SULLETIN. ORIN, PA. BLL, - Editor and Publisher, SUBSCRIPTION: ents Per Annum, strictly in advanee. onths, . . e Copies, . - - Sample Copies Free. 25 Cents. 2 Cents. Special Rates to Yearly Advertisers, Address all communications to— THE BULLETIN, - « Florin, Pa. Bntered at the Dostoffice at Florin as second-class madd matter. np mer ‘I'he Chicago man who 1s representzd to be i nthe possession of two perfect hearts is suspected of having stolen one from some overconfiding woman. While American women are paying fancy prices for “imported Parisian’ hats made by skillful milliners in the United States, the Germans are taking very kindly to trimmed hats manu- factured in our broad land. The salary of the president is $50,- 000; of the chief justice of the su- preme court, $10,600; of a cabinet offi- cer, $8000; of the vice-president, $8000; of the speaker of the house, $5000. The allowance for the president of France is 600,000 francs salary and 600,000 francs for expense. Leslie Stephen believes walking to be of all exercises the best for the lit- erary man. It he declares, “the natural recreation for a man who de- cires not absolutely to suppress his intellect, but to turn it out to play for a season. All great men of let- ters have, therefore, been enthusias- tic walkers (exceptions, of course, ex- is, cepted).” The growth of United States trade ' with China is set forth at length in a bulletin just issued by the treasury departnient. From various ports of the empire statements have been ob- tained showing decided gains in the receipts of cotton piece goods and oth- The total value of American merchandise of all er material from America. classes entering China is now about $24,000,000 annually, while the United States imports from the Flowery King- dom about $28,000,000 worth. This era of experiments in “00d. rope, is an Scientific investigators in Eu- fter thorough tests of a horse- flesh diet, that this sort of meat, when the use of + is continued for a time, the the consumer, whether man or beast. ny tends to lessel. weight of These physiological have come sages te the conclusion that the cudicest steals and roasts from the fattest colts and fillies are inferior to beef or veal, mutton, lamb or ham in sustaining vital force and preventing a decline in strength. is promised for the discovery of A new industry North Carolina the matting reed in its river marshes. It has long said that matting could be made only in China, because lh suitable for its manufacture Re- cently reed has been found growing in in been was found only in that country. the greatest profusion in the water of Trent and Neuse rivers New- bern, N. C., which experts state is identical with that used in China for making matting. This rush is a hardy plant and a very rapid grower. The stalks are from one-sixteenth to three eighths of an inch in diameter, and height of three to seven above grow to a feet. Tne annual importation of mat- ting into the United States from China is estimated at 300,000,000 yards. The manufacture is said to be a simple and inexpensive process and one in which highly skilled labor is not neces- sary. ,One of the experts at the recent tu- berculosis congress in London says the scourge of mankind will decrease materially “in the United States when the national vice of ex- pectoration is checked. Decency, re- finement, health, even life itself, plead for the abolition of ihis offensive cus- tom, yet, with nothing to urge in its favor, and everything against it, it is one of the hardest social evi®s to com- bat. ven now that it is proved to be an actual evil, it has its practition- ers, and, what is more astonishing, its advocates. Laws against it, while based on soundest hygiene. affecting the public health, are denounced as an invasion of personal liberty. Thera is still much work to do in the case, but with the advantage at stake, the mis- sionary efforts by law, reason and per« suasion, should be continued till the desired result is attained. A begin- ning might be made in the schools and the habit nipped in the bud, thinks the Baltimore American. _ dread GRAVE CHARGES AGAINST WOMAN, Mrs. Witwer, of Dayton, Ohio, Suspected of Killing 15 Persons. ALL THE DEATHS WERE SUDDEN, Her Alleged Victims Includes Four Husbands, Five Children and One Sister—The Others, Whom She Is Supposed to Have Poisoned, Were Members of Families Where She Was Serving as Housekeeper. Dayton, Ohio (Special).—Suspected of having committed 15 murders, the po- lice say, Mrs. J. A. Witwer, a widow, living in this city, is under arrest at the instigation of the coroner. The alleged victims are said to include: Four husbands. Five children. One sister. Ja Five members of different families in which she was employed as housekeeper. The last supposed victim was Mrs. Witwer’s sister, Mrs. Anna Pugh, who died a week ago under mysterious cir- cumstances. An autopsy performed at the request of Mrs. Witwer’'s mother, who came here from Detroit, is said to have disclosed the presence of arsenic and copperas in the stomach. : Following closely upon the death o her first husband—Fred Schweger— came, according to the Police Depart- ment’s information, the death of two children. The second husband died sud- denly several years after the wedding and the children of this marriage died in rapid succession. Her last husband—A. J. Witwer—died last April. In each in- stance, it is said, the deaths were strange- ly alike. The prisoner is 47 years of age and formerly lived in Middletown, Ohio. She has two sons in the Philippines and a sister, it is stated, in a New York asy- lum. No motive for these suspected crimes has been disclosed. Drugs which were found in the house occupied by Mrs. Witwer are in possession of the police and will be examined. The third husband of Mrs. Witwer was William Stowe, who died at Middle- town with symptoms, it is alleged, of ar- senical poisoning. Mr. Stowe’s death was investigated by the coroner, but without result. Shortly after Stowe’s death Mrs. Witwer came to Dayton and became housekeeper for Charles K. Kel- ler, a widower. Keller died suddenly, and the information since gained by the coroner concerning Keller's death is said to be that his ailment was similar to that of a person affected by poison. Mrs. Witwer next acted for housekeeper for John A. Wenz, a druggist. In July last year Wenz's 4-year-old son died sud- denly and two months later Wenz died. The doctors attribute Wenz’s death to blood poisoning, but now tell the coroner they were dissatisfied with their diag- nosis at the time, : Mrs. Witwer then went to live with a Mr. and Mrs. Gabler, on Best street, Riverdale. These two persons died sud- denly, and the coroner now says their sickness was of the nature of arsenical poisoning. BURNED IN A WRECKAGE. Four Men Killed in a Rear End Freight Train Collision. Logansport, Ind. 1 Panhandle Railroad trainmen met death near Onward, 14 miles southeast/ of here, in a rear-end collision of freight ttrains. The bodies of three of dead were taken out badly mutilated, but the fourth was almost entir¢ly con- | sumed by flames which broke out soon aiter the wreck before the wrecking crew-could subdue the fire sufficiently to permit work in 4hat portion of the debris. TT Wy, Cf During the night Confhetos Weaver, in charge of the second section of a train consisting of an engig@and two cabooses, left Hartford City fo®Logans- port. In the rear caboose wep =Gal- breath, Brosius and Greeley, wNp had been working on the gravel train at Hartford City, and who were en route to this city. All were asleep when the train stopped near Onward to make up | steam. The flagman was sent out to watch for the third section, and no dan- ger was thought of until the train loom- ed up too close for any of the men to escape, except Weaver, who jumped and got off uninjured. The wreck was most disastrous. Six cars were burned from the third sec- tion, which, with the two cabooses and the ruined engine, make the loss a large one. THEY DESPISE CZOLGOSI. Murderers In Auburn Prison Thiak Them- sclves Above Him. Auburn N. Y. (Special).—Czolgosz has begun to read and obtains books from the prison library. The assassin is d=spised by the other occupants of the condemned cells, who consider themselves in a higher class. | killed Keeper Benedict, | Egnor, who has obtained a picture of McKinley which he has framed and draped in mourning. His cell is between Czol- gosz's and the death chamber. He has planned to hang the picture facing out- ward at the grating of the cell door and to dare the assassin to look at it as he goes past to death. Warden Mead has given orders to the gatekeeper not to allow any person to enter the prison unless properly vouch- ed for or having undoubted’ credentials. Crushed Under Wire Coils. Alpena, Mich. (Special).—Two men were killed and three were injured by being crushed under heavy coily of wire at the Page Fence Company's ware- house. The dead are Thomas Bee and Willard Bowen. The injured. are Michael Fraley, John Mattix and ¥frank Wickham. The men werg piling wire when one tier of coils toppled over upon them. Lieutenant Crockett Killed. Washington (Special).—The War Department received a cgblegram an- nouncing that Second Lieut. Allen /T. Crockett was killed Luzon, Sept. 24. He had been in/the army since June, 1900. / Shot Down by a Preacher. / Carbondale, Ill. (Special).—Relv. Jos. McGammish, a Seventh-Day Adventist reacher, shot and killed John rown, who, it is alleged, attacked him with a knife. Brown is saifi to have been jealous of McGammigh's alleged attentions to Mrs. Brown. (Special). —Fouf the | near Candelafia, | C. | SUMMARY OF THE LATEST ho Domestic. The House of Deputies of the Epis- copal Convention in San Francisco, after a lengthy debate, adopted an amendment to the constitution that spe- cial forms of service may be prescribed by canon for certain congregations not in full communion with the Church. The triennial meeting of the American Church Sunday School Institute was held and officers elected. As to the question of authority over a military prisoner in the Philippines, Civil Governor Taft contends that the power of the general commanding is limited, and that the only tribunal hay- ing jurisdiction over a military prisoner is the federal court. Richard C. Davis was released on $25,000 bail in Evansville, Ind., on the charge of embezzling $10,000 from the national bank of which he was cashier. A. W. Miller, formerly city clerk of Sandusky, Ohio, who is alleged to have embezzled $100,000 of the city's funds, has been located in Sandusky, Ohio. Arrangements have been made to run through trains from Richmond to Washington on the Richmond, Freder- icksburg and Potomac Railroad. J. Q. Adams & Co., of Minneapolis, and exporting houses in the Northwest, assigned. They were caught in the May corner. Y Wardman Bissert, convicted in New . York of accepting a bribe from the keeper of a disorderly house, secured a stay in the United States Circuit Court. Charles Broadway Rouss, the New York millionaire, sent a thousand-dollar cultural Society fair. Several rapid-fire guns were shipped from New Y towns. Three prominent Chicago attorneys and a well-known railroad detective dicted for attempted jury-bribing. Henry W. Cramp, vice-president of the Cramp Ship and Engine Building Company, died at his home in Phila- delphia. The body of Prof. W. J. Beards- worth, who was drowned ghile cross- ing Naked creek, was AE pi Win- chester, Va. The city of Portsmouth, Va., will seek to have the charter of the Old Domin- ion Railway Company revoked. The Virginia Long-Distance Tele- phone Company, with headquarters at Staunton, Va., was sold. The large storage warehouses of A. S. Leach & Co., of Philadelphia, were destroyed by fire: The grain dealers, at their annual con- vention in Des Moines, Iowa, elected officers. October number of the Federationist a vigorous reply to the charges made by President Shaffer, of the Amalgamated Association, regarding the attitude of Gompers and President Mitchell, of the United Mineworkers, in the recent steel strike. The Sultan of Jolo refused to receive | thé Congressional party. A battalion | of the Eleventh Infantry, Colonel De | Rusey, is on the track of the Filipinos |/who attacked the American troops at /| Balangiga, Island of Samar. | Five persons are reported to have | been killed by a renegade band of | Apaches from the San Carlos Reserva- | tion in the Mongolian mountains. Foreign. The deficit for the last nine months in | the finances of France amounts to 137,- { 000,000 francs. The Temps sounds a [note of warning to the government, say- ling that it must be remembered that a | deficit was the immediate cause of the overthrow of the monarchy of Louis XVI. Pekin advices state that the foreign | soldiers continue to ill-treat the natives {and commit petty robberies. The lega- | tion quarter looks like a fortified city. | The court is traveling to Kai Feng Fu |in the most expensive manner. | Abdur Rohman Khan, the Ameer of | Afghanistan, died at Simla, October 3. | His eldest son reported the death to {the British agent at Cabul. It will like- [ly result in trouble between England and Russia. { The North German Lloyd steamer | Kronprinz Wilhelm arrived at Plymouth from New York, having made the trip lin 5 days 9 hours and 48 minutes—a [new record for a maiden voyage. | English police authorities say that | Laura Horos, in custody in London on | the charge of conspiring to defraud wo- | men by fortune telling, is the former | wife of General Diss Debar. Ann Ode- {lia Diss Debar served a term in a New { York prison for swindling Luther C. | Marsh. Miss Helen Morton, daughter of the former vice-president of the United States, was married in London to Count Boson de Perigord, a son of the Duke of Talleyrand-Perigord. Certain German newspapers demand | that the Chinese astronomical instru- | ments taken by the German troops from Pekin be returned, as they were taken unlawfully. The English jury in the inquest over the remains of the 70 victims of the tur- bine torpedo boat destrover Cobra, which foundered in the North Sea, gave a ver- | dict that the disaster was caused by the unexplained buckling of the boat, and that it was too lightly built. Americans in Constantinople have se- cured evidence of the complicity of mem- bers of the Macedonian committee at Sofia in the kidnapping of the American missionary, Miss Helen Stone. Emperor William footed all the bills covering the expenses of Prince Chun and the other members of the Chinese expiatory mission during their stay in t Germany. | United States Minister Bowen, at Car- acas, Venezuela, persuaded the parties | to the asphalt controversy to accept ar- | bitration. | | | Financial. Snow's report gives corn condition 0.8 per cent. Total yield of wheat, | 772,000,000 bushels. | The New York Subtreasury state- { ment shows that the banks have gained | $4,012,000 this week. The Calumet & Hecla Companies | have declared a dividend of $15, pay- | able October 31 to stock of record October 5. The Comptroller of the Currency has | issued a call for the condition of banks j8 the close of business Monday, Sep- Ss 7 tember 30. INS Minn., one of the largest grain receiving | check for the Shenandoah Valley Agri- | ! ork for use of the Colom- | bian government at some of the coast | i have been arrested on the charge of-zid- ing in the escape of a bailiff whe was in- | President Gompers, of the American | Federation of Labor, publishes in the | | KILLED RAILROAD WRECK. Engineer, * Conductor, Fireman Brakeman Meet Death. TRAIN RAN INTO AN OPEN SWITCH aad Coroner's Jury Decided That Orders to S op Were Not Obeyed—Bodies Recovered and / Sent Home—The Wrecked Train Wels the Fast Freight Which Runs Betweerf phils. delphia and Harrisburg. Reading, Pa. (Special).—Fof;r persons were instantly killed in a fr ight wreck | on the Lebanon Valley diyfsion of the Reading Railway, near immelstown, Pa. The killed are: A Thomas T. Dolan, engfheer. Philadel- phia. : William | Philadelphia. & | Conductor Patrick Cane, Philadelphia. Brakeman Charl® Mays, Phila- delphia. ’ The middle mg the rear braken A derail sw. Fil H. McC@ nsby, fireman, , Charles Dennis, and 1, John Ryan, escaped. h was open, and the / /New York (Special).—The America’s «up is safe for another year, at least. [An the closest race in yachting history, {Columbia won the third and deciding Sofas) of the series from the challenging { boat. While Shamrock led nearly all the way and actually crossed the finishing [line two seconds ahead of Barr's white- | winged wonder the official measurements | compelled her to give the American boat | 43 seconds time, and as a result Colum- bia won by 41 seconds. The sea was smooth and the sun bright, while the air had a keen nip that made the spectators button their coats when the excursion fleet went down to Sandy Hook. Soon both boats were standing out to sea in tow of their re- spective tugs. Before the starting gun, both went through the usual tactics of jocking about the line. Barr was more watchful than ever. Sycamore, grim and silent, swung the brass machine first on one tack and then another, while the minutes slipped by. The wind held at twelve knots. The excursinpists crowded up to see the battle, and vilence fell upon the breezy ocean. Shamrock held on to windward and did not set her staysail. Columbia had staysail and jib set and balloon in stops, and as Sycamore show- | ed a decided intention of not going over first on the leeward run, Barr came to the conclusion that he would try it es- pecially as the gun had fired. It was a little different from the usual trial to get the weather berth. This run off before the wind made the windward boat last and in a position to wind her antagonist. They were both standing for the line when the handicap gun fired, the Colum- bia a little in the lead and Shamrock on port quarter. Shamrock broke out her balloon and Barr held on a few minutes to be able, if necessary, to haul his wind if Sycamore forced him to spring his | | | | { | | 10 our, plu e moment the ¢ rails the cars in the rear up ahout the engine, and both re blocked. the morning all of the passen- re transferred, a special train been sent out from Reading. recked train was the fast freight which" runs between Philadelphia and Harrisburg. Several days ago the Read ing Company posted notices to the ef] fect that trains would be run on a singl track over Swatara bridge and directir all trains in both directions to come to stop before crossing the bridge. An ¢ erator had been placed at the east gid, and all trains were regulated by sig s. Whether the crew had been advisll of the change is not known, but it is ert- ed that the signals were against thgain. Ly i Many Lost In Storms. i { Tacoma, Wash. (Special).—S nor advices are that the coast of F za, Northern Japan, has been visit by heavy gales, wrecking 400 fishing oats; 12 boats with total crews of 74 mf are missing. Heavy rains caused over- flow of the rivers of Hokaido, yflashing away 600 houses and submerginlf many villages. ~ AMERICA'S CUP WILL STAY HERE. / tN ; The Last Race Was the Closest in the History of In- ternational Contests—Jockeying for the Start. luff. Then, seeing that the Englishman was making a straight race, he broke out his balloon and went across. Time, Columbia, 11.02; Shamrock, 11.02. This is official, and not actual, as Co- lumbia went over at least 10 seconds ahead. Shamrock broke out her spin- naker, going over and Columbia follow- ed. The Britsh boat seemed to have a handicap in not getting over in time, but she pulled up rapidly and soon closed the gap. Heading for the mark Shamrock turn- ed at 12.48.46 and stood away on star- board tack to keep the weather berth. Columbia swung around much quicker 49 seconds later and threw about on port tack. The Columbia now began to show her old form in wind-jamming}, She stood well up to it and held along for several minutes and then came about on the starboard tack, with the Shamrock to lee- ward but well ahead. They stood along for some minutes and then came about to port tack, the Shamrock first and Co- lumbia following, having stood well over to windward first. J ; Then happened the greatest sailing in the history of racing. Columbia flattened in N@sheets and jammed her nose right with the failing breeze, which had fallen to less than Six %oty” : Shamrock eytld not point 1p as high and Sycamore/ held along blpkgting the Columbia, feeling sure mow of an vietory. ' Bujt the Columbia is!a fait and reliable/ ship. She poked her into the last puff. and luffed alm through Shiamrock’s lee, with that brass boat close enough to jump aboard. The Ie was only a few fathoms dis- tant and with failing headway and shak- ing h#adsails, both yachts luffed over the ifine, the Columbia a boom’s length behind. Such a race never was sailed befote and it was a fitting climax to the serigs, Lost 600 Killed Willemstad, Curacoa (By Cable).— News received up to September 29 in- dicates that General Davila's first fight at Curogoa was an absolute rout, Five Venezuelan battalions of 400 men each were engaged and the Colombiqns are estimated at the same number. Tt is now known that General Echg¢yerria was killed on the battlefield, and not shot by the Colombians. The battalion called the “Sacred Battalion,” composed of gentlemen volunteers moynted, was the first to break and retreat pefore the Colombians. After General Echeverria was killed, General Davila, Clodomiro Castillo and Ermilo Castro. a brother of President Castro, fled the field. About 6c0 were killed on the Venezue- lan side, including 30 minor officers. The Indians ambushed] General Da- vila's retreating vanguard composed of 200 men, and annihilatey it. : Clodomiro Castillo, who is a Colom- vian, now commands the Venezuelan forces at the front on Guaiira Penin- sula, and Ermilo Castro nowy commands FEUD ENDS IN FO Mortal Battle at the Big Knoxville, Tenn. (Spfeial). —A bloody fight occurred at the, Union Baptist Church, at Big Spri Tenn., 10 miles from Tazewell, Ten, Services were bei eld at the church thered. Just be- n “Tip” Chadyell o yards from the n was at the spring hadwell. Both fac- hered and the fight . The killed are: n F. Chadwell, Rush Morgan. Mortally wounded: John Horgan, Asa Chadwell. Hanged Ferself Publicly. Victoria, B. C.}Special).—The steamer Duke of Fife, Which sailed from Yoko- hama Septem 21, brings a strange story of the puplic suicide of a Chinese woman at FoofChow. She resolved on the deed afterfhe death of her husband and informed [he public of her intention. The taotai trkd to prevent her, artd on account of typhoon floods the suicide was twice postpoied, but ill efforts failed to divert the yoman froth her purpose. Be- decked in Fer finest dothes, she publicly hanged heself on platform before which stoi several hlindred spectators. / tions immediately lasted half an h “Tip” Chadwell, Morgan, Henr FLEETING ARMY AMBUSHED BY INDIANS. Vanguard of the Roiited Venezuelans Annihilated— in Recent Battle. the “Sacred Battalion.” An unconfirmed rumor reports that General Uribe Uribe, the Colombian Liberal revolutionist, has been killed. When the Venezuelans first entered the peninsula they robbed the Guajira Indians of their cattle and generally | maltreated them. The Indians are now retaliating, cruelly mutilating and mur- dering many of the fugitives who have been straggling since the defeat over the waterless, burning flat peninsula in an effort to reach their lines or the coast. Venezuela seems determined, if pos- sible, to retrieve her fallen fortunes at Guajira. If she fails in this present en: deavor it is believed, even among army officers, that the Colombian government forces, allied Guajira Indians and Vene- zuelan revolutionists opposed to Presi- dent Castro will unite and march on Maracaibo, with good chances of cap- turing the place. Such action would probably also mean the capture of San Carlos Fort and the liberation of the Venezuelan political prisoners. Springs Baptist Church, / Tennessee. Wounded: Jones, leg broken; Neabley, flesh wound: Sheriff James Brook, slightly. Sheriff Brook attempted to arrest one of the Chadwells, who resisted. The feud between the Morgans and Chadwells has existed for a long time. Last Christmas they met at Walnut Hills, Va., and a pitched battle ensued in which several were killed. Eighteen months ago they met near the Hancock line. Fighting followed and one was killed. Both the Chadwells and Morgans are prosperous and influential and have large families. More trouble is feared. © Suicide Carried Diamonds. Chicago (Special). — With $15,000 worth of diamonds in his possession, D. W. Dickie, a jeweler, who lived at the Kimball Hotel, committed suicide near the Grant Monument in Lincoln Park. A park policeman heard a pistol shot in the direction of the monument and after searching 20 minutes in the darkness came upon the body of Dickie lying on a bench just south of the statue. Dickie was about 55 years old. It is thought he had not been long in Chicago. The directory only states that he is a jeweler, but does not tell his place of business. JR MORE DEATHS. 4 he Kidnappis he Whole Cour DBABLY SOON BE als Consistent With Their Conduct, Decline Absolutely 8 Miss Stone's Case for Publication, t Is Evident From Their Manner t They Are Feeling More Hopeful. Boston, Mass. (Special).—From the Atlantic to the Pacific and from Maine to Florida, this country has been aroused by the story of the capture of the Ameri- can missionary, Miss Helen H. Stone, by brigands in Southern Europe and by the appeal for funds with which to pay the ransom. Thousands of dollars are being received here as a result of the appeal of the American Board of Mis- sions, and it is known that mails from the Far West are bringing additional thousands. \ The firm of Peabody, Kidder & Co. which is caring for the contributions as’ they are reeeived, reported that over $50,- 000 had Been received. This is nearly half of the amount, $110,000, necessary\ to pay the ransom demanded for the re- lease of the American woman. Three Governments, Bulgaria, Turkey and the United States, are putting forth every effort in behalf of the unfortunate missionary. Bulgarian and Turkish troops are in pursuit of the brigands, and if the latter are captured they will be Jilted without the formality of a trial. The United States Government has also been aroused by the news of the kidnapping. and President Roosevelt is urging the State Department to do everything in its power to secure Miss Stone's release. The President has been in consultation with the delegates of the = Missionary Board at the Capital, and whatever can be done will be done, but this is not a case for fleets or armies — at least, not now. The Government must move with extreme caution, how- ever, lest it cause the loss of the life it would save. It is the practice of these brigands in the Balkans to kill their captives immediately on the advent of any government into the negotiations. After Miss Stone is restored to her friends the campaign of punishment may be prosecuted, but such a course is now deemed inadvisable, KRUGER SAID TO BE FAILING. Mentally and Physically, It Is Declared, He Is Weaker. London (By Cable).—A dispatch from The Hague says: “A. D. W. Wolmraans, one of the Boer envoys, who has been visiting President Kruger at Hilversum, Hol- lag ad the mental condition of the President by no means satis- r. Kruger is slowly growing ysically and mentally. His reaching a decision on im- pions is found to be a seri- ne to those working in gii- ehalf of the Boer cause, Sirghtest cuestion regardin health Mr. Kruger exhibits inten tation and vehenently denies t thing is wrong. Me approac ter causes anxiety, as TR r leave Holland.” Brussels (By Cable).—Le P states that Mr. Kruger has President Roosevelt a protest the exportation of horses and South Africa. It also declares never contemplated sending a to the United States Governme licit mediation." MISS HELEN L ~~ Daughter of Secretary of § to Consumption. Hingham, Mass. (Specia Helen Long, youngest daughtg retary of the Navy John D. Loj her home, in Cottage street, of consumption. Miss Long had been suffer pulmonary trouble since the 1808. During her father's Secretary of the Navy Miss obliged to enter somewhat i cial functions of the capital, o delicate health of Mrs. Lon, own health became impaired, In November, 1898, eming advised her to seek the cli rado, which she did. Sher for three years, and her so much that Secretary permanent residence for Springs about a year ag Three weeks ago she ¢ Secretary, with her si her grandmother, physicians at Color3 of climate might | She arrived at Hing ing with nervoust into decline. FO QOae Man K N Mak accident in and a John C stantly ki Draper Col panion named tients. Joseph MolinofsK] both arms broken b same mine, Martin Kirby a short ‘cut to the crawling under a it Mahanoy Plan crushed. The hos cannot recover. Frank Kopopag Miners’ Hospital, skull fractuzed, coal at Gilberion Wireless Te London (By Company and I have made an j stations of the world are to telegraphy. Help Atlanta, G Turner, of Rq structor in t branches of the Georgia committe \