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Pit tot on J&jjk (Strife. WEATHER INDICATIONS. THE HOME PAPER . Forecast Until 8 p. m. Tomorrow for Eastern Pennsylvania. For the People of Plttston and Vicinity. Fair tonight; Wednesday, rain and warmer. ALL THE HOME NEWS. PITTSTOK, PA., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1905. Foffi 8m £ S°opnyth. \ EIGHT PAGES 56th YEAH. | WWFKT.V EHTARMHHIOI) 1850. i DAILY BBS. ■* THflO. HAR* 1881. HOME WEDDING1. SEAMEN ON A RAFT MOVING PICTURES. A ROYAL DIME UUHEI LINE TUNNEL. HEROES HONORED 3,000 MEN STRIKE Miss .lean Watson, of Tills City. Be- lladley Exhibition Will be Given at Broad Tonight I'nder Auspices of comes tlie Wife of J. B. Hall, of Tell a Fearful Story of Suf Congregational Church. Prince Philip Has Asked for An Extensive Engineering Job Ready for Use. Jackson, Mich Boy's Discharge the Cause The prices of admission to the Hadley moving picture exhibition, in the Broad street theater tonight, are 50 cents reserved seats, and 25 cents for gallery seats. Mr. Hadley and company arrived here this morning from Sunbury, -where they delighted a big audience last night. A clean, enjoyable and Instructive entertainment is promised, Robert H. Young1, bai-itone, will give several solos, which will be Illustrated. A complete new programme will be given by Mr. Hadley, who will have personal charge of his picture machine. Awards Made by Carnegie Hero Fund Commission. A pretty wedding took place this morning at the home of Robert Watson, on Oak street, when his daughter, Miss Jean Watson, was united in marriage to J. B. Hail, oj Jackson, Mich. The ceremony was performed by Kev. W. D. Thomas, pastor of the Welsh Baptist church. A small company of relatives witnessed the marriage. The bride is a well known young woman with many friends. Her husband is the general agent for the N. B. Brinkerhoff Piano Co., in Jackson, Mich. After a week's visit in Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Canada, Mr. and Mrs. Hall will make their home in Jackson. fering. a Divorce. of Trouble. DRIFTED FIVE DAYS. CASE TO BE PUBLIC. Party of Newspaper Men Were Taken A MINER HEADS LIST. MARKLE MINES IDLE. Through the Tunnel Tills Morning —Express Trains and Freight Co. Won't Discuss Case Un✓til Men Resume Work. Thsir Schooner Turned Tur- Woman in Case Has Caused Trains Will Use the Tnn- Family of Ohio Man Who Lost Life Gets $1,000. Many Sensations. tie on th3 Ocean. ncl. Beginning Next Thursday. JOHN J. PALLAS DEAD. Gottaa, Germany, Oct. 17—The suit brought by Prince Philip of Snxe-Coburg-Gotha for an absolute divorce from liis wife, the Princess Louise, and for an adjustment of their joint property interests began here before the ordinary court for the trial of divorce cases, the prince having waived bis technical right to have the case tried by a special court as provided for under the laws of his family. The Laurel Line's tunnel at Scranton will be opened for truffle on Oct. 19th. It will be used for passenger traltic only by the limited express trains and also for freight service. By cutting oIT the trip over the curve on the hill overlooking Scranton, the tunnel route will reduce the time schedule of trains three minutes. The completion of the tunnel entailed enormous expense and marked one of the most gigantic feats of railroading in this section of Pennsylvania. Just why a million dollars was expended for a tunnel on a passenger railroad 20 miles In length is a veiled secret. There Is a general Impression, however, that the completion of this tunnel Is an epoch In the freight history of Scranton's commercial affairs. Like the rest of the IDaurel Line, the tunnel Is constructed on the Pennsylvania railroad style. It brings to the center of Scranton an outlet for the freight trafllc of the Pennsylvania railroad, and an opportunity for a transfer of freight between the 1 . It. R. and 'the D., L. & W. R. It. Freeland. Pa„ Oct. 17.—John Kardisko, the discharged Jeddo "patcher," Boston. Oct. 17.—A typical north Atlantic shipwreck tale, in which eight seamen suffered so fearfully from exposure, hunger and thirst that six of them either died outright, were washed away or, crazed by their fearful experience, hurled themselves into the sea, was brought out by the two survivors of the coasting schooner Van Name and King of New Haven, which was beaten to pieces by a gale off the South Oarolinn coast on Oct. CD. Pittsburg, Oct. 17—The Carnegie Hero Fund commission has made public the result of its Investigation of a large number of cases which were supposed to entitle the participants to recognition under the hero fund provided by Andrew Carnegie several years ago. Ten awards were made to heroes in widely separated parts of this country and Canada, as follo%vs:Is now the bone of contention in what promises to be the most stubborn labor struggle in the anthracite region since the strike of 1902. At a mass meeting held last night, the 14lployea of G. B. Markle & Co. voted to strike, and today the 3000 employes were Idle. NEGRO LYNCHED BY MOB Park Commissioner Passed Forced jailer to Give Up Away Suddenly. the Prisoner. This is the outcome of a controversy covering Just three days. The decisions on both sides were reached with unusual promptness, and the ultinuvtum laid down with corresponding emphasis. The case has more significance than would appear since the employes of the largest individual operator remaining in the anthracite field only are involved. The Deceased Spent His Early l,lfC^ Both the principals were absent, but the Austrian officer, Lieutenant Keglevlteh Mattachich, with whom the princess eloped, was present. The president of the court inquired of the attorneys for the prince if they desired to make any motion respecting the publicity of the proceedings. They replied that the prince had no objection Jto the proceedings being public. The attorneys for the princess also declined to request privacy. Daniel Davis, a coal miner, aged 23, of Sherodsville, O.. lost, his life in the rescue of his brother-in-law, William Monroe. For Ills heroism the commission awarded his wife a silver medal and $1,000 to be devoted to the purchase of a home, or to be applied In any other manner to the support of herself and two children. On July 1lf 1904, William Monroe, having charge of the steam and electric pumps of the Summers Mining Co,, in the Sherodsville, (D., section, was overcome by gas in the Did Slope, and Davis, in spite of warnings, attempted a rescue. Monroe was saved but Davis could not be restored to consciousness when brought to the surface. The Victim Had Been Tried Twice on The two men who lived through the five days and were rescued by the schooner Stillman F. Kelly, which arrived here last evening, are William Thomas and William O. Warner, both about twenty-nine years old, six feet three Inches tall and hail from Antigua, British West Indies. The six who, one by one, succumbed were: Captain William A. Maxwell of New Jersey. Mate E. A. Chase, home unknown; a German engineer, home unknown; colored servant, name unknown; William Grlzell and Alfred Arthur, colored seamen, both of Jamaica. in (lie Coiil Regions iiikI I1a«l Fre- tlie Charge of Murder, Had Been quently Visited Pittston— On (iolng to New York He Acquitted Once, and on a Re- Became Prominent In trial Was Found Guilty IjHlior Movements and Sentenced to Life The dispatch attending the strike decision has been such as to -start lithe more conservative of the United Mine Workers, especiajly in view of the fact that the employment ef a single boy constitutes the Issue. Superintendent Smith, when seen by the committee, reaffirmed his position flatly, refusing to reopen the case and put the boy to work unless the men decided to return to work flrst and treat with the company as employes anil Politics, Imprisonment London, Ky., Oct. 17.—A large crowd of armed and masked men from Knox county rode into London last night and at revolver points forced the jailer to give up a negro who had been given a life sentence for the murder of a well known Knox county lumber merchant. Pittston friends of John J. Pallas, Park Commissioner of New York, were shocked this morning to learn of his sudden death, which occurred last night in New York. This morning's issue of the New York Journal details the circumstances of Mr. Pallas' death, a.s follows: The president then began the proceedings by proposing to the lawyers that the two parties seek to bring about a reconciliation, explaining that this was not meant to get the prince and princess to live together again, but to agree to an amicable separation and a satisfactory agreement regarding property. The lawyers agreed to take the matter under consideration and asked for an intermission for the purpose. The prince's lawyer said the prince asked for an absolute divorce in order to secure a complete separation.As to the tunnel itself, It is " model. A party of newspaper men were given a trip through it this morning under the personal direction of General Manager Conn. ThC Scranton junction of the tunnel line and the present main line is but a short distance out from the Scranton depot. The tunnel line goes through the roundhouse yard and, Ju*t befoie reaching the bridge crossing Roaring Brook, changcs from a double track to a single track system, the tunnel being just wide enough for a single track. The tunnel itself is almost a mile long. 4.750 feet, to be exact, and. excepting the curves at both entrances it Is a straight line. Once into the tunnel there is a straightaway stretch of 3,900 feet. It is lighted by means of incandescent lamps at a distance of every 25 feet. The tunnel is spoken of as being in three sections—masonry, solid rock and timber sections. The minimum size is in the stone and concrete sections, and is 17x23 feet in size, the timber section being 18x23 feet. There arc 750 feet of masonry lined tunnel. 1,300 feet of rock section, and 2,700 feet of timber lined. In the tunnel are two shafts which are on the east side of the track and open into the tunnel by an arched culvert. These form a natural ventilation. The shafts are 10x30 feet. No. 1 the south shaft being 110 feet in depth, and No. 2, the north shaft, being 180 fejDt in depth. The roadbed is ballasted with broken stone, like the entir® road. The southern outlet of the tunnel m at South Scranton, and, after leaving the tunnel, the road extends a distance of several hundred yards before it unites with the main line at what is to be known as Connell Junction, about opposite the Scranton brickyard. The work on the tunnel was commenced July 5th, 1904, and was completed July 19th. 1905. It was prosecuted from both ends, and both ways from the two shafts, or on six headings. The headings between the shafts met on June 10th, 1905, giving a continuous opening from the north to the south end. The excavation was completed in July. As showing what the work entailed the following figures are IntereAlng: 2,700 cubic yards of shaft excavation; 88,000 cubic yards of tunnel excavation; 3,500 cubic yards of concrete lining; 1,150,000 feet board measure timber lining in place; 45.000 cubic yards of excavation in approach cuts; 3,000 cubic yards of concrete masonry in ap- The Van Name and King, which has been plying up and down the coast since lKXti, left Charleston, H. C., for New York on Oct. 3 with a cargo of hard pine. Two days later, 011 Thursday, Oct. 5, she ran into a heavy gale and after wallowing about In the great seas for several hours sprang a leak. The pumps were started, but within a short time the engine room was flooded and the pumps choked. "John J. Pallas. President of the Park Hoard and Park Commissioner for the Boroughs of Manhattan, the Bronx and Richmond, died at 6:30 o'clock last night at the home of Miss Bertha La I or, at No. 581 Lexington avenue, of what was pronounced acute cardiac dilation, superinduced by kidney trouble, from which he had long Wade 11. Plummer, aged 15, on May 7. 1904, on Uynrich's river, near LAmar, S. saved a companion, John M. Gibson, aged 19. from drowning after a desperate struggle. The commission awarded him a silver inedal and $600 to be devoted to educational purposes. The mob then hanged him to an apple tree in the suburbs of tho town. They pinned a note 011 the negro telling' why they lynched him. This decision, when reported at the mass meeting, was briefly discussed. A motion to stand by the boy ami tie up the six collieries of G. B. Markle & Co. until such time as the mai^'gf1- ment changed its attitude passed with a hurrah. later The negro was tried twice, the first jury disagreeing and the second gave him a life sentence. A silver medal was awarded to Michael A. Doyle, a ship laborer, aged 31. of Quebec. CDn April 18, 1904, Miss Charlotte L. de Kastner, aged 17, a student, attempted suicide by jumping Into the St, Lawrence river. The water was between 30 and 35 feet deep and filled with floating ice. Doyle plunged into the Icy water after the girl and after getting her to the Christiania, Norway, Oct. 17.—King Oscar having refused the offer of the Norwegian throne for a prince of the house of Bernadotte, It Is expected that the government will immediately ask the storthing to authorize an invitation to Prince Charles of Denmark to become king. It is said that the reply will he favorable and that immediately on its receipt the storthing will proceed to his election. Danish Prince For King of Norway. been a sufferer Faith Not Necessary. "Mr. Pallas was a bachelor, fifty years old, and bin presence in the home of Miss Lalor, who is a crayon artist, living with her sister at the address given, was due, according to Joseph J. Mulroney, private secretary of Mr. Pallas, to a social call, he made there in the forenoon. You may be just as skeptlca and pessimistic as you please. Kodol will digest what you eat whether you oat or not. You. can- put your food In a bowl, pour a little Kodol Dyspepsia Cure on it and it will digest the same as it will in your stomach. It can't help but cure indigestion and dyspepsia. It Is curing hundreds and thousands—some had faith and some didn't. Kodol will cure you If medicine can euro you, whether you have faith in It or not. Sod by T. J. Yates. Schooner Turned Over. Arrangement Proposed. At 8 o'clock 011 the morning of Friday, Oct. H, with her hold nearly full of water, the little schooner was hove down on her beam ends. The crew clambered up on the weather side and lashed themselves to the bulwarks. There they remained, soaked to the skin by every sea that broke mercilessly over them all day Friday, constantly on the watch for some passing vessel. That night the storm increased In fury and one great wave crashed aboard, breaking both legs of Seumau Arthur and sweeping Grizell Into the sea. During the recess the lawyers agreed to an arrangement on the following basis: The prince to continue the payment to the princess of a yearly allowance of and also to pay to her a lump sum of $30,(KK(, provided she abandon all further claims against the prince and that after the divorce she adopt the name and title of Louise, princess of Belgium. "It was Mr. Pailas's insistence that be must register that hastened the end as he made an attempt to leave the room, only to fall dying to the surface the second time both were pulled to shore by a rope thrown to Miss Maude Titus, aged 16. a student of Newark. N. J., was awarded a silver medal by the commission In recognition of her action in saving from drowning of Miss Laura V. Riefsnydcr. aged 27, a music teacher of Bast Orange, N. J. On July 30, 1904, when returning from a cruise on Caseo Bay, ne:ir Yarmouth, Me., they were thrown into deep water by the upsetting of their boat. Miss Riefsnydcr could not swim and Mies Titus, a fair shimmer, supported her companion until help came from shore. Doyle, Moor Kaiser Honors Bostonian. "The Park Commissioner has apartments in the Le Barton family hotel, at No. 30S West Fifty-eighth St.. but at the hotel last night it was asserted that he had not been there for several days. Mr. Mulroney, however, said the Park Commissioner left his rooms in the hotel at !» o'clock yesterday morning, and after inspecting Madison Square and one other small park he drove up Lexington avenue on 11 Is way to headquarters, and stopped to see Miss Lalor for a few minutes.After these terms were laid before the court another recess was taken In order that the princess might be tele graphed for her consent to the arrangement.Lindenburg, Prussia, Oct. 17.—The emperor has conferred the Order of the Red Eagle of the third clnss otl Abbott Lawrence Kotch of Boston. Mr. Rotch Is a member of the international aeronautical commission which- met at Berlin, when the commission passed a resolution approving his plan for the organization of an expedition to study atmospheric conditions above the Atlantic ocean. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. New York Stock Markets, furnished by M. S. Jordan & Co.. stock brokers. Miners' Bank Building. New York, Oct. 17 High. Low. 140H HO 38 H 37% «oy4 Arthur's companions could do nothing to ease his sufferings, but when on Saturday the schooner turned completely over they managed to cut his lashings and drag him on to a piece of the afterhouse. It was several hours before they were all huddled together on their little raft. That night Arthur died in the arms of Captain Maxwell, and to relieve the overloaded raft the body was quietly dropped Into the sea. Later In the day the lawyers for the princess attacked the competence of the court to decide the case at all. The court then adjourned to Oct. .'{0 in order to study the question of Its camptence, to get an answer from Princess Louise and to settle the applicability of the Austrian law to Prince Philip's agreement that the court avoid raising the question as to which party is guilty. 1905 Close. 140 Am Sugar . . Am Car & F 37% 60 %' 85 Vi Am Xjoco . . Amal Copper 60 "i 86% 88% 85 14 Mrs. Sadie I... Crabbe, aged 35, of Coopers Landing, Va„ lost her life on Feb. 1, 1905, while attempting t« save from drowning Ralph Young, colored, aged 19, a laborer. Mrs. Crabbe Ik survived by her husband, Charien, a. son. aged 9, and three small girls. The family is very poor. The commission awarded a bronze medal and appropriated $1,000 to be expended by the executive committee as it thinks best for the children. Atchison com B. It. T. . . . B. & O. . . . 72% 112% 171 Mi 88 % 71% 112% 170% 88 V 72% 112% 170% "in (he parlor, Mr. Mulroney said, the Park Commissioner suddenly complained of feelins faint, and Dr. Thomas Quinan, of No. 221 Kast Thirtyninth street, was called in. The doctor told the Park Commissioner that lie must remain quiet for a time and hail liini lie down on a couch in the har-k parlor. The doctor visited him four times after this, the last time at 6 o'clock last night, when Mr. Pallas's attempt to leave the couch resulted in his collapse. Malone, N. Y., Oct. 17.—Herbert Miller of Saranac Inn. after a quarrel with bis wife, shot and killed her instantly and then attempted suicide by slashing his throat with a razor. He is not expected to live. The couple for some time had conducted the guides' boarding house and are said to have quarreled frequently. Killed Wife and Attempted Suicide. Can Pacific Ches & Ohio SI Paul . . . C. F. I Krie •D i 180% 06% 179% 56% 179% 45 Mi Sunday brought a ray of hope when a craft was sighted, but the gloom shut In again as she passed by without heeding the little group of arm waving seamen. That night, however, the waves subsided and a little rain fell, which was eagerly caught In a tarpaulin and brought a slight relief. It was only and not long after Mate Chase's mind gave way entirely, and the .craft was again lightened when he threw himself into the sea. Debts Amounted to $744,812. 46 % The prince's 'bill of complaint, besides alleging the princess' misconduct with Lieutenant Keglevltch Mattachlch, says that, although the princess received a yearly allowance, she contracted debts which in 1895 amounted to $744,- 81'J, of which the prince had paid $218,000, and that in her wardrobe were found 75 pairs of silk shoes, pairs of other shoes, 60 parasols and about 100 hats. 48% 179% 152% 48% 179% 151% 146% 126% 48% 179% 151% 146% 125% 104% 111 Central L. & N. Manhattan Met St Ry Mo. Pacific Mex Central N. Y. Central Am Smelter Norf & West Ont & West Pennsylvania 14 6 % 126% 104 % 104 % Miss Anna Margaret Cunningham, aged 20, a nurse at the Savannah hospital, Savannah, (la.. was awarded a bronze medal for her part on the attempt to save from drowning on May 26, 1905, Walker Cutts, aged 21, an attorney of Savannah. "The Little Shop For Little Folks." 25 150 128% 86% 54 % 144 % 103% 24 % 149 127% 24 % 149 "The Rev. Father Hughes, of the Cathedral, administered the last rites of the church. The Interment will be 86% 127 % fume morning—perhaps to-morrow morning—General Jack Frost will blow big huckleberry colored clouds off Campbell's Ledge with his icy trumpet blasts, and then you'll harry to me for YOUR children's underwear 54 % 144 103 121% 54% 144 103% 121 % in Scrahton Commissioner Pallas started life us a breaker boy in the anthracite region. Ijater he learned the trade of pattern maker and became prominent in the labor unions tlirouRh his connection with the pattern workers. .Some ten years ago, when his sister, then Mrs. J. J. Flanaghan, now Mrs. Croghati, of Scrnnton, was a resident of this city, he spent considerable time here and became acquainted with many of our people. On fcoing to New York he took an active part in labor movements and was elected president of the Central Federated Union. Through the influence which he wielded as a prominent labor leader he became active in political circles, and when Mayor McClcllan was elected he appointed him one of the city's park commis- Peo Became Violently Insane. Princess Louise is the oldest daughter of the king of the Belgians, . In 1807 she eloped with Lieutenant Keglevltch Mattachlch. Her subsequent confinement in a sanitarium and escape from her attendants caused sensations. A medical commission In Paris in May last declared the princess to be sane, and two days later it was announced that Prince Philip had decided to hegin proceedings for a divorce, which, should he win, would relieve him of paying the princess the allowance of $15,000 yearly upon which she had been living In Paris. The commission awarded a bronze medal to William C. Brune, aged 17, a laborer, of Sandusky, O., for saving from drowning George P. Pfanner, aged 9, on July 8, 1904. Reading Gas 122% The next victim of the terrific strain was Captain Maxwell, who on Monday forenoon became violently Insane and followed his mate's example of self destruction.Rock Island So. Pacific . 32% 69% 36% 86% 34 % 132% 38 104% 42 32% 32% So Rwy com T. C. & I 35% 68% 6S% 35% Arthur J. Gottschalk, aged 24. a storekeeper, of N. Y., was awarded a bronze medal for saving the life of Mrs. Joseph Webster, aged 35, of Detroit, who fell from the Crystal Beach Co.'s pier at Bertie, William county, Ont., Canada, on July 6, 1904, at 10:30 p. in. —after all the Prepared family has selected. And if. when you return to find your children "croupy",—but listen : 85% 34% 131% 85% 34% 131% Texas Pacific Union Pacific The spectacle of two men voluntarily throwing themselves Into the sea proved too much for the German engineer, and a few hours after Captain Maxwell's death he. too, jumped into the waves and sank. Children's Underwear, heavy cotton Shirts and ankle length Drawers, fine ribbed. 40 cts. 37 V4 37 % 104% 104% 41% 41% October Records just Received, at Garrison's phonograph store. S. Steel proaches. Inasmuch as the tunnel is singletracked, the most careful precaution has been taken to prevent collisions. At Connell Junction and at Scranton Junction are located cabins which are to be used as interlocking switch and U. S. Steel pfd Wabash Extra quality Merino Underwear Drawers and Shirts, ribbed, 60 ets. The colored steward died on the raft late Monday night. His body was dropped overboard by the two remaining seamen. Relief came twelve hours later, when the schooner Stillman F. Kelly, bound up the coast from Cellon, Oa., to this port, sighted the little rnft and hove to alongside. George F. Russell, aged 24, a shipfitter, of Groton, Conn., was awarded a bronze medal for saving the lives of three school boys whose boat capsized with them off New London, Conn., on July 29, 1904. Infants' long Flannel Skirts, 50 cts Children's short Flannel Skirts, mil SHOWDK OF GUIS signal stations. The switch arrangement is similar to the interlocking style used by all railroads, but thr signal or right-of-way system is a unique one. It is known as the "Staff System", which is used extensively on single track railroads in England and In some parts of the United States, but has never before been introduced in this section of Pennsylvania. Every train crew is under positive orders not to pass a signal cabin until the conductor secures a "staff" from an automatic machine. When a train arrives at either end, the signal operator inquires of tho other station as to whether the track is clear. If the reply is favorable (there is no train in the tunnel), the automatic machine will deliver out a small iron tubing which is called a "staff." This is the conductor's authority to take his train through the tunnel. He places the staff In a small rubber sack. When he arrives at the other end of the tunnel the staff Is handed over to the operator of the cabin at that end, who deposits it in the machine. The machine works independent of the operator. Should the latter make a mistake while a train is In the tunnel, and signal to the other station that the track Is clear, the automatic machine will refuse to give forth a cts. up Come anyway. If only to see ALI, your children's wants compactly displayed, and not scattered over twenty wearisome departments. You AlUST come to see the "Arnold" Knit Goods for women, infants and children. No one else has them. New York, Oct. 17.—A thousand mile automobile journey by the joint committee on good roads of the New York state legislature started at 8 o'clock this morning from the Murray Hill hotel, with the first day's run terminating probably at Lenox, Mass. Senator W. W. Armstrong, the chairman of the committee, was not able to join the party. The tourists Include Senators Allds, Malby, Warniek, Keenan and Orady; Assemblymen Hooker, Merritt, Moreland and Cooke and State Engineer Yan Alstyne. Legislators on Good Roads Tour, sloners Arthur A. Ross, aged 23, of Enxboro, Mass., was awarded a bronze medal for the saving of the lives of three persons, who on April 19, 1905, were thrown into a mill pond by the horses attached to their carriage going over the bank. The water was 18 feet To Kutld Steel Street Calx. AT Thomas and Warner had to hp taken off in slings and for two days were unable to move. The rescue took place off Cape Lookout in latitude 33.10 and longitude 76.30. When the Kelly arrived here the seamen were still too exhausted to land. The.v will come ashore in a day or two and will probably be sent home. Each of them lost thirty or forty pounds in weight during the five days' exposure. Building street cars entirely of steel is n new and important Industry recently added to the world's workshop. One car has been constantly in use for about a year and its operation has been carefully watched with most satisfying results. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters has been before the public constantly for 52 years and It has made such a wonderful record of cures that it is now recognized as the best and safest medicine for men, women and children to take whose stomach is in a weak condition, whose appetite is poor or whose bowels are constipated. If you are sickly or in a debilitated state, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters will help you. It is especially good for Indigestion, dyspepsia, heartburn, bloating, costiveness, sour stomach, insomnia, female troubles or malaria. We urge a irlal at once. MRS. ELLEN 'oM. BARRETT, 21, N. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barro, Infants' and Children's Outfitter. Magnet PTTSfl Ik deep. Money to loan. O. B. Thompson. lie Douglass 1 Lot cotton batting, special value Be. Has performed, you might say, miracles. Consult Dr. O'Brien, Miners' bank. Scientific Osteopathy. Double cotton blankets, full slse, 50c. SMoe For lea 1 Lot Infants' all wool shirts, worth 25c and 48c, while they last 10c. Mrs. Wilcon Fully Recovered, Fourth Class Postmasters. Washington, Oct. 17.—The following fourth class postmasters have been appointed:Bridgeport, Conn., Oct. 17.—Mrs. Janet Ij. Wilson of New York, who attempted suicide at a Mllford hotel by shooting herself in the breast a few days after her escape from a hospital at Poughkeepsle, N. Y., lias been discharged from the Bridgeport hospital. Mrs. Wilson Is said to have fully recovered.Anchor Pain Expeller Full line of pillow shams and stand covers from 25c. the best shoe ever made Children's dresses from 25c. gleton New Jersey—Monroe, Mark N. Con 1 Lot boys' 50c madrid shirts 25c. New York—Fosterdale, Otis F. Olsen: Otselie Center, Allen S. Hay; Spring Lake, Judson Green. Used for over 35 years, all the world over, as the best and most reliable remedy for for the money. Oiled opaque window shade*, the 25c quality, only 19c. Pennsylvania—Wlnderdale, Susan A. Corey. $D$ III $3.50 SPECIAL NOTICES, Full Una of comfortables at special prices. Faure Won Balloon Contest. Rheumatism, Gout, Influenza, Lumbago, Paris, Oct. 17.—Jacques Faure, thewell known French aeronaut. Is the winner of the international balloon endurance contest which started from the Tuilerles gardens here Sunday. He landed in Hungary after covering 8!MD miles. The distance record is 514 miles. FOR FINK WATCIIE6 Togo Will Visit Italy. Hosiery and Underwear reasonable prices. very at money saving prices call at our jew- London, Oct. 17.—The Rome correspondent of the Morning Post says.that It is the intention of Vice Admiral Togo and the Japanese fleet to visit Italy and that the admiral will be received by King Victor Emmanuel. '•staff" until the train then in the tunnel has reached the other end and the "staff" carried by that conductor Is deposited in the machine at that end. The "staff" system is considered a most perfect one. Now showing the fall elry store; can show you many case Colds, &c. Ttc Magnet designs with standard movements, and and winter styles. will quote prices that you admit reasonable, The ride through the tunnel Is a pleasant one, and there will be none of the disagreeable sulphur or other odors which the air In tunnels on locomotive lines. The Laurel Ijlne tunnel Is on? of the longest and best constructed In this section of the country. Killed While Hunting. 8amu*l H. R. Grow Dead. Jamestown. N. Y., Oct. 17.—Milton D. Stone, a wealthy lumberman of this ctty, was accidentally killed while hunting near Westfleld by Frank Sears, a companion. HARKY W. YASEEN, 63 N. Main St Binghamton, N. Y., Oct. 17.—Samuel H. R. Grow, only brother of former Congressman Galusha A. Grow of Pennsylvania. In dead at his home In this city, aged elghty-flve years. 25 A 60c., at all druggists Look for the Trade-Mark ANCHOR Boston Shoe Store, 79 N. Main St, Pittstoi. 87 8. MAIN ST. IP1TTSTML THE PLACE FOR THE RELIABLE fresh meats; poultry, pork sausage. etc. Hallock's Meat Market.
Object Description
Title | Pittston Gazette |
Masthead | Pittston Gazette, October 17, 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 | 1905-10-17 |
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, October 17, 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 | 1905-10-17 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | PGZ_19051017_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 | Pit tot on J&jjk (Strife. WEATHER INDICATIONS. THE HOME PAPER . Forecast Until 8 p. m. Tomorrow for Eastern Pennsylvania. For the People of Plttston and Vicinity. Fair tonight; Wednesday, rain and warmer. ALL THE HOME NEWS. PITTSTOK, PA., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1905. Foffi 8m £ S°opnyth. \ EIGHT PAGES 56th YEAH. | WWFKT.V EHTARMHHIOI) 1850. i DAILY BBS. ■* THflO. HAR* 1881. HOME WEDDING1. SEAMEN ON A RAFT MOVING PICTURES. A ROYAL DIME UUHEI LINE TUNNEL. HEROES HONORED 3,000 MEN STRIKE Miss .lean Watson, of Tills City. Be- lladley Exhibition Will be Given at Broad Tonight I'nder Auspices of comes tlie Wife of J. B. Hall, of Tell a Fearful Story of Suf Congregational Church. Prince Philip Has Asked for An Extensive Engineering Job Ready for Use. Jackson, Mich Boy's Discharge the Cause The prices of admission to the Hadley moving picture exhibition, in the Broad street theater tonight, are 50 cents reserved seats, and 25 cents for gallery seats. Mr. Hadley and company arrived here this morning from Sunbury, -where they delighted a big audience last night. A clean, enjoyable and Instructive entertainment is promised, Robert H. Young1, bai-itone, will give several solos, which will be Illustrated. A complete new programme will be given by Mr. Hadley, who will have personal charge of his picture machine. Awards Made by Carnegie Hero Fund Commission. A pretty wedding took place this morning at the home of Robert Watson, on Oak street, when his daughter, Miss Jean Watson, was united in marriage to J. B. Hail, oj Jackson, Mich. The ceremony was performed by Kev. W. D. Thomas, pastor of the Welsh Baptist church. A small company of relatives witnessed the marriage. The bride is a well known young woman with many friends. Her husband is the general agent for the N. B. Brinkerhoff Piano Co., in Jackson, Mich. After a week's visit in Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Canada, Mr. and Mrs. Hall will make their home in Jackson. fering. a Divorce. of Trouble. DRIFTED FIVE DAYS. CASE TO BE PUBLIC. Party of Newspaper Men Were Taken A MINER HEADS LIST. MARKLE MINES IDLE. Through the Tunnel Tills Morning —Express Trains and Freight Co. Won't Discuss Case Un✓til Men Resume Work. Thsir Schooner Turned Tur- Woman in Case Has Caused Trains Will Use the Tnn- Family of Ohio Man Who Lost Life Gets $1,000. Many Sensations. tie on th3 Ocean. ncl. Beginning Next Thursday. JOHN J. PALLAS DEAD. Gottaa, Germany, Oct. 17—The suit brought by Prince Philip of Snxe-Coburg-Gotha for an absolute divorce from liis wife, the Princess Louise, and for an adjustment of their joint property interests began here before the ordinary court for the trial of divorce cases, the prince having waived bis technical right to have the case tried by a special court as provided for under the laws of his family. The Laurel Line's tunnel at Scranton will be opened for truffle on Oct. 19th. It will be used for passenger traltic only by the limited express trains and also for freight service. By cutting oIT the trip over the curve on the hill overlooking Scranton, the tunnel route will reduce the time schedule of trains three minutes. The completion of the tunnel entailed enormous expense and marked one of the most gigantic feats of railroading in this section of Pennsylvania. Just why a million dollars was expended for a tunnel on a passenger railroad 20 miles In length is a veiled secret. There Is a general Impression, however, that the completion of this tunnel Is an epoch In the freight history of Scranton's commercial affairs. Like the rest of the IDaurel Line, the tunnel Is constructed on the Pennsylvania railroad style. It brings to the center of Scranton an outlet for the freight trafllc of the Pennsylvania railroad, and an opportunity for a transfer of freight between the 1 . It. R. and 'the D., L. & W. R. It. Freeland. Pa„ Oct. 17.—John Kardisko, the discharged Jeddo "patcher," Boston. Oct. 17.—A typical north Atlantic shipwreck tale, in which eight seamen suffered so fearfully from exposure, hunger and thirst that six of them either died outright, were washed away or, crazed by their fearful experience, hurled themselves into the sea, was brought out by the two survivors of the coasting schooner Van Name and King of New Haven, which was beaten to pieces by a gale off the South Oarolinn coast on Oct. CD. Pittsburg, Oct. 17—The Carnegie Hero Fund commission has made public the result of its Investigation of a large number of cases which were supposed to entitle the participants to recognition under the hero fund provided by Andrew Carnegie several years ago. Ten awards were made to heroes in widely separated parts of this country and Canada, as follo%vs:Is now the bone of contention in what promises to be the most stubborn labor struggle in the anthracite region since the strike of 1902. At a mass meeting held last night, the 14lployea of G. B. Markle & Co. voted to strike, and today the 3000 employes were Idle. NEGRO LYNCHED BY MOB Park Commissioner Passed Forced jailer to Give Up Away Suddenly. the Prisoner. This is the outcome of a controversy covering Just three days. The decisions on both sides were reached with unusual promptness, and the ultinuvtum laid down with corresponding emphasis. The case has more significance than would appear since the employes of the largest individual operator remaining in the anthracite field only are involved. The Deceased Spent His Early l,lfC^ Both the principals were absent, but the Austrian officer, Lieutenant Keglevlteh Mattachich, with whom the princess eloped, was present. The president of the court inquired of the attorneys for the prince if they desired to make any motion respecting the publicity of the proceedings. They replied that the prince had no objection Jto the proceedings being public. The attorneys for the princess also declined to request privacy. Daniel Davis, a coal miner, aged 23, of Sherodsville, O.. lost, his life in the rescue of his brother-in-law, William Monroe. For Ills heroism the commission awarded his wife a silver medal and $1,000 to be devoted to the purchase of a home, or to be applied In any other manner to the support of herself and two children. On July 1lf 1904, William Monroe, having charge of the steam and electric pumps of the Summers Mining Co,, in the Sherodsville, (D., section, was overcome by gas in the Did Slope, and Davis, in spite of warnings, attempted a rescue. Monroe was saved but Davis could not be restored to consciousness when brought to the surface. The Victim Had Been Tried Twice on The two men who lived through the five days and were rescued by the schooner Stillman F. Kelly, which arrived here last evening, are William Thomas and William O. Warner, both about twenty-nine years old, six feet three Inches tall and hail from Antigua, British West Indies. The six who, one by one, succumbed were: Captain William A. Maxwell of New Jersey. Mate E. A. Chase, home unknown; a German engineer, home unknown; colored servant, name unknown; William Grlzell and Alfred Arthur, colored seamen, both of Jamaica. in (lie Coiil Regions iiikI I1a«l Fre- tlie Charge of Murder, Had Been quently Visited Pittston— On (iolng to New York He Acquitted Once, and on a Re- Became Prominent In trial Was Found Guilty IjHlior Movements and Sentenced to Life The dispatch attending the strike decision has been such as to -start lithe more conservative of the United Mine Workers, especiajly in view of the fact that the employment ef a single boy constitutes the Issue. Superintendent Smith, when seen by the committee, reaffirmed his position flatly, refusing to reopen the case and put the boy to work unless the men decided to return to work flrst and treat with the company as employes anil Politics, Imprisonment London, Ky., Oct. 17.—A large crowd of armed and masked men from Knox county rode into London last night and at revolver points forced the jailer to give up a negro who had been given a life sentence for the murder of a well known Knox county lumber merchant. Pittston friends of John J. Pallas, Park Commissioner of New York, were shocked this morning to learn of his sudden death, which occurred last night in New York. This morning's issue of the New York Journal details the circumstances of Mr. Pallas' death, a.s follows: The president then began the proceedings by proposing to the lawyers that the two parties seek to bring about a reconciliation, explaining that this was not meant to get the prince and princess to live together again, but to agree to an amicable separation and a satisfactory agreement regarding property. The lawyers agreed to take the matter under consideration and asked for an intermission for the purpose. The prince's lawyer said the prince asked for an absolute divorce in order to secure a complete separation.As to the tunnel itself, It is " model. A party of newspaper men were given a trip through it this morning under the personal direction of General Manager Conn. ThC Scranton junction of the tunnel line and the present main line is but a short distance out from the Scranton depot. The tunnel line goes through the roundhouse yard and, Ju*t befoie reaching the bridge crossing Roaring Brook, changcs from a double track to a single track system, the tunnel being just wide enough for a single track. The tunnel itself is almost a mile long. 4.750 feet, to be exact, and. excepting the curves at both entrances it Is a straight line. Once into the tunnel there is a straightaway stretch of 3,900 feet. It is lighted by means of incandescent lamps at a distance of every 25 feet. The tunnel is spoken of as being in three sections—masonry, solid rock and timber sections. The minimum size is in the stone and concrete sections, and is 17x23 feet in size, the timber section being 18x23 feet. There arc 750 feet of masonry lined tunnel. 1,300 feet of rock section, and 2,700 feet of timber lined. In the tunnel are two shafts which are on the east side of the track and open into the tunnel by an arched culvert. These form a natural ventilation. The shafts are 10x30 feet. No. 1 the south shaft being 110 feet in depth, and No. 2, the north shaft, being 180 fejDt in depth. The roadbed is ballasted with broken stone, like the entir® road. The southern outlet of the tunnel m at South Scranton, and, after leaving the tunnel, the road extends a distance of several hundred yards before it unites with the main line at what is to be known as Connell Junction, about opposite the Scranton brickyard. The work on the tunnel was commenced July 5th, 1904, and was completed July 19th. 1905. It was prosecuted from both ends, and both ways from the two shafts, or on six headings. The headings between the shafts met on June 10th, 1905, giving a continuous opening from the north to the south end. The excavation was completed in July. As showing what the work entailed the following figures are IntereAlng: 2,700 cubic yards of shaft excavation; 88,000 cubic yards of tunnel excavation; 3,500 cubic yards of concrete lining; 1,150,000 feet board measure timber lining in place; 45.000 cubic yards of excavation in approach cuts; 3,000 cubic yards of concrete masonry in ap- The Van Name and King, which has been plying up and down the coast since lKXti, left Charleston, H. C., for New York on Oct. 3 with a cargo of hard pine. Two days later, 011 Thursday, Oct. 5, she ran into a heavy gale and after wallowing about In the great seas for several hours sprang a leak. The pumps were started, but within a short time the engine room was flooded and the pumps choked. "John J. Pallas. President of the Park Hoard and Park Commissioner for the Boroughs of Manhattan, the Bronx and Richmond, died at 6:30 o'clock last night at the home of Miss Bertha La I or, at No. 581 Lexington avenue, of what was pronounced acute cardiac dilation, superinduced by kidney trouble, from which he had long Wade 11. Plummer, aged 15, on May 7. 1904, on Uynrich's river, near LAmar, S. saved a companion, John M. Gibson, aged 19. from drowning after a desperate struggle. The commission awarded him a silver inedal and $600 to be devoted to educational purposes. The mob then hanged him to an apple tree in the suburbs of tho town. They pinned a note 011 the negro telling' why they lynched him. This decision, when reported at the mass meeting, was briefly discussed. A motion to stand by the boy ami tie up the six collieries of G. B. Markle & Co. until such time as the mai^'gf1- ment changed its attitude passed with a hurrah. later The negro was tried twice, the first jury disagreeing and the second gave him a life sentence. A silver medal was awarded to Michael A. Doyle, a ship laborer, aged 31. of Quebec. CDn April 18, 1904, Miss Charlotte L. de Kastner, aged 17, a student, attempted suicide by jumping Into the St, Lawrence river. The water was between 30 and 35 feet deep and filled with floating ice. Doyle plunged into the Icy water after the girl and after getting her to the Christiania, Norway, Oct. 17.—King Oscar having refused the offer of the Norwegian throne for a prince of the house of Bernadotte, It Is expected that the government will immediately ask the storthing to authorize an invitation to Prince Charles of Denmark to become king. It is said that the reply will he favorable and that immediately on its receipt the storthing will proceed to his election. Danish Prince For King of Norway. been a sufferer Faith Not Necessary. "Mr. Pallas was a bachelor, fifty years old, and bin presence in the home of Miss Lalor, who is a crayon artist, living with her sister at the address given, was due, according to Joseph J. Mulroney, private secretary of Mr. Pallas, to a social call, he made there in the forenoon. You may be just as skeptlca and pessimistic as you please. Kodol will digest what you eat whether you oat or not. You. can- put your food In a bowl, pour a little Kodol Dyspepsia Cure on it and it will digest the same as it will in your stomach. It can't help but cure indigestion and dyspepsia. It Is curing hundreds and thousands—some had faith and some didn't. Kodol will cure you If medicine can euro you, whether you have faith in It or not. Sod by T. J. Yates. Schooner Turned Over. Arrangement Proposed. At 8 o'clock 011 the morning of Friday, Oct. H, with her hold nearly full of water, the little schooner was hove down on her beam ends. The crew clambered up on the weather side and lashed themselves to the bulwarks. There they remained, soaked to the skin by every sea that broke mercilessly over them all day Friday, constantly on the watch for some passing vessel. That night the storm increased In fury and one great wave crashed aboard, breaking both legs of Seumau Arthur and sweeping Grizell Into the sea. During the recess the lawyers agreed to an arrangement on the following basis: The prince to continue the payment to the princess of a yearly allowance of and also to pay to her a lump sum of $30,(KK(, provided she abandon all further claims against the prince and that after the divorce she adopt the name and title of Louise, princess of Belgium. "It was Mr. Pailas's insistence that be must register that hastened the end as he made an attempt to leave the room, only to fall dying to the surface the second time both were pulled to shore by a rope thrown to Miss Maude Titus, aged 16. a student of Newark. N. J., was awarded a silver medal by the commission In recognition of her action in saving from drowning of Miss Laura V. Riefsnydcr. aged 27, a music teacher of Bast Orange, N. J. On July 30, 1904, when returning from a cruise on Caseo Bay, ne:ir Yarmouth, Me., they were thrown into deep water by the upsetting of their boat. Miss Riefsnydcr could not swim and Mies Titus, a fair shimmer, supported her companion until help came from shore. Doyle, Moor Kaiser Honors Bostonian. "The Park Commissioner has apartments in the Le Barton family hotel, at No. 30S West Fifty-eighth St.. but at the hotel last night it was asserted that he had not been there for several days. Mr. Mulroney, however, said the Park Commissioner left his rooms in the hotel at !» o'clock yesterday morning, and after inspecting Madison Square and one other small park he drove up Lexington avenue on 11 Is way to headquarters, and stopped to see Miss Lalor for a few minutes.After these terms were laid before the court another recess was taken In order that the princess might be tele graphed for her consent to the arrangement.Lindenburg, Prussia, Oct. 17.—The emperor has conferred the Order of the Red Eagle of the third clnss otl Abbott Lawrence Kotch of Boston. Mr. Rotch Is a member of the international aeronautical commission which- met at Berlin, when the commission passed a resolution approving his plan for the organization of an expedition to study atmospheric conditions above the Atlantic ocean. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. New York Stock Markets, furnished by M. S. Jordan & Co.. stock brokers. Miners' Bank Building. New York, Oct. 17 High. Low. 140H HO 38 H 37% «oy4 Arthur's companions could do nothing to ease his sufferings, but when on Saturday the schooner turned completely over they managed to cut his lashings and drag him on to a piece of the afterhouse. It was several hours before they were all huddled together on their little raft. That night Arthur died in the arms of Captain Maxwell, and to relieve the overloaded raft the body was quietly dropped Into the sea. Later In the day the lawyers for the princess attacked the competence of the court to decide the case at all. The court then adjourned to Oct. .'{0 in order to study the question of Its camptence, to get an answer from Princess Louise and to settle the applicability of the Austrian law to Prince Philip's agreement that the court avoid raising the question as to which party is guilty. 1905 Close. 140 Am Sugar . . Am Car & F 37% 60 %' 85 Vi Am Xjoco . . Amal Copper 60 "i 86% 88% 85 14 Mrs. Sadie I... Crabbe, aged 35, of Coopers Landing, Va„ lost her life on Feb. 1, 1905, while attempting t« save from drowning Ralph Young, colored, aged 19, a laborer. Mrs. Crabbe Ik survived by her husband, Charien, a. son. aged 9, and three small girls. The family is very poor. The commission awarded a bronze medal and appropriated $1,000 to be expended by the executive committee as it thinks best for the children. Atchison com B. It. T. . . . B. & O. . . . 72% 112% 171 Mi 88 % 71% 112% 170% 88 V 72% 112% 170% "in (he parlor, Mr. Mulroney said, the Park Commissioner suddenly complained of feelins faint, and Dr. Thomas Quinan, of No. 221 Kast Thirtyninth street, was called in. The doctor told the Park Commissioner that lie must remain quiet for a time and hail liini lie down on a couch in the har-k parlor. The doctor visited him four times after this, the last time at 6 o'clock last night, when Mr. Pallas's attempt to leave the couch resulted in his collapse. Malone, N. Y., Oct. 17.—Herbert Miller of Saranac Inn. after a quarrel with bis wife, shot and killed her instantly and then attempted suicide by slashing his throat with a razor. He is not expected to live. The couple for some time had conducted the guides' boarding house and are said to have quarreled frequently. Killed Wife and Attempted Suicide. Can Pacific Ches & Ohio SI Paul . . . C. F. I Krie •D i 180% 06% 179% 56% 179% 45 Mi Sunday brought a ray of hope when a craft was sighted, but the gloom shut In again as she passed by without heeding the little group of arm waving seamen. That night, however, the waves subsided and a little rain fell, which was eagerly caught In a tarpaulin and brought a slight relief. It was only and not long after Mate Chase's mind gave way entirely, and the .craft was again lightened when he threw himself into the sea. Debts Amounted to $744,812. 46 % The prince's 'bill of complaint, besides alleging the princess' misconduct with Lieutenant Keglevltch Mattachlch, says that, although the princess received a yearly allowance, she contracted debts which in 1895 amounted to $744,- 81'J, of which the prince had paid $218,000, and that in her wardrobe were found 75 pairs of silk shoes, pairs of other shoes, 60 parasols and about 100 hats. 48% 179% 152% 48% 179% 151% 146% 126% 48% 179% 151% 146% 125% 104% 111 Central L. & N. Manhattan Met St Ry Mo. Pacific Mex Central N. Y. Central Am Smelter Norf & West Ont & West Pennsylvania 14 6 % 126% 104 % 104 % Miss Anna Margaret Cunningham, aged 20, a nurse at the Savannah hospital, Savannah, (la.. was awarded a bronze medal for her part on the attempt to save from drowning on May 26, 1905, Walker Cutts, aged 21, an attorney of Savannah. "The Little Shop For Little Folks." 25 150 128% 86% 54 % 144 % 103% 24 % 149 127% 24 % 149 "The Rev. Father Hughes, of the Cathedral, administered the last rites of the church. The Interment will be 86% 127 % fume morning—perhaps to-morrow morning—General Jack Frost will blow big huckleberry colored clouds off Campbell's Ledge with his icy trumpet blasts, and then you'll harry to me for YOUR children's underwear 54 % 144 103 121% 54% 144 103% 121 % in Scrahton Commissioner Pallas started life us a breaker boy in the anthracite region. Ijater he learned the trade of pattern maker and became prominent in the labor unions tlirouRh his connection with the pattern workers. .Some ten years ago, when his sister, then Mrs. J. J. Flanaghan, now Mrs. Croghati, of Scrnnton, was a resident of this city, he spent considerable time here and became acquainted with many of our people. On fcoing to New York he took an active part in labor movements and was elected president of the Central Federated Union. Through the influence which he wielded as a prominent labor leader he became active in political circles, and when Mayor McClcllan was elected he appointed him one of the city's park commis- Peo Became Violently Insane. Princess Louise is the oldest daughter of the king of the Belgians, . In 1807 she eloped with Lieutenant Keglevltch Mattachlch. Her subsequent confinement in a sanitarium and escape from her attendants caused sensations. A medical commission In Paris in May last declared the princess to be sane, and two days later it was announced that Prince Philip had decided to hegin proceedings for a divorce, which, should he win, would relieve him of paying the princess the allowance of $15,000 yearly upon which she had been living In Paris. The commission awarded a bronze medal to William C. Brune, aged 17, a laborer, of Sandusky, O., for saving from drowning George P. Pfanner, aged 9, on July 8, 1904. Reading Gas 122% The next victim of the terrific strain was Captain Maxwell, who on Monday forenoon became violently Insane and followed his mate's example of self destruction.Rock Island So. Pacific . 32% 69% 36% 86% 34 % 132% 38 104% 42 32% 32% So Rwy com T. C. & I 35% 68% 6S% 35% Arthur J. Gottschalk, aged 24. a storekeeper, of N. Y., was awarded a bronze medal for saving the life of Mrs. Joseph Webster, aged 35, of Detroit, who fell from the Crystal Beach Co.'s pier at Bertie, William county, Ont., Canada, on July 6, 1904, at 10:30 p. in. —after all the Prepared family has selected. And if. when you return to find your children "croupy",—but listen : 85% 34% 131% 85% 34% 131% Texas Pacific Union Pacific The spectacle of two men voluntarily throwing themselves Into the sea proved too much for the German engineer, and a few hours after Captain Maxwell's death he. too, jumped into the waves and sank. Children's Underwear, heavy cotton Shirts and ankle length Drawers, fine ribbed. 40 cts. 37 V4 37 % 104% 104% 41% 41% October Records just Received, at Garrison's phonograph store. S. Steel proaches. Inasmuch as the tunnel is singletracked, the most careful precaution has been taken to prevent collisions. At Connell Junction and at Scranton Junction are located cabins which are to be used as interlocking switch and U. S. Steel pfd Wabash Extra quality Merino Underwear Drawers and Shirts, ribbed, 60 ets. The colored steward died on the raft late Monday night. His body was dropped overboard by the two remaining seamen. Relief came twelve hours later, when the schooner Stillman F. Kelly, bound up the coast from Cellon, Oa., to this port, sighted the little rnft and hove to alongside. George F. Russell, aged 24, a shipfitter, of Groton, Conn., was awarded a bronze medal for saving the lives of three school boys whose boat capsized with them off New London, Conn., on July 29, 1904. Infants' long Flannel Skirts, 50 cts Children's short Flannel Skirts, mil SHOWDK OF GUIS signal stations. The switch arrangement is similar to the interlocking style used by all railroads, but thr signal or right-of-way system is a unique one. It is known as the "Staff System", which is used extensively on single track railroads in England and In some parts of the United States, but has never before been introduced in this section of Pennsylvania. Every train crew is under positive orders not to pass a signal cabin until the conductor secures a "staff" from an automatic machine. When a train arrives at either end, the signal operator inquires of tho other station as to whether the track is clear. If the reply is favorable (there is no train in the tunnel), the automatic machine will deliver out a small iron tubing which is called a "staff." This is the conductor's authority to take his train through the tunnel. He places the staff In a small rubber sack. When he arrives at the other end of the tunnel the staff Is handed over to the operator of the cabin at that end, who deposits it in the machine. The machine works independent of the operator. Should the latter make a mistake while a train is In the tunnel, and signal to the other station that the track Is clear, the automatic machine will refuse to give forth a cts. up Come anyway. If only to see ALI, your children's wants compactly displayed, and not scattered over twenty wearisome departments. You AlUST come to see the "Arnold" Knit Goods for women, infants and children. No one else has them. New York, Oct. 17.—A thousand mile automobile journey by the joint committee on good roads of the New York state legislature started at 8 o'clock this morning from the Murray Hill hotel, with the first day's run terminating probably at Lenox, Mass. Senator W. W. Armstrong, the chairman of the committee, was not able to join the party. The tourists Include Senators Allds, Malby, Warniek, Keenan and Orady; Assemblymen Hooker, Merritt, Moreland and Cooke and State Engineer Yan Alstyne. Legislators on Good Roads Tour, sloners Arthur A. Ross, aged 23, of Enxboro, Mass., was awarded a bronze medal for the saving of the lives of three persons, who on April 19, 1905, were thrown into a mill pond by the horses attached to their carriage going over the bank. The water was 18 feet To Kutld Steel Street Calx. AT Thomas and Warner had to hp taken off in slings and for two days were unable to move. The rescue took place off Cape Lookout in latitude 33.10 and longitude 76.30. When the Kelly arrived here the seamen were still too exhausted to land. The.v will come ashore in a day or two and will probably be sent home. Each of them lost thirty or forty pounds in weight during the five days' exposure. Building street cars entirely of steel is n new and important Industry recently added to the world's workshop. One car has been constantly in use for about a year and its operation has been carefully watched with most satisfying results. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters has been before the public constantly for 52 years and It has made such a wonderful record of cures that it is now recognized as the best and safest medicine for men, women and children to take whose stomach is in a weak condition, whose appetite is poor or whose bowels are constipated. If you are sickly or in a debilitated state, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters will help you. It is especially good for Indigestion, dyspepsia, heartburn, bloating, costiveness, sour stomach, insomnia, female troubles or malaria. We urge a irlal at once. MRS. ELLEN 'oM. BARRETT, 21, N. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barro, Infants' and Children's Outfitter. Magnet PTTSfl Ik deep. Money to loan. O. B. Thompson. lie Douglass 1 Lot cotton batting, special value Be. Has performed, you might say, miracles. Consult Dr. O'Brien, Miners' bank. Scientific Osteopathy. Double cotton blankets, full slse, 50c. SMoe For lea 1 Lot Infants' all wool shirts, worth 25c and 48c, while they last 10c. Mrs. Wilcon Fully Recovered, Fourth Class Postmasters. Washington, Oct. 17.—The following fourth class postmasters have been appointed:Bridgeport, Conn., Oct. 17.—Mrs. Janet Ij. Wilson of New York, who attempted suicide at a Mllford hotel by shooting herself in the breast a few days after her escape from a hospital at Poughkeepsle, N. Y., lias been discharged from the Bridgeport hospital. Mrs. Wilson Is said to have fully recovered.Anchor Pain Expeller Full line of pillow shams and stand covers from 25c. the best shoe ever made Children's dresses from 25c. gleton New Jersey—Monroe, Mark N. Con 1 Lot boys' 50c madrid shirts 25c. New York—Fosterdale, Otis F. Olsen: Otselie Center, Allen S. Hay; Spring Lake, Judson Green. Used for over 35 years, all the world over, as the best and most reliable remedy for for the money. Oiled opaque window shade*, the 25c quality, only 19c. Pennsylvania—Wlnderdale, Susan A. Corey. $D$ III $3.50 SPECIAL NOTICES, Full Una of comfortables at special prices. Faure Won Balloon Contest. Rheumatism, Gout, Influenza, Lumbago, Paris, Oct. 17.—Jacques Faure, thewell known French aeronaut. Is the winner of the international balloon endurance contest which started from the Tuilerles gardens here Sunday. He landed in Hungary after covering 8!MD miles. The distance record is 514 miles. FOR FINK WATCIIE6 Togo Will Visit Italy. Hosiery and Underwear reasonable prices. very at money saving prices call at our jew- London, Oct. 17.—The Rome correspondent of the Morning Post says.that It is the intention of Vice Admiral Togo and the Japanese fleet to visit Italy and that the admiral will be received by King Victor Emmanuel. '•staff" until the train then in the tunnel has reached the other end and the "staff" carried by that conductor Is deposited in the machine at that end. The "staff" system is considered a most perfect one. Now showing the fall elry store; can show you many case Colds, &c. Ttc Magnet designs with standard movements, and and winter styles. will quote prices that you admit reasonable, The ride through the tunnel Is a pleasant one, and there will be none of the disagreeable sulphur or other odors which the air In tunnels on locomotive lines. The Laurel Ijlne tunnel Is on? of the longest and best constructed In this section of the country. Killed While Hunting. 8amu*l H. R. Grow Dead. Jamestown. N. Y., Oct. 17.—Milton D. Stone, a wealthy lumberman of this ctty, was accidentally killed while hunting near Westfleld by Frank Sears, a companion. HARKY W. YASEEN, 63 N. Main St Binghamton, N. Y., Oct. 17.—Samuel H. R. Grow, only brother of former Congressman Galusha A. Grow of Pennsylvania. In dead at his home In this city, aged elghty-flve years. 25 A 60c., at all druggists Look for the Trade-Mark ANCHOR Boston Shoe Store, 79 N. Main St, Pittstoi. 87 8. MAIN ST. IP1TTSTML THE PLACE FOR THE RELIABLE fresh meats; poultry, pork sausage. etc. Hallock's Meat Market. |
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