Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 45, Number 52, Jasper, Dubois County, 11 September 1903 — Page 2
WeekluCourier. AmT l PTMAKA.
The Qnlon grocery build lms Vlntoc. la . being remodeled, collapsed, on the 4th. Half a dozen workmen were 1 reported buried in ihe ruin. 8t Louis established a tax collection record, on the 1st. the r.- -iits aggresatin $4,7u7. with. The largest amount j received on a single tax bill was $13,$97.36. and the smallest ... cents. Severe censure of the practice of j peonage and the perjii comerned in the cases recently brought to light m Alabama was contained tn the message . of Gov. JelVa sent to the täte legi&U ture on the lc Pield Marshal Lord Roberts is not comtntr to the United States this autumn. The alteration in his plans mas necessitated by the postponement of the British army maneuvers until the middle of September. For the payment of $10, the Schrille College of Law " has offered to confer the degree of Doctor of Laws upon Rev. George E Bate. ;a.-t..r i the First Congregational church ol Maple wood, St. Louis Vermillion county. Illinois, was, a' last accounts, in a dilemma All of the tames deposited in the jury box by the board of supervisors had been drawn Witness! securing a Jury to try the L'snvills rioters. Twenty-nine lives were lost as the result of three explosions on board the steamer Vaskapu, en routa from Varna to Constantinople The explosions are said to have been due to an insurgent plot. A permit for tbe erection of the Illinois building at the St Louis World's j fair has been issued to Janus Lawrence Brown, tbe superintendent of the building, for the Illinois commis sion Consrressman Timothy P Sullivan. of New York city, is now the head of the fraternal order of Eagles, having been elected grand worthy- master at . the convention in Tammany ball on ths 4 th John B. McCormick iMacon. the: sporting writer, died, on the 4-h. al Bath Beach. N Y . from Bright s disSSS He wsvs born in Cincinnati in 1837. For 20 years he was connected i Will the Cincinnati Enquirer. Mrs. Roland B. Molineaux has departed from South Dakota, and it j transpires that she has se ured a di- ; Tone, quietly and surreptitiously la one of the Interior count ies, on evi. dence taken before a referee a: Castle- j wood. The Lipton company in EIntland ha' raised tbe price of jams one penny a Jar, and the story has gone out that the tonsumer are to be compelled to pay Sir Thomas- bills in connection with his efforts to lift the aSMTSCai cup Frederick R Coudert. lawyer, public speaker and lecturer, was reported, oa the 4th. to be very ill at his summer borne on Cove Neck road, at Oyster Bay. N. Y. He is a sufferer from heart failure, and his physician h-ld out no hope for his recovery. Acting Attorney General M Reynolds says that when the investigation in Indian territory and Oklahoma, is complete, "no honest or straight forward offldal of the department will suffer Every dishonest man will be dealt sRI sa his se ts warrant '' The federal grand Jury in Washington, D. C. adjourned, on the 4th. until the &th. without making the expected , report in the postal cases It is not certain, though rather generally ex- ' peeted. thst indictments will follow immediately the reast-embliag of tbe Jury. Tbe comptroller of the currency at I Washington. D C . received a report from tbeGroesbe'k national bank of I Croesbeck. Tex . which show,j the total liabilities of tbe bank la St fltfv K9.41 and the estimated value of assets to be $14.6&4. show ing a de'i iei.cy of $.46". 01. In an effort to pr. rve fro S3 further decay the tomb and mansion of tjeorp Washington at Mount Vernon a Hire oi mn is a ufk irea.iui; uh limestone, of which the tomb is built, with a vulcanizing process. whi h. it is ! uppoed, will make it aataffXoof and Imperi.-halle Fijrene Zimmerman, of Cinc nni :. vle-president of the F;n inna:i. Hamilton Sc Dayton sysfm .f rabn ads. f i ther of theduche- f Ma:.- I. r. and one of the most prominent capitalists Of the country, whose name as wet known in the eltlos of the eat as ia tbe west, wavs reported, on the 2d, to he seriously III. The Southern Pacific, Cnion Pacific and connecting mads took independent i trtion in the matter of colonist rates to California this fall. -nd annoumed on the 3d. that they would put then. Into effect on September 1 and elally antil November 3". It is expected that this action will result in very heavy travel to California during; this period Mr and Mrs Andrew Hanitsch. of Brooklyn, N. Y., celebrated thtlr golden wedding anniversary on ths 40th. and received many valuable presents, among which was a gold brooch tn tbe form of four-laaved c lover from Kins Edward of Great Britain, for whom. Id 1S60 Mr lianitsch made a pair of toots on short notice, whlls hit SASji-ity was vlilting this country. i
Alfred E l.yford. altaa B. C Miller, es deputy county treasurer of Hook Island county, Illinois, has been arrested In Victoria, B. C, on a telegram from Rock Island. 111. Lyford ts alleged to hare absconded July 3. 1SKC. with $12.000 of county funds. Three bundred milk dealers In convettion at Pittsburg. Pa . haw p rfn-te.l
an organization which practically places the trade of Pittsburg and Allegheny in I the hands of a combine. Detroit, Mich., will be the mecca for the Disciples of ChrUt when th- int r- I national missionary convention of the Christian churches of the world conrene there tVtobr 16-22 inclusive. Reliance won the third and decisive; race in tbe International series for the America's cup. Shamrock III becoming j lost in the U g ai.il failing to eres tue line The sweet wine output for southern California for the season of 1903 will exOhf I I ,$$$ gallons. The output of brandy is estimated at $$, gallons. ; tax paid, and 2".o,000 gallons, free of tax. for f.rtif ir.g purposes rrires ior grapes range from $12 to $18 per ton. Champion Jeffries is matched to fight Jack Munroe at Los Aniales October 16. the latter to get all tbe proceeds if he stays 2ö rounds. The Indictment for manslaughter against directors and officials of a New Jersey trolley line, the result of a fatal accident, was dismissed by Chief Justice QVSMM re who held that the deaths were due to the carelessness of employes of the road Sit persons were killed and 25 Injured, oc fatally ant! two seriously. In a wreck on the Southern railway near Yorkvllle. S C The rn the . , mm shortage In ths salmon product ... . , Pa-fie coast 1 now said o; amount to !.W cases, and prices hare ear-- ' !y a h an. ! Superintendent Bauer, of the r.Ptcn Company of America, announces that the company WflS begin the manufacture of sirup at Peoria. Ill . within three months, and will erect the largest irup plar.t In the world. The Illinois Grand Corrmandory. K- fits Templar, win held its 1904 ron. lure in Chicaro. prmoTii. atd rot.iTir!.. C Frank Pricket t. one of the best known Citizens of southern Illinois, dropped dead at his home in Carbondale, 111., aged SI years. Dr George B Russell, one of the oldest and best known physicians of Michigan, diedat his torn? in D-troit . aged 87 years The Pennsylvania democratic täte convention nominated a state ticke! by acclamation headed by Senator Joel 1. Hill, of Wayr.e count v. for sta'e trrisurcr. Rev T'T James Leonard Corninr. the .-"lebrate.i pulpit orator and historian and diploma in dead in Munich Dr Corninc was 72 years old, I was an intimate fri'n 1 of Presi dent Lincoln. Gen l Henrv V.'ard Becher. The ongacervr.t of Mi-- Marv G elet, American heiress, to the duke of Roxburche of Scotland, is announced by Mrs Ogden Goelet. He is :,r. years ! -irl and has a. rer.t income of StiW .Vio yearly. Henry Wstlhmasr, an insane gardener with a loades revdver. made thre attempts ta interview President Roosevelt at Oyster Bay. anl was arrested He was afterward declr.red insane by experts. Henry Townend Edscn, son of a former mayor of New York, killed Mrs John F Pullen in the presence of his wife and then committed suicide.. The rejection by Mr- Pt,;;.n ol a proposal to elope with Edsoti preceded the trag edy. President Roosevelt and Secretary Hay lad Ofts tiM activity of Minister Reaupr- in pushing the canal treaty with Colombia, rontcnu. Dr. Barkhauson. president of the
Prussian Evangelical church, ls dead at 'was Fahren!. .t Berlin. j Uncle Sam's trKps ar.d afiJoa inen. The remains of Ixird Salisbury werelat Leavenworth. Kas. OH the T:h. for Interred BSlsfM ihosa of his wife in the the first time in the hist(.ry of f e .lay burial ground ef the Cecil. at Hatfield. joined hands in celebrating labors The arrangements were of the most prj- holiflay Two Ihoassad unlOS BOB anT vate and simple character. Simul- an eqssl aaBber of regulars Of all ar.eously a memorial service was held bran tses parade! in the mornin g and in Westminster abbey. lndulged In a military csralvsl in the The spirit of revolution is gaining In , afternoon force on the Isthmus, as the result of th- ijn, RooSSVOlt was. on the 7th, rejection rf the canal traty by the Co-' .or,,,.,, a ..,. r,., .o..n h.
lombisn congress at Bogota, says a dispatch from Manama The Ma edonian re o'm lonaries awaped the anniversary of the sultan's secession to proclaim the long anticipated general Insurrection In northern Macedonia At the village of Artrensl. after a day's flehrlriS. the Turkish troops In the night time massacred the entire population of 10 men and 200 women. The Turks have also massa red the Inhabitants of the village of Velesl. According to the latest Turkish official estlms'f about IJ$$$ Bulcarlans were killed In the recSBl fighting at Smllero. Neveska and Kllssurs. The Turkish lo?ses are not stated. Jose Marrero. a nem-leprous patient who was lib rated from the leper colony at San Juan, Porto Rico, as a result of the recent Investigation, died of heart diseased, superinduced by Joy at his release. The pone hns notified Minister Irishman that live arrests have been made at Beirut in connection with the shooting which led to the report that William C Mageissen, the United States vice and deputy consul there, had been assassinated. Negotiations bare been begun between Cuba and France for a treaty covering the general relations between the two countries. It Is expected thst a similar treaty with Spain will be conduced later. The Alsskan boundary commission was organized In London with Lord Chief Justice AI verstone, of England, as chairman and Reginald Tower secretary Oral acKuments will beirlnS.ptember 15. Tbe close is rxpeded CXtober 16.
The Jolo constabulary have cob It conflict with a body of insurgent In tbe province of Cavlte near the Uigui.a de Bay and killed 20 them during a sharp engageruc nt. The ronttahnlary hsd oue man 1.1.1. 1 during the fight. Anorliug to tellable roaaftS from Mtmuniir, thousand of Bi'.garii - In Html vilay. t are coufrontcd with fan
ue la addltiOS to Turkish paiSCClltlOS An Austr.ati s;c;u:. t w..s id. In the Black sea and 2 persOSJ kill d Macedonian retoIUÜonita arc i I tred issaUHlllla The saltas of Turkey, in an rOH to the heads of religious eommsnll : . - clares that all his desire It for the web fare of his people, without distil ! B In regard lo ither thO orrtliajlon T!:(. ropori of goaeraJ apt in northern Ma cdonla Is denied b."li In offb ;al and revolutionary circles at Sofia President Palma, on behalf of ths CuLan Agrarian !c.n .. sent a n..ssKe t() Present K v. :t e; r. s nR Mu (hat reciprocity will b approved. f.tTCt Adit -Gen Scott Issued an order, on the tith, pPMtiftf permtsMn to enter the state of Illinois fully armed and equipped to CosapS&y H. Fifty-fourth Infantry, of Hurlington. Ia . for the purpose of risitias. the Soldiers' and Sailors' sssnctetkni ol ffausooek ootn ty during the reunion to be held at Carthage September i and 10. The University of Kansas, at Topeka, will be equipped with a chair In jour-nali.-ni vii n it opens this fall, a . Itng to a statement issued, on the Gth. " r - bj Chancellor i'rank Mrong. ... lion to teaching the various l , , . In aiidiiranches of journalistic work, le t ares will Ls given iiy aewspaper sditoss sad mauagers. Gov. Psabody Of Colorado was threatened with assassination. On arriving hisothfc. on the Ith, he received an ant'nynious letter, threatening to kill him if be dared to call out the troops of the state In order to restore law and order in the Cripple Creek district. The lettt-r was abusive in the extreme. As the result of the enormous raiss in Insurance rates announced, ths packing ompanie? having plants in St Joseph, Mt., have leen considering a scheme for organizing a mutual company to protect their property fr.m fire and to escape what they term extortion by the insurance eXHBpaafSS While parsing QfSSavlsSi, 111 . at full speed the iniiler of a locomotive pulling a KansaF City fast freight train, westbound e n the Chicago & Alton railway exploded, on the 0th. killing Engineer Frank J. I'pton. of Rloomiugton ; probably fatally injuring Fireman C. C Keltner. of NoOmlBSJtOa Gov. Yates of Illinois said that It would be impracticable for various reasons to have the Illinois national
3. Grant andiuard mobilized at the Worlds fair in
St. Louis next year. Instead of having tbe encampment at Camp Lincoln Chancellor St. ng. of the Kansas university, at Topeka. Kas . was ChoSon the t.tn. to superintend me state educational display at the St. Louis World's fair. Thp display is to cost lir.ooo During a severe storm Which paiSfi over Shelby ville. Ill . on the Gth. John Durbln and CteOMSl Wagvr were killed by lightning at Hentern, eight miles north of Shelby ville. The Paris store at Burlington, ia, was tutted by fire on the t'.th The loss on the stock and building was $4".o.i0. Smoke and water . .-c 1 a iofs of $10,to adjacent sto. k? A heavy snow storm f'l on tv.e eontinental div ide, on the fl. and '1 e en,tire tar.se was covered w i'h feet of snow. The sacuache veral latlK comprising the Collegiate peak, Princeton, Harvard and Yale, a'' more than fourteen thousand ,'cet hipb, were massive monuments of immvulate white The temperatur" In the valley the citizens of his own täte. Fron, the moment of his arrival in sjl $. N. Y., until he st pped abarLKit. siterial train to bSftfl hi return trip to Oyster Day. N. Y., he ts givn a i afifi'ial ovation. In the Labor day parade at Sprin?fieid. 111 . oa the 7th. deiegaUeaa, were present frm BlOOSaingtOO, Lincoln ami either Illinois ities. In the nftei noon a mas me-eting srsj he'.J at thi state fair grounds, with BdjdjrSSSSt Lf Gov. Yates, and others. Fireman Chester Kelu.er. f Hbom Ington, 111 . who was tajsrod in the ei plosion of a Chieafn & A,ltoi Ipeoaw tive at Ofssavlew, on IS dh. rllo$ al Jacksetnvllle. Ill . on the Tth, Itebig tot second victim of the acei t-nt. Seven Ixidles have been washed ashore lictKi port J fferson and Waling river, L I It n-as snpp. ej that they were thse of sailors wha were lost from a s hKin r that c ipsized In the norm of August J". Cunis Jett, coavkted of the mafdej of J. D Marcum at Jackson, Ky . wai taken to Cynthiana, Ky . on ll.,- 7th, o stand trial for in- as SOStaSI On of Town MarshHl James C ickrill. whi h hegan on the Mh Tommy MtCillllgan. 13 vears oM, of 5t. Iiuls. ;11 a distance of M f. : from the Merchants' oridiro vi i lael crossing (he Chicago A Alton tr wl.s in Ve: ', e, III., on the 7th, and ".as Ins'antly Killed Mrs Vit tila l.'.wman Clfflord, for everal years editor of he S.lnlla . Mo t Morning Capital. AM, M the Uth, of diabetes. She leaves three 'dauf .hters.
WITHIN OUR LIMITS.
Hews by Telegraph from Various Towns in Indiana. Sin il. Mile, lnd , s. p- t . Mrs. Flors Davis attended a state gtsta by h r rlativs w.t of town. In (;..!, t toilie grove she irv- In r horse and lMC$7 into Drandy wine rhr. and wlnn mar tat center of thi stream the wain tloucd into the bed of tin- vehicle. Mrs. Davis :iad a small satchel in the bugg which contained 11,$$$ worth of dismosda These were swept lata tas flvsr. tesrefc w.i nia.ii ;i!l fur tin aluilt'le .tol'.i S, but without Mice. sn. Next day William Dlackltdge was flbhing in the stream six miles below, wlnn he noticed a sack. He obtained this and dlsvered it contained tas precious stones w hich Mrs. Davis had lost. He r turned them to her and receivtd a reward of 1$$, Itlaaglri n Mefcie, Blufft on, Ind.. Stpt. 4. Raymond nrookhart, four years old. son of Mrs. Dert Hrookhart, had his left leg cut off at the ankle and his right leg so badly mutilated that it may have to be amputated. Four boys were playing in s millet field on the Walter Grant farm near Nottingham. L B, Bomhake r was mowing the field, and he ordere! the boys out. All obey d except Brookhart, who hid In the milbt. A woman living icross the road saw the child's dar.gr and called to Horn baker and as he turned to her the sickle caught the child y the aukles. Help aaai ReseleeJ, Tipton, Ind., Sept. I The Tipton anr.ing works and the Snyder catsup factory have commenced operations on this season's tomato crop ar.d both are running to their gr at at capacity. The tomato crop in this county bids fair to be the largest one in Its history. The factories are experiencing great tilfflculiy in securing sufficient help to handle the crop and are offering good wages to women and girls with a premise of work that will last until late in tue fall. Death of im SM etiler. Martinsville. Ind. Spt. 4 "Aunt" Mary Hine, as she ta familiarly known, who has been In fcMt healt h for months, died at her home in this city She was aged S9. and was one of the- ebbst settlers of this county, coming hr with her husband from North Carolina fn 1837. She and her husband first settled on a farm near where the county farm now stands, but later occupied the he most'ad on which Mrs Hine lived until her death, altogether t'.7 years. To Kiuht nl . Sullivan. Ind.. Sept. t Thre will be a ''.rci.led fight against building the proposed levee of the Island Leve-e association. Th smaller land owners, those having less than $0$ SCISI, BTS a unit in fighting the SSSSSaiSht as returned by th' board of appraisers. Land along the route of th- levee has l. en assess d at $2"( an acr . and the small land Owners' refuse to pay it. The big land OWSCfl are ready to pay the assessment, and will endeavor to win in the courts. An Hnnornltlr tnrrer. Terre Haute, Ind.. Sept. 4. Dennis Burke, for 30 years driver ef an American txpress money delivery wagon, has been retired on a pension. He is said to be an exception among American exnrss employes who handle min y packages, in that he w as n ver required to give bond. He sltO is a pensioner of the civil war, having been severely wounded In the battle of the Wilder less. I .on it iinVrinu Knlet. Jasper. Ind . Sept I. IfJS, Mary Worsham, familiarly known as At:nt Polly," for 40 yars a victim of rheumatism, is dead at the county infirmary where she was removed after her relaIve8 and friends had xliaustd thdr ntSSI In trying to relieve her seeeisf ties. Her husband (ii-d ears ato S was a pioneer of this Sectios, 77 jresffl )ld. ami well known throughout seiuthrn Indiana. Rami Pell-try. New Albany. Ind.. Sept. 4 Rural free mall delivery has been inaugurated In this city, three re.tites leing SStShllsasd. t)r.' post office. Sandrs)n. two miles ea.-t of the ity. is abedishee!. The three routes cover fi3 sepiare- mile ant '-' bouses are on the route The i.ttmlur of people served Is IjMO, PostatSStse Morris Is urging th stablishment ef other r tit.-p, which will include th ntlre county, t. ReSSea 'icmh. Elwood. Ind.. Sept. 4 - Sfrie ! n with heart failure as she was leaving her home to go to l near-by frort ry for provisiems for the family fable-. Mrr iorgc De Ing. wife of a promir. i.t Lias worker, died w ithin ten minute - bsfbfS medical aid could be reached. OorOBSf True-blood helcl an inquest and decided that death folbtwed an attack of paralysis of the heart. Mithl lt .lore. I Kol-omo. Ir.d . S' pt 4 Ibnry Down- . of this city, -.vent blind ab'.ut a year aeo. since w hi h time be has been I fhte less until rece ntly. when vision was mysterou!y rSBtOrSd Hi malady was paralysis of the optic The do. tors ar" mystified and think the fSStorstioS ia only temporary The rusfer is a very proud an' han'some bird, but he wants all the hens tew know It. Two of the hest portraits of Leo XIII were painted by Franz von Lnbach. Kngland has over 1,1$$ Roman Cnfhollc churches and chapcl. and a population claimed by hat CSOrch numlierlng upward of 1.100,000. Women servants found out of OOfl after nine p. rn. In some Hungarian towns are liable to be arrested and fined.
I J is now UP TO BOGOTA
State Department's Attitude is 0ns of Dignified Patience. lloa.ela BksVSOtMSMSflM InfurMeJ That II Is t p To ftkSSI Hatify i tr.t ps eats' Washlm.'. n. Sept. 8 The stru- !e Srtsasat, Monday. rSCStved a ruiine message irom Mr DesHtMfSi the Anierk an minister at Bogota. ncknowIcdgiiiR the rsostsi 't iscrstsrj Hafl cablegram of August tt, stat'ng t bat the Washington government would enter into no cugag. nient winch would hamper the pr side ni - fm iun of action under the law. This vws all the cablegram stated, although It ha:. bn the basis foi spin ul.uive reHrts about Mr. Bssaprss ideas of the Beejp's situation Tlie state depai iment's attitude is one of digiiitled patb n.. N. Indication of its eOSfSl of action Is tinevent that the OokMSbtSB ongrss relets or amends the treaty w'?l be forvhcomlng until ths time for th exchange of the ratification expire September 22. It is kaOWS a the s'aie delart rm iit that the Colon-' ian eoagrSSI already is r'gretting its hasty ac ion In rejee ting UM traiy. Itut the- state departmetit will sugte-st BO remely for the mistake OaCS and for all the state ebparfmeiit lias arnounee 1 that the treaty as approved bv th Washington gove rnment was ra' ;fle b:' the American senate It !s up to the Bogota government to ratify that identical treaty if Colombia desire-- an isthmian canal. The state department detiies all reports as to the conn tlon of this government or even Its interest In ih' unrest on the isthmus as oo trivial for consideration Dr Herren, the Colombian charge, hnlignant'.v scouts the Idea that tin- United BtatiM woubl lend Itself to the eniuragement of this un-ret-t. SEC Y MOODY MAY RESIGN. Ilia Ht-iUili U ROSM 'f th Betet, anel Those iel tS llr Brri -.inn- I'rlrllon. Washington. Sept. 8 A statement Is current in officialdom, comiug from an apparently authoritative source, that Mr Moody, secretary f the navy, tarleast contemplates retiring from the cabinet, and that his return to Washington in the next ten days is preparatory to sm h action The administratln of Mr. MHHly has not SOM a successful as it might, it is repeirted. nor has it had the full approval of the president, although Mr. Moody has ever ban ready to feilleiw any suggestion made by the chief executive as tu ta( management of the navy. His health has not been gewnl since the serious fall he had when thrown from a carriage at Annapolis several memths ago. ami this will lie given as the rasSOfl for his retirement from the cabinet Friends of Lieut. Deary saythat the i SfJOSttloa ef the se- retary to the Are ti exieedit ion was urn mpro-mi-int:. and that he eamc into open conflii t with Mr. Darling, the assistant secretary. WOULD SHOOT PRESIDENT. Van rr-(.-l i hnrunl Willi Kit lau ffheaseeosi kiii "riii-ni llnrlnK I'uratle. Syrac ise-. N Y.. Sept lJoha Miller, a "I'm. .in. as arr.--t-l ?t his home and is charged with having threatened to shoot the president during his stay in this ity. Sunday evening the police learned that a man named Miller living in t'.e southwestern part of the city, had said that he would shoot the president while the letter carriers' parade wis being reviewed They COSM find no traee of the man until four o'etoek, Monday afternoon. hen he was placed under arrest. He deaies that he made threats against the president's life, and claims a soman irim whom the nolice laarne'd of it is lyint' Wh.e-n n- "ioned at police headiuartep he was una'. de to give a e lear e xplanation if bis w hereabouts since six o'clock Sunday morning. He is hebl pending a more thorough investigation. BELIEVE WAR IMMINENT. . hl i.k" lliiluarlnna aSSJOOBSISsa I nil Support I I hrlr Native c mates, Chieat-o. Se-pt h Believing war with Turkey lo lie imminent, Cbbaco Hulgarian ;:r- raii i 1 tiu to gie tlnancial SBpport to their native land, and to aend Bghthtf men to the IsM, A number of Bulgarians have left for Philadelphia, where a regiment is being formed. Among those who have left fr the see;,.- of the threatened war is Stanlslss Svetiikoff. of Waukegan. formerly S lieutenant In the Bulgarian army. I.nhor hm nt SprinxSeld. Springfield, III . Se pt. X. In Ihe labor day parade, Monday, delegations were prsSSBl tfOSl BkXWllSfttOa, Lincoln anel OtBSr Itlsa In the afiernoon a mass meeting was heb' at the state fair grounds, with addresses by (lor Yates and ot Iters. WAS IT ACCIDENT OR NOT. OSIelala In ratlaatlna the Oeatk of Mr.. KU Ira Scale. StoOSh at tsassooestssi al. Watsonville, Cal , Sept. 8 Ths district attorney and sheriff are investigating the death of Mrs. Elvira Scales Greene, an aunt of Bill Nye, the wellknown humorist Mrs (Jreene's death recently was attributed to gas asphyxiation. The district attorney states that he has received information that bar death vas not accide ntal.
THOUSANDS GREET
THE PRESIDENT Opens the State Fair and Makes an Address at Syracuse, N. Y. AN ENTHUSIASTIC RECEPTION Peilnt. Oat Ihr Ilm e.f I Itlarii.hip. to the HI. Ii an. I I lie- I'u.iri tat I he Worker, anal t pi I :l 1 .1 D nf of luli-ra at luu liia iil. nla. Syracuse, N. V . Ispi $ l'r- ident Roosevelt was, Monday, SCordsd a magnificent rscasiUoS by the ;t; ens of his own state I re in t!.. in..:..cnt of his arrival in this city iu tin1 morning until he stepjieil aboard his special train at 1$ - la t night to begin his return trip to u - - r Day. he was given a continual ovation Syracti e ne.er before held such a throne as ssm uibltd hire to greet the president. Sitrrnuou. Ha l-'or lrelita nt. It was a busy day for tli- presidest as well as a day full of .nterest ing Incidents. In the memlug soon after his arrival he rerleved from a beau UfUlly-deeorSted stand in Hmiover square a gre at parade of the lalnir organizations of the city. He then went to the State Fair grounds where he delivered, before r.ooiMi persons, an address on good citizenship aud the relations of labor and capital to the state. In his address Dresldent Ro s-evclt said : i. .mil anei iiaii ItlaeoaMpa The line of cleavage netweer. good and had citizenship lies, not BStSfShl the man of wealth wh.. acta - riare'y bv his fellows am! the mm. who seeks each day's wage by that day's work, wronging no one and do-ng hid duty I by his neighbor; nor yet doc- this lino j of cleavage divide the unscrupulous ; wealthy man who exploit others in hi ' own interest, from the dehMfjOghS, or I from he sullen and uavtoSS being who i wishes to attack all men of property, 1 whether they do well or ill. On the I contrary, the line of etSSfhSS, $StS ia good citizenship and had citi . nshlpseparates the rich man Sho does well from the rich man who does ill, the MHr man of good conduct from the poor man of bad conduct. This line of cleavage lies at right angles lo any sin h arbitrary line of division as that separating one- class from another, one locality from another, or men with a certain degree of property froru thus of a less degree of property. The- l.noil C Itlren. The good citizen li the man who, whatever his wealth or his pa.verty, strives manfully to do hi-; duty to himself, to his family, to h neighbor, to the state; w ho is incapable of the baseness which manifests Itself either ia ignorance or In envy, but who while demanding Justice for himself Is co ISSs scrupulous to do Justice to others. It is because the averige Amern an citizen, rich or poor, is of Just this type that we have cause for our profound faith in the future- of th republic. Inlrnrr Wf Miirli ra' Karin). There Is no worse er.emy of the wage worker than the man who c nSOB mob v lol n e Is any shape or who preai lies class hatred; and an tf the slightest acquaintance with c ur industrial history should fach even the most short-sighted that the times of mot sufferim; for our people as a whole, the times when business ta stagnant, and capital uffers from shrinkaKi and gets no return from its I invest tne-nls are exactlv the times of hardships, anel want, and grim disaster among the poor. If all the existing instrumentalities of wealth could be altolished, the first and severest suffering would eome ammi" thos. of M who are least well off at present. The wag- weirker is well off not? when the rest of the country is wdl off, and he can best contribute to this 'ii'ral well-being by showing -anlty und a firm parsaSS ta do Justice to others, c npltall.t.' BSSSa In his turn th capitalist who 19 really a conservative, the man who has forethought as well e-c patriotism, should heartily weleom every effort, legislative or otherwise, which has for Its object to secure fair deal'ng by capital, lorporate or individual, toward the public anel toward tbe emp!eye There is no room In our healthy American life for the n.ere Idler, for the man or the woman whose object It is ihtouuhont life to shirk the dutiewhich life ought to bring. Life can mean nothing worth meining. unless Its prime aim Is the SOtaf of duty, the aiLievement of results worth achieving A recent writer hn- finely said: "After sll, the ssddest thing that can happen to a man is to carry no par dens. To be bent under too great a load is bad; to be crushed by it Is lamentable: but even in that there are possibilities that are glorious. But tS carry no load at all -there Is OthtSI In that No one seems to arrive at any goal really worth renrhlng In tnts world who does not come to i' heavy laden." fssssltsso Poos apparel Trenton, N. J.. 8cpt. 8 The f.TO.OOC fees allowed tbe three rceeivers of the American t'ycle Co. were. Monday, apportioned by Judge Klrl partrlcl' . sf the fnited States dlstrb t court, a follows: Col. Albert A Pope and K Lindsay Coleman eac h $11, I', and J. hn A. Miller $s,0oo Ufll-hnonn laanrant e Man Deal. Cedar Rapids, la . Sept I -II A. Munger. general agent for Iowa of 'he Northwestern Mutual Insurance Co., and well-known throughout the west. Sled Monday, aged U year.
