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D J n * " • - WEATHER INDICATION*. D For tho People of Plttaton and Vlolnlty. THE HOME PAPER. ""'Il —I Forecast Until 8 p. m. Tomorrow for Eastern Pennsylvania. - ...v : i Fair tonight and Suiulaj , v ppl ALL THE HOME NEWS. I WBRKLV B38TARLISHKD 18B0. D DAILY HBT. Ill THBO. HART IMS. PITTSTON, PA.. MO XDAV. - ' AP IL 3, 1905. FORT? CEN?§ A MK&TH. f 8 PAGES. 55th YEAR. POLICE FIRED ON BY FOREIGNERS ROOSEVELT IS OFF PRESIDENT POTTER DEAD. MORE BLOODSHED BOUND FOR KIN THIEVES WERE ABOUT. DISASTER IN MINE Long Isfand Railway Again Suffers Loss of Chief Executive. Burber Shop of Bruce Council, on North Main Street, Was Rifled Now York, April President William F. Potior of the I.onjOslaiul railroad, who had boon ill ill tout a month with cerebro spinal meningitis, is dead. The death of Mr. Potter Is much deplored by his associates of the Pennsylvania railroad. The loss i-D especially felt following so closely npon the death of Mr. Potter's personal friend a;h1 predecessor, the late William II. Baldwin. Two Italians Wch- Detemitacrt Xot Starts on Trip to South and Czar's Troops Butcher Men to lie Captured but "lie "Cops" Oyma Leads Concerted Ad- ,on Saturday Terrible Explosion Occurred in a Leiter Working. Caught Them. The barber shop of Bruce Connelt, on North Main street, was broken into early Saturday morning and literally "cleaned out," all the razors, clippers, scissors and even soap being taken. Entrance was gained by forcing a rear window. Mr. Connell states that he has suspicions as to the identity of the guilty person and expects to cause an arrest In the case. West. " in Warsaw. Officers Prico and Peiidergast were made the targets /or a volley of bullets, fired by an Italian fleeing from them, Saturday night, and had it not been that the fellow had poor aim something serious would in all probability have happened. The two policemen were called to suppress a row on Mill street late at night and when they arrived they found thati all but two of the foreigners who had been engaged In the tight had disappeared. These two. as soon as they saw the police, started to run. The officers started In pursuit and chased the men into an alley, where one of them turned around and, whipping a gun from his pocket, fired several times at his pursuers. He then started to run, with his friend, and Officer Price, in order to bring them to a stand, shot several timers in the air, but the reports, did not seem to have the right effect, as both men kept on running. The officers finally ran them down and hauled them to the city jail, where they were given a hearing yesterday afternoon. The man who had fired the shots gave his name as Prank Wakesnish and his partner called himself Mike Sitter. Wakesnish was fined $15 and Sitter $3. Both men paid their fines. vauca. REST AND RECREATION A STATE OF CHAOS. LINEVITCH RETREATS. POSSIBLY 50 ARE DEAD. Tokyo Gets News of Bril- Zeigler, 111., Scene of the Reported Explosion. Secretary Taft is Left in William F. Potter was a striking example of the self made man. Born fifty years ago in I'tica, N. Y.. he was educated In Worcester, Mass., and in Europe. Early in life he moved to Michigan, and in 1875. when he was twenty years old. he entered the service of the Flint and Pere Marquette Kailroad company as a clerk. From that position he passed successively through those of conductor, station master, division superintendent and general superintendent. Terrorists Making Plans for A CLEAN PAVEMENT. liant Work. Charge. Attack. New Hriek Pave Flushed Saturday Night and Looked Very Washington. April 3. — By the departure of the president this morning jn a trip to the south and west Secretary Taft becomes n "three ply" official. For the next few weeks he will not only be secretary of war, but acting president and secretary of state. Tokyo, April 3.—Fresh news from the front indicate* tliat the activity of the Japanese armies is being directed by Marshal Oyaina, who until last Wednesday was in Liiioyang. A concerted advance seems to he underway not only east and west of tlie railway, but along the valley of the Hoelfan river running northeast to the H\iu gari. This is shown in a significant dispatch made public at the imperial war department. It says: Neat Sunday Zoigler, IIJ., April 3.—An explosion of gas occurred in Joseph Letter's Zeigler mine this morning at 6:45. just after the men had been lowered Into the mine. Warsaw, April 3.—The strong arm of the czar has began in earnest to work for the restoration of complete order in Warsaw, and as a result a score of men and women lie dead, and upward of a hundred are in hospitals suffering from bullet wounds and slashes with sabers. The police and Cossacks used their woapifns without restraint, and in one crowd of 1,1 K)0 parading .lews four were killed and forty injured by a single volley. One sided lighting took place In almost every main street of travel throughout the city. Strikers and suspected revolutionists were hunted remorselessly by the police and mounted Cossacks, and harrowing scenes of slaughter marked every hour of the day. Main street on the line of the new brick paventent presented a very neat appearance yesterday, due to the Hushing that was Riven it at midnight Saturday night. The bricks were as clean as a new pin and would have passed muster in "spotless town " Street Commissioner Carroll At least rD0 men are entombed in the mine, and small hopes are entertained that any of them are olive. The force of the explosion threw timbers, railroad rails and debris 1200 feet into the air. President ltoosevelt and his party leparted this morning on the long contemplated trip to the south and west aver the Pennsylvania railroad. Mr. ltoosevelt expects to return about May 2H. but this limit is not cast iron, and lie time may be extended. The presilent will at all times keep in touch With affairs at the capital. While the president Is hunting. Secretary Loeb Hiul the clerks will be established at •ome convenient point and act as the medium of communication between the president and the outer world. They will have direct telegraphic connection with the White House, and all official announcements will be made here. In the course of this experience he had mastered every detail of the railroad business, and eight years ago he was engaged by the Long Island iRallroad company as general superintendent. He retained that office until March 4 of last year, when he was appointed vice president and general manager, and on Jan. 13 last, shortly after the death of Mr. Baldwin, he was chosen president of the company. « was Hooded with congratulations as a result of the Improved appearance. If the Hushing is kept up during the summer, the street will be a subject of much pleasure to the residents of this and other cities. The earth for rods around was cracked and smoke and flames issued out of the shaft through the head house. "Our scouts whloli advanced toward llallung on Friday night met :mmD of the enemies' cavalry in the mountains ltorlh of the Kaiyuan river. The enemy was pursue*] northeast until Saturday morning, when they joined half a division fifteen miles above Hailung This column of Russians seems to he transporting large stores of supplies to points between Wlngcheng and Sanschengtsu. A division of our Second brigade was in touch with this column on Saturday night." CANAL COMMISSION. Only one man, who climbed out of the air shaft, has escaped. The crowd which gathered at the mouth of the shaft has had to move back 100 yards owing to the extreme heat. Tlieo. Shouts Chairman and C. E. Ma- FINE PROGRAMME. goon Governor of the Duquoin, III., April 3.—Reports from Zeigler received here say that at least 54 men, so far as can be ascertained, were entombed In the ruins of the mine when the explosion came. Twenty are reported dead. How many others of the 16 unaccounted for are dead or injured Is not known. Canal Zone, COLLEGE MEN'S EXPENSES. The entire city is in 11 state of chaos. The terrorists have lost nil fear of the police anil are openly soliciting funds for arms ami ammunition. Hands or men are going from house to house levying taxes for this purpose, and many merchants who have refused to pay their allotment have been Hogged in the streets. Musical Selections and Headings to be Students Pay Out Much For Tobacco Hendered In tlie M. 1*. Church Washington, April 3.—Secretary of War Taft this morning made public the personnel of the new isthmian canal commission, as follows: and Intoxicants, Tomorrow Kvetting The president was accompanied by Secretary l.oeb. Dr. Alexander Lambert. (Jenerai S. H. M. Young. Mentenant G. It. Fortesiiue, Mr. M. C. Latta and Mr. .1. L. MeGrew and stenographers and representatives of newspaper press associations. New Haven, Conn.. April 3.—Professor William Bailey, the Vale statistician, summarizes as f dlows his tables 011 money spent by Yale students: The following programme will be rendered in the Methodist Protestant; church tomorrow evening under the auspices of the Christian Endeavor Theodore P. Shonts, presdent of the Clover Leaf Railroad company, chairman and member of the commission; Charles E. Magoon, of the law department of the war department, member and governor of the canal zone; John F. Wallace, now In charge of the engineering work In the canal zone, member and chief engineer. This bulletin is decidedly important, army officers say, as it shows the Japanese have advanced more than halfway to Klriu, east of the mountains, and this division must be acting in the flanking movement und£r way to reach Klrin from the east. An important bulletin from the center army announces the arrival of a detachment at Changchun, more than halfway be ttveen Mukden and Harbin, on tht main line of the railway. Changchun jn Cfti u straight Hue west fifty miles from Klrln: therefore the two Japanese columns reported in the bulletin? are widening the area of operations, one going northwest and the othei northeast. A final bulletin announces an engagement 011 Saturday night with a small body of Russian cavalry south of Mituncho, which Is east of the rail road, and shows another Japanese column UN) miles north of Tie pass and almost centrally between the other two Joseph Lelter recently announced his intention of abandoning the mine, and the men had been notified accordingly. Under tobacco and intoxicants the differences are marked. Of those spending over $1,000 there are very few reports In which both of these items are omitted. The poorest men spend more on tobacco than 011 intoxicants, but aside from this class the reverse is true. Most of them smoke a pipe, with an occasional cigarette or a cigar, and expenditure for these is by no means as elastic as for intoxicants. The highest class spend as much 011 intoxicants as on tobacco. society A Campaign of Destruction Organ include, "The Lost Chord," Sullivan There are growing indications that the terrorists are ready to begin a campaign of wholesale destruction by bombs. Handbills have been scattered through the streets warning the public against walking near government buildings, which, it is said. will be blown up Without exception. The few parents who have had the courage to send their children hack to school have been warned to withdraw the pupils, as it is also proposed to raze the school buildings with bombs. Although there has been a steady strengthening of the garrison for two months, the situation has been rapidly growing worse. Miss Hannah Drury. The only guards at the mine since the withdrawal of the state mlHtlamen, have been armed detectives. First Stop at Louisville. Readings, "Itasca" "The Love Story" . . Cora Morris Griffin Desprler Rurdette The first stop will bo madc'at Louisville, Ky„ at !» o'clock tomorrow morning. The president and party will pass in procession through the city, and the president will make an address. The train will leave Louisville at 11 o'clock, pass through St. Louis at H p. 111.. making a stop there of ten minutes, and at that point take the Missouri, Kansas and Texas road for San Antonio. The other members are: Rear Admiral Mordecal T. Endyoott, U. S. N„ now chief of the bureau of yards and docks; Brigadier General Peter C. Hains, U. S. A., retired; Colonel Oswald H. Ernst, corps of engineers,''! T, S. A.; Benjamin M. Harrod, the only present member of the commission to be reappointed. BOND BIDS RECEIVED Slug Me to Sleep". . Edwin Greene Miss Clara I^anjrfortl. Headings, "The Soldier's Pardon".. Soprano solo, Issuance of $13,000 Worth of Iionds by School Hoard Tempts Good Anon Baker Premiums, Innocent Drummer" . . Cora Morris Griffin. • The following bids have been received in connection with the proposed issuance of $13,000 worth of 4 per cent bonds by the Pittston city school board: Lamprecht Bros. & Co., of Philadelphia and Cleveland, offer to take up the bonds at a premium of $3.35 on $100, which would hrlng the bonus to $435.50. Haydn Miller & Co. offer a premium of $2.50, or $102.50 on $100, which would bring their bonus to $325. The Trowbridge & Niver Co., of Chicago, offers to buy the bonds at tar and give a bonus of $131. The needy student spends nearly four-fifths of his money 011 necessities. while the wealthiest class spend less than three-fifths on the same items. As is to be expected, the men who spend the largest amounts on pleasure and intoxicants are not those who rank flic highest in the class room work. Male Quartette Selected Jumt's McArt, Louis James, George Professor William H. Burr and William Barclay Parsons, present members of the commission, it is announced, will be appointed merrflbers of the consulting board of engineers. A few short stops will be made in Indian Territory 011 Wednesday. At Sherman. Tex., where the party will arrive at -I p. 111., the president will leave the train, drive to the public square and make a brief address. I (alias will be reached at p. in., and after a public address the president will attend a dinner. Drury, William Krise. Heading, second act from "The Virginians" Cora Morris Griffin Tenor solo, "Face to Pace,". Gwiiym Kosser. FINANCIAL and commercial. New York Stock Markets, furnished by M. S. Jordan & Co., stock brokers, Miners' Bank Building. At first it was said that only a few persons had been killed and wounded in the attack on tin- Jews. In no sense was the slaughter prompted by racial hatred, as the Jews were parading in sympathy with I'olish strikers living near tiie Jewish district. Mi fact, the Jews were on their way to fraternize with a parading body of thCD Poles when intercepted bv the police. After the Jews bad been dispersed the police attacked the Poles, killing and wounding twelve men ami two women. Headings, "Connor" "Mose Johnson" Cora Morris Grlttln Soprano solos. "Rainbows" Anon Kicketts divisions, New York High. . .142% • .. 39% April 3. 1905. Low. Close. 142 142 % 39% 39% 50 50 Charges Against Greene False, 'J'lds news is regarded as establishlng the fact that a general advaucr lias lietiim against the Russian army. The next stop will be at Waco 011 Thursday. April ($, at a. 111. The president will speak briefly at Waco, lie will reach Austin at 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon, address the Joint session of the legislature at the capltol. and later speak to the public 011 the lawn of the capitol. Washington. April :t. Solicitor Penflelil of the state department has reported that the charges made in \ enessnela against General Francis V. Greene and the asphalt company of which lie (Qreenei was the head to the effect that lie and the asphalt people had aided the Matos revolution are false. Some months ago General Greene submitted to the state department a sworn denial of the truth of these re|MDrts and had backed his denial by affidavits from responsible officers of the asphalt company, denying that they or the company had aided the Matos revolutionists in any way. C. B Hawley C. P. Webber Am Sugar . . Am Par & F 'Constancy Miss Langford "Michael StrogofC (by refluent) Cora Morris Grlffln. Selection by Male Quartette. James McArt, Louis James, Drury, Wm. Krise. The price of tickets is 25 cents for adults and 15 cents for children. Tickets can be purchased at Drury's Am Loco■.. Amal Copper Atchison com Atchison pfd H. R. T. B. AO 50% SI The matter of disposing of the bonds was left in the hands of a committee, but the sale has not yet been owing to a question of the taxation on the bonds, raised by the Lamprecht Reading, Verne JAPS ON THE MOVE. 80% 88 80% 88 % Russian Troops Already Attached tc 88% 102 74 102% 102 % New Commander. 68% 10!) 67% 108 V. 148% 58% 28% 54 % 46 141% 122% 65 % 67% George Gunshu I'usk, .Manchuria, April U.— O.vnma is sending tiie bulk of the live Japanese armies, natives report, to Tsitsihar, ISO miles west of Harhiu, on tlie Siberian railway, anil Vladivostok, leaving heliiuil only forces enough to harass Linevitch in his retreat. Can Pacific Ches & Ohio Col Southern C. F. I Brie L. & N 149% 108% 14it% llrm Rough Rider Reunion at San Antonio. Volley Fired Into Procession 58% 29 % 58% 29 Tin* train will roach San Antonio at !S::tO p. ni. Thursday, but there will be no public programme until tlie following morning. The object of the president in visiting San Antonio is to attend the reunion of his regiment. Exercises have been arranged which will till the entire day, Including a review of the regular troops at. Port Sain Houston, a. procession in which the (4rand army and Confederate veterans will take part, luncheon at the rough riders' camp and a dinner by the Business Men's club at the Hotel Monger. The president will leave at 11 p. m. for Fort Worth, arriving there the next morning at 9:45 and leaving at 10:45. The programme for Fort Worth will consist of a drive and an address. Itzika street Is a narrow thoroughfare running through the heart of the Jewish settlement. The procession formed hero and was winding slowly along" through cheering lines of sympathizers on the sidewalk when tifty police came galloping up and shouted for the throng to disperse. Without waiting for the order to be obeyed the body dismounted, formed in double line across the street and tired a volley straight into the packed mass of humanity. Men and women and children were struck down in the front ranks. In a minute the street was deserted of all save the murderers and the dead and dying. Four men were killed with bullets through the heads. A mother with a baby at her breast was found shot through the temple. The baby was found uninjured and crying. Apparently the authorities had expected n butchery, as ambulances followed closely behind the squad of police. Thirt.V-ono wounded were carted to hospitals. Seven men and two women slightly wouuded were left lying in the street. SPECIAL NOTICES. 46% 5 6 % 55% 46 % Carpets and Hugs. Williams & Co store, 142't 123 142 D4 CONSUMPTION. Met St Ry M. K. & T. Shad roe at Donnelly's. Linevitch has ordered drills resumed, keeping the soldiers occupied In the daytime, while music is played in the bivouacs at night. An energetic regime is being instituted. The soldiers are much attached to the new commander on account of his simple, soldierly style of living. Mo Pacific N. Y. Central Norf & West St. Paul .. . 107'/* 163% 106% 162 85 V* 175% 66 107 Mainly Caused by Chronic Colds and 162% 85% Gold porcelain crowns. Dr. Moon ET CAE fERA. llunging-oii Coughs. 85% 176 % 176% H. H. Tinker has given a good deal of time to the study of consumption, and llnds that comparatively few cases are hereditary. Ont & West Pennsylvania 63 % 143% 115% 95% 34 % 68% 62% 143 114% 94% 34% 63 143% 114Sb 94% 34% 68 y4 34 % Call and see Bonstein's new line of wall paper. 30 Church street. Xolw From Business Men and Other Minor Matters. Heading Peo Gas —Pair gold eye glasses. Return to Gazette and receive reward. It MODEltN K"-cart for sale cheap. Call 150 Market street. It IjOST Mostly all are caused by neglected coughs and colds, which gradually weaken the whole pulmonary system, and before the people realize it there Is a diseased spot on one lung; spitting blood soon follows and eventually a collapse. The army Is being supplied with equipment for the summer, which the officers especially need, several regiments during the retreat throwing away all the officer#' baggage. Rock Island So Pacififlc So Rwy com T. C. & I. 35 105 34% 98 M 38 % 130% 36 Paints and Oils. Williams & Co. HOUSE for rent cor. Searle and Division streets. Inquire on premises. Texas Pacific Union Pacific U. S. Steel . U. S. Steel pfd 38% Red Star Stamps given with all "Mistchenko has moved forward into close touch with the Japanese and keeps up coustant skirmishing. 133% 36% 97 132% 36% 96% cash purchases at Hallock's Meat At Fort Worth the public part of the trip will end. The president will spend some days hunting in the Panhandle of Texas and will then go to Colorado for a hunt of several weeks. XOTICE is hereby given that bank book No. 15,100 on Miners' Savings Bank, Pittston, has been lost, and application made foi- new book. .Such an unnecessary end. such a pity, for all could have been so different. We know of hundreds of cases where our wonderful cod liver oil preparation, Vinol, has saved a young and valuable life, which without It would have been sacrificed. We have letters from people who were given up to die, and who positively state that Vlnol, and Vinol alone, saved their lives when all else had failed to help them. 96% Market Elsewhere everything Is quiet Ed Schussler has disposed of his New vegetables at Sharp's. ESTKAY COW—Strayed away Thursday night, a Jersey cow, white spot on forehead and shoulder. Finder inform Prank Zalinsky, Port Grif- 27Mltaw3t Little neck and chowder clams, pool tables and Is now devoting his Shad at Sharp's, The plans for the president's hunt in Texas have been somewhat changed, and the presidential party will cross Red river and hunt in the Big Indian pasture. There is a tract of half a million acres here well stocked with game. The outfit is in a car of the International and Great Northern railway and was shipped from southern Texas, to which place the outlit had been sent when it was proposed to huiit for bear in the Big Thicket. Ttte Big Thicket hunt has been abandoned. clams on half shell. Garden seeds at entire attention to the bicycle busi- Frederick's. ness, gun and'locksmithing, and light SPRING SUGGESTIONS. Have just received a new, novel and fith, Pa 1A2 machinery repairing. 14 Luzerne Ave ESTKAY—Cow and calf being oared for at 66 Mason street, Exeter. Owner call and prove property. Ia2 An official statement was made by the police that the parade had been organized by Socialists and that some of these agitators provoked the volley by firing revolvers. It was also asserted that the Socialists were inciting the crowd to Are upon the police. These statements are absolutely denied by the survivors of the massacre, who say that the police tired without the slightest provocation. fashionable, up-to-date line of the fol- nig sram muses FOR THIS WEEK; lowing FOR SALE—Second hand safe. Medium size. Apply G. Labarre & Co., printers, Delaware avenue. 31m3 Vlnol Is able to cure hanging-on colds and stubborn coughs, because it is the most perfect preparation of cod liver oil ever compounded; It contains no oil or grease to upset the delicate stomach, yet it does contain every one of the fifty odd medicinal curative elements actually taken from fresh cods' livers, and we freely and publicly state that we will supply all the Vinol we think necessary to cure any case of chronic coughs, hangingon colds or weak and debilitated conditions of Pittston people, and pay for the medicine ourselves if it fails to give satisfactory results. (3 (5=1? nji rr lnl£ Gold filled shirt waist sets. Gold filled signet shirt waist sets, FOR SADE—Iron gray mare, weight 1350 to 14 00 lbs. Apply Na- Sterling silver shirt waist sets. (BEST EM" tional Biscuit Co, ROOMS for rent. Apply P. J. Battle, m31-lw 31m3 The spring line is complete. This store is teeming with great value. Sterling silver signet hat pins. Gold filled signet hat pins. No plans have yet been made for tin return trip to Washington. FOR RENT—Furnished roms; Mrs. Greenwood, 13 S. Main St. 29mlw MONEY to loan at "Yaseen's. BOARDERS wanted. 154 S. Main street. 29mlw Gold filled signet watch pins. Are the three words that fol- () Best oiled opaque shades, the 25c kind l#e. Gold filled carmen bracelets. Elmira (N. Y.) Surrounded by Fires, Jockey's Injuries Prove Fatal low the first qiiafY of Solid gold rings. Elmira, X. Y., April 3.—Forest tires menace considerable Elmira property, and the fire department lias been called out In an effort to extinguish the flames. The fires are said to have been started by tramps. They seem to have been sturted simultaneously on the hills surround lug the city, and they spread with great rapidity until the united efforts of the firekicii were required to save city property. FOR SALE CHEAP—A good team of large horses. Apply at 27 Mont- Memphis, Tenn., April 3.—Jockey T. Otto Wonderly, who was thrown from a horse at the ruce track, died after an operation in a local hospital. The young man's skull was fractured, and a blood clot developed on the brain. Wonderly was widely known in turf circles, having ridden for of the most prominent stables of the couutry. One lot seersuckers, regular 10c kind, 5c. Ladles' comb sets St@gmai®rs s Bleached and unbleached curtain scrim, regular price 8c; now 5c. Pocket books, etc, gomery street m28tf All goods engraved free. LEWIS, THE JEWELER, MONEY to loan at Yaseen's. SHELL, OYSTERS and fresh milk daily at Cogglns'. How can I express my faith Vinol more emphatically ? H. Very pretty wrappers, all trimmed and a nice deep flounce, also cape over shoulder, equal to any 75c one. Yours at 50c. Tinker, druggist 22 North Main Btreet, BREAD—Eat Harter's bread. It's good. Accused Bank Officials Out on Bail. BEER ICE CREAM—Wholesale and retail, Harter's. Ely'ria, O., April 3.—Cashier K. 1C\ Kaneen, Assistant Cashier E. B. Walker and Bookkeeper Dana Walker o( the Citizens* Savings hank of Lorain, who were placed in the county Jail here after being a nested oil the charge ol embezzling the funds of the bank. hav( been released on bonds of $8,000 each. A nice lot of 75c lace curtains, 35 inches wide, 2 % yards long, a bargain at 45c. Clams at Sharp's. LOST—Young collie dog, yellow and white, with white spot on breast. Finder please return to H. A. Mulhall, Philadelphia avenue. Ift3 WANTED—Roomer. Inquire 37 Fulton street. Ia6 Schenectady, N. Y., April 3.—Mrs. Fred W. Breek, the wife of former Alderman Breek, was instantly killed by being run over by one of the heavy interurban cam of the • Schenectady Railway company, running between this city and Ballston. The body was terribly mutilated. Woman Killed by Trolley Car. Its perfection of quality Is what strikes the taste, appreciation and approbation of all 1 lot of J1.00 lace curtains, 40 inches wide, 3 yards long, selling for 69c pp. Crown and bridge work. Dr. Moon A Boom In Irish Immigration New York, April 3.—Not In live years before lias a single steamship lauded so many Irish immigrants here as the Celtic of the White Star line, which arrived in port with l.lWfl passciigers in the steerage, of which total l.tmi were Irish. In marked contrast to the Fancy stripped seersuckers, worth 15c, handsome for shtrt waists, your choice at 10c yard. Lowest prices for cash. who try it Best meats and bologna. WANTED—Young man with some experience to drive grocery wagon and work in store. Address B. K., Brewed from the best of You must change your curtains. Come and see our 18c curtains, wash net with scroll, very pretty and best quality for 10c a yard. CHICAGO CASH MEAT MARKET, Woman Dies From Burns. Malt and choicest Hops to suit the popular taste, sonic light, Q some dark, but all ABNO- C/ WfLY PUKE. () Gazette la3 Utlea, N. Y„ April i}.—Mrs. James Dixon of nigginsvllle, aged seventyfive years, has died from the effects 01 burns received while attending to tlx kitchen fire. Her husband was in tin cellar at the time, but, lDeing deaf. dlO not lieHr her cries until too late U render assistance. Wall papers. Williams & Co, Five Dead In Mine Explosion, Children's fast black ribbed hose, regular price 15c, now only 8c while they last. one of the Irish on the Celtic was ex v,eluded or even held for special in Jiuiry. immigrants from southern Europe not Prescott, Aria.. April 3.—As the result of an explosion in the United Verde mine at Jerome, owned by Senator Chirk, five men are dead and five others seriously inlumi. The acclHent happened just as the shifts were being changed and all the men except twelve had been raised to the surface. On account of the heavy rains surface water found Its way to that portion of thPtmlne where fire,has been smoldering several years, and stea 141 thus generated caused the explosion, blowing out the bulkheads erected to keep the fire fivui npicuUiug. . Naples, April 3. — The White Star liner Cretic, with Secretary of State Hay and Mrs. ILiv on board, arrived here after a pleasant voyage. Mr. Hay says his heath lias been greatly Unproved by the trip, and Mrs. Hay also is enjoying the voyage. Hay at Naples and Gaining Health, Ladies' will find a nice display of Gray and white cotton voile, also blue and white, newest style, at 25c yard. 1 summer white goods, and requisites at Clara Wagner's, 18 S. Main St, Locomotive Spark Caused Fire. The Gazette Printing Office would like to do your printing. Only the finest quality of work, and at prices that will suit. Oatskill, N. Y., April 3.—A forest IIri at the Burden mines, two miles south of Greendalep destroyed three dwell ings, a barn, two flat ears and a seetioi of trestle owned by the Burden Ori and Iron company. The tire vvas cans ed by sparks from a locomotive on th Central road. - ' Stepiaier Brewing Co. Mttstoo, Pa. | J3ottliug Department. NEW THONE 8452' £ Latrobe, l'a., April — A Slavish c hristening ended In a tragedy at Jam Ison mine Xo. 2. four inllus from tliis city. Mike Kulifoski is and sov era! other men are re|Dorted to b« se riously Injured. The festivities started at the home of John Boreka. Tragedy at a Christening. ™e14GNEI Kingston. N. Y.. April 3. — Forest Urea liave afurtetl In the footlillls ot the Cfttskill mountains, and a serious Are is now raging nettr the foot of Overlook mountain. . Fires In Catskill Forests. 37 South. Main St. Xry PurseH's fronting'; It's cheapest. Let Dr. Moon care for your teeth. 1*
Object Description
Title | Pittston Gazette |
Masthead | Pittston Gazette, April 03, 1905 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1905-04-03 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | Pittston Gazette |
Masthead | Pittston Gazette, April 03, 1905 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1905-04-03 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | PGZ_19050403_001.tif |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text | D J n * " • - WEATHER INDICATION*. D For tho People of Plttaton and Vlolnlty. THE HOME PAPER. ""'Il —I Forecast Until 8 p. m. Tomorrow for Eastern Pennsylvania. - ...v : i Fair tonight and Suiulaj , v ppl ALL THE HOME NEWS. I WBRKLV B38TARLISHKD 18B0. D DAILY HBT. Ill THBO. HART IMS. PITTSTON, PA.. MO XDAV. - ' AP IL 3, 1905. FORT? CEN?§ A MK&TH. f 8 PAGES. 55th YEAR. POLICE FIRED ON BY FOREIGNERS ROOSEVELT IS OFF PRESIDENT POTTER DEAD. MORE BLOODSHED BOUND FOR KIN THIEVES WERE ABOUT. DISASTER IN MINE Long Isfand Railway Again Suffers Loss of Chief Executive. Burber Shop of Bruce Council, on North Main Street, Was Rifled Now York, April President William F. Potior of the I.onjOslaiul railroad, who had boon ill ill tout a month with cerebro spinal meningitis, is dead. The death of Mr. Potter Is much deplored by his associates of the Pennsylvania railroad. The loss i-D especially felt following so closely npon the death of Mr. Potter's personal friend a;h1 predecessor, the late William II. Baldwin. Two Italians Wch- Detemitacrt Xot Starts on Trip to South and Czar's Troops Butcher Men to lie Captured but "lie "Cops" Oyma Leads Concerted Ad- ,on Saturday Terrible Explosion Occurred in a Leiter Working. Caught Them. The barber shop of Bruce Connelt, on North Main street, was broken into early Saturday morning and literally "cleaned out," all the razors, clippers, scissors and even soap being taken. Entrance was gained by forcing a rear window. Mr. Connell states that he has suspicions as to the identity of the guilty person and expects to cause an arrest In the case. West. " in Warsaw. Officers Prico and Peiidergast were made the targets /or a volley of bullets, fired by an Italian fleeing from them, Saturday night, and had it not been that the fellow had poor aim something serious would in all probability have happened. The two policemen were called to suppress a row on Mill street late at night and when they arrived they found thati all but two of the foreigners who had been engaged In the tight had disappeared. These two. as soon as they saw the police, started to run. The officers started In pursuit and chased the men into an alley, where one of them turned around and, whipping a gun from his pocket, fired several times at his pursuers. He then started to run, with his friend, and Officer Price, in order to bring them to a stand, shot several timers in the air, but the reports, did not seem to have the right effect, as both men kept on running. The officers finally ran them down and hauled them to the city jail, where they were given a hearing yesterday afternoon. The man who had fired the shots gave his name as Prank Wakesnish and his partner called himself Mike Sitter. Wakesnish was fined $15 and Sitter $3. Both men paid their fines. vauca. REST AND RECREATION A STATE OF CHAOS. LINEVITCH RETREATS. POSSIBLY 50 ARE DEAD. Tokyo Gets News of Bril- Zeigler, 111., Scene of the Reported Explosion. Secretary Taft is Left in William F. Potter was a striking example of the self made man. Born fifty years ago in I'tica, N. Y.. he was educated In Worcester, Mass., and in Europe. Early in life he moved to Michigan, and in 1875. when he was twenty years old. he entered the service of the Flint and Pere Marquette Kailroad company as a clerk. From that position he passed successively through those of conductor, station master, division superintendent and general superintendent. Terrorists Making Plans for A CLEAN PAVEMENT. liant Work. Charge. Attack. New Hriek Pave Flushed Saturday Night and Looked Very Washington. April 3. — By the departure of the president this morning jn a trip to the south and west Secretary Taft becomes n "three ply" official. For the next few weeks he will not only be secretary of war, but acting president and secretary of state. Tokyo, April 3.—Fresh news from the front indicate* tliat the activity of the Japanese armies is being directed by Marshal Oyaina, who until last Wednesday was in Liiioyang. A concerted advance seems to he underway not only east and west of tlie railway, but along the valley of the Hoelfan river running northeast to the H\iu gari. This is shown in a significant dispatch made public at the imperial war department. It says: Neat Sunday Zoigler, IIJ., April 3.—An explosion of gas occurred in Joseph Letter's Zeigler mine this morning at 6:45. just after the men had been lowered Into the mine. Warsaw, April 3.—The strong arm of the czar has began in earnest to work for the restoration of complete order in Warsaw, and as a result a score of men and women lie dead, and upward of a hundred are in hospitals suffering from bullet wounds and slashes with sabers. The police and Cossacks used their woapifns without restraint, and in one crowd of 1,1 K)0 parading .lews four were killed and forty injured by a single volley. One sided lighting took place In almost every main street of travel throughout the city. Strikers and suspected revolutionists were hunted remorselessly by the police and mounted Cossacks, and harrowing scenes of slaughter marked every hour of the day. Main street on the line of the new brick paventent presented a very neat appearance yesterday, due to the Hushing that was Riven it at midnight Saturday night. The bricks were as clean as a new pin and would have passed muster in "spotless town " Street Commissioner Carroll At least rD0 men are entombed in the mine, and small hopes are entertained that any of them are olive. The force of the explosion threw timbers, railroad rails and debris 1200 feet into the air. President ltoosevelt and his party leparted this morning on the long contemplated trip to the south and west aver the Pennsylvania railroad. Mr. ltoosevelt expects to return about May 2H. but this limit is not cast iron, and lie time may be extended. The presilent will at all times keep in touch With affairs at the capital. While the president Is hunting. Secretary Loeb Hiul the clerks will be established at •ome convenient point and act as the medium of communication between the president and the outer world. They will have direct telegraphic connection with the White House, and all official announcements will be made here. In the course of this experience he had mastered every detail of the railroad business, and eight years ago he was engaged by the Long Island iRallroad company as general superintendent. He retained that office until March 4 of last year, when he was appointed vice president and general manager, and on Jan. 13 last, shortly after the death of Mr. Baldwin, he was chosen president of the company. « was Hooded with congratulations as a result of the Improved appearance. If the Hushing is kept up during the summer, the street will be a subject of much pleasure to the residents of this and other cities. The earth for rods around was cracked and smoke and flames issued out of the shaft through the head house. "Our scouts whloli advanced toward llallung on Friday night met :mmD of the enemies' cavalry in the mountains ltorlh of the Kaiyuan river. The enemy was pursue*] northeast until Saturday morning, when they joined half a division fifteen miles above Hailung This column of Russians seems to he transporting large stores of supplies to points between Wlngcheng and Sanschengtsu. A division of our Second brigade was in touch with this column on Saturday night." CANAL COMMISSION. Only one man, who climbed out of the air shaft, has escaped. The crowd which gathered at the mouth of the shaft has had to move back 100 yards owing to the extreme heat. Tlieo. Shouts Chairman and C. E. Ma- FINE PROGRAMME. goon Governor of the Duquoin, III., April 3.—Reports from Zeigler received here say that at least 54 men, so far as can be ascertained, were entombed In the ruins of the mine when the explosion came. Twenty are reported dead. How many others of the 16 unaccounted for are dead or injured Is not known. Canal Zone, COLLEGE MEN'S EXPENSES. The entire city is in 11 state of chaos. The terrorists have lost nil fear of the police anil are openly soliciting funds for arms ami ammunition. Hands or men are going from house to house levying taxes for this purpose, and many merchants who have refused to pay their allotment have been Hogged in the streets. Musical Selections and Headings to be Students Pay Out Much For Tobacco Hendered In tlie M. 1*. Church Washington, April 3.—Secretary of War Taft this morning made public the personnel of the new isthmian canal commission, as follows: and Intoxicants, Tomorrow Kvetting The president was accompanied by Secretary l.oeb. Dr. Alexander Lambert. (Jenerai S. H. M. Young. Mentenant G. It. Fortesiiue, Mr. M. C. Latta and Mr. .1. L. MeGrew and stenographers and representatives of newspaper press associations. New Haven, Conn.. April 3.—Professor William Bailey, the Vale statistician, summarizes as f dlows his tables 011 money spent by Yale students: The following programme will be rendered in the Methodist Protestant; church tomorrow evening under the auspices of the Christian Endeavor Theodore P. Shonts, presdent of the Clover Leaf Railroad company, chairman and member of the commission; Charles E. Magoon, of the law department of the war department, member and governor of the canal zone; John F. Wallace, now In charge of the engineering work In the canal zone, member and chief engineer. This bulletin is decidedly important, army officers say, as it shows the Japanese have advanced more than halfway to Klriu, east of the mountains, and this division must be acting in the flanking movement und£r way to reach Klrin from the east. An important bulletin from the center army announces the arrival of a detachment at Changchun, more than halfway be ttveen Mukden and Harbin, on tht main line of the railway. Changchun jn Cfti u straight Hue west fifty miles from Klrln: therefore the two Japanese columns reported in the bulletin? are widening the area of operations, one going northwest and the othei northeast. A final bulletin announces an engagement 011 Saturday night with a small body of Russian cavalry south of Mituncho, which Is east of the rail road, and shows another Japanese column UN) miles north of Tie pass and almost centrally between the other two Joseph Lelter recently announced his intention of abandoning the mine, and the men had been notified accordingly. Under tobacco and intoxicants the differences are marked. Of those spending over $1,000 there are very few reports In which both of these items are omitted. The poorest men spend more on tobacco than 011 intoxicants, but aside from this class the reverse is true. Most of them smoke a pipe, with an occasional cigarette or a cigar, and expenditure for these is by no means as elastic as for intoxicants. The highest class spend as much 011 intoxicants as on tobacco. society A Campaign of Destruction Organ include, "The Lost Chord," Sullivan There are growing indications that the terrorists are ready to begin a campaign of wholesale destruction by bombs. Handbills have been scattered through the streets warning the public against walking near government buildings, which, it is said. will be blown up Without exception. The few parents who have had the courage to send their children hack to school have been warned to withdraw the pupils, as it is also proposed to raze the school buildings with bombs. Although there has been a steady strengthening of the garrison for two months, the situation has been rapidly growing worse. Miss Hannah Drury. The only guards at the mine since the withdrawal of the state mlHtlamen, have been armed detectives. First Stop at Louisville. Readings, "Itasca" "The Love Story" . . Cora Morris Griffin Desprler Rurdette The first stop will bo madc'at Louisville, Ky„ at !» o'clock tomorrow morning. The president and party will pass in procession through the city, and the president will make an address. The train will leave Louisville at 11 o'clock, pass through St. Louis at H p. 111.. making a stop there of ten minutes, and at that point take the Missouri, Kansas and Texas road for San Antonio. The other members are: Rear Admiral Mordecal T. Endyoott, U. S. N„ now chief of the bureau of yards and docks; Brigadier General Peter C. Hains, U. S. A., retired; Colonel Oswald H. Ernst, corps of engineers,''! T, S. A.; Benjamin M. Harrod, the only present member of the commission to be reappointed. BOND BIDS RECEIVED Slug Me to Sleep". . Edwin Greene Miss Clara I^anjrfortl. Headings, "The Soldier's Pardon".. Soprano solo, Issuance of $13,000 Worth of Iionds by School Hoard Tempts Good Anon Baker Premiums, Innocent Drummer" . . Cora Morris Griffin. • The following bids have been received in connection with the proposed issuance of $13,000 worth of 4 per cent bonds by the Pittston city school board: Lamprecht Bros. & Co., of Philadelphia and Cleveland, offer to take up the bonds at a premium of $3.35 on $100, which would hrlng the bonus to $435.50. Haydn Miller & Co. offer a premium of $2.50, or $102.50 on $100, which would bring their bonus to $325. The Trowbridge & Niver Co., of Chicago, offers to buy the bonds at tar and give a bonus of $131. The needy student spends nearly four-fifths of his money 011 necessities. while the wealthiest class spend less than three-fifths on the same items. As is to be expected, the men who spend the largest amounts on pleasure and intoxicants are not those who rank flic highest in the class room work. Male Quartette Selected Jumt's McArt, Louis James, George Professor William H. Burr and William Barclay Parsons, present members of the commission, it is announced, will be appointed merrflbers of the consulting board of engineers. A few short stops will be made in Indian Territory 011 Wednesday. At Sherman. Tex., where the party will arrive at -I p. 111., the president will leave the train, drive to the public square and make a brief address. I (alias will be reached at p. in., and after a public address the president will attend a dinner. Drury, William Krise. Heading, second act from "The Virginians" Cora Morris Griffin Tenor solo, "Face to Pace,". Gwiiym Kosser. FINANCIAL and commercial. New York Stock Markets, furnished by M. S. Jordan & Co., stock brokers, Miners' Bank Building. At first it was said that only a few persons had been killed and wounded in the attack on tin- Jews. In no sense was the slaughter prompted by racial hatred, as the Jews were parading in sympathy with I'olish strikers living near tiie Jewish district. Mi fact, the Jews were on their way to fraternize with a parading body of thCD Poles when intercepted bv the police. After the Jews bad been dispersed the police attacked the Poles, killing and wounding twelve men ami two women. Headings, "Connor" "Mose Johnson" Cora Morris Grlttln Soprano solos. "Rainbows" Anon Kicketts divisions, New York High. . .142% • .. 39% April 3. 1905. Low. Close. 142 142 % 39% 39% 50 50 Charges Against Greene False, 'J'lds news is regarded as establishlng the fact that a general advaucr lias lietiim against the Russian army. The next stop will be at Waco 011 Thursday. April ($, at a. 111. The president will speak briefly at Waco, lie will reach Austin at 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon, address the Joint session of the legislature at the capltol. and later speak to the public 011 the lawn of the capitol. Washington. April :t. Solicitor Penflelil of the state department has reported that the charges made in \ enessnela against General Francis V. Greene and the asphalt company of which lie (Qreenei was the head to the effect that lie and the asphalt people had aided the Matos revolution are false. Some months ago General Greene submitted to the state department a sworn denial of the truth of these re|MDrts and had backed his denial by affidavits from responsible officers of the asphalt company, denying that they or the company had aided the Matos revolutionists in any way. C. B Hawley C. P. Webber Am Sugar . . Am Par & F 'Constancy Miss Langford "Michael StrogofC (by refluent) Cora Morris Grlffln. Selection by Male Quartette. James McArt, Louis James, Drury, Wm. Krise. The price of tickets is 25 cents for adults and 15 cents for children. Tickets can be purchased at Drury's Am Loco■.. Amal Copper Atchison com Atchison pfd H. R. T. B. AO 50% SI The matter of disposing of the bonds was left in the hands of a committee, but the sale has not yet been owing to a question of the taxation on the bonds, raised by the Lamprecht Reading, Verne JAPS ON THE MOVE. 80% 88 80% 88 % Russian Troops Already Attached tc 88% 102 74 102% 102 % New Commander. 68% 10!) 67% 108 V. 148% 58% 28% 54 % 46 141% 122% 65 % 67% George Gunshu I'usk, .Manchuria, April U.— O.vnma is sending tiie bulk of the live Japanese armies, natives report, to Tsitsihar, ISO miles west of Harhiu, on tlie Siberian railway, anil Vladivostok, leaving heliiuil only forces enough to harass Linevitch in his retreat. Can Pacific Ches & Ohio Col Southern C. F. I Brie L. & N 149% 108% 14it% llrm Rough Rider Reunion at San Antonio. Volley Fired Into Procession 58% 29 % 58% 29 Tin* train will roach San Antonio at !S::tO p. ni. Thursday, but there will be no public programme until tlie following morning. The object of the president in visiting San Antonio is to attend the reunion of his regiment. Exercises have been arranged which will till the entire day, Including a review of the regular troops at. Port Sain Houston, a. procession in which the (4rand army and Confederate veterans will take part, luncheon at the rough riders' camp and a dinner by the Business Men's club at the Hotel Monger. The president will leave at 11 p. m. for Fort Worth, arriving there the next morning at 9:45 and leaving at 10:45. The programme for Fort Worth will consist of a drive and an address. Itzika street Is a narrow thoroughfare running through the heart of the Jewish settlement. The procession formed hero and was winding slowly along" through cheering lines of sympathizers on the sidewalk when tifty police came galloping up and shouted for the throng to disperse. Without waiting for the order to be obeyed the body dismounted, formed in double line across the street and tired a volley straight into the packed mass of humanity. Men and women and children were struck down in the front ranks. In a minute the street was deserted of all save the murderers and the dead and dying. Four men were killed with bullets through the heads. A mother with a baby at her breast was found shot through the temple. The baby was found uninjured and crying. Apparently the authorities had expected n butchery, as ambulances followed closely behind the squad of police. Thirt.V-ono wounded were carted to hospitals. Seven men and two women slightly wouuded were left lying in the street. SPECIAL NOTICES. 46% 5 6 % 55% 46 % Carpets and Hugs. Williams & Co store, 142't 123 142 D4 CONSUMPTION. Met St Ry M. K. & T. Shad roe at Donnelly's. Linevitch has ordered drills resumed, keeping the soldiers occupied In the daytime, while music is played in the bivouacs at night. An energetic regime is being instituted. The soldiers are much attached to the new commander on account of his simple, soldierly style of living. Mo Pacific N. Y. Central Norf & West St. Paul .. . 107'/* 163% 106% 162 85 V* 175% 66 107 Mainly Caused by Chronic Colds and 162% 85% Gold porcelain crowns. Dr. Moon ET CAE fERA. llunging-oii Coughs. 85% 176 % 176% H. H. Tinker has given a good deal of time to the study of consumption, and llnds that comparatively few cases are hereditary. Ont & West Pennsylvania 63 % 143% 115% 95% 34 % 68% 62% 143 114% 94% 34% 63 143% 114Sb 94% 34% 68 y4 34 % Call and see Bonstein's new line of wall paper. 30 Church street. Xolw From Business Men and Other Minor Matters. Heading Peo Gas —Pair gold eye glasses. Return to Gazette and receive reward. It MODEltN K"-cart for sale cheap. Call 150 Market street. It IjOST Mostly all are caused by neglected coughs and colds, which gradually weaken the whole pulmonary system, and before the people realize it there Is a diseased spot on one lung; spitting blood soon follows and eventually a collapse. The army Is being supplied with equipment for the summer, which the officers especially need, several regiments during the retreat throwing away all the officer#' baggage. Rock Island So Pacififlc So Rwy com T. C. & I. 35 105 34% 98 M 38 % 130% 36 Paints and Oils. Williams & Co. HOUSE for rent cor. Searle and Division streets. Inquire on premises. Texas Pacific Union Pacific U. S. Steel . U. S. Steel pfd 38% Red Star Stamps given with all "Mistchenko has moved forward into close touch with the Japanese and keeps up coustant skirmishing. 133% 36% 97 132% 36% 96% cash purchases at Hallock's Meat At Fort Worth the public part of the trip will end. The president will spend some days hunting in the Panhandle of Texas and will then go to Colorado for a hunt of several weeks. XOTICE is hereby given that bank book No. 15,100 on Miners' Savings Bank, Pittston, has been lost, and application made foi- new book. .Such an unnecessary end. such a pity, for all could have been so different. We know of hundreds of cases where our wonderful cod liver oil preparation, Vinol, has saved a young and valuable life, which without It would have been sacrificed. We have letters from people who were given up to die, and who positively state that Vlnol, and Vinol alone, saved their lives when all else had failed to help them. 96% Market Elsewhere everything Is quiet Ed Schussler has disposed of his New vegetables at Sharp's. ESTKAY COW—Strayed away Thursday night, a Jersey cow, white spot on forehead and shoulder. Finder inform Prank Zalinsky, Port Grif- 27Mltaw3t Little neck and chowder clams, pool tables and Is now devoting his Shad at Sharp's, The plans for the president's hunt in Texas have been somewhat changed, and the presidential party will cross Red river and hunt in the Big Indian pasture. There is a tract of half a million acres here well stocked with game. The outfit is in a car of the International and Great Northern railway and was shipped from southern Texas, to which place the outlit had been sent when it was proposed to huiit for bear in the Big Thicket. Ttte Big Thicket hunt has been abandoned. clams on half shell. Garden seeds at entire attention to the bicycle busi- Frederick's. ness, gun and'locksmithing, and light SPRING SUGGESTIONS. Have just received a new, novel and fith, Pa 1A2 machinery repairing. 14 Luzerne Ave ESTKAY—Cow and calf being oared for at 66 Mason street, Exeter. Owner call and prove property. Ia2 An official statement was made by the police that the parade had been organized by Socialists and that some of these agitators provoked the volley by firing revolvers. It was also asserted that the Socialists were inciting the crowd to Are upon the police. These statements are absolutely denied by the survivors of the massacre, who say that the police tired without the slightest provocation. fashionable, up-to-date line of the fol- nig sram muses FOR THIS WEEK; lowing FOR SALE—Second hand safe. Medium size. Apply G. Labarre & Co., printers, Delaware avenue. 31m3 Vlnol Is able to cure hanging-on colds and stubborn coughs, because it is the most perfect preparation of cod liver oil ever compounded; It contains no oil or grease to upset the delicate stomach, yet it does contain every one of the fifty odd medicinal curative elements actually taken from fresh cods' livers, and we freely and publicly state that we will supply all the Vinol we think necessary to cure any case of chronic coughs, hangingon colds or weak and debilitated conditions of Pittston people, and pay for the medicine ourselves if it fails to give satisfactory results. (3 (5=1? nji rr lnl£ Gold filled shirt waist sets. Gold filled signet shirt waist sets, FOR SADE—Iron gray mare, weight 1350 to 14 00 lbs. Apply Na- Sterling silver shirt waist sets. (BEST EM" tional Biscuit Co, ROOMS for rent. Apply P. J. Battle, m31-lw 31m3 The spring line is complete. This store is teeming with great value. Sterling silver signet hat pins. Gold filled signet hat pins. No plans have yet been made for tin return trip to Washington. FOR RENT—Furnished roms; Mrs. Greenwood, 13 S. Main St. 29mlw MONEY to loan at "Yaseen's. BOARDERS wanted. 154 S. Main street. 29mlw Gold filled signet watch pins. Are the three words that fol- () Best oiled opaque shades, the 25c kind l#e. Gold filled carmen bracelets. Elmira (N. Y.) Surrounded by Fires, Jockey's Injuries Prove Fatal low the first qiiafY of Solid gold rings. Elmira, X. Y., April 3.—Forest tires menace considerable Elmira property, and the fire department lias been called out In an effort to extinguish the flames. The fires are said to have been started by tramps. They seem to have been sturted simultaneously on the hills surround lug the city, and they spread with great rapidity until the united efforts of the firekicii were required to save city property. FOR SALE CHEAP—A good team of large horses. Apply at 27 Mont- Memphis, Tenn., April 3.—Jockey T. Otto Wonderly, who was thrown from a horse at the ruce track, died after an operation in a local hospital. The young man's skull was fractured, and a blood clot developed on the brain. Wonderly was widely known in turf circles, having ridden for of the most prominent stables of the couutry. One lot seersuckers, regular 10c kind, 5c. Ladles' comb sets St@gmai®rs s Bleached and unbleached curtain scrim, regular price 8c; now 5c. Pocket books, etc, gomery street m28tf All goods engraved free. LEWIS, THE JEWELER, MONEY to loan at Yaseen's. SHELL, OYSTERS and fresh milk daily at Cogglns'. How can I express my faith Vinol more emphatically ? H. Very pretty wrappers, all trimmed and a nice deep flounce, also cape over shoulder, equal to any 75c one. Yours at 50c. Tinker, druggist 22 North Main Btreet, BREAD—Eat Harter's bread. It's good. Accused Bank Officials Out on Bail. BEER ICE CREAM—Wholesale and retail, Harter's. Ely'ria, O., April 3.—Cashier K. 1C\ Kaneen, Assistant Cashier E. B. Walker and Bookkeeper Dana Walker o( the Citizens* Savings hank of Lorain, who were placed in the county Jail here after being a nested oil the charge ol embezzling the funds of the bank. hav( been released on bonds of $8,000 each. A nice lot of 75c lace curtains, 35 inches wide, 2 % yards long, a bargain at 45c. Clams at Sharp's. LOST—Young collie dog, yellow and white, with white spot on breast. Finder please return to H. A. Mulhall, Philadelphia avenue. Ift3 WANTED—Roomer. Inquire 37 Fulton street. Ia6 Schenectady, N. Y., April 3.—Mrs. Fred W. Breek, the wife of former Alderman Breek, was instantly killed by being run over by one of the heavy interurban cam of the • Schenectady Railway company, running between this city and Ballston. The body was terribly mutilated. Woman Killed by Trolley Car. Its perfection of quality Is what strikes the taste, appreciation and approbation of all 1 lot of J1.00 lace curtains, 40 inches wide, 3 yards long, selling for 69c pp. Crown and bridge work. Dr. Moon A Boom In Irish Immigration New York, April 3.—Not In live years before lias a single steamship lauded so many Irish immigrants here as the Celtic of the White Star line, which arrived in port with l.lWfl passciigers in the steerage, of which total l.tmi were Irish. In marked contrast to the Fancy stripped seersuckers, worth 15c, handsome for shtrt waists, your choice at 10c yard. Lowest prices for cash. who try it Best meats and bologna. WANTED—Young man with some experience to drive grocery wagon and work in store. Address B. K., Brewed from the best of You must change your curtains. Come and see our 18c curtains, wash net with scroll, very pretty and best quality for 10c a yard. CHICAGO CASH MEAT MARKET, Woman Dies From Burns. Malt and choicest Hops to suit the popular taste, sonic light, Q some dark, but all ABNO- C/ WfLY PUKE. () Gazette la3 Utlea, N. Y„ April i}.—Mrs. James Dixon of nigginsvllle, aged seventyfive years, has died from the effects 01 burns received while attending to tlx kitchen fire. Her husband was in tin cellar at the time, but, lDeing deaf. dlO not lieHr her cries until too late U render assistance. Wall papers. Williams & Co, Five Dead In Mine Explosion, Children's fast black ribbed hose, regular price 15c, now only 8c while they last. one of the Irish on the Celtic was ex v,eluded or even held for special in Jiuiry. immigrants from southern Europe not Prescott, Aria.. April 3.—As the result of an explosion in the United Verde mine at Jerome, owned by Senator Chirk, five men are dead and five others seriously inlumi. The acclHent happened just as the shifts were being changed and all the men except twelve had been raised to the surface. On account of the heavy rains surface water found Its way to that portion of thPtmlne where fire,has been smoldering several years, and stea 141 thus generated caused the explosion, blowing out the bulkheads erected to keep the fire fivui npicuUiug. . Naples, April 3. — The White Star liner Cretic, with Secretary of State Hay and Mrs. ILiv on board, arrived here after a pleasant voyage. Mr. Hay says his heath lias been greatly Unproved by the trip, and Mrs. Hay also is enjoying the voyage. Hay at Naples and Gaining Health, Ladies' will find a nice display of Gray and white cotton voile, also blue and white, newest style, at 25c yard. 1 summer white goods, and requisites at Clara Wagner's, 18 S. Main St, Locomotive Spark Caused Fire. The Gazette Printing Office would like to do your printing. Only the finest quality of work, and at prices that will suit. Oatskill, N. Y., April 3.—A forest IIri at the Burden mines, two miles south of Greendalep destroyed three dwell ings, a barn, two flat ears and a seetioi of trestle owned by the Burden Ori and Iron company. The tire vvas cans ed by sparks from a locomotive on th Central road. - ' Stepiaier Brewing Co. Mttstoo, Pa. | J3ottliug Department. NEW THONE 8452' £ Latrobe, l'a., April — A Slavish c hristening ended In a tragedy at Jam Ison mine Xo. 2. four inllus from tliis city. Mike Kulifoski is and sov era! other men are re|Dorted to b« se riously Injured. The festivities started at the home of John Boreka. Tragedy at a Christening. ™e14GNEI Kingston. N. Y.. April 3. — Forest Urea liave afurtetl In the footlillls ot the Cfttskill mountains, and a serious Are is now raging nettr the foot of Overlook mountain. . Fires In Catskill Forests. 37 South. Main St. Xry PurseH's fronting'; It's cheapest. Let Dr. Moon care for your teeth. 1* |
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