Youngstown News, 1895-05-24 |
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The Youngstown News. VOL. XT. YOUNGSTOWN, N. Y., FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1895. NO. 15. MADE HOMELESS BY FIRE Seventy-five Acres of Buildings Destroyed in St. Albans, Vt. FIVE HUNDRED SHELTERLESS. the Flames Started In a Lumber Vard and Laid Watte the Business rart of the Town—Nearly ISO Building* Burned— A Large Area In Ruing—The New Government I'.uiMinc Gutted. Moro thau 500 persons were made homeles3 at Bt. Albans, Vt., as a result of the 8750,000 fire that started at 3 o'cloek p. m. and bnrned fiercely till after 6, razing In that time forty business houses, the new Government build- Ing, which was nearly finished, and 100 tenement houses. There was a high wind Wowing from the eouth when the flnmes were first seen at 8 o'clock in the lumber yard owned by \V. B. Fonda. The fire company was slow In.responding to the Rlarm, and the lumber, being well seasoned, the flames were beyond control when the apparatus reached the scene. The air was soon ablaze with firebrands shooting hither and thither like meteors. Some of them were carried a mile to remoto parts of tiie city. While the firemen were trying to subduo tho blaze in tho lumber yard, flames shot into the air from a dozen other places in town. The people became panic stricken. Household belongings were carted away from nearly every house in the thickly settled part of tho city. Every available, horse was impressed Into the service of fa*mituro and merchandise saving, 'and the park was covered with piles of barrels, boxes aud furniture. Streets that escaped untouched were also used as storing places, acd the churches and school houses were turned into habitations for the homeless.Six streets in the business part ot the place were swept clean of buildings, and a spaae covering sevonty-flvo twros was madeattinglo of ruins. In less than twenty-five minutes after the first alarm was given fire burst out in as many at fifteen places, buildings cateh, ' ing so last and burning m> quickiy that the I firemen were practically helpless. Help was t »ent for to Burlington and Swanton, but it was almost six o'oloek when the out-of-town / firemen arrived. By that time the thickly settled part of the city had been laid waste, and there was little difficulty in protecting the rest of the city. The extensive plant of the St. Albans Messenger Company, publishers of the Daily and Weekly Messenger, bookbinders and Jobbers, ■was entirely wiped out. Everything was lost. The damage was very heavy. The company had under contract the State print- Ing forms for other papers. The town was in complete darkness at night, the gas and electric lights having been cut off. Late that night Information was gathered which led the citizens to believe the fire was caused by the explosion of a lamp which a woman was using to heat a ourling iron. At ,8 o'clock a mass meeting was called to take action for relief measures. LIKE THE SIAMESE TWINS. A Pair of Remarkable New York Olrli Born With a Connecting Link. A remarkable pair o! twins, Joined together Iby a ligament of flesh and bone that rune I from the upper part of the pelvis to the base of the spine, was born the other day to Mrs. J. Koehler, the wife of a caterer, who lives I In East Forty-eecond street, New York. The Koehler twins.as they ire known, were born at midnight exactly. S*s. Koehler was much agitated when she leaned of the connecting link between her tfcbiee, but the physician reassured her by sasng that it was only a figment that can be cutaway as soon as the little onus are strong tough to submit to the operation. But ttjre is now no doubt, affirms the New York Vorld. that the cutting of the ligament -wouUlbe fatal. Both children are girls md brunettes. They welghod fourteen pound together, one tipping the scales at sevenpounds and a half and the other at six poujls and a half. Each haa a perfectly formed" and healthy body. The connecting band bids tho children facing partly away eaqh other, but is so elastic that they caibo laid flat upon their backs without apprent discomfort, and may even be turned eras to partly face each othor. Tuoy u<!t alike and simultaqously in all their motions. When one eric.so does the other. Still the doctors clalmhut thoy are capable of individual action, tie mother is a buxom young German womanbout thirty years old. She has anotherfclld, a girl about a year and a half old, w> is perfectly formed. The peculiar manner in whjh her lastborne are tied together is a nojlty in medical science. Instead of being ifrely a band of tissue or flesh, the conneotln seems to reach inward to the bone. |u Siamese twins were joined by a band otissue in a direct line from side to side, pd In two other similar cases the subjects ire fastened back to back. In tho present <*e the children have the free use of the! arms and legs, and are able by twisting loir bodies silently to. look at eaoh othor. ' The twins are joined nearer ttlower endof the sacrum, and the connect!; part covers nearly tho satire surface of be coccyx. 'Ihu sacrum is the lowest bone I the splnn, and usually consists of llvevert«fu, aud tiio coccyx is the end of the vartefa iu man and tailless monkeys, and Iβ i-.iiilly tho hardest in the human Anatomy. Dr. Granben, President of i> County Medical Soi'iety. iwd many otl»mon eminent in medlaSanaedeurso-- ha4ournoyod again and ugatn to the Koehl resldunce -.0 examine the wonderful twins, t Is their unanimous opinion thitt the ci of tb-.'aa twins is the most reaiarkable on *>r.!. BABES WITH A COSKECBNO LIKE. NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION Will Hold Its Thirty-fourth Annual Meet- Ins in Denver. The National Educational AsaoclatlCm bus Used upon Denver, July 5 to 12, as the place and time of Its thirty-fourth annual meeting. The association comes so far West this year for the second time in its history. In 1888 the session was held in San Franolsoo, but the President of the association for '88 was Aaron Qove, then and now Superintendent of the Denver schools. At the San Francisco meeting 12.000 people attended. At Denver it is expected the attendance of people from nil parts of the country Interested In education will reach 25,000. Tho National Educational Association wus published Iα 1857 in I'bilndulphiu; Its object, us stivtod in the preamble to the constitution, is '-To elevate the character and iulvnneo the interests of the profession of teaching, iind to promote the cause of popular education In the United Slates." Dr. Niciioias Murray butler, of Columbia College, Professor of Philosophy and Eduoation; aud State University Examiner for New \ork. is President of the Association, Dr. Butler is one of the young men who havo of late years come to tho front in educational lines. Hn la ihlrty-three years of age and is recognized as one of the most advanced thinkers and among the most proggressive educators in the world. Superintendent A. G. Lane, of Chicago schools, Iβ Viee-Pre3ldent; Irwin Bhepard, State Superintendent, of Minnesota, is Secretary; Superintendent J. M. Greenwood, of tin; Kansas City schools, is Treasurer, and Superintendent N. A. Calkins, of the New York schools, is Chairman of the Board of Trustees, the governing body of the aeeoeiatioii. The membership is composed of men and women eminent In educational lines In the United States and Canada, and numbered last venr over GOOO. The Educational Association has eleven departments. Bach of which has a meeting pliici)and holds s■ mions of its own, in addition to those of the general convention. The departments are: Kindergarten, Elementary, Sooondary, Higher, Normal, Manual, Training, Art. Music, Business Education. Child Study, and a National Council of Education. Among the noted educators who will read papers and take part in the discussions of the convention and its departments are: President Dβ Garmo, of Swarthmore; Commissioner Harris, of the United States Bureau of Education; Hon. Hoke Smith, Secretary of the Interior; Professor Jackman, of the Cook County Normal School, Illinois; Chancellor \V. H. Payne, of Nashville University; George H. Martin. Supervisor of Boston Schools; Professor William Carey Jones, of the University of California; James L. Hughes, Inspector of Schools, Toronto; Dr. J. M. Rice, of New York; Mrs. Mary Hunt, of Boston; Professor Bichard T. Ely, ofthe University of Wisconsin; N. C. Shaeffer. Pennsylvania State Superintendent; Halsey C. Ives, Chief of the Art Deportment of the World's Columbian Exposition. DR. BUTLEII, rnISIDENT R. E. A. KB. OOVE, SUPERINTENDENT I'ENVEU SCHOOLS. ADMIRAL ALMY DEAD. HI. Brilliant Naral Career Began Suty•lz Tear* Ago. Admiral John J. Almy, ofthe United States Navy, retired, died at his residence (n Washington after a long illness. He leaves a widow and five, grown up children—throe sons and two daughters. Hβ was born in Newport, It. 1., in 1814. He entered the navy In 1829 and served almost forty-eight yeate, retiring In July, 1877. Hβ was present at the surrender of Walker and his filibusters and was at the siege of Vera Cruz and the capture of Tuxpam during the Mexican War. He was commander at the Brooklyn Navy Yard In 1861 and 1862. During his service as Commander tin bad charge successively of the gunboats South Carolina, Connecticut and Juniata. While in command of the Connecticut he captured four noted blockade runners with- valuable cargoes and chased four others to the shore and destroyed them. NIGARAGUA PAYS UP. The •'.".son Extracted by Encland In th« Treasury In London. The $711,500 demanded of Nicaragua by Great Britain for the expulsion of British subjects was f ovoreil into the British Treasury at London by Senor Medina, Salvador'* Minister to England, who has acted foi Nicaragua In London throughout the episode thus closed. Nicaragua had until May 23 to pay the indemnity under the terms of agreement, which allowed her fifteen days after the British warKOips left Corinto. The money was robed by private subscription from Nicaraguans and foreign residents, and .no necessity arose for accepting. th« help offered by other Central American republics. THE NEWS EPITOMIZED Washington Items. The Secretary of the Interior made ■ requisition on toe Secretary of the Treasury for $10,140,000 for the payment of pensions. Colonel Judson D. Bingham, Assistant Quartermaster-General, was placod on the retired list of I tho United States Army, having reached the age of sixty-four years. The President signed the proclamations declaring the Yankton Sioux reservation in South Dakota and the Silety reservation iu Oregon open to settlement at noon May 21. During the month of April, 1895, 40,444 immigrants arrived at tho ports of the United States. President Cleveland is deluged by letters from parents of triplets and ijuadru plots. Great Britain notified the United States that it would not observe the regulations regarding sealing firearms on vessels in Bering Sea. Admiral Meade declined to answer tho inquiries of th« Navy Department regarding his criticism of the Administration. United States Minister BawitOß was recalled from Venezuela becauso lie was mentally and physically broken down. Domestic. BECOHD OP THE LEAGUE CT.UBI. Per Per Clobs. Won. I,«»t. in. I C!ub«. Wv. '.""'. "•■ Pittsburp..ls 7 .CS2 Serv York.lo 10 .5M Cincinnati.lC 8 .fifi6 Baltimore, s 9 .471 Boston 12 7 .632 3t. Louis.. 10 15 .403 Chicago...ls 9 .623 Brooklyn.. 7 1-t .35U Cleveland.l 2 10 .545 Wash'ne'n. 614 .SO') Philadol. ..10 9 .526 Louisville. 5 15 .250 At Athens. On., ft daughter was born to Mrs. Hoke Smith, wl'e of the Secretary of the Interior, where Mrs. Smith is spending the summer. Ex-President Benjamin Harrison was the principal guest of honor at the seml-centounial celebration of the New Jersoy Historical Society at Newark, and was presented with e gold medal as the centennial President of the United States. Dr. Robert Kussell Booth, of New York was elected Moderator of the Presbyterian General Assembly at Pittsburgh Penll-■ ou the first ballot. The Now Jersey Court of Pardons, by t vote of six to two, remitted tho sentence o! one year's imprisonment imposed on Dennii McLaughlin, John C. Carr. Nicholas Crusiut and Gottfried Walbaum, the "Big Four" o: the Guttenberg race tracU. Jones & Laughlin, operating the extenslvt American Iron Works, Pittsburg, Peon., have voluntarily advanced the wa««s of al their skilled workmen ten per cent. Anoui 4000 men share in the advance. The widow of Policeman Christian Ottt was awarded $0500 by a Jury at Elizabeth N. J., in a case brought to recover $10,001 from the Suburban Electric Light Compuu; for the killing of her husband by eleotricitj in a pole with which he camo in contact. Peter Hardemaa liurnett, first Governor o> California, died in San Francisco, eightyseven -years old. He was bori in Nashvilla TeiiD.. of Virginia parentage. A twenty days' extra session of the Tennessee Legislature will be held. Warrants were Issued for seventy-font members of the Pennsylvania Legislature for absence without leave. The price of wueat in Chicago rose to 70% cents a bushel. The convention at Salt Lake City. Utah, called by Governor Uickards, of Montana, to discuss means to promote the interests of he silver cause met, after a parade, in the Great Mormon Tabernacle. Over 2000 delegates were present. Governor Bickards presided.One of the pewder mills at Schaghticoke, N. ¥~ blew up. Chauncey Lohmee wae killed and Charles Clump fatally injured. Both men were employed in the mill. An anti-trolley indignation meeting in Brooklyn, N. Y., was attended by 10,(00 persons.Three thousand employes of the Peneoyd Iron Works at West Manyhunk, Penn., had their wages advanced ten per cent. The competitive drill of the military companies at Memphis, Twin., began. Eokley B. Coxe. the most prominent coal operator in Pennsylvania, died at Drifton of pneumonia. Hβ was fifty-six years old. Mr. and Mrs. Hale, a newly-married couple, were burned to death in their new home at Midland, Mich. The fire wai incendiary. Foreign Notes. Fire destroyed the long wharf, freight shade, and coaling ptor at Biohmond, Novn Scotia. Government property worth o quarter of a million dollars was burned. The French troops defeated the Hovas at Sukalave, Madagascar, killing sixty. A revolt broke out in the State of Chihuahua. Mexico. The famous Tlchboriie claimant baa confessed he is plain Arthur Orton. The pulpits of 200 of the London churches will be occupied on June 10 by women, who will preach a campaign of religion, temperance, social purity, the abolition of the opium trade, and opposition to the turf. Japan announced that eho would quit Korea this year. The plan of confederation of New Foundland with Canada bos been abandoned. The American Commissioners of the Nicaragua Canal arrived at Uriytowu. Considerable damage was done to the erops in Switzerland by frost ami snow. The Chinese troops stationed at Shanaikwan openly revolted and looted the city. The people fled. Count Goluchowski. formerly Austrian Envoy at Bucharest, has been appointed Premier of Austria-Hungary, to succeed Count Kalnoky. William Alexander Louis Stephen Douglas Hamilton, twelfth Duke of Hamilton, died in Algiers. He was fifty years oid. Northern Formosa Is in a etate of anarchy, and China wants it turned into a republic.The insurrection in Cuba is reported to be spreading rapidly. There was a snowfall in London, Essex and Eent, England, on-May 17th. The Chambers at Stockholm voted Jointly 15,000,000 crowns to the Government to supply its immediate wants In the event of war, or to transport Swedish troops iu nase of a Norwegian revolution. The Emperor of Austria has finally accepted the resignation of Count Kalnoky, Imperial Premier and Minister of Foreign Allaire. Baron von Ooltz has been succeeded as Admiral Commanding-in-Chiet of the German Navy by Admiral Knorr. A decree was issued by the Mikado announcing that, In deference to the wishes of BuMia, France and Germany, Japan would not iuist on retention of theLiau-Tong Peninsula. Toe Japanese Nation is greatly excited over the Mikado'* submission. Queen Wllbelmlnla -and Queen Regent Emma returned to The Hague, Holland, from England. ARMENIAN ATROCITIES. Tvidences of the Terrible Butcheries Discovered by the Commission. PITS FILLED WITH MASSACRED. Ruined Villages Left In (ha Path of the Kuthleu Turks---Bocilet Thrown Into Trenches and Partly Burned—The Powers Submit Notes to the Porte Call- Ing for Reform. The commission which has been Investigating the atrocities in Armenia traversed the devastated villages and arrived at Jellygoozan (also written Ghellyguzan), where 120 houses were found to hove been burned. The people wero sheltered In miserable huts, and ample proof ni found of the truth of the stories heretofore told by correspondents of English newspapers regarding the massacre of Armenians and the throwing of their bodies In large numbers Into a pit, where the Turks endeavored to conceal their crime by pouring barrels of petroleum upon the bodies and setting fire to the oil. Tho flames, however failed to consume the mass, and a stream was dammed and diverted from its course in order to wash away the half-burned bodies. Even this failed to obliterate the terrible evidence against the Turks, and the local authorities were compelled to remove the bodies. The villagers had removed the bulk of the bodies and Interred them In consecrated ground before the arrival of the commission. The delegates of the Powers left Mush on April 5. The Turkish delegates at first declined to accompany them, and then changed their minds. They went to the ruined villages, and traversed Shonik and Gernal, which were found in ruins standing In the midst of devastated fields. They passed other villages where many houses were burned, and at Jellygoozan the commission had two pits, instead of one as originally reported, opened, and found in them the remains of skulls and bones with hair and clothing still adhering to them. Later, another pit wae searched. It was situated in a ravine near Jellygoozen.and inside it was found a decapitated trunk and other remains. But few bodies, however, were found. The villagers told the delegates that they had removed the bodies from this pit. It was evident that all three pits had contained bodies. The exhalations from the pits were so frightful that the delegates had great trouble in prevailing upon laborers to finish their horrible task. Aβ a resalt of the investigation and the reports of the delegates, the Powers have gubmitted notes to the Turkish Government impressing upon the Porte the necessity of promptly inaugurating a scheme for Armenian reforms which should include the appointment of Christian officials in Armenia, the Powers to have the. right to veto the appointments of the governors. The notes of the delegates do not baee their suggestions on the Sassun outrages, but ou the general unsatisfactory condition of Armenia. nMU TCBKISH DRAOOMAS. (He BerNflp Interpreter Between Turkish Offlciall and Foreign Ambassadors.) A MILE OF VETERANS. Grand Parade of the New York State O. A. R. at Saratoga. The parade of the State Grand Army veterans at Saratoga, N. Y., proved u great success. There was an immense gathering tho lanjest seen in Saratoga sine.: the Heytember floral fete. The procession—k mil' in length—whs reviewed Ly Cmnnrmnder-iii- Chief Thomas G. Lawler and Department Commander Shottn. FollowiuK tho pariule tho retnraus anil their friends assembled in Convt-ntion Kail, which was filled to overflowing- t>" ••'• Mage there went 850 school children, win rendered patriotic songs. The a idreeo o welcome wne made by VlUnw Pnaidem Charles H. Sturges, which was tu by Department Cornuiundcr Bhott*. A!• dresses were also made by Oeiivral Val-jut aad Commander in-Chief Lawler. OEKERAr. THOMAS (I. LAWLEK, Commander-ln-Chlet of the G. A. R THE MARKETS. Lnte TCImV«nV Pilaw of Co«i->tr.r l'«o--<luro Otinttil In Ni'ir 20 jjii.K 111 r»E\«. The r.:.irki't durlcs tlv> wl W ,v: Mβ' ! hardly In- termed ;.-tlvc. rttttl IQ •<\ I'V n < nn-ans .lull Wales <u Mm** WW * little »low. owing to laetMnd ranoU**. 'i;>' ncr, price reooivi'.l for tho platform ■**! *as W-L 11.20 per cau of 40 i|u«rt-. SHERIFF AND PRISONERS KILLED. The AtlmlnUtnttlon of lhi> Law In the Indian Territory. James Taylor, David Eohols, and E-dwnrd Bohannon were killed ne the result of aa attempt by Bohannon to arrest Taylor and Echole near Diirant. India i Territory. Bobannon was reading the warrant in Taylor when the latter suddenly drew hie pistol and began firing. Eohols. who was in n house near by, ran oui to Join in the fraca*, but was struck by a ballet and killed. Holmnnon returned Taylor'g fire, retreating us he did eo, but Taylor followed him until ho emptied the contents of a six-shooter, the last shot striking Bobannon in the lioail «nd killing him. Taylor defied any one to take him and walked 200 yards, when ho foil dead. Bohaonon is the third ono of bis family to meet with a violent death duritg a year. Neway Gleanings. Vermont has 300 crcumcries. California haa 72,172 Chinese. Turkey hae 813* miles or railway. France has a deficit of $11,00J,00a The Ohio pottery trust is smashed. The nub for gold bonds continue*. Italy hae twenty-three crematoria-. London has seventy-fire daily papers. An oil trust has been"formed In Kiwsia. Wall street shows remarkable activity. The Salvation Army proposes to lurade China. Cuban Insurgent Leader Maoeo lias more reorulu than arms. Japan will keep troops In China until the full Indemnity to paid. Brooklyn letter carriers have been ordered to Mlute the Postmaster. Fish hare mysteriously disappeared from the waters of J-ike MlchiW "COIN'S FINANCIAL SCHOOL" Career or the Anther of a Work Which Hμ Created • SeaMtloa In the Wast. William Hope Harvey la the author of "Cola's Financial School," which Is just now TPiitlns much tennation and dlecosalon In the West. Two year* ago, when Mr. Harvey «nw publishing his weekly paper, called Coin, he had a little office In one of the old-fashioned building In Chicago. One stenographer attended to his oorreapondenoe. To-day Mr. Harvey oocuplm an elegant <uite of rooms In the nky-aerapliut Fort Oearbora Dulldlng. There are velvet and Brussels carets on the floors. T'ao doalcs tablos. olmtm mid other furntturo are niail« Df expensive woods, nnd nix typewriter glrlu irn busy nil tbo day. Apparently Hβ loin; ■is the money discussion lusts Mr. Harvey's harvest will"l'ontiuuo, nnd whethergoldbugs >r tree sllverUes triumph there will be no more hard time* tor tm< man who wrote "Coin's Financial School." Mr. Harvey takes in prollts of from t750 to (1000 a rtav. lb|4| Is a W«st Virginian by birth, and U forte three years old. Ills work has libou h<< hundred thousand, nnd Is maili) many free silver converts^™ WILLIAM n. HABVET. (Hfl Has Found a Fortune In a Boole.) BICYCLIST AND UNKNOWN a. Vd« AttacktMt on Hli l^ Killed the Itoptll^^ Edward Coates, • bicyollet. of Conn., woe riding with a corai>anioJH the shore of the lake in Bristol, and mH wake coiled in the road in front of him. turne I out, supposing the snake was an clinary blank one. As In, camp abreast of the snake, which was iarting its head up and down, it made a tpring uud fastened Its fahga in hie bloyolci trousers at the knee. At the same time the warning whirring sound told Coatos that he ■ad a rattler to deal with. There were , ieveral revolutions of the wheel before he ■mm) to a stop, the snako keeping a vloe-Ukt) ,'rtp and curling itself around the bicyclist's leg. Coatee seized a etlok and boat the head ot :he snake free from his trousers, and with fits hand wrenched theuolls from around his 'eg. The snake sank its frangs time and Willi into the stiok and made repeated iumps at C'oatea, Aftor fifteen minutes it tVHH killc'll. The snako measured fnur feet eight Inches in length. It had fourteen rattle*, and it wan at least two Inches In diameter. RUNNING AWAY FROM CANADA. Bad BnaineM Force* an Increase In Emigration to the United States. There Is general alarm In Canada about ho largely increased emigration thto year 'rom the Dominion to the United State*. Three years of bad business and poor crops have completely discouraged a Urge element it the Canadian population. Mennwhlle news oomoe of increased wages and lncreaned business in the States, which ■in»ntH of the American and Canadian railway oompanies are using to the utsaost advantage. They have men In the oountles of Rlmonoki. Matane and Bonaventure who have induced whole families to embark, bag and baggage, for the United BtatM. The number of deserted farms la something tnomou*. Several hundred more people have emigrated to the newly opened gold fields of the Rainy Lake region of Ontario, Just over the border from Minnesota. Mo white man wan settled there a year ago, but a population of nearly 8000 Is now claimed. Many shafts are already sunk, some over seventy feet deep, and four stamp mills an in operation. SAVANNAH HAS A GALA DAY. A Big Military Review WltnesMd by Uμ Governor and 90,000 Fmplo. Governor Atkinson, of Georgia, reviewed one of the largest bodies ot troope that baa been soon In. Savannah since the oelebratlon ot the city's sesqul-eentennlal, in 1883. Twelve hundred men were In Use, with flve comjianlesi of raArinoa and blueiaokets from the United Stntiw steamships Atlanta and Baleigh, which uro uuohored In the river below the city. The rfavlew took place on the military parade ground ami was witnessed by 30,000 people. It was tile first appearance of the Governor and his staff in Savannah. Following the parade and review, prices wen awarded to the vlsltlnjr eorapanles by th« May Weak Festival official*. The sham battle by the marines and bluejookets closed the display. The day's festivities ended with llreworks in the park. Russia Wants All Korea. The Mohoow Gazette says that it military, (table and financial Power like Buasla atom hai the right to hold Korea, Tho paper addi that 11 any Power should object to ftiisila'i holding that country It would be a mark ol avowed uofrlendltneM with wtrioh Buasl* would know how to deal. The Noroe Tremya eays that a BumUw protectorate ot Korea Is necessary to protect Buesian merchants then from Japanese competition. The Brooklyn Handicap. The Brooklyn handicap, a race ot a milt, and a quarter, tor horse* three yean old and upward, worth $8000 to the winner, two t< the aeoond and tMO to the third horse, wai run at the Grareaend Qf. Y.) track of thi Brooklyn Jockey Club. Hornpipe, owned bj" Messrs. Keene, won. Lanafone was second and Sir Walter third, Time, i.ll^. Premineat UNKNOWN. The Oiar ol Itussla has taken to rldla* * Receipts "f till trtWr, fliii I milk. enl« l,.r1". Condensed milk, 11.1 '•"> Croam, Ra!s 61,VI. rtTTEn. Penn.—Frvsii, extra*. ...£.. — 0% ft Firsts • A ]'■■ ThlriV>t<i seconds 11 I* H Btiite—Fnney — ty> Ifi'. 8eeonrl« to llrst* 1" • 1'« Western Im. Croiimory f .'■;>! 1'1 Western Dairy 7>i* !! Factory,. fresh 7 @ 10 CHF.KSr,, State—Fr.licrenm.white.funey C\'-7> r\' Fullorpom, cooltoprl'iv." Bj£» C State Factory—Part skiir.", common to prime I,iff -1 Part skims, choice 3 -Of i Fullskims — "<n> 1 reins. State, A r«<nn—Fresh lt¥* H1f Jersey—Fancy. ... . . — <w 15 Western—Prime to choice. , — r-> 1L DllCk 6RRS — r> — Goose ogK3 — IV — BEANH UUt l'FV-i. Bean*—Marrow, 1R94. choiei-. — f> 2 4" Medium. 18M, choice 1 !»n ffl I '.)", Pea, 1H94. choice IP", flit 3 On Bed kidney, 18M. etek*. . 1 M ft1 1 !•"■ White kidney, 181U. pholue. 2 W /B> 9 S-l Black turtle fioup. 1S!>1 1 f.i «> 1 0". Limn, Cnl.. 1894, ¥ 60 tot.. 2 95 n> S 0i> Qreen peas, bl>ls — @ 1 0J FBCITH AND BEnr.IES—FI'.ESU. Cramberrteg, Cnpe Cod, V bl>l. — (a> — Jersey, V orato. 2 00 rS) 3 0.1 Baldwin 3 00 nt> n s i Golden Uussot 2 0'J W "J 0) Orapcs, Del., V basket — to — Catawba — fi>> — etrawberrlee, Norfolk, V qt.. 1 > m> 1* Other sections 8 @ |l nors. State—1894, choice, V Ib ~ (n> 9 1894, common to fair 4 fn> " Pacific Coast, choloo — (n> '•' Ooodtoprlme 7 (S> H Old odds '2 @ 3 nxv A»n stttkw. Hey—Primp. V 100 Ib — <<D PI Clover mixed 61 f» PT Straw—Long rye. TO ffi> C1 Oat 4i ® 45 LITK POCI.TnV. Fowu, »m n <w iny Bprlnfc ohioken?. V pulr 70 (n> 1 13 Boosters, old, V tb — (g> 0 Turkeys, ¥ lit 8 © t> Ducks, V pair. 6li a> f<) Oeese, Vpalr 60 (a> 1 1:1 Pigeons, ¥ pair 20 ® 4j DnESSiD rnrr.Tiiv. Turkeys, V m in an 12 ChlokenSjPhila. brollers.Vlb. 85 <S> 42 Capons, Phlla — a> — Western — <a — Fowls, V n> 9 (S 9J$ Ducks V It. 10 <$ 13 Oeese, V n> n rf H Squabs, » doe 1 Cα d> 3 00 TEOETAOLES. Potatoes, State V bbl -a ffi> — Florlda.*bbl 8.TJ * SSl Sweet, bbl 175 ©300 CabbaRe, Fla., V bbl 150 ©2 60 Onions—Yellow, V bbl — e> — Bermuda, Verato 75 <S 01 Bqunnh, marrow, V bbi — & — Yellow. Vorate 75 <ft>10i Asparacas. V doE. bunohos. . i:> (a> 1/5 Cucumbers, Flu., i<) crate 75 ©175 Celery, Southern, V doz r>0 a> 85 Boets, V 100 hunches 2 00 0 4 0:) Peas, N. C, V basket 1 00 (S> 2 no Radishes, V 100 hunches B i ft. 73 Spinach —i ffi) 75 Tomatoes, V carrier 2 ill) fi> 4 :.O Ehubarb 1 00 @ 1 50 ORAIN. r.TC. Flour—City Patents — (3> i 41 Sprlnc Patents 875 <» 4 15 Wheat, No. 2 Bed — (s> 7'.' M»y - O - Corn—No. 2 CGkys> 66W Oats—No. 2 White _ » Track, White SO (» 41 Molt—Western — d> — Barley—tlngmded W«wtern.. — (» — Beede—Timothy, V 100 B JH) ffi C 50 Clover 8 75 <S> 9 60 Lard—City stenm 6K® 6/i LIVE KTorJt. Beeves, olty dressed 9)< Mlloh oows, com. to good.... - (a> — Calves, city dressed 5 (g> 8 Country dresned K\($ 7 Sheep, » 100 Bis 4 87» (S) 4C'i Lambs, V 100 lbs 4 00 ® 6 00 Hogi—Live, V 100 lbs 0 00 (S> 5 20 Drwwed C ® V4
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Youngstown News, 1895-05-24 |
| Description | Early newspapers of Youngstown, New York |
| Subject |
Newspapers--New York (State) Niagara County (N.Y.)--Newspapers Youngstown (N.Y.)--Newspapers |
| NY Heritage Topic | Community & Events |
| Location |
New York (State), Western Niagara County (N.Y.) Youngstown (N.Y.) |
| Date of Original | 1895-05-24 |
| Physical Format | Newspapers |
| Type | Text |
| Language | English |
| Format of Digital | image/tiff |
| Identifier | ytn_18950524 |
| Holding Institution |
Nioga Library System Town of Porter Historical Society Museum Niagara Falls Public Library |
| Digital Collection | Youngstown Newspapers |
| Library Council | WNYLRC |
| Rights | All images in this collection are for educational and non-commercial purposes only. |
| File Name | index.cpd |
Description
| Title | Youngstown News, 1895-05-24 |
| Description | Early newspapers of Youngstown, New York |
| Subject |
Newspapers--New York (State) Niagara County (N.Y.)--Newspapers Youngstown (N.Y.)--Newspapers |
| NY Heritage Topic | Community & Events |
| Location |
New York (State), Western Niagara County (N.Y.) Youngstown (N.Y.) |
| Date of Original | 1895-05-24 |
| Physical Format | Newspapers |
| Type | Text |
| Language | English |
| Format of Digital | image/tiff |
| Identifier | ytn_18950524_001 |
| Holding Institution |
Nioga Library System Town of Porter Historical Society Museum Niagara Falls Public Library |
| Digital Collection | Youngstown Newspapers |
| Library Council | WNYLRC |
| Rights | All images in this collection are for educational and non-commercial purposes only. |
| Technical Data | 2997.2 KB |
| Transcript |
The Youngstown News. VOL. XT. YOUNGSTOWN, N. Y., FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1895. NO. 15. MADE HOMELESS BY FIRE Seventy-five Acres of Buildings Destroyed in St. Albans, Vt. FIVE HUNDRED SHELTERLESS. the Flames Started In a Lumber Vard and Laid Watte the Business rart of the Town—Nearly ISO Building* Burned— A Large Area In Ruing—The New Government I'.uiMinc Gutted. Moro thau 500 persons were made homeles3 at Bt. Albans, Vt., as a result of the 8750,000 fire that started at 3 o'cloek p. m. and bnrned fiercely till after 6, razing In that time forty business houses, the new Government build- Ing, which was nearly finished, and 100 tenement houses. There was a high wind Wowing from the eouth when the flnmes were first seen at 8 o'clock in the lumber yard owned by \V. B. Fonda. The fire company was slow In.responding to the Rlarm, and the lumber, being well seasoned, the flames were beyond control when the apparatus reached the scene. The air was soon ablaze with firebrands shooting hither and thither like meteors. Some of them were carried a mile to remoto parts of tiie city. While the firemen were trying to subduo tho blaze in tho lumber yard, flames shot into the air from a dozen other places in town. The people became panic stricken. Household belongings were carted away from nearly every house in the thickly settled part of tho city. Every available, horse was impressed Into the service of fa*mituro and merchandise saving, 'and the park was covered with piles of barrels, boxes aud furniture. Streets that escaped untouched were also used as storing places, acd the churches and school houses were turned into habitations for the homeless.Six streets in the business part ot the place were swept clean of buildings, and a spaae covering sevonty-flvo twros was madeattinglo of ruins. In less than twenty-five minutes after the first alarm was given fire burst out in as many at fifteen places, buildings cateh, ' ing so last and burning m> quickiy that the I firemen were practically helpless. Help was t »ent for to Burlington and Swanton, but it was almost six o'oloek when the out-of-town / firemen arrived. By that time the thickly settled part of the city had been laid waste, and there was little difficulty in protecting the rest of the city. The extensive plant of the St. Albans Messenger Company, publishers of the Daily and Weekly Messenger, bookbinders and Jobbers, ■was entirely wiped out. Everything was lost. The damage was very heavy. The company had under contract the State print- Ing forms for other papers. The town was in complete darkness at night, the gas and electric lights having been cut off. Late that night Information was gathered which led the citizens to believe the fire was caused by the explosion of a lamp which a woman was using to heat a ourling iron. At ,8 o'clock a mass meeting was called to take action for relief measures. LIKE THE SIAMESE TWINS. A Pair of Remarkable New York Olrli Born With a Connecting Link. A remarkable pair o! twins, Joined together Iby a ligament of flesh and bone that rune I from the upper part of the pelvis to the base of the spine, was born the other day to Mrs. J. Koehler, the wife of a caterer, who lives I In East Forty-eecond street, New York. The Koehler twins.as they ire known, were born at midnight exactly. S*s. Koehler was much agitated when she leaned of the connecting link between her tfcbiee, but the physician reassured her by sasng that it was only a figment that can be cutaway as soon as the little onus are strong tough to submit to the operation. But ttjre is now no doubt, affirms the New York Vorld. that the cutting of the ligament -wouUlbe fatal. Both children are girls md brunettes. They welghod fourteen pound together, one tipping the scales at sevenpounds and a half and the other at six poujls and a half. Each haa a perfectly formed" and healthy body. The connecting band bids tho children facing partly away eaqh other, but is so elastic that they caibo laid flat upon their backs without apprent discomfort, and may even be turned eras to partly face each othor. Tuoy u is perfectly formed. The peculiar manner in whjh her lastborne are tied together is a nojlty in medical science. Instead of being ifrely a band of tissue or flesh, the conneotln seems to reach inward to the bone. u Siamese twins were joined by a band otissue in a direct line from side to side, pd In two other similar cases the subjects ire fastened back to back. In tho present <*e the children have the free use of the! arms and legs, and are able by twisting loir bodies silently to. look at eaoh othor. ' The twins are joined nearer ttlower endof the sacrum, and the connect!; part covers nearly tho satire surface of be coccyx. 'Ihu sacrum is the lowest bone I the splnn, and usually consists of llvevert«fu, aud tiio coccyx is the end of the vartefa iu man and tailless monkeys, and Iβ i-.iiilly tho hardest in the human Anatomy. Dr. Granben, President of i> County Medical Soi'iety. iwd many otl»mon eminent in medlaSanaedeurso-- ha4ournoyod again and ugatn to the Koehl resldunce -.0 examine the wonderful twins, t Is their unanimous opinion thitt the ci of tb-.'aa twins is the most reaiarkable on *>r.!. BABES WITH A COSKECBNO LIKE. NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION Will Hold Its Thirty-fourth Annual Meet- Ins in Denver. The National Educational AsaoclatlCm bus Used upon Denver, July 5 to 12, as the place and time of Its thirty-fourth annual meeting. The association comes so far West this year for the second time in its history. In 1888 the session was held in San Franolsoo, but the President of the association for '88 was Aaron Qove, then and now Superintendent of the Denver schools. At the San Francisco meeting 12.000 people attended. At Denver it is expected the attendance of people from nil parts of the country Interested In education will reach 25,000. Tho National Educational Association wus published Iα 1857 in I'bilndulphiu; Its object, us stivtod in the preamble to the constitution, is '-To elevate the character and iulvnneo the interests of the profession of teaching, iind to promote the cause of popular education In the United Slates." Dr. Niciioias Murray butler, of Columbia College, Professor of Philosophy and Eduoation; aud State University Examiner for New \ork. is President of the Association, Dr. Butler is one of the young men who havo of late years come to tho front in educational lines. Hn la ihlrty-three years of age and is recognized as one of the most advanced thinkers and among the most proggressive educators in the world. Superintendent A. G. Lane, of Chicago schools, Iβ Viee-Pre3ldent; Irwin Bhepard, State Superintendent, of Minnesota, is Secretary; Superintendent J. M. Greenwood, of tin; Kansas City schools, is Treasurer, and Superintendent N. A. Calkins, of the New York schools, is Chairman of the Board of Trustees, the governing body of the aeeoeiatioii. The membership is composed of men and women eminent In educational lines In the United States and Canada, and numbered last venr over GOOO. The Educational Association has eleven departments. Bach of which has a meeting pliici)and holds s■ mions of its own, in addition to those of the general convention. The departments are: Kindergarten, Elementary, Sooondary, Higher, Normal, Manual, Training, Art. Music, Business Education. Child Study, and a National Council of Education. Among the noted educators who will read papers and take part in the discussions of the convention and its departments are: President Dβ Garmo, of Swarthmore; Commissioner Harris, of the United States Bureau of Education; Hon. Hoke Smith, Secretary of the Interior; Professor Jackman, of the Cook County Normal School, Illinois; Chancellor \V. H. Payne, of Nashville University; George H. Martin. Supervisor of Boston Schools; Professor William Carey Jones, of the University of California; James L. Hughes, Inspector of Schools, Toronto; Dr. J. M. Rice, of New York; Mrs. Mary Hunt, of Boston; Professor Bichard T. Ely, ofthe University of Wisconsin; N. C. Shaeffer. Pennsylvania State Superintendent; Halsey C. Ives, Chief of the Art Deportment of the World's Columbian Exposition. DR. BUTLEII, rnISIDENT R. E. A. KB. OOVE, SUPERINTENDENT I'ENVEU SCHOOLS. ADMIRAL ALMY DEAD. HI. Brilliant Naral Career Began Suty•lz Tear* Ago. Admiral John J. Almy, ofthe United States Navy, retired, died at his residence (n Washington after a long illness. He leaves a widow and five, grown up children—throe sons and two daughters. Hβ was born in Newport, It. 1., in 1814. He entered the navy In 1829 and served almost forty-eight yeate, retiring In July, 1877. Hβ was present at the surrender of Walker and his filibusters and was at the siege of Vera Cruz and the capture of Tuxpam during the Mexican War. He was commander at the Brooklyn Navy Yard In 1861 and 1862. During his service as Commander tin bad charge successively of the gunboats South Carolina, Connecticut and Juniata. While in command of the Connecticut he captured four noted blockade runners with- valuable cargoes and chased four others to the shore and destroyed them. NIGARAGUA PAYS UP. The •'.".son Extracted by Encland In th« Treasury In London. The $711,500 demanded of Nicaragua by Great Britain for the expulsion of British subjects was f ovoreil into the British Treasury at London by Senor Medina, Salvador'* Minister to England, who has acted foi Nicaragua In London throughout the episode thus closed. Nicaragua had until May 23 to pay the indemnity under the terms of agreement, which allowed her fifteen days after the British warKOips left Corinto. The money was robed by private subscription from Nicaraguans and foreign residents, and .no necessity arose for accepting. th« help offered by other Central American republics. THE NEWS EPITOMIZED Washington Items. The Secretary of the Interior made ■ requisition on toe Secretary of the Treasury for $10,140,000 for the payment of pensions. Colonel Judson D. Bingham, Assistant Quartermaster-General, was placod on the retired list of I tho United States Army, having reached the age of sixty-four years. The President signed the proclamations declaring the Yankton Sioux reservation in South Dakota and the Silety reservation iu Oregon open to settlement at noon May 21. During the month of April, 1895, 40,444 immigrants arrived at tho ports of the United States. President Cleveland is deluged by letters from parents of triplets and ijuadru plots. Great Britain notified the United States that it would not observe the regulations regarding sealing firearms on vessels in Bering Sea. Admiral Meade declined to answer tho inquiries of th« Navy Department regarding his criticism of the Administration. United States Minister BawitOß was recalled from Venezuela becauso lie was mentally and physically broken down. Domestic. BECOHD OP THE LEAGUE CT.UBI. Per Per Clobs. Won. I,«»t. in. I C!ub«. Wv. '.""'. "•■ Pittsburp..ls 7 .CS2 Serv York.lo 10 .5M Cincinnati.lC 8 .fifi6 Baltimore, s 9 .471 Boston 12 7 .632 3t. Louis.. 10 15 .403 Chicago...ls 9 .623 Brooklyn.. 7 1-t .35U Cleveland.l 2 10 .545 Wash'ne'n. 614 .SO') Philadol. ..10 9 .526 Louisville. 5 15 .250 At Athens. On., ft daughter was born to Mrs. Hoke Smith, wl'e of the Secretary of the Interior, where Mrs. Smith is spending the summer. Ex-President Benjamin Harrison was the principal guest of honor at the seml-centounial celebration of the New Jersoy Historical Society at Newark, and was presented with e gold medal as the centennial President of the United States. Dr. Robert Kussell Booth, of New York was elected Moderator of the Presbyterian General Assembly at Pittsburgh Penll-■ ou the first ballot. The Now Jersey Court of Pardons, by t vote of six to two, remitted tho sentence o! one year's imprisonment imposed on Dennii McLaughlin, John C. Carr. Nicholas Crusiut and Gottfried Walbaum, the "Big Four" o: the Guttenberg race tracU. Jones & Laughlin, operating the extenslvt American Iron Works, Pittsburg, Peon., have voluntarily advanced the wa««s of al their skilled workmen ten per cent. Anoui 4000 men share in the advance. The widow of Policeman Christian Ottt was awarded $0500 by a Jury at Elizabeth N. J., in a case brought to recover $10,001 from the Suburban Electric Light Compuu; for the killing of her husband by eleotricitj in a pole with which he camo in contact. Peter Hardemaa liurnett, first Governor o> California, died in San Francisco, eightyseven -years old. He was bori in Nashvilla TeiiD.. of Virginia parentage. A twenty days' extra session of the Tennessee Legislature will be held. Warrants were Issued for seventy-font members of the Pennsylvania Legislature for absence without leave. The price of wueat in Chicago rose to 70% cents a bushel. The convention at Salt Lake City. Utah, called by Governor Uickards, of Montana, to discuss means to promote the interests of he silver cause met, after a parade, in the Great Mormon Tabernacle. Over 2000 delegates were present. Governor Bickards presided.One of the pewder mills at Schaghticoke, N. ¥~ blew up. Chauncey Lohmee wae killed and Charles Clump fatally injured. Both men were employed in the mill. An anti-trolley indignation meeting in Brooklyn, N. Y., was attended by 10,(00 persons.Three thousand employes of the Peneoyd Iron Works at West Manyhunk, Penn., had their wages advanced ten per cent. The competitive drill of the military companies at Memphis, Twin., began. Eokley B. Coxe. the most prominent coal operator in Pennsylvania, died at Drifton of pneumonia. Hβ was fifty-six years old. Mr. and Mrs. Hale, a newly-married couple, were burned to death in their new home at Midland, Mich. The fire wai incendiary. Foreign Notes. Fire destroyed the long wharf, freight shade, and coaling ptor at Biohmond, Novn Scotia. Government property worth o quarter of a million dollars was burned. The French troops defeated the Hovas at Sukalave, Madagascar, killing sixty. A revolt broke out in the State of Chihuahua. Mexico. The famous Tlchboriie claimant baa confessed he is plain Arthur Orton. The pulpits of 200 of the London churches will be occupied on June 10 by women, who will preach a campaign of religion, temperance, social purity, the abolition of the opium trade, and opposition to the turf. Japan announced that eho would quit Korea this year. The plan of confederation of New Foundland with Canada bos been abandoned. The American Commissioners of the Nicaragua Canal arrived at Uriytowu. Considerable damage was done to the erops in Switzerland by frost ami snow. The Chinese troops stationed at Shanaikwan openly revolted and looted the city. The people fled. Count Goluchowski. formerly Austrian Envoy at Bucharest, has been appointed Premier of Austria-Hungary, to succeed Count Kalnoky. William Alexander Louis Stephen Douglas Hamilton, twelfth Duke of Hamilton, died in Algiers. He was fifty years oid. Northern Formosa Is in a etate of anarchy, and China wants it turned into a republic.The insurrection in Cuba is reported to be spreading rapidly. There was a snowfall in London, Essex and Eent, England, on-May 17th. The Chambers at Stockholm voted Jointly 15,000,000 crowns to the Government to supply its immediate wants In the event of war, or to transport Swedish troops iu nase of a Norwegian revolution. The Emperor of Austria has finally accepted the resignation of Count Kalnoky, Imperial Premier and Minister of Foreign Allaire. Baron von Ooltz has been succeeded as Admiral Commanding-in-Chiet of the German Navy by Admiral Knorr. A decree was issued by the Mikado announcing that, In deference to the wishes of BuMia, France and Germany, Japan would not iuist on retention of theLiau-Tong Peninsula. Toe Japanese Nation is greatly excited over the Mikado'* submission. Queen Wllbelmlnla -and Queen Regent Emma returned to The Hague, Holland, from England. ARMENIAN ATROCITIES. Tvidences of the Terrible Butcheries Discovered by the Commission. PITS FILLED WITH MASSACRED. Ruined Villages Left In (ha Path of the Kuthleu Turks---Bocilet Thrown Into Trenches and Partly Burned—The Powers Submit Notes to the Porte Call- Ing for Reform. The commission which has been Investigating the atrocities in Armenia traversed the devastated villages and arrived at Jellygoozan (also written Ghellyguzan), where 120 houses were found to hove been burned. The people wero sheltered In miserable huts, and ample proof ni found of the truth of the stories heretofore told by correspondents of English newspapers regarding the massacre of Armenians and the throwing of their bodies In large numbers Into a pit, where the Turks endeavored to conceal their crime by pouring barrels of petroleum upon the bodies and setting fire to the oil. Tho flames, however failed to consume the mass, and a stream was dammed and diverted from its course in order to wash away the half-burned bodies. Even this failed to obliterate the terrible evidence against the Turks, and the local authorities were compelled to remove the bodies. The villagers had removed the bulk of the bodies and Interred them In consecrated ground before the arrival of the commission. The delegates of the Powers left Mush on April 5. The Turkish delegates at first declined to accompany them, and then changed their minds. They went to the ruined villages, and traversed Shonik and Gernal, which were found in ruins standing In the midst of devastated fields. They passed other villages where many houses were burned, and at Jellygoozan the commission had two pits, instead of one as originally reported, opened, and found in them the remains of skulls and bones with hair and clothing still adhering to them. Later, another pit wae searched. It was situated in a ravine near Jellygoozen.and inside it was found a decapitated trunk and other remains. But few bodies, however, were found. The villagers told the delegates that they had removed the bodies from this pit. It was evident that all three pits had contained bodies. The exhalations from the pits were so frightful that the delegates had great trouble in prevailing upon laborers to finish their horrible task. Aβ a resalt of the investigation and the reports of the delegates, the Powers have gubmitted notes to the Turkish Government impressing upon the Porte the necessity of promptly inaugurating a scheme for Armenian reforms which should include the appointment of Christian officials in Armenia, the Powers to have the. right to veto the appointments of the governors. The notes of the delegates do not baee their suggestions on the Sassun outrages, but ou the general unsatisfactory condition of Armenia. nMU TCBKISH DRAOOMAS. (He BerNflp Interpreter Between Turkish Offlciall and Foreign Ambassadors.) A MILE OF VETERANS. Grand Parade of the New York State O. A. R. at Saratoga. The parade of the State Grand Army veterans at Saratoga, N. Y., proved u great success. There was an immense gathering tho lanjest seen in Saratoga sine.: the Heytember floral fete. The procession—k mil' in length—whs reviewed Ly Cmnnrmnder-iii- Chief Thomas G. Lawler and Department Commander Shottn. FollowiuK tho pariule tho retnraus anil their friends assembled in Convt-ntion Kail, which was filled to overflowing- t>" ••'• Mage there went 850 school children, win rendered patriotic songs. The a idreeo o welcome wne made by VlUnw Pnaidem Charles H. Sturges, which was tu by Department Cornuiundcr Bhott*. A!• dresses were also made by Oeiivral Val-jut aad Commander in-Chief Lawler. OEKERAr. THOMAS (I. LAWLEK, Commander-ln-Chlet of the G. A. R THE MARKETS. Lnte TCImV«nV Pilaw of Co«i->tr.r l'«o-- |
| File Name | ytn_18950524_001.tif |
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