Indianapolis Journal, Volume 52, Number 315, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1902 — Page 2

TUT. INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER ll. 1902.

within the sound of my voice, and It hall Bot cost you more than 36 cent." Coming to the connection of Cornish with the case. Mr. Black declared that he was not arguing for the punishment of anyone, but that he felt it hi duty to show the whole case to the jury us he himself aw it. "There was a crime and thsre was a motive." he said. " and the motive points to Harry 8. Cornish." Mr. Black r. cited from the records the story of 'Ornish's divorce, his meeting with Mrs. Rogers, then separated from her husband, and her late divorce. Mrs. Adams. Mrs. Roger's mother, was a good woman." Mr. Black said. "Do you think she looked with complaisance upon the conditions that prevailed? There is a motive, the great consuming motive force for all things. The motive Cornish had against the life of Mrs. A'lami, compared with the motive Molin ux had against the life of Cornish was as the volcano of Martinique to the lapping of waves gainst the statue of Liberty in our own harbor." CORNISH WORE AN OVERCOAT. Mr. Black called attention to the evidence given that the purchaser of the bottleholder in which the poison was sent said he wanted the holder to match the silver on lady's toilet table, and from that he argued that the purchaser km.w the pattern of Mrs. Rogers's silver. He also reviewed the testimony of Koch, the letter-box man, who said the renter of the private box wore a brown overcoat. Cornish denied while on the stand that he had any overcoat that winter, but Mr. Black read from the last trial to show that he had one, and that It was brown. Cornish, wno was in court, appeared to be little concerned by Mr. Black s line of argument. Once or twice, when his name was mentioned, he laughed aloud. After reviewing other evidence Mr. Black gald: "Mr. Cornish took that dirty little bottle home, but when did he take it? He did not take it home when he got it. He waited until he had arranged for five men to identify it in case of need. You are asked to notice that Cornish was willing to let his friend King take a dose of the stuff. Of course he was willing, but wli n he offered It to King the poi..n was not in the bromo bottle. Professor Witthaus told you the poison was only at the top of TO-DAY'S WEATHER FORECAST.

Fair In Northern Indiana Rain and Cooler In Southern. WASHINGTON. Nov. 10.-Forecast for Tuesday and Wednesday: For Indiana Fair in north, rain and cooler In south portion on Tuesday; Wednesday, rain, fresh northeast winds, becoming southeast. For Illinois Rain on Tuesday, with cooler in central and south portion; Wednesday, fair in north, rain in south portion; fresh northeast winds, becoming southeast. For Ohio Showers and colder on TuesWednesday, showers, fresh northeast winds. Local Observation on Monday. Bar. Ther. R H. Wind. Weather. Fre. 7a.m. .30.14 5 90 South. Cldjr. 0.00 7 p.m.. 30.18 58 !tt North. Cldy. 0.04 Maximum temperature, 66; minimum temperature. 54. Comparative statement of the mean temperature and total precipitation on Nov. 10: Temp. Pie. Normal 4 0.13 Wean 0 0.04 departure 14 0.09 Ieparture since Nov. 1 83 0. departure since Jan. 1 184 6.03 I'lus. W. T. I'.LYTHH, Section Director. Yesterday's Temperatures. Stations Min. Max. 7 p. Abilene, Tex 62 7 Atlanta. Ga 48 72 Bismarck. N. I 10 Buffalo. N. Y I- 54 Cairo. Ill 60 80 m 70 68 -; TJ 8 64 4; M 4S 38 41 50 42 4) 42 n 72 72 7-' 4J 56 H 30 32 64 48 t6 72 7'! 30 74 46 t;s t& 56 TO 00 .12 60 M 71 58 60 54 48 12 32 56 72 36 52 56 11 70 66 AUw-rta 8 Uanooga, Tenn 44 71 Chicago 46 46 Cincinnati. 0 46 70 Cleveland. O 48 .; Concordia. Kan 34 Ü Davenport. la 44 48 Denver. Col 38 58 Pes Moines, la 36 u D ige City, Kan 40 Dubuque, la 42 42 Duluth. Minn 20 32 Kl Paso. TYx 46 v Fort Smith. Ark 60 a Galveston. Tex 7 J 78 nd Haven, Mich 38 4 Grand Junction, Col. ... 4J s Havre. Mont 6 20 Helena, Mnt It Huron. S. D 10 34 Jacksonville. Fla 54 76 K insas City, Mo 48 54 Lander. Wyo 30 60 Little R.. k. Ark 78 "Louisville, Kv 50 ;s Harquette. Mich 30 30 Memphis. Tnn 62 7s Moden a, Utah 36 50 Montgomery, Ala 48 76 Nsw Orleans. La 60 70 Nw York City 44 64 Nashville. Tenn 44 7 Norfolk. Va 40 To North Platte. NVb 24 32 Oklahoma. U. T 0 74 Omana. Neb 32 N Palestine, Trx 64 78 Parkersburg. W. Va 36 W 1 tdelphia. Pa 44 To Pittsburg. Pa 30 Pueblo. vi 3- 5g Qu'Appelle, Assin 10 12 Rapid City, 8. D 11 36 Salt Lake City r.4 St. Louis, Mo 62 Ti St. Paul. Minn 24 H Santa Fe, N. M 42 60 Springfield. Ill 56 64 Springfield, Mo 62 Ts Vleksburg. Miss mi 7s Washington, D. C 40 70 MOVEMENTS OF STEAMERS. PLTMOCTH. Nov. 10.-Arrived: Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse. from Now York. Salted: Graf Wald erase, from Hamburg, for New York. j i'HERBOI'RG. Nov. 10 Arrlvad: Moltke. from New York. Sailed: Friederich der Grosse. fron Bremen, for New York. LIZAUI', Nov. 10. Fassed: Rotterdam, from New York, for Rotterdam; Finlaad, from Nw York, for Antwerp. 1 1 1 BRALTAR, Nov. 10 Arrived: Thn. tram New York. Sailed: Aller, from Genoa and Naples, for New York. NKW YORK. Nov. 10. Arrived: Trave. from Genoa. Naples and Gibraltar. Sailed: Manltou. for Iamdon. ST. MICHAELS, Nov. 10 Passed: Palatia, from Genoa and Naples, for New York. GLASGOW. Nov 10. Arrived: Laurentian. from New Y'ork. IIAVRK, Nov. 10 Arrived: La Gaacogne, from New York. LIVERPOOL, Nov. 10.-Arrived: Tunisian, from Montreal. TIS TIME TO BUY YOUR Underwear We have some special values to offer that will be very interesting to under war buyers. A very good article Is the ROYAL SILK PLUSH UNDERWEAR At I1.50 per Garment. Warranted not to shrink. The construction of this fabric is such that the cold does not penetrate, and th. Sll.K PLUSH on the inside of the warmest causes a friction that warms the body without irritating the skin. Norfolk and New Brunswick WOOL UNDERWEAR The oldest and best make, all sizes, stouts and Ilms, for $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 Derby Ribbed and Wool Fleeced Underwear in Tan, Blue ami Ecru; also toucy Stripes for 50 cents per Garment Regular 7c values. Danbury Hat Co.

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II I

the bottle, and had not permeated the other stuff below. Cornish got it home Just in time. He knew Mrs. Adams was subject to headaches, and twelve hours after the bromo reached the tlat Mrs. Adams had taken it. She was gone. There was nothing now to stand in the way of that unlimited passion which burns cities and destroys empires." Mr. Black argued from the testimony of the chemical experts who analyzed the contents of the glass from which Mrs. Adams drank that Corn'sh lied when he said he drank a "good swallow" of the mixture, and quoted from Professor Witthaus to prove that half an Inch depth of the mixture in the glass would have killed anyone who took it. "Cornish never tasted the liquor" Mr. Black said. The x-Gocrnor traced Cornish's actions after Mrs. Adams's death. "Were his actions those of an honest man?" he asked. "Why did he not go home and help Mrs. Rogers in hT troubles? No; he wanted to pose. He showed himself to his chemist friend Vokum. and then went to bed in Yokum's room at the club. Th n he called in five friends to tell them how sick he was. What else did he do. He stayed away from the Adams's flat until after the funeral. He never dared to face that dead woman." Ex-Governor Black declared the case asrainst Cornish far stronger than the case against Molincux. "Kvery fact in the case points toward Cornish." he said. "and nothing against the testimony of the hand-writing experts points to Molineux." Mr. Black closed at 3:25, having spoken three hours and nfty-five minutes. mr. osBOmori argument. Assistant District Attorney Osborne, In opening for the prosecution, ridiculed the argument of the counsel for the defense that the death of Mrs. Adams was the result of a deliberate design of Cornish, and argued that it would be absurd to suppose that Cornish would go down town to mail a package to himself. "It was not disputed by the defense," Mr. Osborne went on, "that the three Cornish letters and the poison package wrapper are In the same, handwriting. Well, look at the corner Governor Black haa put himself in by trying to show that Cornish is the criminal. Cornish must have taken the address from some parcel, and then have got the writer to write three letters for him and signed H. Cornish" to them. That writer would own Cornish body and soul, and could hand him over to the law for conviction and electrocution. Is It reasonable to suppose any thing of the sort? If Governor Black's assumptions are true," Mr. Osborn. said. 'orni?h without any necessity for doing so. handed over to the authorities the only means of tracing the crime to him and his associates the poison wrapper, the poison and the silver holder. Js that a fair reasoning?" Mr. Osborne touched on Governor Black's charge that the prosecution had suppressed the evidence of the envelopes found in MolIneaux's desk. "Now. I am not hurt at that charge," he said. "Governor Black did not mean that personally, and I took it in a Pickwickian sense. He did not mean that any more than he meant we suppressed tho envelopes of the Cornish letters. He knows that we never had those envelopes. The envelopes taken from Molineaux's desk were given to the defense and the other letters we suppressed were marked for identification in the last trial, and eliminated from this trial, because the defense thought we hsd enough handwriting exhibits without them." Referring to the statement made by Mr. Black that Cornish did not attend the funeral of Mrs. Adams and dared not face the dead woman. Mr. Osborne read the minutes Jo show that Cornish visited the flat before Mrs. Adams's body was removed and, that ex-Governor Black had refused to let him tell on the witness stand why he was absent from the funeral. Then counsel contradicted ex-Governor Black's contention that Cornish was shamming sick, and read the evidence of the doctors who attended Cornish in the Knickerbocker Athletic Club, who said they found him suffering from an irritant poisoning. The insinuation that a motive for the murder of Mrs. Adams could be found in Cornish's feelings for Mrs. Rogers, the prosecuting attorney said was not worthy of consideration. All the evidence, he said, showed that Mrs. Adams and Cornish were on the best of terms, and he added that there was nothing against Mr.;. Rogers's character ejccejl the insinuations of the defendant's lawyers. QUESTION OF MOTIVE. Coming to the question of motive Mr. Osborne went to show that Molineux had attempted to injure Cornish even after Molineux had left the club, and cited as evidence of the enduring nature of Molineux's ill will, the Scheffler letter written nearly a year after his resignation frem the Knickerbocker Athletic Club, and letter about Harpster, Cornish's friend, sent to Stearns & Co. "We tind." he went on, "that Molineux had the motive and we find that he had or could have had the poison. He was experimenting in the manufacture of ship paint and one of the uses of cynanide of mercury is for the manufacture of ship paint." As to the purchase of the bottle holder Mr. Osborne said that Molineux was daily in Newark and knew the Hartdegen store well, at which he had a friend, Arnold. Why. then, he asked, did not the defense call Arnold who had refused to come here for the prosecution. Taking up the evidence of the handwriting experts Mr. Osborne said the testimony of David H. Carvalho, the expert called by the defense, proved his contention that Molineux wrote th poison p u kage wrapper. Carvalho said the wrapper addr.ss was not disguised sufficiently to hide the characteristics of the natural hand of the writer. "By whom do I convict Molineux of that writing?" he demanded, "out of the mouths of his enemies? No. Out of the mouths of his friends. Two bankers of Newark who knew Molineux and his writing and who had no enmity towards Molineux told you they were sure Molineux wrote those disputed writings. I am satisfled to let that portion of the accusation against Molineux rest upon the testimony of Carvalho." Mr. Osborne declared that no man could avoid seei ist; the likeness between the characters in .needed writing of Molineux and the on package wrapper. He argued that the writer dared not entirely hide his hand or use printing characters or a typewriter for fear of defeating his object in arousing the suspicion of the recipient of the package. "The sender of that package had to use a pen. He found himself having to decide." counsel said "between the Scylla of doubt and the t'harybdis of his own identity." At 6 o'clock Justice Lambert announced a suspension of the proceedings until tomorrow morning. Mr. Oshorne said it would take him three hours to finish his address, but Justice Lambert said ho would allow him only two and a half hours. That will take him to the time for adjournment for lunch and the afternoon session will be started with the charge of Justice Lambert. Henry Hogfri Dead. NEW YORK. Nov. 10.-Henry Rogers, son-in-law of the late Mrs. K. J. Adams, who was the victim of the poison supposed to have been sent to Harry S. Cornish, is dead at his home in this city. TAR AVB FEATHER CASE.

Itiehard Harding- Davis Denies ContrlhntluK to Defence Fund. MARION. Mass.. Nov. 10. The McDonald tar and feather case, which is the sole topic of conversation in the village, will be called to trial here this week. Marion is the summer home of such wellknown persons as Richard Harding Davis, the novelist; Charles Dana Gibson, the artist; the Hawlinses, Reeds and Thawr of Boston; J. M. Clark, of Chicago, and the Pegrams. of Providence. Ex-President Cleveland and Joseph Jefferson are near-by residents. Yet. exclusive as Marlon is. on Aug. 5 last James McDonald was tarred and feat hen d here, and it is hinted that some of the distinguished summer reidents participated in the work. It has been stated that flO.Oon has been raised by the cottagers as a defense fund Within a week local newspapers have alleged that Richard Harding Davis had contributed 1,000 to the fund. This statement Mr. Davis denies. Five men hae been arrested on charges of participating in the tar and feathering and their cases are the ones to be heard this week Case of K'lf-ll pnotlsni. NEW YORK. Nov. JO Details concerning the autopsy performed on the body of Nellie Corcoran, the (pheteen-yeiar-old Irl who died Saturday after a trance of twenty days, are interpreted as confirming the theory that her condition was due to hysteria. No sign of disease was found In any organ. The physicians believe th girl's original sleep was cause bv selfhypnotism, and that hysteria followed. EcsruiM, o lirr, So Pay. Druggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT falls .to cure Ringworm. Tetter, Old Ulcers and Bores, Pimples and Blackheads ou the face, and ail akin diseases. 50 cents.

MARKLE'S MEN TO WORK

ALL WILL BE REISTATED EXCEPT A BLACKLISTED THIRTEEN Poor More Anthraelte Collieries to Resume To-Day Trouble at the Coxe Minen. BAZLETON, Pa.. Nov. 10.-G. B. Markle A Co. and their 2,500 men who refused to return to work because they were asked to make individual application for their positions, came to an agreement to-day and operations at the four Markle collieries will be resumed to-morrow. The company offered to reinstate all the employes except the thirteen recently evicted, and not to discriminate against members of the union on condition that the men agree to abide by the decision of the arbitration commission and answer questions as to their age and other details before resuming their places. These terms were accepted. The thirteen evicted employes who will not be taken back, according to the company officials, under any consideration, will be provided for by the United Mine Work- r s. Among this number are the president, the sec retary and the treasurer of the Jeddo local union. A conference was held at Drifton to-day betW'- n the officials of Coxe Bros. & Co. and a committee of the company employes, to bring about, if possible, a settlement of the difficulty at the ''oxes collieries, which have not yet resumed operations because of the refusal of the men to apply Individually for their old positions as required. The mine workers' committee present1 written demand that all the men be reinstated and that the company give a guarantee that it will abide by the decision of the arbitration commission. The NEW YORK'S

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PBWCE. HESSXÄI oFPUSJS

Prince Henry is the German representative at

Commerce.

answer of the company was given in a sealed envelope, which was not opened until the executive board of district No. 7 convened thi.-s . ning. It is understood that President Stearns agrees to reinstate all men for whom places can be found, but declines to discharge any nonunionista to make room for strikers. President Stearns return- I to New York this evening. His proposition, k is said, is not satisfactory to the men and probably will be rejected. The executive board reached no decision to-night on the proposition of President Stearn. The matter will be considered further to-morrow. General Strike Threatened. TAMAQUA, Pa.. Nov. 10. At a meeting of the employes of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company a committee was appointed to wait upon W. D. Zepner, the superintendent, and inform him that unless the 218 officials of the various local unions in the Panther Creek Valley, who. it is said, have been blacklisted, are reinstated in their old positions before the enl of the week, a general strike will be ordered. Ten Miners Injured. WlhKESBARRE. Pa., Nov. 10. Jacob Bengert, engineer at No. 2 colliery of the Lehigh Valley Coal Company at Pittston, lost control of his engine this morning and ten men who were being lowered into the ndne in the carriage were injure. I. When the carriage struck the foot of the shaft the men were thrown several feet in the air and fell again on the carriage with much force. LORD MAYOR'S PARADE. (CONU'DED FROM FIRST PAGE.) were the same proportion of miners working at other places. One company which was hesitating over accepting arbitration has r. carved a vigorous letter from Premier Combes asking it not to temporize. William nnd Edward Spend Qnlet Day. SANOR1NGHAM, England, Nov. 10.-The royal party spent a quiet day to-day. The shooting expedition of the morning was successful and in the afternoon a clump of beach trees was planted on the Sandrinffham eetata Later in the day Emperor W illiam and King Edward attended the dinner given by the King to the laborers on hi.s es tati to celebrate the anniversary of his birthday. King Edward inviting the company to drink to the health of the German Emperor, expressed the hope that he would often see Kinpcror William at Sandringham again. The Emperor did not reply to the Klnffi but smiled his acknowledgement. Lord Lansdowne. the foreign secretary, was among the guests of King Eld ward who arived at Sandringham today. Walloon with a Sail. LONDON. Nov. 10 The Rev. J. M. Bacon, the aeronaut, accompanied by official representatives of the i.aval and military authorities, ascended in a balloon from Douglas. Isle of Man. to-day with the object of crossing the channel. The balloon is fitted with a sail and a trail rope for purposes of steering. The gunboat Renard is following the balloon, so as to be of assistance in case of mishap. The balloon started in a northeasterly direction. News has reach iure that Mr. Bacon, in his balloon, descended In Dumfriesshire, Scotland. Georg Ade Coming; Home. LONDON. Nov. 10.-The White Star line teaaner Majestic, which sails from Liverpool for New York Wednesday, takes amonK her passengers Lord Hawkes and his team of cricketers and George Ade, of Chicago, and Jaros Lai Kocian, tho volinlst. pnnlsh Cabinet Resigns. MADRID. Nov. 10. Premier Sagasta today tendered to King Alfonso the resignation of the enure Cabinet. The King will de ide to-morrow whi ther he will accept the ministers' resignation. Should the

King accord a continuance of his confidence in Premier Sagasta. th Ministry will be modified and probably the ministers of war, marine and justi :e will be sacrificed.

Pooltaey Blgelow Injured. MUNICH. Bavaria. Nov. W Poultney Blgelow. the author, was thrown from his horse to-day while hunting with the officers of the garrison, and suffered a fracture of the collar bone. J Cable Vote. Count Von Wedel, German -imbassador to Italy, has been appointed to succeed Prince Von Eulenburg as ambassador of Germany at Vlsnna. A special dispatch from Cap Town announces that an area of eight acres at Eastland. Cape Colony, has been destroyed by fire. Thirty large buildings in the center of the town were destroyed. Sydney Waterlow, attache of the British embassy at Washington, and A'lce. daughter of Sir Frederick Pollock, were married in London yesterday. The Bishop of Winchester officiated at the ceremony, which was attended by Ambassador and Mrs. Choate and many other well-known people. The arrest of Mascagnl. the Italian comfoser, at Boston, has caused an unpleasant mpression in Rome, and muco indignant comment is heard. The paier; ask if. in view of the personality of Mascagnl. his arrest could not have been avoided, and inquire what would have been said In the United States if Mark Twain had been arrested in Rome for law-breakuig through Ignorance. The Canadian emigration office in London, which was recently promoted to the dignity of a special bureau vdth a comwloner of its own. Is pn pariug to branch out to an extensive scale with the view of popularizing emigration to the. Northv . it Commissioner Preston says: 'We expect next year to place 1G0.000 emigrants in western Canada and we sh: 11 probably draw a third each from the 1 lited States, the United Kingdom and th rest from Europe." The German imperial marine ministry has decided to assign several cruisers to ROYAI, VISITOR. the opening of the New York Chamber of duty on the Pacific coast of North and South America, when vessels, now being completed, become available. The western American squadron will be permanently atabllahed not for any specific purpose, but in accordance with goi i 1 naval dispositions. Like the eastern American squadron it will not have a base. Vessels will simply be sent to varioup ports according to the requirements of the moment. Lord George Hamilton, the Indian secretary, in submitting the Indiai budget statement in the British h'ouse' of Commons yesterday pictured the Increasing prosperity of India in spite of the ravages 6f famine and said the only ltm showing a decrease In revenue was opium. The income for the current year was so ample that the government had decided to make a special grant of 17,500.000 fcr the relief of the sufferers from drought and famine, and the secretary expected that the surplus would still exceed $8.500.000. The secretary paid a high tribute to the viceroy of India, Lord Curzon of Kedleston. TOLD STORY OF ASSAULT. The Police Investigation, However, Brought the Facta to l ight. Acting on Information from Mrs. Craig, living at No. 2030 North Capitol avenue, that her housemaid. Mrs. Xlertha Wilson, had come home Sunday n ornlng at 2:30 o'clock suffering from sev re wounds on the head, face and limbs that she claimed to have received at the hands of a negro ruffian who assaulted her. Captain Hyland last night male an investigation of the affair. It was learned that Ora Brown, a colored employe of Frank van Camp, living at No. MM North Meridian street, had two white women in his stable late Saturday night. Mrs. Brown wert home Sunday morning about 1:30 o'clock and found the two white women with hr husband. A fight ensued and one of the women, said by Captain Hyland to be Mrs. Wilson, was severely beaten by Mrs. Brovn. Mrs. Wilson arrived at her home about 2:30 o'clock Sunday raornint; and told Mrs. Craig that she had fallen fr m a street car. Sunday afternoon her injuries had taken such a serious turn that she was sent to the City Hospital, where s?e is now in a ward. At tho hospital Mrs. Wilson, who Is a widow, said that she received her injuries from a negro who dragged her into an alley between Illinois and Meridian streets on Thirteenth street and beat h?r severely and left her unconscious. fhe said she did not revive until 1:30 o'clock. She told the detectives that she could not identify her assailant. LAST OF THE QTT ARTET. McAfee's Suicide lreeeud by the SelfKllllns of Three of Bis Frlenda. LOUISVILLE. Ky.. Nov 10. Mrs. Julia Long, the mother of John cAtee, the Kansas City Southern clerk who is reported to have committed suicide Li Kansas city yesterday because of an accusation of attempted robbery, rejects th!e story of theft as the motive. She says John McAtee is an only son, and could ha - e had financial assistance had he asked f of it. A grewsome coincidence comes to light in connection with the ddath of McAtee. When he was a young man he was Intimate with three other well-kno'vn young men Irvin Glllls. Dudley Reynolds and Will Coker. Each of these me;i has since died by his own hand and McA.ee is the last of the quartet to lake his life President Will Attend. CANTON. O.. Nov. 10. -.judge Henry W. Harter has returned frdm Washington where he went on behal; of the Canton Republican League to extend an invitation to President Roosevelt to 'attend the coming McKinley memorial bai quet. The President accepted the Invitation, and is expected to make an address. The banquet will be held on the evening af Jan. 27. TO CI HE A COLD I! ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AH druggists refund the mo&ey if it Tails to cur. w. ureve s Signatur is ea

EDISON'SGREAT INVENTION

A THOROIGH AXD EFFECTIVE DISEASE AND GERM DESTROYER. ev Discovery Pronounced the Greatest Boon of the u-. NEW YORK, Nov. 10 Again science has lab. red and brought forth a marvel. This time the product is one of electricity the Magno Electric Vitalizer and its inventor is none other than Thomas A. Edison, jr., son of that great wizard who has given to the world so many wonders. The Magno Electric Vitalizer is now being offered to the public with absolute assurance that It will fill a want long felt. Its mission is one of hope to the despairing and it will be welcomed by thousands I throughout the land as a burst of golden sunlight on the black pathway of despair. Electricity has transformed the world and i why shouldn't it transform the world s methods of curing its sick? This is the reasoning of Thomas A. Edison. Jr.. in his presentation of the Magno Electric italizer. This invention has already commanded the attention of medical men and of the laity in ail parts of the world. It has remarkable energizing and rejuvenating propertii s. It la being placed on the market by Mr. Edison's own company, the Thomas A. Edison. Jr., Chemical Company, 4 Stone streu. New York. A booklet containing complete Information is being sent out free on application to those who suffer from Consumption. Bronchitis. Malaria. Rheumatism. Debility, Sleeplessness, Nervous Exhaustion and to all who may be Interested in cures of disease by electricity. STEAMSHIP WRECKED. Ninety-Six of the Crew nnd Passengers Missing Forty-One Saved. MELBOURNE, Nov. 10. The British steamer Elingamitc, bound from Sidney, N. S. W., for Auckland, has been wrecked on Three Kings islands. Forty-one of those on board the steamer were saved and ninety-six are misring. WELLINGTON. N. Z., Nov. 10. The lost steamer Elingamite carried 110 passengers. She was wrecked Sunday morning. Six of her boast and two rafts left the vessel. Twenty-seven of the strainer's passengers and fifteen of her crew have landed at N w Zealand. Steamers have been sent out to search for the rafts and four of the boats which are still missing. Lloyd's reports thirty-seven of the passengers have been saved, but that it is feared the remainder have been lost. YOUNG WOMAN MURDERED. Criminally Assaulted nnd Her Head Afterward Badly Mutilnted. ALBANY. N. Y.. Nov. 10. Anna Mitchell, seventeen years old, employed by Captain Adrian W. Mather, at Loudonville.was murdered some time last night. She left her employers house early last evening to visit her parents, whose home is about a mile distant. Her body was found to-day In a field in the rear of Captain Mather's home with the head crushed In. No weapon of any kind was found near the body. Ai. autopsy revealed the fact that Miss Mitchell had been criminally assaulted before the murder was committed. Her skull was fractured and the entire left side of her face was shockingly cut and mashed apparently with a club. There was also a hole above the right eye the size of a silver dollar. Detectives Nolan and Wilson, of the Albany detective force, to-night lodged in the central police station Fred Knapp, a farm hand, charged with the crime. CUT-RATERS COMBINE. About 400 Independent Druggists Form a Protective Association. CLEVELAND, O., Nov. 10. W. G. Marshall, a druggist of this city, Is authority for the statement that the cut-rate druggists of the United States have formed a protective association. Several of the large cities are already largely Interested in the association. The capitalization is placed at (500,000. Four hundred druggists are said to be interested. Goods manufactured by independent druggists will be given the preference of the new association. The organization will be known as the United Drug Company. Provisions will be made to reduce the cost of drugs to purchasers and also to supply the members of the T'nited Drug Company with articles which It is now difficult to obtain. The company has employed a number of chemists, and will manufacture proprietary and patent medicines, and the staple drugs. STRICKEN IN THE PULPIT. Collapse of Dr. John Heid Jost as He Was Beginning to Pray. NEW YORK. Nov. 10. Dr. John Reid, of the Memorial Presbyterian Church, one of Brooklyn's best-known ministers, has been stricken suddenly, in his pulpit, Just as he was beginning a prayer. His collapse was caused by acute indigestion and his condition is reported as being serious. The church was crowded by a fashionable congregation when the minister was overcome. Several of those sitting near the pulpit sprang to his aid and caught him as he fell. A doctor, who was present, worked over him fifteen minutes before restoring consciousness. The minister was taken to his home and the congregation, which had been greatly excited, was dismissed. IN TOM JOHNSON S TOWN. Sensation Created by Demand for Res. Ignatlon of Police Captains. CLEVELAND, Nov. 10. A sensation was created in police circles to-day when Director of Police Dunn demanded the resignations of five captains of police for disobedience of instructions in connection with an order issued on election day for the purpose of keeping saloons closed. In many cases it Is said saFoons were open. The five captains arc R. H. Hutchinson, E. W. Bradley, Michael English. M. F. Madigan and Jacob Lohrer. The captains were given three days in which to make up their minds about it. and if they do not resign, it is said charges will be preferred against them and they will be tried by the maor's tribunal. Three Passengers Seriously Hart. BLOOMINGTON. 111.. Nov. 10. In a collision on the Chicago & Alton last night, at Berdon, a small station south of Roodhouse, three passengers were seriously, but, it is believed, not fatally injured, and the engine of the train badly damaged. While the St. Louis veatibuled limited was stopping at the station It was struck a side blow by a light engine on an adjoining track. The passengers were all badly shaken up. the three following being the most seriously hurt: G. W. Guest. St. Louis; Mrs. G. W. Guest. St. Louis; H. J. Knott. Springfield. Obituary. ST. LOUIS. Nov. 10 MaJ. Charles C. Rainwater, aged sixty-four, died at his home here to-night from chronic stomach trouble. He was president of the Merchants' bridge, in the construction of which across th Mississippi, here, he assisted, and during the civil war he served on the Confederate side. BOSTON. Nov. lO.-Mles Abbie B. Child, home secretary of the Women's Board of Home Missions (Congregational), died suddenly of heart disease at her home here yesterday. Fell ZOO Feet. MORRISTOWN. N. J., Nov. 0 Two miners were killed this evening at the iron mines at Mt. Kooe by falling down a

ROOICWOOD I

In Indianapolis this celebrated Pottery is vnlrl h this hnima Xmas selections de livered at any time desired.

CHARLES tf sl Y E H. ö CO.. INDIANAPOLIS.

MANUFACTURER OF GRILLES AND FRETWORK.;

Wall Paper ea ther

No better time of the year to hare the house repapered than now. No better time to get a choice of auch a large variety of designs. No place so good to get them and have the work done right as at.

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Albert Gall

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shaft two hundred feet deep. Five others had a nurrow escape. The seven were in a skip and were being hoisted out of the mine when their day's work was over. When part way up the skip ovt-rtumed. Five of the men managed to leap to the sides of the shaft and grasp the supporting beams. The other two. whose names have not been learned, missed their hold when they jumped and fell to the bottom of the shaft. REPUDIATED PROPHECY. Harris's Remark About Roosevelt Gives Him n Grievance. Hartford Courant. Letting him tell it. Hon. William Alexander Harris has a grievance against some Kansas reporter unknown. Last week he made a speech to the honest farmers of Elk county. Next moning, in the local newspaper, he was reported to this effectthat "the big trust magnates would force the Republicans to drop Theodore Roosevelt, and that the Democrats would immediat ly pick him up, nominate him for the presidency and elect him." The nredlrtion was put on the wires and has gone all over the I country. Now Senator Harris writes to the editor of the Topeka Journal that the reporu-r was heedless, stupid or mendacious. "I said no such thing." he writes. Then he proceeds to tell what he did say. This was that if Mr. Roosevelt crowded and anfand the trusts the Republican senators would abandon him and the Democratic senators wodld support him solidly. Nothing was said about 1904. he writes. The Boston Pilot is one of the Democratic journals that accepted the telegraphed version of the senator s utterance as authentic. It believed that Harris had rally seen, in his mind's eye, Theodore Roosevelt running for the presidency year after next as the nominee of the Democratic party. And this is what our brilliant but occasionally erratic Boston contemporary said of the remarkable vision: "Well, worse things than that might happen; but are the Republicans fatuous enough to give the people such a chance of killing the trust power? If they should do o. and the Democrats take up President Roosevelt, he would be elected in spite of all the money in America; and. if elected, he would be seated. There would not be any electoral commission to cheat the Nation as was done in 1876. Fancy any eight to seven vote 'counting out' Theodore and Strenuous!" But it's all a dream, beloved: all a beautiful, tantalising, deludtherlng dream. No such undeserved good fortune is in store for the Democratic party, this journey. Mr. Roosevelt is spoken for. You will have to put up one of your own sort of folks year after next, as usual, and our sympathies go out to him in advance. MAKING A PRECEDENT.

Strike Commission Seta a New Pace la Arbitration Matters. Chicago News. Judging from the preliminary steps which it is taking preparatory to holding its regular sittings, the coal strike commission is going to establish some valuable precedents for the guidance of other arbitration tribunals. The members of the commission have gone to the coal mines, where they can see and judge of the miners' conditions from personal observation. They have Inspected the homes in which the mine workers live and th- place where they work. Tiuy have gone down Into the mines and studied at first hand the methods by which coal is blasted out and brought to the surface, weighed and paid for and loaded upon cars for shipment. That these investigations will prove of great assistance to the commissioners when they come to weigh the evidence and determine the needs of justice cannot be doubted. No array of statistical reports and arguments can take the place of personal observation. No amount of tlaortg Jng as to what may or may not be done to improve the miners' condition can . ad t so just a conclusion as can be derived fr rssj a study of concrete conditions and actual working methods. Wh. ti the representatives of the mine workers and the operators come to pres. tit their cases the commissioners will underetand clearly what those advocates are talking about. However bewildering may be the mass of reports, argurmnts and figures heaped up before them, they will always have in mind the actualities of the work of mining and the conditions in which it is carried on. From what they know as a result r observation they will be the better able to Judge of the value of the tvldecOS an.', the force of the arguments present The commission, in short, is proceeding along the exceedingly practical line of action which is surest to enable it to pass upon this strike problem wisely and intelligently. ColoaellslB the Month. Springfield Republican. The newly inaugurated Governor of Georgia has appointed a personal military' staff of 100. all gaining thereby the title of colonel. This is one of the ways in which pretty much the whole adult male population of the South Is colonellred. And so, too. is the title cheapened the country On r There is now much more distinction in being a major than a colonel. Massachusetts did well when the Legislature put the brakes on colonel-making, and required some military training as a prerequisite to appointment on the Governor's staff. Hope aad Despondency. Sioux City (la.) Journal. Election morning always finds th? Democrats fuil Of hope. But how different the cold gray dawn of the morning after!

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We do it promptly. t eolcationaV. Indianapolis Conservatory of Music EDGAR N. CAWLEY. P rector. 509 North Illinois Street All Branches or Music Taughr Boarding D pertinent tor Young l-sdiea. -SENI KoK A i AI.'Mil K.C INDIANAPOL S OMMERCLAL &CHOOI, lac a.-oar ati Mtiuli Bläa r - -1 Superior shorthand. course of trm Bookkeeping. ty,'-wrltl!s lndTl ual Instruction. Johnson's TELEGRAM SCHOOL Majestic Building, India, Spoils. Ind. Telegraphy practically taucht. Positions secured. Dar and Nihi Schollt Catalogue and testimonials fr . f BVORIESfs" USINESS COiLEGH Phoses 1254. MoasnKM Place, ftsjrai only acnool here uslnc the 1-- 4 oratory II ci So Ja, Only school here teaching tuu. tor puno; tpewriting and EnH.h. Thess na thuds nable th learnr to go from the sctuA into the office without Intermediate experierfe. Positions secured Call on. phone or wrl H. D. VÖRIES. ex-State Superintendent Puhli. Instruction. Pres. PH VSICI A' 13. J. 1 l'At; -V Uli NMT. hejrtKtered OsteopaikU- ny .ici.m Tr ats suecv&sfullr all form, of - nlc a meases aad deformities, aid- many s-ril-v Incurables to recover KunimUon free; Jforei.cea Pnone ma n 3t70 i.esid nets, 912 ' A" a bam a st. Phons green. Mtjt PI th Floor Btevenavi Bn tiding. ff-a. DR. 8 WAINS HEAifll HOME 73 Middle Drive, Wocflrnff Place Superior accommodations for chronic and nervous cases. Afternoon office. VJ S. Illinois st. SPECIAL RATE FOR N Treatments only fl each by Dr. F.?A'. Hannah, graduate of the American Schoo Klrksvlile, Mo., and ex-Pre. National 0t- Kathie Association. Hours, 9-12. 1-4. other hour, by appointment. 4ul Law lildf. Phorie, New J. -- - i - j DR. C. L FLETCHER. RESIDENCE 10S North Pe insylvanla street OPP1CB Til South alerldlai street. Office Hours tt to 10 a. m . A to 4 p. m , 7 to I p. m. Telephone Residence. ew, 417; old. lttl Brown. f A SURE CURE FOR HEU MAT ISM DR. C. H. FR! CAN, . . 7SO Newton Clsypo 4 Building:. .. Hour 10 a. m to 1 p. m.. and Hot a. m. QUEER "FUN" A BEL0IT. a 4 Sophomores Shower fttreshmea with Foul-Smelling besnleals. BELCIT, Wis., Nov. 1" A banquet of the Belolt college freshrn was successfully broken up to-night 1 M he sophomores. The freshmen tried to k -p the time and ue of their event a ivcret, but failed to do so. ani while th were enjoying their spread the sophmr-.res climbed up on surrour.cllnb- bunding broke In some windows and showered Che banquet ball will eg-gs, foul smelling chemicals and liquid glue. The freshn ii r. . u ously and clothing was vn on both sldea. While the battle was on. Vorne foil through the ceiling tnto the banquet hall. This led to a call f?r the police, who rounded up the sophomo? s. sec uring their names. After seizing the ; lands the sophomores ran through town-bating them and yelling. Tho fi.-.hmtn rallied as beat thejr could, consumed what ua left of a flna dinner and carried outt their lost programme without furth t interference. I Will Cure You of r Rheumatism Else No Money 1 Wanted. AftiT expeiimenu I have learned how to cure RheumatiKii Not to turn bony joints into flesh again; 'nat Is Impossible. But I can cure the disee always, at any stage, and forever. 1 ask lor no money, fmply write me a postal and I will send ,vou an order oq your nearest druggist i rr six bottles Tr. Shoop's Rheumatic Cur for every druggist keeps it. Use it for a month, and. if it succeeds, the cost Is onlv.-B.lO. If it falls I will pay your druggist rself 1 hav no samples. tV'ause any medicine that can affect R . umatlsm quickly must be drugged to th .verge of danger, l ue no such drugs, an It Is folly to take them. You must get t' e disease out of tl.c blood. 4 My remedy does tnat.even in the mal GiiiKult. obstinate case 4? No matter how unposblble this seems to ou I know it. and 1 take the risk. ; L have cured tens of thousands of risen in this way. and my r s'.rds show that 9 out of 40 who get th six bottles pay gladly. l have learned that pple In generrj arc honeat with a physlcUr who cure ibem. That U all I ask if I. tail I don t evpect a penny from yon. Simply write me a p?:tal card or letter, i win send you my b.-.t about Rheum. Utm and an oruw i roeaicine. Ta t fils It is free, vkd I 1 k. .i clflon with you. Aaai--s ur. snoop. h0 7. Racine. Wis. Mild cases, not ehro'.o are ft, eur

WT one or iw - cuuguta.

v t. .sbiorton St. f

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