TIN. PA, Bditor and Publisher, SCRIPTION: Per Annum, strictly in advance. . Rix Months, . . . Single Copies, . . 2 Sample Copies Free. ifty Ce 25 Cents. 2 Cents. Special Rates to Yearly Advertisers. Address all communications to—- THE BULLETIN, = Florin, Pa. Entered at the Postoffice at Florin as second-class mail matter. nth of the millionaires in the. es are women, accordin ork Herald's “list. led that somebody wants to machine trust. Here is a at is going to have trouble his goods. Wge meiecorite has fallen in St. Louis county, Mo. for the world’s fair of 1903 are com- ing from wide distances. King Oscar of Sweden is am au- historian, an orator, an artist atigt 4nd he also writes s the accordion. Yet The good people of ru ne is popular. Sweden have some peculiar traits. The value of the statement made by the agricultural department that the ravages of destructive insects cost the United States $300,000,000 a year is somewhat impaired because of the Raggact that it can be neither corrobor- ated nor refuted. — The mayor of Buenos Ayres has issued an order prohibiting those municipal employes who handle the public funds from attending the races. An investigation had shown that on race days a majority of the officeholders were not to be found ) their posts, but at the racetrack. 1t/is now definitely established that corlsumption is a curable disease. Like every other chronic malady, if it is permitted to possess itself of the system and complicate itself with other disorders, it is beyond remedy. But, taken in time and dealt with in its incipient stages, recovery is practically assured. The French have decided to intro- duce ihe automobile into the trans- portation service in North Africa to supplies across the desert of oasis to oasis, in place wravans. It is expected v service will be more car paegconomical. It looks . 1czoL NE Evidently exhibits ! -, XECUTE \ AUBURN PRISON The Assassin of Pres'dent McKinley Pays the Penalty in the Death Chair. LAST ACT IN THE GREAT TRAGEDY. Sullen and Unrepentant the Anarchist Mur: derer Goes to His Death, Denouncing Res ligion, Cursing the Priests and the Church and Declaring That He Alone Was Responsi- ble for the Crime. Auburn, N. Y. (Special).—Leon Czol- gosz, the agsassin, has paid the penalty of the law for one of the most terrible crimes in the world’s history. The anarchist who, on September 6, shot and mortally wounded President McKinley in the Temple of Music on the Exposition grounds at Buffalo, N. Y., was electrocuted at 7.12 o'clock Tuesday morning in the death chair in the State prison at Auburn, N. Y. To the last he maintained that he alone was responsible for the assassina- tion of the President. His brother and brother-in-law, at their farewell meeting with the condemned man, begged and pleaded with him to tell them who prompted him in his crime, but he only repeated his former statement that he had no accomplices. He refused all religious consolation and maintained a dogged silence in the resence of the priests who visited him. hey begged him to abjure anarchy be- fore his death, but he was emphatic in his opposition. . Czolgosz held two final interviews Monday night, the first with State Pris- on Superintendent Collins and the second with his brother Waldeck and his broth- er-in-law, Thomas Bandowski. Both in- terviews were brief and the visitors did most of the talking until the question of religion was mentioned. Then Czolgosz broke from his seeming lethargy, vio- lently denounced the church and the clergy and made his relatives promise that there should be no religious service for him, living or dead. Prior to these late interviews Czolgosz reluctantly received Revs. Hyacinth Fud- zinski and Thomas Hickey, Catholic riests. This was after he had once re- used to meet them. When they reached the prison Supt. Collins conveyed to the prisoner the request of an inter- view. Czolgosz sent back word that he did not care to see them, but the priests asked to be allowed to go to him despite his refusal. At 7 p. m. Superintendent Collins went into the deathhouse and tried to get the prisoner to talk to him. Although he re- mained in the cell some time, he was ap- parently not successful in getting any- thing material from Czolgosz. The brother and brother-in-law arrived at 8 o'clock and Superintendent Collins took them down to the condemned man’s cell. There was no demonstration when they met. Czolgosz merely stepped to the front of his steel cage and said: “Hello.” The brother ventured the remark: “I wish vou would tell us, Leon, who got you into this scrape?” The is answered in a slow, hesi- tating “N govthing to do with d uy to ! er SUMMARY OF THE LATEST NEWS. Domestic. An anti-Mormon movement was started in Harrisburg with a view to securing an amendment to the national Constitution providing for the prohibi- tion of polygamy in all the States and Territories. In a fight among the foreign element at Loyal Hanna, a Pennsylvania mining town, Antonio Motta was shot and kill- ed by an unknown anarchist, who es- caped. Winchester horsemen have protested against the awarding of purses in the running races there. The officials are charged with unfairness. John Segrist, center rush of the Ohio State University football team, died in Columbus from injuries received in Sat- urday’s game. Annie Etter, who was fearfully beaten by George Gans because she resisted his advances, died in the hospital in Read- ing. Judge Hanecy, in Chicago, decided that the consolidation of the various gas companies in that city was constitu- tional. The Tennessee Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South has expelled Rev. B. A. Cherry from the ministry. Judge Jones, of Sioux Falls, S. D., dissolved the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gebhard and awarded Mrs. Geb- hard $1000 for counsel fees and court expenses. Mrs. Gebhard and her moth- er arrived in Sioux Falls just in time for the wife to file a eross bill charging desertion, and the court held that Geb- hard wilfully deserted his wife in 1800. Arrangements were completed in Philadelphia for the transfer of 238,624 acres of land in West Virginia, owned by the Flat Top Land Association, to a syndicate representing the Pocahontas Coal and Coke Company for $10,000,000. The falling of a nest of wasps in a Methodist church near Greenbackville, in Accomac county, Virginia, broke up a revival service, and many of those in the congregation were stung by the in- sects. _ Five mean were killed and nine in- jured by an explosion of gas in the But- tonwood Mine of the Parrish Coal Co., near Wilkes-Barre, Pa. The white girl students of the North- western University, at Evanston, Ill, have drawn the color line against a col- ored girl from Texas. Horace Morrison Hale, former presi- dent of the University of Golorado, and father of Gen. Irving Hale, died at his home in Denver. The Manufacturers’ Association at I'all River refused to advance wages 10 per cent, and it is likely th: operatives will strike. Four men were injured by an explo- sion in the dust catcher of a furnace of the Carnegie Company at Rankin, Pa. Andrew Carnegie has offered to give $100,000 for a public library at San Juan, P. R., under the usual conditions. In Chicago, David Bernstine, 13 years old, stabbed Harry Himmelfarb to the heart with a basting needle. Mra David Gressley, wife of a letter carrier, in\@wrk, Pa., shot herself, with fatal effect. Foreign. A premonition that King Edward will not live to be crowned prevents the ladies of the English court from placing their orders for gowns for the coronation ceremonies. hat the King is suffering from cancer or Bright's dis- ease, or both, is the impression in diplo- gatic circles in London. in n Weltheim, of the German cnt speech said that Ger- in the five republics of could only be main- py had a fleet strong ica, ‘Ha El CALEB POWERS IS AGAIN FOUND GUILTY Many Women Embrace and Kiss Him in the Court, PRISONER PALE AND MOTIONLESS, Kentucky's ex-Secretary of State Convicted a Second Time as an Accessory Before the Fact fo the Murder of Governor Goebel —Again Sentenced to Imprisonment for Life—Motion for New Trial Georgetown, Ky. (Special ).— Ex-Sec- retary of State Caleb Powers was again convicted as an accessory before the fact to the murder of William Goebel in Janu- ary, 1900, and for the second time has been sentenced to imprisonment for life. The second trial began October 8, and has continued with three sessions daily, court adjourning late at night. Argu- ments were limited so that the case went to the jury at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, and a verdict of guilty soon followed. Powers sat pale and motionless when the verdict was announced by the fore- man, B. S. Calvert, his eld sehoolmate. Opposite Powers on the other side of the courtroom, with the attorneys, sat Ar- thur Goebel, brother of the late gover- nor, with his eyes fixed on the prisoner. The attorneys of Powers shook his hand, expressing their belief in his in- nocence. Women crowded around Powers, em- bracing and kissing him, and tears were shed. The defense having filed a motion for a new trial, Judge Cantrill, at 2.30 p. m.,, heard arguments on it. The jury was out only 50 minutes. Then a motion for a new trial was over- ruled, and the case will be appealed. The sentence was read and judgment sus- pended pending the decision of the higher tribunal. Powers was taken to Frank- fort on an evening train and committed to jail without bail. ARE BURNING SAMAR TOWNS. Recent Demonstrations on the Island Due to Lack of Food—Leader Surrenders. Manila (By Cable).—The constabu- lary report a fight with insurgents near Passi, Province of Iloilo, Island of Pa- nay, in which 25 insurgents were killed and three captured, together with a quantity of arms and ammunition. The news from General Hughes re- garding conditions in the Island of Cebu is encouraging, Lorega has surrender- ed with his entire force and one cannon{ and several rifles, while General Hughes is negotiating for the surrender of Maxi- lot, who styles himself “Governor Po- litico Militar”. His surrender will mean the pacification of the province. Lack of food and the harassing ef- fects of the aggressive tactics now pur- sued by the American forces are having their influence upon the natives. In many places where rice is doled out by the government, only enough is given for one meal, so that it is hardly pos- sible for any large quantity to find its way to the insurgents. It is believed that the recent mani- festations in the Island of Samar were chiefly due to the lack of food, the in- surgents finding it necessary to make outlets to the coast in ofder to obtain this. The first labor problem growing out of the new tariff has taken place. A hat and umbrella factory, employing 600 hands, has found it necessary fo close. The lawyers are making a pro- test to the Commission, urging protec- tion, as the goods from Germany can be sold here at half the prices it takes to manufacture them here. Dispatches from Catbalogan, Samar, say that stringent and energetic meas- ures are taken to suppress the insurrec- tion in that island. General Smith has notified all the presidentes and head men of the pueblos that, in order to avoid trouble, they must surrender all arms and turn over the persons impli- cated in the Balangiga massacre. NINETEEN DEAD AT A FIRE. The Employes of a Philadelphia Furniture Firm Caught By Flames. Philadelphia (8pecial). — Nineteen known dead and property loss amounting to more than $500,000 is the awful result of a fire which occurred in the heart of Philadelphia. The number of injured is not known definitely, but fully a score of victims were treated at various hospitals. The buildings destroyed were the eight-story structure, 1219 and 1221 Mar- ket street, occupied by Hunt, Wilkinson & Co., upholsterers and furniture dealers, and three three-story buildings occupied by small merchants. The furniture build- ing extended back a half block to Com- merce street and was owned by Henry C. Lea. Never in its history has Philadelphia experienced a fire which spread with such great rapidity. At 10.20 o'clock a. m. the blaze broke forth in the building occupied by Hunt, Wilkinson & Co., and one hour later the horrible sacrifice of life had been made and the great loss of property had been sustained. The origin of the conflagra- tion is unknown. It is said that an ex- plosion of naphtha or gasoline in the basement was the cause, but this is de- nied by Mr. Wilkinson, who says there never was a sufficient quantity of either explosive about the building to be re- sponsible for the disaster. Rumor has it also that an elevator constructor at gael bo sement permitted the flame LE SR Gr horrifying. Men and women met death in aight of thousands of spectators who were unable to lift a hand to their assist- ance. The rear of Hunt, Wilkinson & Co.’s building abuts on Commerce street, a small thoroughfare. Employes who started down the fire escape on that side of the buflding before the flames were visible from the street were compelled to jump before they had traveled two stories because of the flames breaking through the windows. On the fire escape at this end of the building two men and one woman were slowly roasted to death while the horror- stricken throng on the street below turn- ed sick at the sight. In the front on Mar- ket street a woman, driven to despera- tion, leaped from a window on the top floor and was dashed to death on the pavement. One woman leaped from a window and fell astride of an awning pole and her body was torn almost in half. The corpse hung in the air many minutes before the firemen could recover it. The dense smoke was responsible for the loss of some lives. Firemen stood on the pavement with life nets spread ready to catch those who jumped, but both victims and life-savers were so blinded they could not see each other. These are only a few of the heart- rending scenes attending the conflagra- tion. Firemen say they saw men and women, unable to reach the windows or £28 escapes, burned to death in the in- ma Lili ao Tf thie he adit] i THIRTY ARE KILLED IN A RACE RIOT Serious Trouble in the States of Louisis ana and Mississippi. A BATTLE ON THE BORDER LINE. Cause of the Trouble Said to Be the Efforts of the Negroes to Kill One of Their Own Race Who Had Been Compelled By the Whites to Light the Fire by Which a Negro Was Burned fo Dea:h. New Orleans (Special).—A race war that already numbers among its victims 30 white men and negroes, is raging in and around Balltown, in Washington parish, this State, a few miles from the boundary line of Mississippi, and a com- pany of militiamen from the First Loui- siania Brigade is being rushed to the scene to put a stop to hostilities. So far as can be gathered from the meager sources of information at present available the cause of the bitterness that has led to the outbreak is the determina- tion of the colored men of the region to | kill one of their own race, who, under or- | ders of the whites, last Wednesday set fire to a pyre about a negro, who was be- ing put to death for a brutal assault and attempted murder. Of the men already killed as a result of several rifle battles that have been go- ing on since Sunday, five are whites and the remainder eolored. When the fight- ing began the colored men met their foes in the open, but in the afternoon several of them fled across the Mississippi line, where the Columbia State Guards are stationed to protect them, and others are entrenching themselves in houses in the heart of the town. ce srt —————————r seep] In all probability the struggle is now resolving itself into a man hunt, with the | negroes seeking whatever shelter they can find. The whites far outnumber them in the neighborhood of Balltown. Squads of men are reported patroling the country round the settlement, and they are shooting them down in cold bloed wherever they find them. Sheriff Si- mons, of Washington Parish, has tele- graphed to Governor Heard that it will be impossible for him to restore order without the assistance of the militia. Last Wednesday Bill Morris, a negro, assaulted and attempted to murder a white woman, Mrs. John Ball, who now is said, to be dying at her home. Morris was caught on the same afternoon, and, in the presence of several hundred peo- ple, was burned at the stake in the mid- dle of the town, after being chained to a pine sapling and surrounded by a great heap of pine knots. Another negro was forced to set fire to the wood, and as soon | B as the colored population heard of the affair they held a meeting and denounced the man for his cowardice in complying with the demands of the white. Violent speeches stirred them to action, and they determined to catch the offender and burn him at the stake in revenge. DR. RIXEY’S REPORT. His Record of McKinley's Case Geos Deeply Into Detail Washington, D. C. (Special).—““In the line of duty, while receiving the people, was shot by Leon F. Czolgosz,” is the official statement filed with the Surgeon- General of the Navy, by Dr, Presley M. Rixey, Medical Inspector, United States Navy, as the introduction for his report upon the wounding illness and death of President McKinley. 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