and Publisher, 3 ) ION: ty Cents Per Anuum, strictly in advance. ix Months, - . gl Copies, - - - : Sample Copies Free. 25 Cents. 2 Cents, Special Rates to Yearly Advertisers. Addresdight THE“BULLETIN,’ - aid semmunications to+- Florin, Pa. Hridbied di the Postoffice at Florin as second- class mail matter. Bef3te going into business a » methodi- ha] man will estimate the demand for his , goods or his services and will regulate the amount of his first in- vestment by this estimate. this share, however, there is a volume of trade which can be won from other establishments by judicious mnewspa- per advertising, and a still further amount which can be actually created by such advertising. Therefore, the man who fails to advertise boldly voluntarily foregoes “the benefits of what might be the largesi part of hig the Philadelp?™ custom, observes Record. The automobile , has “come to stay.” Of that there can be do doubt. And it will stay not as a tolerated evil, but as a highly prized acquisition. But, after all, automobiles—or their motor- men—do not “own the earth.” They must be used with due regards to the law, to the rights of other vehicles and their occupants, and to the common sense status of public highways. The highways are ‘common reads for the general use of all. No one class of vehicle users has any right to monop- olize them. to use them in a way that will make their use by others impossible or un: safe. EE ————————————————— Of course, it would be impossible te patrol every mile of road in could cover a good deal of territory if the right thethod were employed, and first be supposed to cover all sections of the State where such protection i¥ | meeded, reflects the Manchester Union, (Within éfficiedt body of what might {iE called “rural polige,” whether under State or County authority, life and property in the ‘country, would be safer; there would be fewe. murders, assaults, barn burnings, horse .teal- ings and crimes of like nature. With such a force well organized it would be almost impossible for a man to go through the State with a stolen horse, as it would be equally as hard for a man to commit an assault or murder on a country road and escape detec- tion. Then, again, in the way of dis- oss odio on mpt at crime, the omposed df and : \ Besides And no one has a right | | out reflecting on | ley was a ; | of the reports which had been credited | New | Hampshire, but a single man, mounted, | 'it would not take so many as would af | Thaddeus Mills, Al BY Ji The Father Gives Up A ing His Daughter Alive. EXPECT IMPORTANT DEVELGPMENTS Committee Are Rewarded for Their Search in the River by Finding a Piece of Dress Goods That Ray Have Belonged to the Missing Girl—Edward J. Kelley Is De- nounced by thc Girl's Father. Elizabeth City. N. C. (Special). —The citizens’ committee again promise im- portant developments in the Cropsey dis- appearance case within a short time, two or three days. W. H. Cropsey, father of the missing girl, issued a public letter in which after thanking citizens of North Carolina for their kindness and sympa- thy, he says: The police officials and citizens’ com- mittee have done all human agency could do to restore my daughter, without suc- cess. I never expect to see her this side of the great eternity. _ I shall always believe James Wilcox instrumental in my daughter’s disappear- ance. hireling responsible. this life before the presence of the Great Judge, Some time I believe we shall learn how and when | : | counties. he murdered my daughter, and that the justice he may escape here will be dealt with him. (Signed) W. H. CROPSEY. Chief of Police Dawson is still with- out information. He said: “I still think the girl was either drowned or murder- ed, but I have no definite clue.” The party dragging the river, under the direction of the committee of five, If dead, I believe his hand or his | when | shall cease and we shall stand | L ; ATEST NEWS, eived sick transport Bates. ! PenNordica mas aims amounti’ to millions for property. of an ancestor, destroyed during the Revolutionary War. Rev. J..'S. Robinson, ny, of the Chapline Street Methodist ¥eniscopal Church, refused to return Brewer Schnul- bach’s contribution of $3co0, despite the protest of the W. C. T. U. against its acceptance. W. H. Woods and a woman compan- ion, both colored were arrested at Oma- ha, charged with robbing A. B. Lowen- thal, at Portland, Ore, of $15,000 in diamonds and jewelry. The father of Ella Cropsey, the mis- sing Elizabeth City girl, denounces Wil- cox, the girl's suitor, as being instru mental in her disappearance, and possi- bly in her murder. John A. Hess, of Buchanan, W. Va. was found dead in his room, in a small hotel, in Whitehall street, New York Death was caused by escaping illuminat- ing gas. Another trolley car was dynamited by the strikers in Scranton, Pa. No one was injured, though the passengers were considerably shaken up. Records of court-martial proceedings in the Philippines show the death pen- alty inflicted on a number convicted of cold-blooded crimes. The Virginia State Senate elected E E. Montague, of Hampton, judge of the Court of Elizabeth City and Warwick The Southern Securities Company was incorporated at Trenton. Its object, it is believed, is to carry through projected railroad deals in the South. John Kinonen, of Copper Falls, Mich. became despondent because he was out | of employment and cut the throats of his | wife, two sons and then committed sui- brought up a piece of dress goods which it is thought, may have belonged to Miss Cropsey. Edward J. Kelley, who some time ago visited the Cropsey home, ward alleged that he had proving that a girl in whose he was in Norfolk, November 22, Nellie Cropsey, and that she left by steamer for a Northern city, went to Justice Cropsey’s home again. He inti- mated ‘to the family that he knew where Miss Cropsey was. His presence there, in view of the reports that have gone Miss Cropsey’s char- acter, was not agreeable. After some warm words Justice Cropsey “fake.” Kelley denied some was to him. A personal encounter was im- minent, when the police interfered. FRIGHTFUL DEATH IN A SAWMILL. a Fireman, Caught ia the | Flywheel and Torn to Pieces. Salisbury, Md., (Special).—Captain Stephen Dolbey’s steam sawmill at at White Haven, this county, scene of a frightful accident. While Mr. Thaddeus Mills, one of the firemen, was in the act of fixing some part of the engine his clothing became en the fly wheel, and in a few seconds he was being caried over the wheel at a terrific rate, his body and head being torn to pieces at every revolution. soon as his fellow-workmen could complish it the machinery was stopped As | ac- | | cide in his office by through and after- | information | company | said Kel- | Company, cide. Alonzo P. Douglass, a well-known lawyer of Philadelphia, committed sui- sending a bullet his brain. Despondency was the cause. The way has been paved for the re- moval of the Bureau of Identification from Chicago to Washington. A deal involving the consolidation of the silk mills of York, Pa., has been car- ried through. The third Sunday in January will be observed as “McKinley Day” among In: diana churches. In a riot growing out of the street cat strike in Scranton, Pa., officers who at: tempted to arrest a man who had as saulted one of them were attacked by 2 crowd of miners, who fired at them. The officers and a nonunion motorman ther fired into the crowd and wounded three men. A committee of the Amalgamated As: sociation of Street Railway Employees | submitted a list of grievances to Presi: { dent Parsons, of the Union Traction Philadelphia. The conductors | and motormen of that city are dividec was the | angled in | | of upon the strike question. There was a sharp discussion in the convention of the American Federation of Labor on the question of boycotting machine-made cigars. A resolution was adopted omitting reference to machinery, but denouncing child labor. Rev. A. A. Johnson, colored, pastor the African Methodist Episcopal Church of Okaloosa, Ia., was shot while | in the pulpit on Sunday night by Anna and the body was taken from the wheel. | The body was frightfully mangled, the limbs being torn and broken, as was also the head. A jury of inquest rendered a verdict that death was accidental. Mills leaves a widow and one child. He was about 45 years old. MAN KILLS HIS FAT MILY. After Cutting the Throats of His Wife and Sons, He Commits Suicide. Calumet, Mich., phn Kinonen, living at Copper Falls, (Special). —While in | a fit of despondency over his inability | in New York in behalf of Albert T. Pat- to find work and provide for his family, | Hes | aire Rice. Nelson, colored. In a battle between burglars who had robbed the general store of Edward Wood, in Gelena, S. D., and officers one | of the robbers was killed and another Mr. | | ers | Angeles, wounded. H. J. Fleischman, cashier of the Farm- and Merchants’ Bank %f Los Cal, has disappear with | $100,000 of the bank's money. , An extra freight ran intgf a freight | train on the Northern Pacifi€¢ near North | Yakuma, Wash. niles from here, arose from bed, and | ¢ family was sleeping he cut his | oat, the throat of a son age, slashed a younger son less | then committed suicide | >and Kinonen is | his own throat. the other members of e in a serioys conditig ounded 10 | | Two were killed and five were injured. A writ of habeas corpus was sued out accused of the mur ler of million- d $2,000 from Three robbers secu 1 Banking Com- the bank of the Archib pany, in Archibald, O Fereign. The Hungarian Premiey the Diet that there being n the | al decision that horses arg pent tQ g THE INSURGENTS ~ARE AGAIN ACTIVE Ticusands of Ferscns Lesvire Frovince of Batangas. A RENEWAL OF THE FIGHTING A Filipino Force, Consisting of 200 Rifiemen and 40? Bolomen Recently Attacked Nag- partian, Province of North Ilocos—Com- pany M, Eighth Infantry, Acting on the Defensive, Drove Oif the Enemy. Manila, (By Cable).—Thousands of persons are leaving Batangas province, Luzon, for places of safety, owing to the renewal of war there by the Filipinos. Filipinos recently in Batagas. A large force of attacked the town of Lipa, killing one soldier and several pro-Amer- ican natives. Troop H, First Cavalry killed 10 of the attacting party before the remainder escaped. . A Filipino force, consisting of 200 riflemen and 400 holomen, attacked Nag- partian, Province of North Ilocos. Com- M of the Eighth Infantry, acting on the defensive, drove off the natives, kill- ing 11 of them, with no loss to them- selves. Gen. James M. Bell reports an import- ant engagement between a force of na- tives at Labo, Province of Camarines, and a detachment of the Twentieth In- fantry. Three Americans were killed, The loss of the natives is not known, but it is believed to have been heavy. General Bell expects a speedy extermin- ation of the irreconcilables. The natives of Samar and Leyte are stirred by the closing of the ports and bitterly object to reconcentration. William B. Preston, formerly a cap- tain in the Forty-third Volunteer Infan- try, has committed suicide. The Philippine Supreme Court has dismissed the writ of habeas corpus in the case of Mr. Patterson, man, an IEnglish- | who is private sceretary to Sizto | Lopez and whose deportation is sought | by the authorities here, as he refuses to take the oath of allegiance to States when he landed at Manila. tice Cooper dissented. Patterson be deported on the first steamer for Hongkong. The American and Federals elected their full ticket tions held in Iloilo, Island of Panay. The constitutional code allowing soldiers Jus- will Fusion elections. BIG MINE FIRE. Roasted or Suffocated. Harrisburg, Pa, broke out in the Big Lick mine, near Lykens. the mine when the fire was discovered. They crowded into a car, which was to the None of them were injured. Twenty mules were either roasted- alive or suffocated by smoke and steam pump was gotten in and the mine is being flooded to pre- vent the flames from spre: ding. The mine is operated by the Lykens Valley Coal Company, most productive in It is believed the fire was st incendiaries, as it broke out in tion that has not been worked for some A large number of men and boys hoisted of fire. started time. have conflagration. TRAIN FALLS THREE HUNDRED FEET. bound | an | ler of the Treasury Robert J. Tracewell surface through a wall | | the appropriations made for the nation the United | per at the local elec- | | the Fiftcen Men Rescurd, But Twenty Mules Were | g | of $50,000,000 could be used after July (Special) .—Fire Fifteen men were working in | NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS, Work of Weather Bureau. In his annual report Prof. Willis L. Moore, chief of the Weather Bureau, refers to the extension of experiments with wireless telegraphy. An important extension of the fore- cast work was made during the year, whereby meteorological reports of Europe and from the Azores are transmitted to Washington and with ob- servations from Nassau, Bermuda and Turks Island are regularly published on the weather maps, together with fore- casts of the wind an dthe state of the weather for the first three days out of steamers bound eastward. In a number of instances, when storms of marked strength were passing eastward off the American coast, leaving European ports westward bound were cabled to England. Reports from steamers show that these forecasts and | other special warnings were verified. Philippine Trade in 1901. A comparativ~ statement of the com- merce of the I"hilippine Islands for the fiscal years 1gor and 1goo, prepared in the War Department, shows that the to-. tal value of merchandise imported dur- ing the fiscal year 1901 was $30,279,406, as against $20,601,436 for the fiscal year 1900; and the total value of merchandise exported during the fiscal year 1901 was $23,214,048, as against $19,751,068 for the fiscal year 1900, an increase of 47 per cent. in the value of imports and an increase of 1774 per cent. in the value of exports. The value of imports of merchandise from the United States was $2,855,685, an increase of 72.4 per cent. over the previous year; from the United King- dom, $6,036, 145, increase 53 per cent.; from Germany, $2,135,252, increase 76.5 per cent., and from ey $1,683,929, increase 246.7 per cent. The value of exports of merchandise to the United States was $2,572,021, a decrease of 27 per cent.; United King- dom, $10,704,741, increase »2 per cent; Germany, $81,526, decrease cent. ; France, $1,034,256, increase 38.9 cent. Officials at Loggerheads. Secretary of War Root and Comptrol- are officially at loggerheads. The War Department has outstand- ing contracts which were to be paid from the national defense fund of 1808, and to vote played an important part in the | Secretary Root, in a communication to | F | thereon Tracewell asking that payments be authorized by the account: ing officers, stated that “It appears that President and his Cabinet were agreed that the national defense fund I, 1901, in making payments under con- tracts properly entered into during the year 1808.” Mr. Tracewell replies that his judg- ment is not influenced by the “views of certain executive officers. I hold that { the accounting officers are not author- gas. Al] operation, | | and is one of the | the Lykens region. | by | a por- | ized to allow any payments made from al defense after June 30, 1901.” Secretary Root regards Mr. Trace: well’s decision as a “misinterpretation” of law. Mr. Tracewell insists that he is right. Hepburn’s Canal Bill Representative Hepburn, of Iowa, has introduced his Isthmian Canal bill which, by reason of his being author, passed | last year, and from his probable continu- | ance been thrown out of work by -the | at the head of the House Com:- merce Committee, it is regarded as the { measure which will serve as a basis for A Rock-Slide Causes If to Plunge Over a Bluff | Down [ato Brazi! River. Vancouver, B. C.—At an early hour a Canadian Pacific freight train was proceeding east at a slow rate around a dangerous curve, 400 feet Brazil river, when suddenly came upon a rock-slide scarce- ly 50 yards ahead of him. above the | > Engineer Randall | then to direct the Sepretary of War to | 000,000. action by the House. It differs from the Hepburn bill pass- ed last year in making the total appro- priation $180,000,000 instead of $140,- Of the total amount, $10,000, | 000 is made immediately available to begin work. In othér respects the bill follows that of last} year, authorizing the President to acquire a right of way from Costa Rica and Nicaragua, and from Greytown to Brito, on the suitable defenseg | begin the constructio on the Caribbean sea an, with iven to the brakemen | g from | points in the British Isles, the continent forecasts for steamers ! 16.3 per { $10,000,000 PRESENT T0 THE NATION : Carnegie Will Found stitution of Leern- | ing at National Capital. TO LEAD RESEsRCH, IN OR RIGINAL The Government Asked to Be the Trustee for the Splendid Endswment, No Appropriation Being Expected or Wanted— Carnegie [las i Conferred With Dr. Gilman and Other Noted | Educators on the Subject. Washington, D. C,, (Special) .—DPresi dent Roosevelt has received a letter from Andrew Carnegie, in which the latter offers to make a donation of $10,000,000 | will to the United States. The letter be referred to Congress by the Presi- | i dent in a special message. Mr. Carnegie's gift is for the pur- pose of establishing in Washington a university for higher As fas as his idea has been developed, it proposes a gift after the manner of the bequest of James Smithson, the Eng- lishman who gave $1,000,000 for the es- tablishment and maintenance of what is now known as the Smithsonian Insti- tution. Smithson desired the institution founded by him to be a factor in he dif- fusion of scientific knowledge. Mr. Car- negie proposes that the ele which he is to endow shall be the greatest in- stitution in the world for the develop- ment of higher education. Mr. Carnegie has consulted ex-Presi- dent Gilman of Johns Hopkins Univer- sity ; President Hadley, of Yale; Presi- dent Eliot, of Harvard; ex-President White, of Cornell, and all the leading educators of the country. They heartily indorse his plans. The pr oposed univer- sity will not interfere in the least with the educational institutions already es- tablished, but will supplement them, for, education. according to the present plan, its doors | will be open only to those who desire to | take up a post-graduate course. Mr. Carnegie also wants the new university to take the lead in original research, so that the United States can eventually stand side by side with Germany, if not excel that nation, ment. Mr. Carnegie’'s plan does not propose | a national university in the sense that an appropriation will be asked or need- ed. The Government is simply to be the trustee of the magnificent endow- ment, just as it administers the fund bequeathed by Smithson. It is probable that a board of regents will be appointed, |} In- | @ in the case of the Smithsonian stitution, or it may be that the Govern- ment will be represented upon the board of directors, which, it is contem- plated, shall consist of men of national reputation. Mr. Carnegie has kept the proposed endowment a secret until he could defi- nitely arange the plans and scope of the new university. Even yet all these de- tails have not been arranged, so that lit- tle more than the outline of his gift can be published. It is known, however, that he does not propose to ask from Congress a single foot of land upon which the university buildings will be constructed. The entire expense i sto be borne out of his endow- ment. No site has yet been selected. It will, however, necessarily be very large, as it is proposed to erect a series of magnificent structures. It is said that by offering to endow a university in Washington with $10,000,- 000 Mr. Andrew Carnegie does not in- tend to establish a new institution. The money is to be used for affording facilities for research. Whether Congress will accept the of- fer is a mooted question. It is said the endowment will be in Steel Company securities, and the ques- tion has been raised whether it would be politic to accept them in view of the agitation against combinations. as WRECK ON GEORGIA RAILROAD. Passengaz in scientific develop- | MYSTERIOUSIN ITS ACTIONS! QUICK IN AFFORDING RELIEF! IMMEDIATE IN ITS BENEFICIAL RESULTS! Unexcelled as a BLOOD PURIFIER ! Marvelous asan ALTERATIVE in its stimulant effect on a TORPID LIVER. A sovereign cure for DYSPEPSIA; INDIGESTION, OPPRESSION AND WANT OF APPETITE. 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