood. The town of Keystone, while much damaged, is not wiped out, as was re- ported. No estimate of property loss has been made either by coal operators or by the railroad officials. The loss, how- ever, is far up in the thousands. No definite news has been received from the coal fields, as all wires are still down and there is no means of communication. The Norfolk and Western Railroad | . . | Company's loss will reach $500,000. Men | and materials are being hurried to the | coal fields from all over the line of the | Norfolk and Western. A telegram dated Ennis, W. Va., from | General Manager Johnson, of the Nor- | folk and Western Railroad, says: | “The best information is that about 60 people were drowned in the North Fork t of the Elkhorn. Property loss about | $300,000. The Norfolk and Western Railroad suffered severe damage to its tracks and trestles. Expect to be open for traffic some time Wednesday if we have no more storms.” One train came in but not much new information could be gained from the passengers. The trains are running from Bluefield and Ennis, which places are just outside the territory visited by the cloudburst. The wires are down west of Bluefield, save one which goes | through to Ennis, but this is being used { as a train wire, which prevents the pub- | lic from gaining any additional particn- ( lars. The damage to property will { amount to hundreds of thousands of dol- | lars. Miles of railroad track are washed | out and great gulches have been created. { The devastated section covers an area | of about 20 miles west of Bluefield. It | is a very narrow valley, not much wider | than a broad street in some places. | | Coal mines are scattered all along the road. Keystone, the town reported to { have been so greatly damaged and at | first believed to have been wiped out of | existence, is a village of between 2,000 | and 3,000 people and is built along the | narrow valley and on the sides of the | bluffs. There is a creek which runs { through the town, over which most of | the houses are built on piles and rock- | work. This creek runs in a zigzag way | through the narrow village a Re a | gradual fall. The mountains either + side loom mip-for_ hundreds | the town is so narrow in places th n is obliged to go into the middle of it to see the sky. All reports agree that be- { tween 200 and 300 houses were swept | CAILLES TAKES OATH render in Luzon. Santa Cruz, Province of Laguna, Lu- zon Island (By Cabl ¥Y._General Cailles | surrendered here with 650 men and 500 rifles. J { Oaths of alfegiance to the United | States were @dministered to the former | insurgents, [ Colonel Caballes, who fled to the | mountains with a portion of his com- { mand, likewise surrendered. Cafilles did not sufficiently control the | populace to bring in all the insurgents {in his district. The proczedings of sur- i render were orderly. | Colonel Caballes, who, with 120 of Genjeral Cailles’ command, fled to the | mofintains in fear of being hanged by | the' Americans, has been overtaken by messengers from Cailles, conveying the (General's orders to surrender. When iCailles’ messengers caught up with and explained the situation to the fleeing | colonel, the latter apologized to his wen- | eral and returned to Pagsingan with still another 120 men, whom he persuad- ed to come in and surrender. Caballes brings at least 500 rifles from the out- lying posts beyond Pagsangan. THREE KILLED IN WRECK. Railroad Engine Jumps Off a Bridge With Terrible Results. Hendricks, W. Va. (Special).—A work train went through the Laurel Fork Bridge at Stover on the Dry Fork connection of the WestVirginia Central and Pittsburg Railway 14 miles south of this place. The accid:nt was caused Ly a flange on the pony truck breaking the bridge being on a sharp curve, causing the engine to jump the track, pulling sev- eral cars and a portion of the bridge {wih it and burying the men under the | debris in the rock bed of the Dry Fork | river. Superintendent Booker was rid- ling on the engine and it took several | hours to remove his body from under | the mass. The fall was 20 feet. All the | dead men leave families. Killed Over Board Bill. Pittston, Pa. (Special).—John Nis- back, a miner, was killed here by Mi- chael Diasko as the result of a quarrel over a board bill. Diasko boarded at Nisback’s home, and when the latter de- manded- payment Diasko grasped a idespread Destruction in the Valleys of the Mountain State--Cloudbursts Cause a Mighty Rush of Wators--A Train Caught in the Flood and the Passengers Rescued by Ropes.-Mahy Miles of Track Torn Up. f ® CLOUDBURST, _ LIVE N New R Following Taft civil goy an order has eral Chaffee a archipelago. dered to vaca large pubic b out of the mu government g cupied by th ippines. Th tofore occ Generals been org authoriti Governo headqua General ippines regar gove othg mi pig su ha NA away in the Elkhorn Valley, but, of course, not all the occupants were drowned. The railroad people are rushing mate- rial and supplies the Elkhorn. J. W. Crotty, eman on the Norfolk and Western toa® who lives in this city, received a message from Bluefield that his father, mother, one sister, two bro- | Ge thers and sister-in-law, with her two | tion children, were lost in the flood Saturday | Amer at Keystone. Mr. Crotty’s people lived | ing t in the center of the town. Th Mr. E. H. Stewart, the well-known [to a furniture dealer in this city, was in the |latio midst of all the storm and traveled on | car foot nearly the whole of the route devas- | ca tated. Mr. Stewart had been to James- | te town, N. Y., on business and was return- | dee ing via Columbus. When his train reach- | me ed Vivian, W. Va,, about 9 o'clock Sat- | mg urday morning, water already covered a large portion of the yard, and the train- men knew that no further progress could be made. The train was placed at the | highest point on the yard. Rain was coming down in torrents, and while in | the train Mr. Stewart saw about thirty | cars washed from the yard and carried | away by the rushing torrents, large trees uprooted near by, while houses, bridges, furniture, went whirling by in the water. As the flood increased the water cut a channel on the other side of the train, leaving it between two streams. Then it was decided to take out those | passengers who wished to leave the train and a rope was attached to the platforn: of one of the cars and to a tree on the bank. Among the passengers was a lady, | who, with the assistance of several men, was gotten safely to the bank. A num- | ber of men had narrow escapes from drowning in making the trip. There was a let-up in the rain aud the floods subsided about noon, and at o'clock Mr. Stewart and another passen- ger left the train and started to the nex station, Keystone, five miles distant. Much of the track and several bridge; had been washed away and the trip wa made with great difficulty, a portion the way on the track and the balance gj the bluffs along the route. Mr. Stewart says he saw a number « corpses along the route, but does n think more than 40 people were drownd When he reached Keystone, about o'clock, he found that a number of bui ings had been washed away, and it estimated that along the whole route the storm between 200 and 300 hou had been carried away, but the occup of many of them had escaped to the h He_saw on every hand large buildi go down with the ff buildings, however, v The coal companies bridges and supplies. oo 0 —- = AWFUL DEATH Pet Dog Bit Child Hydrophobis Baltimore, Md. ( 23, six-year-old Lud Oxford, N. C., was nose by a pet dog playing. On June hibit symptoms of reparations were at her to the Pasteur Hospital here. The journey had Saturday before thd wild with rabies. pursued and bark around her. In t her mother’s flesh also scratched her Dr. Williams, of strange gentlema assistance. If the child's fin with any of the s are also in dangg with the dread m in the city awaitin] are being carefully sor Keirle and his teur Institute. At the station t waiting; fighting flicted child was hl She was immedia ment, but without increased as the after midnight agony. Her mot grief. This is probabl kind in the local P a human being a tacked others so t afflicted with hyyq velopments are be terest. Mrs. McKiale Washington (Sf ley's condition co Marine Band co House grounds, weekly occurrence son, but which wq count of her illness resumption was g McKinley's esp¢g First Con Harrisburg, Stone has allo lawful for figs come 10 da the ( pitchfork and stabbed Nisback in the head. killing him almost instantly. The murderer escaped to the woods. $10,000,000 for Flat Top Coal }.ands. Philadelphia (Special).—The United States Steel Corporation is negotiati for the purchase of the Flat Top Ca Land Association properties, and it believed that the deal will be cons mated within a few days, the pricg the land being fixed at $10.000,004 short time ago negotiations were ed by parties said to be unknow officers of the Flat Top Coal tion for the purchase of the a $50,000 forfeit was put up Top Coal Ass@iation was fg the laws of Wilt Virginia