' <
SIXTEEN mm PERISH Price's Violett Ernplioc tics Obst Macy
Lives.
SWEPT AWAY BY THE TIDAL WAVE Tkt VIO*t« o! Monx Rmxc WlpcC O.l-Le Ctrbcl Struck By • TMal Wave—Tkt UrtS Lmi at These f»o Placet Naaber About Oae Maodrctf —Maay Otkrr Uvea Were
Last ta the Northers Districts.
Basse Terre, F. W. 1. (By Cable).—It has been- learned trom the Ker.dartncs »I the Island-ol Martinique that toho persons were killed and 1500 injured
s ol Mont Pe-
SUMMARY OF THE UTEST NEWS.
diS of
rH^r-Nel 1 ^
?ets> iuru
ng the Iasi eruptions c
rcount the
e Rivet Flore ar ■n drva
Mont
ic hills
Willi
Home _ . heart disease at his home in that city He was 7S years old. and was for many In Queens Borough. N. Y., Jerry Hunter. a negro, wa* captured after he had mounded 11 policemen and 3 citizens: His wife was seriously wounded. HuuS&Sotss ^ runaway of which he died. IJis horses mere frightened by an automobile. The report of Special Examiner Mabey in the Northern Securities case has been filed at Minneapolis. It makes a
cd at V!
million words of test Two hundred and
and pupils
sevent/five ( >llcd r.n the t
According to an official accot
yruption of August .to was one of the Most severe that has been experienced
Morne Rouge and a great part of
\joupa Bouillon mere destrov'C The
cone between the River Capott Valley of Champ Flore and Fondi Se Reine has been devastated.
■ Iap.ite suffered severely and the l....- , . _
around Basse Pointe were burned- I President Mitchell, of the Unkt The Governor of the island is- arrang- i Mineworkcrs. had a rousing reccptic rig lor the evacuation of the northern ; m Philadelphia. There were 13.000 parishes and the removal of the ; nten in the parade and 40.000 attended hounded. the picnic. President Mhchell made a
The temperature at Martinique is re- j stirring speech. ’ \
ported to be aWnos: unbearable.. j ^ F«er Medinger^ of Chicago, birtet^by
with hydrophobia. He told his family
jes o.°e *f’resident Roosevelt resumed his tour of New England, reaching Rutland at
»TU
stopped at Proctor, where he t drivenj through the town and madt
ipeec .
SET FIRE TO THE MINES Strikers Apply the Torch After Desperate Battle With Guards. VOLLEY AFTER VOLLEY EXCHANGED.
F'tb'-lag Ortmeca the Qaards sad the Miaers After tbt Flriaf af the Pocahontas Mlacs— Situatloa Critical—The Strikers Earaftd Btcaase Several at thtlr Naaber Were
lajmd.
Blueficld,
Warships Will Be Seat
(By Cat M Pellet
ss.-V -«««.-te
iJ ^1 ss.wszzz ssziaw=ssrsx
rrsrs; ^u^£%A^Lrsrsi \
a^eSSASb?.'* - “ id ,o “ b -* i ” ,n ,8S "
M-ri
Pocahontas was set on fire by strikers. They broke the lock on the door of the Beartown entrance and carried in a lot of old lumber to a point about
300 feet from the entrance.
considerable
as given, and g them was
xtremely difficult. Fear mas entertained that if the flames were not soon extinguished that the accumulation of gas would cause
!!*>«!;
NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS.
Orowtti al the Halloa.
A moving picture of conditions in the United States at decennial intervals from 1800 to 1850 and annually from 1850
it presented in a monograph by the Treasury Bureau of
Statistics.
The area has grown from 837.844 miles in 1800 to 3.035.600 square
1 ipos i it issue'
Ine total mealth hat grown from J7.000.000.opo in 1850 to an estimated
x.’r,
it.*" .Vir,
Per capita; jn 1853 W was $3* per •ap«a; in i«6i. before the beginning ^toney in circulation amounted to $13 - »5 per capita in i860, and in 1903 $38 40 ! per capita, the highest point that it
1 tas ever reached.
r stnkcrs arc , in igot The individual deposits in naeffort will be tional banks have grown from $500.5
S7.1in 1865 to $3,111,690,196 m tgo3.
Qaards and Strikers Exchwg* Vrikya^ | t^'s.yy^*'^ '
report says that the fire 1 vhile rushing to the seen : were shot at several times t 1 by strikers. The strikers
y strikers. T : woods and a > arrest then
vibell. W. Va. (! mines of the Po< Company arc 01
applied the torch to v of the mine near the
t .449.073 m 1850 to s.730.6
-The ; ; hc value of farms and farm property Co], from $4,000,000,000 to $30,000,000,000. ikers ,nd the value of their product, which trious portions | *' as not measured until 1870. grew f—™ enttancc, fMJSo.ooq.ooo m that year to $3./64.<
14.000.-
recetv- | | 1
| was killed. y *
fslight* ea'rth^shock 1 *^!!oved^ir^m *n6r'th J Soothe™
amal- I Officials of the Poeahont
tl £“iS!
from $544.t oo in 1900.
if the product of the
—'w from $t,
1,000,000
» in 1850 to . „
> ? 00: . *h e number of people therein grew from less than
night and the ncx- morning eruptions of Mont Pelee occu npanied by electrical dischat
lent Pelee occurred, i into Vermont on a
lyho dawn-hr' daniag
am Service K
■ ,.aS^rn ,.;,, ,nd «,« | ^ i( tno „ „ jrtr SH«. ‘»4 ! <■' »
’Til..-syt lh ,
•ctivity continued until August 28. when col-ied *ith a stul • he volcano seemed to. have calmed | ,h . r “ w " yolently. town. The dispatch docs not mention j "'th hl * ,lle -
»ny loss of life.
irpcrs Ferry. ’ sbhhm steer a
Report.
The annual report of the Civil Sermade public, staiement that 473)75
examined during the year.
Labor Has Its Day.
Washington (Special).—The anneal
i fS" c I'T£' : rl?3 ]
300 mindrs lost their livt* a dozen years 'Vashington. but all the federal classified ago. It is the largest on the line of •f rv *CM .outside of Washington, with the Norfolk and Western Railroad, and , ,* exception of the Postal. Customs.
and Government
Thus, the railway
divisions of the
the departments 1
celebration of Labor Day was obscr/ed left Chicago en route to the North- j !°“ r now in 33 Sutcs and. in the District of ] west on a hunting trip. guarded Mine officials et
' r ” r ‘ — Ri _ 1 , ^ Wn
Vty- j Lanrin's place voted for in the Demo-Cleveland.-O. (Special).—The project Congressman Asbury C. Lath
being heavily
ith their request for
Havana and a $rd!ley line across
majority.
in j ex-Gfov. John G. 'Evans, will b the jed^L-r 'L r onard C< Radri?ffrdfe*d
'• (Special).—The project | Congressman Asbury C. Latimer to build an electric street railway in j ex-Gov. John G. Evans, will be
, ci„ bv SSuUm’dS I WvSilijrtt.taf'fafTSd'ctol
■■'STS'-
the company r
Girl Commits Suicide.
■dale. Pa. (Special).-
he found in kis house upon his return. Mrs. iemcrand says that she and Laborge were planning an elopement. General Maria per Lord, of the An
. Meyer*!. Mary Brur
• girl companion to take a walk with ! j
FDT NURSES DROWNED.
Rowboat Sank by Steamer at Battle Creek
MicMfaa.
Battle Creek. Midi. (Special).—Five members of a boating party of six employes of the Battle Creek^Sanatorium were drowned in Lake -Goguac. Their .rowboat was run down by the steamer
Welcome!
Miss Cany Eyock, the sixth occupant of the capsized boat, was rescued. Bennett had been rowing the young ladies about the lake and the party was returning To the sanatorium villa al
just as th« little «<
to p. m.. just as come was leavin
the exception of Internal Revent Printing service
and Indian services are divisions of the departmental services. Nearly 21,000 persons were examined for the Postoffice Service, or a little over a thousand less than the yrtfinber examined for the departmental service. About 59 per cent., or 33.739- ol those taking examinations passed, and 14059 failed. Compared wrth the year previous, this represented an-increase of 2,113 in the number of persons examined, a decrease M 1.298 in the number who passed and sn^increase of 3,140 in the number who The total number of persons receiving appointment, excluding the Philippine service and the municipal service »f the District of Columbia, neither of which is subject to the provisions of the
oivtl service act, was 9.870.
-. In the entire executive service of the ur-t ! government there are. in round num- ; bers. 235000 places, of which number
'""th "IvT ,s, - 00 ° * re classified. Of the
21.000
} J are those 1 ‘
' I cr J'* h fA *» ,h ' «»•<« ’ S' ££?
her to a large tree about a quarter of i a mile east of town, where she suddenly j
it $130,000,000. an<
ice is stat and of tF
for
ited
miojL men
Forelfa.
cident and come out in a boat.
nile east of town, where she suddenly j Fereifa. .1 All of the victims, except Miss Rich*
te=L p *=J!r *S“ -fi-JK! 1
or nearly two-thirda, goes for positions spbject to the
ice rule*.
could react
ire a ph ch the s
jermans receivi
iscovered.
killed fat Mixiic War.
F6rt Wright. N. Y. (I While the guns of die fort
. Edward Roy
; stastn. c I people 1 I strati''-
eceived them with enthu- j the Polish majority of the | : cold and made no demon- j
/1 stration. ' | i The British Trades ..Union Congress. (. Ci
Special).— i bv a vote of 176 to 1^4. declared that ' ing .Tlumw r&3” ■ B “
, : the present government’s rei
7hile the g
u the fleet. ^ ^ ^ killed by the premature discharge of | measurMT * *” ” a Ta-inch gun;. Harry A. Davis died , King Lewanika of Bare later at the hospital from injuries re- ' sailed from England on hit •teived. Rnd a .third 1 man. Samucl_ Clev- i South s ‘~ v »—«*- J
FIENDISH ACT OF INSANE WOMAN. Attempts to kDJ Her Mother aad Sister aad
Then CammUs StricMe.
Cincinnati, O. (Special)—While suffer- _ from temporary insanity, Emma IcmcS B^khrdi. , « jar. ol —— loll her mother and her
then committed r-—: — v..
caved, ^nd a third" man. Samuel Clev- j South Africa gager, was severely wounded- Several j sons in rivili Others suffered slight injuries. All the J' A revolutic
England on his retur much benefited by hit
reactionary | attempted to ki
iroteland
Hanover. Pa. (Special)—While [ flowers upon the grave of her
mg flowers upon the grave of her son announces a several weeks ago Mrs. Edward Bahm- ! pointmenti. : ' gardner. 55 yean old, of Marburg, this , serand to be county, slightly injured her hand^ with ton.
s rusty trowel she —: - r —eloped.
suffering.
1 Earthquake shocks were felt in Algeria | neds *ri ; and Campano, Venezuela. '
P 1 * rt ' ! jWTrench official ionmal form.n. *P r . e * d ^
| sistM^Dorothy. a _ has suicide/lTthe home near Covington, Ky. I© Mrs. Bankhardt and Dorothy Were asleep.
rooms at the time, and each a terrific blow on the head blunt instrument, their skulls tred. r • •
dealt
le*.! in separate
I was dealt
men were privates of the Second Com- |oAfo^meTbro;^™thc Sultan'of being fractured Both probably will die. ‘ pany Coast Artillery of the regular ; Morocco, is spreading among the Berber Having dealt these blows to het | • Army. ! tribes. ■ I mother and sister, she satnnud that
1 laAtaak, shocks wc„ H. ta A*,™ | ^“.1 trtL'b^S ta
.lightly injured her
rusty trowel she was using, ‘poisoning developed, and death
after intense
>fficial journal formally tuber of diplomatic ap* luding that of W.Tusmbassador at W^fEtng-
Lance Corporal Lloyd, of an English
; regiment, surrendered himself, skying f that he is an American and that he had
killed a man in Kansas .City.
Chicago (Special).-The Chicago pub- j Young wMwSId. adding th^G^ Ik schools opened Tuesday with—an i man army maneuvers, visited the miliaggregale eoroHment of, 2754XX) pupils. ! tary school at Lichtenfelde.
lEe-children will-carry a supply of pur
T. Carry Water la SchaM.
against typhoid fever . adopted later by tl
El Paso. Tex. (: . - firmed dispatch
finahua that a terrible wreck took place on the Mexican Central. near Bertneifllo. Many .persons are said to hake been Bhafal m-tk ^— —* ■*-- M—i
list is long
firm the
ig at
man army 1
, _ Jtary school
supply of pure i Eighteen vest nr protection ; u Port Elitabt P 1 * 0 *. wdl. be Coast, in a storm
of Education |o, L
furnish . ^ .^irty-fihh Trades Union Congress of Great Britain opened in Lon-
! don. 1.250,coo workers being repre-
) .—An uncoo- j
many lives
the labor mayor of
Alderman Patrick Dot candidate, was elected 1*
Dublin.
HVare said to hate ten 1 The Colombian government is Bf , . attacks by the rebels a those pons.
. ■ Kerr ) smrily ini
gso Sprrar street. !
Threw CUM team Wlaiam >* j HaaadaL
r“
•reed believe anytkiat
aad 'iwwraal mjurtes. He said there j * »>' aK-nay tef»#Mey. a Mt sir r'n-*y ao hops foe it. rpawary ! of iiwerest wiH g» ep.
the flames began to t. cistern in the yard
>n7>ii
.
Hundreds 'of neighbor to the Bankhardt home
sn
ran to a. cistern in the yard t in, drowning before assis-
: could res mdredsof
iped in, drown uld reach her.
J — : -hbori were attracted
enc by the fire and
succeeded in rescuing the two victhm of the insane woman before they were
harmed by the flames.
Steel Caapaay-s $IMM.0<» Mretgaie. New York (Special .—A mortgage fn $10,000,000, made by the Bethlehem Steel
fied
of Tre.oooxoc t gold bonds
Company of Pennsylvania, was Set with the County Register of Hudson Count#. N. J. It i» hr favor of tht Colonial Trust Company, of New York
and is to secure an issue of of tycnty-year 5 per cent
One Hand red Lives Lust
Cape Town ' (By Cable).—Eighteen vessels, mostly sailing eraft, have been driven ashore in. a gale at Port Elizabrfh. Five of them were dashed to pieces, and all the members of theii crews were lost Two tugs are also reported to have foundered, and a score of lighters are aahore. The deaefa losses are estimated at too <
Ptaaaed terPadflc. San Francisco (Special).—The coast of California, with the Golden Gate as the center of operations, will in all probability bt the seen* of the neat Strategic ■aaiaiin between chosen fleets of the American • Navy. Naval mm are Jia-
tfo-e which gaverntd the Uw r
th* Nr.
.. n
esting in y of Wari
RsHaf Upon Ctvfl Service Law.
President Roosevelt has made a ruling upon the civil service law which apparently disposes of the case of Miss Rebecca J. Taylor, who is testii
court the right of the Secretary
tq^schasge her.
The President's ruling, which has
been pomulgated by the QvU Service
Commission as one.of its own rules, is: For the purpose of preventing_s.ll
misunderstandings and improper coV
struction of said section, it is hereby
declared that the term "iu»t cause/L*s nsed in Section 8, Civil Service RAle 2, is intended to mean any cause./other than one merely political or. religious, which aril! promote the efficiency of the service, and nothing contained in
said yule shall be construed to
_ requi the examination of witnesses or at trial or hearing except in the tion of the officer making the r
or
_ , *dli the officer making the removal,
the President is the the ciril service rules has the force of
laration
and is of equal force and other rules.
fountain this dec-
•f a new law. effect with all
The disappearance of one of the most fatal diseases to the American soldiers in the Philippines—ijysentery—is causing great satisfaction to the medical branch of the Army. Surgeon Genera! Forwood has received recent .-advices that this disease, which heretofore has caused more sickness and deaths than
>ng the troops in practicably disap-
d more s
ither disease^among t
any other dn ^je^JPhilippii
Aiatast Met-yrasf CMh. The United States Army ordnance officers, after an exhaustive test, have reported against the adoption of bul-let-proof cloth shislds. The test showed that, weight for weight, the shields were not as resistant at alee! plate, while they were of double weight when
Tariff Dacaa't Fay. Surprising resuht have fallowed the •ampliation of tariff returns on goods .imported from the Philippine Islands during the first fire months of the opera tkm of the Philippine tariff act.approved R last. The returns show total 1 for the five months of only $11.-
A WANT IEAT COMBINE Overshadows Even the Billion Dollar Steel Trust.
WILL CONTROL THE PRICE OF MEAT. All the Lcadiax Aesl Pickers Are te It-WlP Be Kaewa at the I'afted Steles Pscktex Cewpaay—Armour sad Swill al the HcadThe Etl!mated Auaual Prom oo Qrots But I-
aeM Tea Per CcaL
Chicago, Jll. (Special).—A giganlic combination of the packing houses ol the country, to be known as the United States Packing Company, with a probable capitalization of $500.0003100. on which an annual business of from 750,000,000 to $1,0:0 0003300 will be transacted, at a net profit of from $75,0004x10
to $100,000,000.
These are some of the details coming to the surface in Eastern financial circles of the most far-reaching of all the trusts
yet projected Notwithsta
islanding the repeated and posi-
tive denials from Armour, Swift and other interests, the proposed combine is accepted as a certainty. It overshadows
the United States Steel Corporation. It is understood that the basis of pajr
ment by the new trust, to be known as the United States Packing Company, for the corporations and firms it is to absorb will be twenty-five times th$ earnings for the last year. The earnings aggregated ovei* seventeen millions of dollars.
The reported division of capital among
the principal interests in the Ssco.ooo.ooo
combine is as follows: Armour & Company, Swift 4 Company. $ioo.a Morns & Company. $75
'-.000,000; Schv
TO END THE BIG STRIKE. Oavtraur S'oae May Call Extra Session of
Lc|islalur< — ArMuatlou.
Harrisburg. Pa. (Special).—Persistent rumors were in circulation here that 4 special session «f the legislature may be called by Governor Stone in the interest of legislation looking to the arbitration of the strike fit the anthracite region. It is understood tha: should there be a popular demand for the calling oi the legtslauire together to grapple with the question, a demand which should be imperative and unmistakable. representing the great mass of the people, who have indirectly suffered by die co*l strike, the Governor would be constrained to call an extra While no confirmation of these rucan be secured from an official *, it is stated that a legislative
grave sitnation in the
source, it is st solution to the
'Govern
pronounced and wdll known t
Tratow and miners.
During the fast legislature he not inly urged upon the assembly the netessity for passing an arbitration law. but he had a draft of a bill covering he need made and sent to the coal
and officials of the United
operators jproyed of
jperator. and officials Mine workers. Neither
tor the miners, however, approved of •he bill as it was framed. and^Ahc Govrrnor - knew that, it was impossible to wcure its passage in the /ace of the objections of bo:h sides /{mere
sides interested.
Conterence oo Arbitration. Wiikesbarre. Pa. (Spetfol).—At the :lose of the sixteenth week, of the anhracite strike the talk of arbitration is
*r ^■ om ^ n ^' 5353300.000; others ova j itrong in the M-ike region that the mlaneous expenses, including cost of pro- ; 3n the operators will have the desired
tneous expenses, including cost of prolotion, etc.. $25,000,000 Total. $500-- i eff—L
000.000. It was reported here on good auth 1 OMlen Armour is to be chairman ity that President Mitchell will hav. ic finance committee and head the j conlcitnce with United States Sena'
| & i JrS'“ ^
resident. The full list of officers is: Some week* ago. at a meeting of the Chairman board of directors. J. Ogden People's Alliance of this city, a comIrmour; president. G. F. Swiv treavr mittee was appointed to wait on the *r. Edward Morris; general manfgtr Pennsylvania senates and request operating department), Edward Cudahy; them to use their influence to bt chairman finance committee, J. Ogden thi*~jgijyrt aad operaons .oge'.he
iting dep
MESSENOER GIRLS PQPUl^L Telexnph Boys to Disappear Frok Westers Union's Chicago Office. Chicago (Special).—The farailiarmessenger boy, so long identified with telegrams, is about to disappear, so far as the branch of the Western Union Company here to concerned. This has been finally decided by the local officers of the company haring the matter in charge. The latest strike of the boys, the third disturbance in a .month, forced the American District Telegraph Company, which supplies the messengers for the Western Union, to hire 400 girls to take the strikers’ places, and after a trial of nearly a week ■t is declared that their services are
nighMi
TEXAS WHEAT YIELDS FOR 1HZ. Crop Estimat'd at MM.9M Bushels-Samc Onintity of Oats. Austin, Texas (Special).—The followfog estimate of the grain yield of Texas this year has been issued by H. B. Dorsey, secretary of The Texas Grain Dealers’ Association. There are about 8.000.000 bushels of wheat'in Te* a » this year and about the same quantity of
oats.
As to corn, there is no way by *bich mably accurate estimate cpn be However, the crop jhir/ear is than it was last year. 'No oats were exported except for seed purposes, riiipments being made to the Southeast^ Somerf ng like 2.000.000 bushels — .s oats vert shipped last year
same amount this year.
lighter
east
of Texas id the s
M ould Combine Ctarcb aad Stitt. London -(By Cable).—The Rev.
•hfllips, vicar
of 'Gorleston, near Yi
mouth, who aroused widespread
Yarcbm-
it by permitting Mrs. Brown Potter to recite from his pulpit, in June, loot, is agiuting a fresh and more startling scheme for a close union ol the church and stage in the cause of religion. He proposes that each parish maintain a theatre under the management of the churdi. In an outspoken interview the clergyman says: Clergymen overdo the religious side of life, thereby ruining the spiritual liver, like that of overfed Strasburg geese."
TweatrOw Persons Killed.
Birmingham, Alar (Special)—W(hile rounding a curve on a high embankment near Berry, Ala- at 9.30 o'clock m., the engine and four ears of an cursion train 00 the Southern railway leaped from the track and roiled over and over down the incline, smashing the coaches into kindling wood and causing the instant death of 21 persons
and the injury of Bi others. Physicians -nr,^ say that at least 39 of the injured can- Li .u, not live. With the exception of H. M. L, ,, r\.. ji : .t— c . _
'Special). — The
iving at Birmingham a»d
Roscoe Shelby, of CrluS.Uta, an of the dead and injured are negroes. 1
•folLS. &
Social Democratic party in the state ve ariosi here adopted s'platform reaffirm ing its allegiance 10 the principle* .f international socialism The* platform demands, among other things, a. tew granting wageworkers over fin years of age. who have famed less than SMtcno a year and have been citterns of Mw United States not teas than 16 yrara. a pension of $u a month for the remaindrr of Hfe; a!«o that tha United Sturt Senate ha afoHtfod. VririlTlTlirii '7 ftii
Denounce Gen. Gobln's Order.
'Shenandoah, Pa. (Special).—General Gobin's report from' Major Gearhart was to the effect that everything was quiet in the Panther Creek region. More men reported for work there, he says, than on any previous morning
and none was molested l In Shenandoah and ' "Tftair's’ (sfe,
•cir~«(pnt from doo* to 3oor in :he Panther Creek Valley spreading the
General Gobin's stern warning ra , ri'oSd ,o ta , '.“;.
and his ins
ODDS AND ENDS OF THE LATEST NEWS. Attorney General Anderson, of Virginia. says that the law of the State s sufficient to block the proposed mercer of the Adamic Coast Lins and the >e.iboard Air Line. Theodore Roosevelt. Jn. J»as started eith H. R. McCullough, a vice-presi-lent of the Chicago and Northwestern Railway, on a hunting trip in South Dakota. Huntsville, Ala., has invited Presilent Roosevelt to visit that city next nonlh. A combination of the leading malleible iron companies is under considerThe prices of meats' in Germany tontinne to advance, and t good steak low costs 44 cents a poun-l in Berlin. The French Minister of Finance proxies to meet the financial deficit by educing the amount of untaxed akotol hitherto allowed producers and by abolishing exemptions from the tobacco Captain von Frank<;nberg_ and Lieuenant Numbauer of the First Regiment German Field Artillery, have been disnissed from the army .on account of iemonstrations fo a pardoned duelist. Montagu Holbein, the English swimner. failed in his third attempt to swim he English channel after being in the vater 22 hours and 21 minutes. Tlte capital stock of the Illinois Cental Railroad was increased to $95,040.-
no.
There will be no contest over the esates of either Charles L Fair or his rife by Mts. Fair’s relatives. Mrs. Harriet E. Nelson, mother of Mrs. rate, on behalf of berself and children, las relinquished for a sum in cash all :teim to the estates of Fair or his wife. Five employes of the Battle Creek • .'Mich.) sanitarinm—nurses, probation's and stenographers—were drowned n Lake Goguac as the result of a colision between -4he steamer Welcome ind a rowboat containing a party of
-•oung people.
Theodore Roosevejt. Jr., left New York, accompanied by H. R. McCul- - igh, of Chicago, vice-president o( the Ibago and Northwestern Railway. : goes West for a three week 'hunting and fishing trip as the guest of Mr.
McCullough..
The first clash between the striking mthracite miners and the troops oe-
Tamaqua. Pa. Strikers ston>ops. A number of tbe.strik-'
arrested. Captain Gearhart,
my F. Twelfth Regiment, was
T VahWbU r»f *«b-*tos Wave
Seen found near Lbpenmn*. M*3i
Hltem and King Victor iewed 30,500 troops on Field.' The Emperor meiican general, who guests during the army faa-
. c .:r
1=. -. 1, T-ta-lhot Fk!1 “5”£h',^«'rS
icuvefo.
The Hamburg eustom* .authorit.r 1 rill hereafter require cert iterate* of oririn in th« rate of gram shipped ‘rOn lahimore. New Y ea and other Ante:gji&E&SS dited fondi by iufohng gas

