Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 28, Number 39, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 27 November 1907 — Page 2
THE NAPPANEE NEWS. Q. N. MURRAY, Publlt'.i*r. NAPPANEE, : : INDIANA, BRIEF MS NOTES FOR THE GUST MSN MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE PAST WEEK TOLD IN CONDENSED FORM. ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD Complete Review bf Happenings of Greatest Interest from All Parts of the Globe—Latest Home and Foreign items. William M. Ivins, while investigating the affairs of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit company for the New York public service commission, declared that Mayor Totn L. Johnson of Cleveland and his friends, who formerly owned the Nassau Electric Railway company of Brooklyn, had watered its stock to the extent of $6,250,000 aSd then sold it to the Brooklyn Rapid Transit company. Lieut. John W. Crawford, secretary of Admiral Dewey, disappeared and it is believed he committed suicide. Railway Commissioner Joseph A. William and H. G. Powell, rate expert in the office of the Nebraska commission, were seriously injured while making an inspection of the Missouri Pacific tracks. Physically wrecked through excesses, George P. Miller, aged 48 years, once a brilliant law graduate and private secretary to Samual J. Randall of Pennsylvania, committed suicide in St. Louis. Prince Salmon of Tahiti was arrested in San Francisco on charges of defrauding an automobile livery company and failing to pay a board bill. The jury in the case of Edward G. Lewis of St. Louis, who was charged with having used the mails fraudulently in organizing and establishing the Peoples United States bank, disagreed. Louis M. jQyke, president of the former Atella (Ala.) National bank, charged with misappropriation of funds of a national bank, entered a plea of guilty and was sentenced to five years in the penitentiary. O. K. McCutcheon, a wealthy merchant of Turtle Creek, „Pa., was crushed to death in Pittsburg. Patrolman George Gusrang was murdered at Burlington, N. J., by an unknown man, evidently an Italian, who then'shot himself, inflicting a fatal wound. The shooting was the direct result of the assassination of E. S, Jefferson,' a grocer. It is thought both crimes may have been committed by the same person. J. Pierpont Morgan and George F. Baker, the latter president of the First National bank of New York city, conferred in Washington with Secretary Cortelyou and later with the president. The works of the Aluminum Company of America at St. Louis were closed indefinitely. O. R. Nattinger was killed and Frank Getchell was seriously injured In an automobile accident at Des Moines, la. Miss Ruth Wilkinson and Miss Isolde Benny were severely hurt. The eighteenth annual meeting of the Trans-Mississippi Commercial congress adjourned at Muskogee, Okla., to meet in San Francisco next November. Christian workers representing many lands gathered in Washington in attendance upon the thirty-sixth international convention of the Young Men’s Christian Association of North America. The resignation of W. W. Howe, United States district attorney for the eastern district of Louisiana, was announced. Among* the relics disclosed by the opening of the metal box which for more than 20 years rested in the cornerstone of the old Consolidated Exchange building at Broadway and Exchange place, New York, now being torn down, were particles of the bones of Christopher Columbus. They were in a gold mounted urn. Dr. W. C. Whitney, member of the Ohio legislature from Franklin county, died of burns'* received while attempting to rescue a horse from a burning barn. / The marriage of Prince George of Greece, second son of the king of Greece and high commissioner for the powers in Crete, and Princess Marie Bonaparte took place at the Mairie at Passy, France. Andrew Carnegie placed Ida Lewis, keeper of the Lime Rock lighthouse, on his private pension list for S3O a month. The Nebraska supreme court has affirmed the five-year sentence imposed on H. H. Hendee, a former judge, who was convicted of embezzlement. C. E. Bennett, for many years one of the best known grain dealers in the northwest, died at La Crosse, Wis., aged 65 years. The resignation of Railroad Commissioner Afidrew M. Wilson was received and accepted by Gov. Gillette, of California. Wilson was a member of a notorious "boodle” board of supervisors of San Francisco and confessed several times under oath that he had accepted bribes.
Walter Johnson, 16 years old, was torn to pieces by a lynx near McKln-"' ney, N. D. Oceana, W. Va., a lumbering village, was almost destroyed by fire. The American Federation of Labor declared a universal eight-hour day paramount to all labor questions. . Edgar N. Jennings, for 12 years a coachman for John C. Stevenson, a capitalist of Bloomington, 111., and a brother of former Vice President Adlai Stevenson, attempted to shoot his employer A riot occurred at Joliet, 111., as the result of the strike which followed an attempted wage reduction among stone quarrymen. Col. Kaighn, close friend of former Senator Brown, testified for Mrs. Bradley in heT murder trial and produced Brown’s written acknowledgment that he was the father of the woman’s two youngest children. Gov. Cummins of lowa ordered out a company of the state militia to stop the McFarland-Herman prize fight at Davenport, but the men fought without decision, and Capt. Kulp is in danger of being court-martialed. William Jennings Bryan suggested as a financial relief measure that the government guarantee the deposits in all national banks. Officers and crew of the steamer Dick Fowler, charged with reckless navigation that endangered the life of President Roosevelt during his trip down the Mississippi river, were found not guilty. Mrs. Mary Hartje won complete victory over her husband in the superior court at Philadelphia and then collapsed with joy. Hartje said he would carry the case to the supreme court. William Randolph Hearst was held to the grand jury in New York on charges of criminal libel preferred by William Astor Chanler. Mrs. Evelyn Romadka, of Milwaukee, was taken from Chicago to Joliet to begin her sentence of from one to 20 years for burglary. . Edgar Grubb, his wife and baby were cremated in their home near Beverly, 0., and It was believed they were the victims of foul play. The Kings county grand jury, which investigated the recent n anagement of the suspended Borough bank of Brooklyn, returned indictments charging larceny and- other offenses against Howard Maxwell, who was president of the institution when its doors were closed; Arthur D. Campbell, the deposed cashier, and William Gow, a director who holds a controlling share of the bank’s stock. Nearly $2,000,000 of new business has been placed on the books of the Westinghouse Machine and the Wfestinghouse Electric & Manufacturing companies by concerns west of Chicago and the receivership may soon be ended. * The village of Chain, la., was wiped out by fire, but one building being saved. Five children of Thomas Zuver perished in a fire that destroyed his home near Titusville, Pa. Miss Maggie Sawyer, of South Mills, N. C., was married to Edmund Daily, who forcibly took her away from John Hall when she and Hall were on their way to be married. Percy Zimmerman, right end for Eastern Illinois Normal school, was dangerously hurt in a'iootball game, suffering concussion of the brain. The door of the Buchanan county jail at Independence was blown open by a charge of nitroglycerine or dynamite and two prisoners escaped. One was recaptured. Three thousand barrels of beer, valued at $24,000, will be dumped into the sewer by a brewing company of Guthrie, Okla., unless a special dispensation be granted and the brewery allowed to ship it out of the state and sell it. The corporation commission of Oklahoma issued an order notifying all Oklahoma railroads that .a 60* per cent, reduction in coal rates would go into effect January 2. William W. Atwood, agtd 70 years, a prominent resident of Peoria, 111., committed suicide by tying a shotgun to a tree and using a leather strap to pull the trigger. . Charles F. Caswell, associate justice of the Colorado supreme court, died of paralysis of the heart. John D. Rockefeller declined an invitation to a banquet in his honor by the Commercial club ol St. Paul. A rush of natural gas from an excavation in the southwest land tunnel at Chicago, 150 feet below the ground, caused the death of one man and the partial suffocation of seven others. The federal grand jury at Salt Lake returned indictments against the Union Pacific Railroad company, the Oregon Short Line, the Union Pacific Coal company, J. M. Moore, general agent of the Union Pacific Coal company, and Everett Buckingham, assistant general superintendent of the Oregon Short Line, fo.r violations of the Sherman anti-trust law. * John Moissant, a fugitive from Salvador, is back in San Francisco, after escaping his enemies by pretending to seek the Pacific coast, doubling on his tracks and taking a vessel for New York at an Atlantic seaport. Deputy Sheriff M. T. Kiggins shot and killed an unidentified man near Hillsboro, 111., supposed to be one of a gang of burglars that have been terrorizing the community. Representatives of the Switchmen’s Union of North America, who have been in a wage conference with a railroad committee, decided not to press their demands for advances at the present time. Frank J. Goldman, a prominent druggist, Odd„Feliow and Grand Army man of Elkhart, Infi., committed suicide by shooting while temporarily insane.
In an explosion on the Eastern Construction works of the Grand Trunk Pacific at Dryden, Ont„ seven men were killed and four Injured. Congressman Gilhans of the Twelfth Indiana district is aiding a campaign in favor of a canal from Toledo, 0., to Chicago, and will introduce a bill providing for government aid. War on saloons in Chicago and East St. Louis that violate the law was planned at the closing session of the State Anti-Saloon league convention at East St. Louis. Oklahoma's corporation commission notified the Fort Snilth & Western railroad to comply with the two-cent-fare provision of the state constitution. President Roosevelt was commended and congratulated generally on the wisdom and success of the financial relief measures launched by the administration. Speaking in Lafayette, Ind., W. J. Bryan said the Wall street gamblers, and not the president, were responsible for the financial stringency. President Gompers told the American Federation of Labor that last October a man giving the name of Charles Brandenburg and representing himself as acting for the Manufacturers’ association, tried to bribe him to betray organized labor. In New York Broughton Brandenburg, president of the National Institute of Immigration and a magazine writer, said he was the man referred to by President Gompers, denied that he had attempted to bribe Gompers and declared that he had no connection with the National Manufacturers’ association. Eli Gross, of Zions View, was probably fatally injured and eight other persons were hurt in a panic in Quickel's church, six miles north of York, Pa. United States Senator Joseph Benson Ohio, was endorsed for both reelection to the senate and the Republican nomination for president, at a joint meeting of the executive and advisory committees of the Ohio League of Republican clubs at Columbus, O. J. H. Fowlkes, a farmer, was murdered and robbed of SI,OOO in a box car at Poplar Bluff, Mo. Speaker Cannon was in a railroad wreck at Bismarck, 111. He escaped injury, although his life was in great danger. The army transport Crook sailed from San Francisco for Manila with over 700 sacks of Christmas mail and 200 packages of gifts for the men of the army and their wives stationed in and about Manila. Five thousand enlisted men of the navy presented Miss Helen Gould with a loving cup because she gave $450,000 for their 'new Y. M. C. A. home in Brooklyn. Six men were killed, one fatally injured and a number seriously hurt, as the result of the explosion of a boiler at the John L. Roper lumber mills at Gilmerton, Va. One trainman was killed and seven persons injured when an * Alton passenger train and a Vandalia freight collided at Farmdale, 111. That Mrs. Bradley did not go to Washington with any intention of killing former Senator Arthur M. Brown, of Utah, and that she did not even remember shooting him, she told the jury in her trial. Another trial for .Kemp -V. Bigelow, the Ohio youth who sent bombs to a number of prominent Denver citizens, was ordered by Judge Bliss and he may be sent to the penitentiary. Col. Atherton Thayer, aged 67, formerly well known in dramatic and fraternal circles in the east, died at Butte, Mont., of apoplexy. John Hall, of Camden, N. C., while driving to Elizabeth City with Miss Maggie Sawyer to be married, was shot by Edmund Daily, his rival, who then kidnaped the young woman. The Missouri railroad and warehouse board ordered a 20 per cent, reduction in express rates. At Gaylord,' Mich., Frank Valot, aged 21 years, shot and killed his sister Laura, aged 15, and then ended his own life. Aud McMunn, charged with killing Arch Brown, was acquitted by a jury at Kennett, Mo. The vefdict was based on the “unwritten law.” Floods have done great damage at Lockhart and other points in southern Texas. Fourteen inches of rain fell, sending the rivers opt of their banks. Unprecedented scenes were enacted in the senate chamber of the capitol of Alabama when the statutory prohibition bill was passed. Women and children thronged the corridor and gallery giving vent to their enthusiasm by shouts and cheers. Senators who opposed the bill were hissed down when they arose to speak. In a head-on collision between a freight train and an engine running light on the Wheeling & Lake Erie railroad, just south of Steubenville, 0., Engineer Martin Gilday was killed, two trainmen perhaps ffatally injured and two others seriously hurt. In the course of his first lecture on temperance at Minneapolis Frank M. Eddy, a former congressman from Minnesota, said thafr drink had cost him the governorship of the state. Daniel Sinclair, the oldest editor in Minnesota, fiied at Winona, Minn., aged 76. He contributed largely to the defeat of James 0. Blaine for the Republican nomination for president In 1880. Mrs. Lottie Hitchcock, half-crazed by jgalo,usy, shot and killed her husband as. he lay asleep in New York and then inflicted several* 'wounds on herself. —— The Missouri supreme court de- I cided that it was not a violation of the law for a person to give a friend a drink of whisky in local option counties.
THROUGH THE STATE NEWS GATHERED FROM VARIOUS INDIANA POINTS. ALIENS FOR INDIANA Opinion of Attorney General Bingham May Bring Them Whenever Requests for Such Laborer? Are Made. Indianapolis.—As the result of an opinion given by James Bingham, attorney general, the bureau of immigration and naturalization at Washington, D. C., will send foreign laborers to Indiana whenever requests for such laborers are made by residents of this state. In the opinion of the attorney general, which was prepared by Edwaid M. White, assistant attorney general, it is held that it is not unlawful fpi residents of Indiana to make contracts with foreign laborers in othei states or to forward money for the transportation of such laborers to Indiana. It was held that such contracts are-unlawful only when they are made previous to the time the foreigner becomes a resident of the United States. For some time the department at Washington has been diverting foreign laborers away from Indiana because there was some doubt as to the provisions of the law in this state. The division of immigration of the government bureau was established by an act of the last congress, and its purpose is to gather information and to inquire into conditions affecting immigrants in the different states with a view to a beneficial distribution of the foreign labor over the United States. Recent ly, T. V. Powderly, chief of the division, wrote to Charles F. Woerner, state labor commissioner, for information in regard to the laws of Indiana. Copies of certain sections of the Indiana law were forwarded, and after this a letetr came from P. A. Donahue, acting chief of the division, asking that a construction be placed on the law. In answer to this request the ot-'fne attorney general was forwarded. Blinded): Walks from Roof. Hartford City.—Temporarily blinded in an unusual manner, John Hoffman, a well known merchant, of this city, walked off the roof of a twostory building and may. die from his injuries. Both arms were broken and his chest crushed in. He had climbed to the roof to clean a chimney and was using a long pole which became lodged in the flue. In trying to pull the stick loose it was suddenly released and struck him in attempting to walk to the center of the roof to wait until he Could see he went the wrong direction and tumbled head first over the side of the Hauilding, alighting oh his head and left shoulder on the pavement below. Workman Perishes in Fire. .-New Albany,—William Robertson, -20 years of age and unmarried, was burned to death in a fire at the plant of the Anchor Stove & Range works and the plant was damaged to the extent of $7,000. Panic was created among 300 or more workmen employed at the plant when the fire was discovered, but it fcras believed that all had escaped injury ufitil the body of Robertson was found on thp second floor after the fire. His face and hands were slightly burned and it is believed that he met death by inhaling the flames. The origin of the fire is not known. Heavy Verdict for a Single Life. Mount Vernon. —In the suit brought by Henry Berndt, administrator of the estate, against the Evansville & Terre Haute Railway company, growing out of the killing of his son,, Charles Berndt, on a street crossing in Evansville, fey a train, and brought to this county on change of venue, the jury returned a verdict for $7,166. The claim called for SIO,OOO. It is one of the heaviest verdicts ever rendered in this county, gro’wing out of the* loss of a single life. Sheriff Captures Fugitive. Princeton. —Howard Strickland, a farm laborer, aged 22, was arrested by Sheriff Frank Whiting on the charge of attempting to kill Jack Cash, a blacksmith of Mackey, this county. Strickland was on board a Southern train en route to Illinois when caught by the sheriff. The fight occurred near Oakland City over a trivial matter. Cash was badly wounded, receiving a long gash in the back and a slight cut on the abdomen, but will recover. ■■■•• v ■" Will Case Settled by Compromise. Mount Vernon. —The suit brought by Alfred G. McCallister and Lida G. McCallister, guardian of Oscar N. McCallister, against Mary M. Ebersole, in Cincinnati, to contest the. will of Evaline E. McCallister, has been settled by compromise, 4 the, plaintiffs receiving SIO,OOO and all costs. In the settlement the plaintiffs take the McCallister homestead, this city, valued at $7,500. w Young Men Rule New Town. Seelyville. Young men were chosen to guide the destinies of S.eelyville in its first steps as an incorporated town and the people, by a narrow margin, elected & “wet” ticket. The election passed off quietly and a large vote was cast. Aside from the saloon issue the matter of politics was forgotten. The first official town board of Seelyville will be as follows: Trustees, Thomas Ferguson, Frank Hemphill and Fred Jackson; clerk-treasurer, Solomon Schult. • .
WOMAN MAKES SB9O MISTAKE. Member of Normal Bchool Faculty Files Suit to Recover Money, Terre Haute.—Suit has been filed in the court by Miss Bertha Schweitzer, a member of the faculty of the Indiana State Normal school to recover SB6O, which, her complaint states, was paid in excess by her to Frank and Pauline Boyd last May In purchasing a piece of real estate. In the complaint Miss Schweitzer states that she contracted to pay $(8,100 for the property in three checks. The first payment was SI,OOO, the second $1,150 and the last check was for SI,BOO instead of $950. The complainant states that she did not know until a few days ago that she had overpaid Boyd on the last Installment, and upon requesting him to return the SBSO he refused to do so. She also asks that he be enjoined from drawing from the United States Trust company the amount of the last Installment. Holds Court by Telephone. Columbus. —Justice of the Peace E. H. Kinney held court over the telephone and fined Albert Layton, of Madison, $11.50 for failing to pay Henry Hiatt a board bill of six dollars when he left this city last September. Hiatt filed an affidavit against Laytons ’short time after the latter’s departure and the other morning he was found in Madison by the police of that place, who notified the Columbus marshal. Justice Kinney called up Madison and after talking with Layton found him guilty and assessed his fine for the young man’s violation of the law. Layton paid the amount to the Madison police, who sent it to the Columbus justice. Boy Shoots Child in Play. Bloomington. Playfully picking up a target rifle at a blacksmith shop in Unionville, Harry Steidd, the nine-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Kate Steidd, told three other children with him to stand back while he fired to see whether it was loaded. Edna Ritter, the six-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Ritter, did not heed the admonition, but stood directly in front of the Steidd boy, who fired. The bullet plowed its way into the child’s shoulder and she dropped as if dead. The little tot was carried home and Dr. Fritch, of Unionville, summoned to attend her, says the child will get well. Terms Jail System Disgrace. Indianapolis.—Amos W. Butler, of Indianapolis, a member of the special committee chosen by the National Prison association to investigate jails in every state and territory in the union, in an interview declared that “our jail system is a national disgrace.” Mr. Butler, who is also secretary of the National Prison association, says that the, report of the committee is completed and at a meeting to be held shortly recommendations will be made. '.' . _ t Cat Has Two Tails. South Bend. —Tiring of that international question: “What use could a cat make of two tails?” Mother Nature has endowed a feline with a double caudal appendage in • South Bend. But for someone Os those eccentricities far which the ancient dame is known she had the kitten toddle into life on {hree legs. George E. Wolf is owner of this freakish animal, which is remarkably healthy and cries loudly for food. Would End Death Penalty. Marion. Gus S. Condo, state representative and a member of the bar of this county, having failed to get passed a bill abolishing capital punishment in Indiana, is now mailing letters to persons in the central west inviting them to attend a meeting to be held at Indianapolis December 27. Gov. Hanly will preside and give an address on the subject of the abolition of capital punishment. Conscience Pays Back Tax. South Bend. Troubled by his conscience Mervin Hertzel, of Norwich, N. D„ has remitted 75 cents back taxes to the treasurer of Kosciusko county, this state. The amount is for the second installment of 1899. He closes his letter of explanation as follows: “That 75 cents is as big as a mountain in the sight of the Lord, so I can't get around it.” South Bend Plants Open. South Bend. —Encouraged by the act of Secretary of the Treasury Cortelyou in bringing relief to the financial markets, tjie South Bend Chilled Plow works will resume opera tions and several other local factories, the Studebakers, Olivers and Birdsells, stick to eight hours a day instead of running seven hours. Rich Man Grudges Light to Wife. South Bend. —Alleging that her husband, John Lennox, has a passion for economy which”lS a “mania, Stella Lennox has started divorce proceedings. She says that he will not allow her to use gas to read when she is in bed, claiming it is waste. He is worth about $25,000. Sues Husband’s "Affinity.” Marion. —Suit demanding that hen husband’s “affinity” shall pay $lO,000 for his love has been entered in the circuit court of this county, by Mrs. Ora A. Thomas, wife of E. C. Thomas. E. C. Thomas was arrested at Newport, Ky., a month ago, brought to Marion on a charge of wife desertion, and released became his spouse relented. Within three days after hisrelease he disappeared, and a widow, Mrs. Lydia M. Trussler, is also missing. The widow is made defendant in the suit-.
BIG ODD LOT BUYING TRANSFER BOOKB CONTAIN MORE STOCKHOLDERS THAN EVER. RELIEF TO STRINGENCY Numerous Currency Projects Submitted to President and Cortelyou —lnterest in the Central Bank Idea. New York.—lnvestment buying in small lots of railroad and industrial securities in Wall street still continues in unprecedented volume, and stock transfer officers are overwhelmed with work transferring the names of new security holders. This enormous odd lot buying, bringing as it does thousands of dollars into circulation, has been in progress for several weeks and is doing more than anything else, perhaps, to effect a relaxation in the stringent currency conditions. Washington.—Details of many new projects for improving the currency are being submitted to the president and Secretary Cortelyou and are receiving such attention as the other exigencies of the financial situation permit. l9 Secretary Cortelyou is a good listener and usually digests quickly essential points of the various plans which are submitted to him. Measures relating directly to the currency which are being discussed among bankers and incoming members of congress may be roughly grouped under four heads —a central bank of issue, a central organization of she existing national banks, the issue of additional circulation against various classes of bonds other than United States bonds, and the issue of circulation upon general assets with the security of a guaranty funds. The project of a central bank, based upon the general outlines of the Bank of France or the Imperial Bank of Germany, has apparently been attracting more attention of late than at any previous time fn recent years. Senator, Hansbrough of North Dakota, who is a member of the finance committee, has announced that he will introduce a bill for such an institution. Mr. Wexler, vice president of the Whitney-Central National bank of New Orleans, is openly in favor of a central bank and says that the New Orleans press, taught by the strain of the cotton situation, is generally with him. CRISIS SOON IN PORTUGAL. Signs That the Country Is on Eve of Revolution. Paris. —Reports representing that Portugal is on the eve of a revolution are received here with caution, as dispatches coming directly from that country have been censored and those indirectly across the frontier are held more or less under suspicion. Both the reports of the banishment of the crown prince and the mutiny of the fleet are denied by the Portuguese ~ ambassy here; nevertheless, the making of arrests, the suspension of a newspaper and the repressive measures which have been taken by what Premier Franco terms an administrative dictatorship, sqem conclusive evidence that matters in Portugal have entered upon a critical phase. Senor Lima, proprietor of the newspaper Vanguardia, of Lisbon,” which was suppressed, is now in Paris and considers that a republic is inevitable and that the issue will be decided before January 1. He declares that the people are hostile to a dynasty and that the army is disaffected. NOBEL PRIZE FOR CROOKES. Achievements of the Famous London Chemist Are Recognized. Stockholm.—The Nobel prize for chemistry will be awarded to Sir 1 William Crookes, of London. Sir William Crookes discovered thallium, an element, in 1861, and invented the radiometer in 1874. He was knighted in 1897 and has been closely identified with many of the most important advances in science. Prof. Crookes recently discovered a process of extracting nitric acid from the atmosphere, which it was announced would sonn be available for commercial, industrial and agricultural purposes and would revolutionize the nitrate industry and the world’s food problem. Rudyard Kipling will receive the Nobel prize for literature. Noted Opera Singer a Suicide. Berlin.—Theodore Betram, the celebrated opera singer, committed suicide Sunday at Batruth. He had been melancholy and despondent since the death of his wife, who was drowned on February 21 last, in the wreck of the steamship Berlin off the Hook of Holland. Bertram’s most successful roles were Wagnerian and he made his greatest reputation as Wotan. Hungarian Arrested for Swindling. Columbus, O. —On the- charge that he had been trying to swindle Hungarians throughout the stfite by means of a sick benefit and burial association of which he is alleged to have been president, secretary and treasurer, Istvan Harvath, a merchant of this' city, was arrested Sunday at Newark, where he was about to address a meeting of a local Hungarian’ society, and taken to Akron. It is said Harvath is wanted on similar chrages at Cleveland, Barberton, Massillon and cities.
