Shoat n ULLETIN. FLORIN, PA. J. E. SCHROLL, - Editor and Publisher. SUBSCRIPTION: Iifty Cents Per Annum, strictly in advance. Six Months, - . . Single Copies, . . » Sample Copies Free. 25 Cents. Special Rates to Yearly Advertisers. Address all communications to—- THE BULLETIN, = Florin, Pa, Entered at the DPostoffice at Florin as second-class mail matter. Out of 12,000,000 American families the income of 4,000,000 of these fami- lies is less than $400 each per year, and the incomes of nearly £0 percent of the entire number arc less than $1000 each per year. o According to the Buffalo News there are 257 farms in New York state that make the culture of trees their priu- cipal business. The valuation is $3,- 607,107. Vermont has fouy similar farms valued at $28.5 : match and the Ameri- more and The A watch are becoming more popular in the remotest corners of the globe. With American matches, and American oil, and American lib- erty the irrepressible Yankee is doing a great deal of lighting and enlighten- ing, and with his watches he is also marking time for the progress of civil: dzation. There is an international interest to the reported increase in the Ameri- can demand for sauerkraut. A Penn- sylvania maker has just filled a con- tract for a 15-ton supply of the great German delicacy. Germans have long maintained that lack of appreciation or such food varieties as theirs was re- sponsible for American dyspepsia. Is the sauerkraut market to furnish the open door to our better education? Joseph L, Thompson of Franklin, N. H., who is now in the 85th year of his age, has taught school in that town and vicinity for 65 years. He says, as one thing learned in hig lpmg practice of his calling, that one-third of a teacher’s time is taken up in maintain- ing order. On the wall of his “study” hangs a card with the word “Why” ir. large letters. This, he says, has been his motto all through his life ‘and studies. x A great many California oranges are shipped cast in what are known as tramp cars. There is no fruit the price of which fluctuatee as much as does that of oranges, and thousands ofwcarloads of orangcs are, therefore, started east with some uncertain des- tination. The car may be consigned to Kansas. City, but in the meantime there are agents watching in thes for the best marketssang jC ind «. 2 Cents.. 2% WERE KILLED AND 24 INJURED Disaster Caused by the Explosion of a Boiler in Detroit, MANY BURNED BEYOND RECOGNITION The Penberthy Injector Company's Plant Occupied Half a Square at the Corner of Abbott Street and Broeklyn Avenue— It Was Composed of Two Brick Buildings Separated by a 16-Foot Alley. Detroit, Mich., (Special).—Twenty- six men are dead, five of them uniden- tified and so terribly burned and black- ened that identification is almost impos- sible, and 24 other men are lying in the various hospitals of the city suffering from terrible cuts and burns and other injuries, all the result of an explosion of a boiler in the Penberthy Injector Com- pany’s large plant at the corner of Ab- bott street and: Brooklyn avenue. : Twenty others. who are less seriously injured are in the hospitals. In addition to-.these a dozen or more of the, employes who suffered compara- tively slight injuries were taken directly to their homes. , Eighteen mén and boys have not as yet beer located either at their homes or at the: hospitals. The “five unidentified ‘bddies “account for five of ‘these and the officers of the company say ‘they feel positive that the others:are at their homes. '@ ©. ; A great force of: men: searched the ruins by: electric light and. the work ‘will not be::stopped until. every-.foot. of. the: debris has been examined. The , Penberthy, Injector. : Company's | plant occupied half a square at the cor- ner of Abbott street and Brooklyn ave- nue. It was, composed of’ two brick buildirigs, 'séparated by a 16-foot" alley.’ The réir bitildinig, 4n ‘which -'the ‘boiler: was located and which was completely destroyed, was ‘three! ;slories in height, 54 feetiin depth and 100 :feetiwide. : The boiler :robnt: twas: located rat othe; north-. west corner of: the: building; -oni' the first floor. It was in this building that. most of the; manufacturing ; was «dpne.. The first floor was utilized, gs the engine and boiler. m, } out-pit of the plant! the, finishing and brass manyfactiring’ department was lo’ cated ‘on ‘the sécond ‘flodr afld “thé third floor was devotedito the foundry. 1° = It is ‘impossible to! tell ‘exactly’ How many ‘men were at work ir the various | departments of: the: building when theiex:’ plosion occurred, ‘but the officers insist |. .. 0 : field, Ill, refused an injunction restrain- that the number ‘was not over 8s. : There were four: boilers in. the plant, two: hori- zontal, ones,, which furnished, steam for the engines, and two vertical boilers || which, were used solely to test. injectors. | It was the horizontal boiler’ that was’in use which exploded and caiised the great loss gfflifer rete oh yo bo The “crash came’ Without the sliglitest warning. Those in the front building said it'seemed like the concussionsef ian: immensé ‘cannon. : The floors: and roof of the rear building bulged upward'and then crashed. down . with. their heavy loads; of machinery. and foundry:appa- ratus..- Walls, .roof and:all dropped into a shapeless. mass of debris... Windows in houses. for a block around = were broken by the concussion and flying bricks. filled the neighboring yards. A denise cloud of dust arose, and as it settled ‘and was succeeded by denser clouds of smoke and steam, agonized cries ‘began to come from the heap of tangled wood, metal and bricks. Tg who were only partl dtl dug themselves ically, turg rade t room and a’ room for ‘testing the’ SUMMARY OF THE LATEST NEWS, Domestic. The rise in value of Texas lands owned by the Knights of Pythias, owing to the oil boom, has greatly decreased the deficiency of $500,000. These land securities were thought to be almost worthless at the time John Hinsey was arrested on the charge of embezzlement of funds of the endowment rank. Mrs, McNeal, wife of a Detroit physi- cian, was washed overboard from the steamship Belgerland in the Atlantic and drowned. She was summoned to the deck by her husband to watch a passing steamship. Miss Nellie Cropsey, the 17-year-old girl who disappeared in Elizabeth City, N. C., a week ago, has not bee located. although an exhaustive search has been made. The police think she has been murdered. 2% Three more deaths from lockjaw fol- 16wing vaccination have occurred in New Jersey. Vaccination has been sus- pended in Camden during an investiga- tion by the Board of Health. There was a lively battle between the freshmen and sophomeres at Miami University, Hamilton, O., in which the girls as well as the boys participated. President Shaffer of the Amalgamated Asociation denies that Wheeling lodges will vote on an emergency assessment for a strike fund. Second Lieutenant Louis J. Van Schaick of the Fourth Infantry while scouting near Cavite, had a desperate single-handed encounter with Filipinos, in: which he killed three of the in- surgents with his revolver, but was badly wounded. Capt. Louis Dyche, a veteran of the ; Civil War, who commanded Company :E,.:Second Maryland Home Brigade, during the Civil War, died at his home, .in, Berkeley Springs, W. V 2: _..Annie Van Brott died at the County Hospital in Chicago from the result of butns inflicted by Andrew Boland, who 'was arrested. “Members of the Puritan Club testi- fied before the Meade court-martial that Major Lauchheimer’s conduct in thé..clubhouse was proper. . -Gustav Heinrich of New York, was lassoed by robbers in Cleveland, Ohio, and relieved of $225 in money, his watch and diamonds. " The river coal combine started out ‘1,750,000 bushels of coal from ‘Pittsburg and the Master Pilots’ Asso- iciation declared a strike. A contract has been closed by the Wil- liam R. Trigg Shipbuilding Company, of ‘Richmond, Va., with the Standard Qil: Company . for the construction of a tank steamer to carry 1,500,)0 gallons of oil and to cost $439,000. The United States Court to Spring- ing the Chicago State Board of Equaliz- ation from assessing the stock of the traction companies. ‘"Caballos, the insurgent leader in the Philippines, has 500 fully armed men In his’ command, and it is reported contem- plates an attack upon Mauban, Laguna Province. Isaiah Bollin, principal of the colored school in Lexington, Va. resigned his position because of recent attempts to assassinate him and left for parts un- known. By the dropping of an elevator cage in. the retail dry goods house of Town- send & Wyatt, St. Joseph, Mo., two per- sons were fatally hurt. ‘Smallpox is raging in the southern islands of the Philippines. The United States Commission is preparing an act to compel vaccination. Foreign. Battle: Abbey and the es- res surrounding it were auction in London for e of the successful bid- Leld, but it is reported Waldorf Astor. : hed a cab on a crowded and, firig Brod his {a4 BATELESHIP IOWA LANDS MARINES United States Force Take Charge of Isthmian Transit. EVERY TRAIN IS NOW GUARDED. Postponement of the Bombardment, Which Had Been Expected, Has Restored Quiet and Good Order in the City, and the Rush of Fore'gners to Take Refuge on the War- ships Has Ceased. Colon, (By Cable).—An armed guard of marines from the United States battleship Towa landed Monday and has re-established transit across the isthmus, which had been temporari- ly obstructed. Details of the Iowa’s ma- rines are now protecting each passen- ger train. There has been fierce fighting at Em- pire Station, on the railroad line between Panama and Colon, between the insur- gents and the troops of the Colombian government, with very heavy losses on both sides. At a conference held at 1 o'clock on board the British cruiser Tribune, at which Gen. Ignacio Feliaco, Senor de la Rosa, secretary of General Diaz, and the ‘commanders of the foreign warships were present, the General agreed, at the request of the naval commanders, and on the ground of humanity, having in view the large foreign population of Colon, not to land troops here or open fire on the town before 6 o'clock Friday evening. The Colombian gunboat General Pin- zon is badly off for provisions, and the commanders of all the warships agreed to supply her with the necessary stores. The gunboat has not yet returned to Colon, and her whereabouts is unknown. ATTEMPT TO BURN STEAMER? Match Heads and Cannom Crackers Found in Her Cargo. Pensacola, Fla, (Special). —What seems to have been an attempt to burn the British steamer Cayo, 2,223 tons, which is loading a cargo of 16,000 bales of cotton for Bremen, was discovered here. The plan was frustrated by one of the cotton screw men at work in the hold of the vessel finding a quantity of heads of matches. About 10,000 bales of cotton had been placed in the vessel when the discovery was made. This led to an in- vestigation, and about 20 cannon crack- ers 12 inches in length were found jam- med between the heads of the cotton. In each instance matches had ben placed in the heads of the cannon crackers ad- joining the stem, with the heads protrud- ing in such a manner that slight friction would strike the matches and ignite the cannon crackers. : W..C. T. U. APPROPRIATIONS. Over $14,000 is Set Aside for Work of the Organization. Fort Worth, Texas, (Special). —The report of the committee on appropria- tions of the National Woman’s Chris- tian Temperance Union was adopted by the executive board before adjournment. Fifty-eight hundred dollars are given to the president, vice-president, treas- urer and secretary. The “Y” branch gets $800 and the “L. T. L.” $500. The departments get an aggregate of $7,255. Among the various appropriations for departmental work are: Legislation, $1,000; foreign speaking people and missionary on Ellis Island, $650; colored people, $500; scientific temperance institution, $800, soldiers od sailors, $250; anti-narcotics, $200; pon. 2220: purity, $ DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. Jy Secretary Hitchcock Submits Hig’ Annual Report—The Indians. Washington, D. C, (Special).—The annual report of Secretary Hitchcock, of the Interior Department, just made public, indorses the conclusions submit- ted by Commissioner of Indian Affairs Jones regarding the present Indian edu- cational system. The Secretary says: “The management of the Indian serv- ice in the field and in the schools, while satisfactory under existing conditions, is not deemed to be the best for the wel- fare of the Indians, and different meth- ods will heteafter be adopted. This policy contemplates requiring the work- ing by Indian allettees able to do so of | a fa ir portion of lands alloted them and the contributing by their industry to their own support of all not entirely dis- qualified by actual disability, physical or otherwise, the discontinuance of the issue of rations to those able to sup- port themselves and the extension to the latter of every possible aid for their well-being and encouragement; the in- stitution of industrial training in all schools where not now established so that such Indians of both sexes may be taught the trades or industries adapted to their circumstances.” The income of the various Indian tribes from all sources during the ycar aggregated $5,338,880, a falling off of $260,952, due mostly to the expiration of treaty obligations. The curriculum of Indian schools, the Secretary says, should be restricted to the common school course and the furth- er extension of non-reservation schools should not be permitted. The Dawes Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes in Indian Territory re- ports that the rolls of membership of only one nation—the Seminocles—so far haev been approved and their lands have not yet been entirely allotted. There is a vast amount of labor yet to be per- formed by the commission in investi: gating the claims of applicants for en- rollment and equalizing the value of the lands already classified, and Secretary Hitchcock recommends that the commis- sion be increased by four members. He also favors a modification of the law re- quiring distribution of lands on the basis of equalized valuation and that 3 definite period be fixed for the comple tion of all the work pertaining to the allotment of lands among the Indians in the Territory. TREACHERY CHECKED IN LUZON. American Negroes Said to Have United With Filipinos to Attack Maulau. Manila, (By Cable.)—It has beer officially reported to Gen. Chaffee that the insurgent leader Caballos hat 500 fully armed men, including a numbet of American negroes, under his com mand in Laguna province, Luzon. An insurgent officer has just been cap- tured carrying papers dated Mauban, Laguna province, Nov. 18, and signed by Caballos. The prisoner admits that Caballos has 1000 men with him and contemplated attacking Mauban. The patrolling gunboats along Samar have captured over $20,000 in cash and $100,000 worth of hemp, upon which a tax had been paid to the insurgents, has ben confiscated. The system of taxation and the collection of ‘taxes maintained by the insurgent leader Lukban was per- fect and exhaustive in every particular. Hemp was the most important feature of commerce. Two per cent. of its price was given to the local presidentes, who collected the majgrity of the island’s revenue from natives who had sworn allegiag the United States, and turned it the rebel authorities Smallpox g in the southern islands of elago. The United States Phi ission is prepar- ing ag eryone to | .509,470. NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS, Plans for Isthmian Canal. Unless the unexpected happens Con. gress will this winter vote to construct the Nicaraugua canal at a cost of $189,- 000,000. This is for two great harbors—one | ‘at Greytown, on the Atlantic or Carib- bean end of the canal, and the other at Brito, at the Pacific end—for a canal of { -eight locks, and for an enormous dam . :at Conchuda, on the San Juan river, several miles above the mouth of the San Carlos river. The Greytown harbor and entrance ‘to the canal will cost $2,196,860, and the .Brito harbor and entrance will cost $1,- The Greytown harbor half a century ago had a depth of 50 feet of water. It is now only a little better than -a lagoon, with half the depth, and light- -ers bearing cargoes from ships anchor- ed in the offing have to cross a bar that carries less than six feet of water. As the canal should have a depth of 35 feet, it is necessary that the harbor and ‘entrance should have the same. It 1s proposed to have harbors at each end of the canal, protected by jetties 3,500 feet long. These jetties wall be con structed of loose stome and will be six feet above the water. The entrance will be 500 feet wide and of 35 feet depth. Much more dredging will be neces- sary at Greytown than at Brito. The sand movement at Brito will be less than at Greytown and the com ~~ ar tenatice will be ar less. ~ ein "the harbors there will LN turning basin of 1.800 feet. Income From War Tax. A statement prepared by the Internal Revenue Bureau shows the total re ceipts from the war revenue act only from June 13, 1898, to June 30, igo1, also the four months under opemtion of the act of Morch 2, 1gp1, from July 1 to October 31, 1901. "he total receipts from these acts alone amounted to $343,838,624, as follows, cenis omitted : Documentary stamps Proprietary stamps Beer Special taxes Tobacco Snuff Cigars Cigarettes Legacies Excise tax Mized Flour ....... gosiss ae Additional taxes on “tobacco and beer 9,480,545 3,007.014 11,102.9)2 3:033,572 23,154 091,208 Report of Phiiippines. D. R. Williams, secretary of the Phil- ippine Comission, has delivered the re- port of the commission to Secretary Root. The report is a long one, covering in detail every feature of the Philippine government. Besides the report proper there are several volumes of appendices containing reports of different officers of the Government. It is upon the facts contained in this report that Congress is expected to act in legislatifig for the Phil- ippines. The receipt of the report en- ables Secretary Root. 20 complete his re- port, which probably will be made public next week. : Accompanying ~ Mr. Williams was Charles A. Conant, who was sent to the Philippines by Secretary, Root to make an investigation. of and report upon the monetary situgtion in the islands. The information an this point will be used to shape legislation intended to improve present cbo.ditions. Minister Conger’s Protest. Mirdster Conger’s action in protest ing co the Chinese Government against the arbitrary cancelation of a railway franchise granted to an American con pany, and its transfer to a French corpo- ration, was taken upon representations State, Department by the emient Comp; 400 N. Third Street, IH. HL HL Y A 7 RRR MYSTERIOUS IN ITS ACTIONS! QUICK IN AFFORDING RELIEF! IMMEDIATE IN ITS BENEFICIAL RESULTS! Unexcelled as a BLOOD PURIFIER 1 Marvelous as an ALTERATIVE in its stimulant effect on a ORPID LIVER. A VEGI R DYSPEPSIA; INDIGESTION, OPPRESSION AND WANT OF APPETITE. HEADACHE, NERVOUSNESS, PIMPLES and BOILS vanish as by magic after taking a few doses. 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