Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 47, Number 35, Jasper, Dubois County, 12 May 1905 — Page 2
WEEKLY COURIER
HI N I l HD IM . .. r
JA8PE1
IN PI AN A
The grold production 1904 t,194,32 tin at fso ounces of a value oi 1
rr William Homy an English phynician, states as a result of experiments that to all forms of animal life. Insects inclu. led. esista Um taste fur alcohol.
The French government haa proposed to the chamber of deputies to cr;.te a universal exposition In Paris In liO'. to commemorate the foundation of the French r. ; . '
Fnpr.ce J, nt. : .. tion of gold in li $35" '. the p is almost ci rtain to and It is not until MM mark
:ho prod uc-
d that total, . n ach tho
THE WEEK'S NEWS TERSELY IU1LINE0
An Epitome of the M.vt Important Lvents at Home and Abroad the Past Week. NORTH, EAST. WEST, SOUTr..
The B in Arabi hewn to Aaron's lone ( : i CCBt . v :.
ock-
Uinl Drirluuuiruli la tbc !
JlliMrtr War. lugrlbrr Hit laeaaa lavtassas, uiiea i ro iBI'i'i um 1 1 p v ruiu Ml or UM WTssti. Tili: H AH I HK I" AK K4ST. The two PliTrfU squadrons appear tu be making an effort to Kt together, and at .uv simc time It is reported that soma of AUm.ra. Togo fleetest i Users hi ;nvn sent to harrass Uc fourth sejuaJron under Admiral N- iiutdfl, tht U'.s-!t of which are
have sailed south to m-ti them Aun..ral Rojestvt-nski s fleet u
to have su: lac s ui'h lighur vev extent of it
During th fewer than cured .. Ins tow guage for v given in the
n in the China sea. the Is being scattered. The damage has not ytt been
la i said to have acquired the of the Argentine Republic and
Fr ir a W Thrav' a rural wall carrier, aud his wife, a substitute carrier, are under arrest at Be ::.nghain. ah. charged with dtlay a: 1 noi.-de livery tl In reve nge for th death of a work' man a mob at Kkatefenburg. Russia, captured and tore to pieces two inV While ridiug a bicycle along the edg of the moat at Fort Monroe. Va. Lieut. Moses Ross, of the artillery cor; Ms, was precipitated Into the moat b the chain of his wheel breaking an J drow ned. Quanah Parker, the Comanche chief had told his people that President Roosevelt assured him that the Kiowa Comanche Indian pasture lands in Ok lahoma would remain the property o: the Indian for all time. Kight animal tenders were seriouslj injured in the wrath of Golluer Bros ( .reus at Kempton. Ind . Nearly all the churches in Kan-ai celebrated the twenty-fourth anniver sary of the enactment of the prohibitory law in that state. On Sunday. May 7. tMH foreign immigrants entered New York. This wnt a record breaker. After a chase that led througn severa! Atlan'lc t-oas-t cities, a secret srrice officer arrested Thos. Brewster ("has Fairbanks and Robert Slack, ab of San Francisco, charged with eatensire couuterf. itlng operations. The of-
".:: interfeit
ENTERTAINED M
IE
TÜC
I ll
PRESIDENT
are
Chili, an the n m
An a.
at on: to
died band of P':- neutralit
Walter Trav from Baltimor
ow nc earn wind rast E or.
ceel Mi
Highland cattle ho was dying he was
a favorite o present kin regard her the royal home. W. London, son
and the England mi. er of
waters in Indo-Ch.ua, practically mak- ', ing of Kamranh bay a Russian naval base, and suppressing the news of the , matter which it was attempted to send out. Tokio declares it an ac of war. The Japanese ir: in Manchuria t'-A said tu ! ' strorg. is advancing slowly and intermittently, puhlng forward their columns from right to left under cover of a screen at cavalry and Chinese bandits. The alignment of the opposing armies has
American lumber i in s'ady demand in CWmany Although more than 7O.C32,O0 cubic fee of blackjsal ' nut were received at Hamburg in 1903, the supply of this variety of American lumber does no? equal the increas-1 lng demand. Vircinia whltewood, pitch pine, and cedar find ready markets at good prices. The cedar that is most in demand is that which may be used in the manufacture of artistic furniture and lead pencils
i hi With thgo the -. that the it the-nisei ves bor organi
iu u.o I ntiKi:. beginning of the third teamsters' strike in Chitaition was said to be such mama must a r;r.owdge beaten or call on other laations to assist them by strikes, in which latter
ipii-av i. -
A the won! lal in the ettj w
pre-
k county, exthe night of :k:one ot tlM experiment to
Mrs OtOfga V. m I. ngerke Meyer, wife of the newly appoiuted ambassador to St. Petersburg, is favorably known in every court of Europe. Her aoeial triumph In Rome, where her hus band was formerly stationed, was complete Mr- Meyer i the personal
friend of (4 :. . n He again is an instance eador's wif ac'u more for her wunti been possible unde: open to her husban
f Italy Here e an anibas' ircomplished
,1 hiro
pressed the opinion, on the 5th inst , that the ba strike as br...r.tn. An
be tries tht following day of making gnral deliveriea by down town merchants was expected to determine whether the sheriffs posse and police were equal to the task of furnishing protection, failing which troops were to be called for. The day's riot.ag was on a diminished scale, but bad enough. The latest development in the strike, up to the morning of the 5th, was that Bhc riff Barrett of Cook county had taken active control and was swearing in a large fore of deputies to co-operate w;;h i he police. He declared that troops would not be called for until it was demonstrated 'hat the police and pos were impotent. The strike situation in Chicago was
Wolves have been eaceadhmgly ferocious during the last winter In many parts of N"nh-rr Canada, according
to the reports which are being brought i 'n n -v ameliorated, on the 3d, the In to the headquarters of the Hudson jf5rrf figtring. if anything, being more bay One of the most serious of these vi( lous nd les discriminating than on
toe previous day. t p to midmgnt. cores had ben added to the list of mounded in the hospitals, and it ia reasonably certain mat many others are nursing wound- and broken heads in th-ir homes. The business men of Chicago : n; a delegation to Springfield to request that (jov. Deneen order out state troop to preserve the peace in Chicago. Msyor Dunne and Chief of Police O'Neill an of tb opinion that the police could cope with the situation sucessully. T. C Carlson, superintendent of auto:ru ksfor Montgomery Ward Ac Co .Chirago, was probably fatally wounded by being s'nick on the head by a thrown brick, whic h frac Mired his skull.
reports nas rererence to tne aestruction wrought by wolves among the surviving bands of the wood buffalo, and has been sent by mail from Ft. Resolution, which is a Hudson Bny company po" on the Southern shor of th Great Slave Lake in the vast, unexplored di.-'rirt f Mackenzie.
In the pa'ent office reports one is
les of small oant'y being n.l a glance iv how many
struck with the rn.il' Invent.ons which are i patented in Washiagb at the records would
of them have been put into use a!' over tha world and are practically in-dispe-nsablev Enormous fortunes have been and are made from these simple contrivances Take, for instance, t bej copp. r toed shoe. This is seldom seen to-day exce pt .n the rural s tricts, but during the year it was in use rhe inventor made- $Vi,0M to $10V CHKV
After a logg axparienca vidi mor tality tab', s. Mr Fr. geriet L Hoff man. a writer upon insurance subjects demonstrates the influence of marriage on kmgarvity Interesting flgurei show that the mortality of married mal i has been eow Isrably below the mortality of single males at all agea, the difference l.ing mot noticeable1 b tv. .n the nee periods of 45 and 4 years. Between those ages, roughly speaking, three single- men die to two married ones. The record of females also fhrse a result favorable to mar tied women
QKVKWAI vrwc IfUU, The young woman murdered on Oitler mountain, near Colorado Springs, r.l . Member IT las', has been definite ly identified as M : I).-: It . r. r. Isaightef of Mr and Mrs Rb.hard KewstStar, Of Syracuse. N Y. In onn. ion with th crime. Milton Franklin Ar.dr ws Is v anted. The volcano of Ka'.uea in Hawaii. Is showing Ism tasd and marked activity. The engairoment of Capt. Riehmond Pear-..n .Is on. of Alabama ar. 1 M:Qfiatlda Houston Hull, of Tuxe-do Psrk. N Y.. is formslly announced. President Roosevelt's last Sunday in Colorado was spent at Glenwood Sprintes. CMeni has appeared at Khar) off Russia, and one death ban oeurred from that cause.
Surgery has be en triumphant In th' Because tic had lo-t bin po-pjon w.fh
Ca M Of Albert H Tripp, the rounri,h Modern Wagon Co. in St. Louis,
n. ileal student of Mt Pleasant, Mick . who was shot In the spine two y:ir ago. and who went t Philadel phia Pa a few weeks ago In the hope of an operegjM aving him from paralysis. Today Tripp started for his h-iir..' with a iltvr wire bli,l,iit
togethci bis spine, an, nith feeiin
already returned to his itgj and the ln Jm
W ("onant. formerly of Los nr , Ca! . committerl agfc ide w ;'h carbotte acid. John Balrd. fa-h r of Mrs William J. Bryan, died at Lincoln, ffsty, auH $2 years A report Is ruri.. tuat Secretary of
ilture Wilson is to be married. ie. to a lady employed in his de-
low r rrt of hk !.i.lv he ntiviii'ni pa.tm
The a!.e::d ij:.-appearance of
say n su sajWUI again Trlj p rl; peratietj.
w'i: V himself ne ai.egea atsappearanre of -he
v! life 1 th It,n HjiH has cauvd the iclosiL of the Mid'e-tpo bank of WaIreiU Mo
fleer also go
i money, mostly $20 bills. Fire, originating in the building oi
the C. v land (O i News Co., caus.wl I loss Of $11. o..
a traveling salesman Md . committed sui
cide at El Reno. Ok'.a w. h morphine The Fitzhugh Lee Monument assov on has ocen formally organixed at Richmond. Ya. A monument is to be erected in Richmond.
Britain, at the Mann. on the n.ght of no of the most re
dt nee of the lord mayor of London. Mrs. James E. McGuire. aged 16, walked all the way from her home la Cedar county, Missouri, to Jefferson CUy, a distance of 150 miles, to intercede w ith Gov. Folk for the liberty of her 18-year-old husband, who is confined in the penitentiary on a charge of horsestealing Fetllimattd Ward, the one t;m financial partner of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. It is said, is to azaln become a
York city. In a letter addressed b Acting Sec retary of S'a. Loom is Secretary Hay
and he has gained in strength. Fire, supposed to have been of IncendJiry origin, was discovered in the Peahody Coal Co.'s yards ia Chicago, but it was put out before much damage was done. John F. Johnson, aged IM years, who came to the United States 75 years ago. and who for the last half century has been a resident of Columbus. O.. has just applied for naturalization papers. Iaac N. Perry, who was charged with having set fire to the Chicago Car & Locomotive Co.'s plant at Hegewisch, (IL, to secure insurance money, r as acquitted by a Jury in Chicago. Samuel V. Mi.r, of Cedar Rapids, la., who went to New York to prov that he was not the man wanted in connection with the $10,000 bond stolen. In 1878. from the Manhattan bank, has been discharged. Frank G. Graham, formerly managing editor of the Kansas City Times, died from paralysis at the home of his sister of Carlisle. Pa. The Ro'oerts-Parker wholesale ero (ery house at St. Joseph. Mo . was completely destroyed by fire. The loss If estimated at MejWO. Jimmy Britt bested Jabez White. th English lights ight. a San Francisco, in a twenty-round argument. Britt landed the coup de grace Just 20 seconds before the close of the last rcund. Secre-ary Taft has cabled to Gov. Davis, a' Panama, authorizing him to r- irn at once to the Fnited States, placing Col. Goruas in charge of the administration of the canal zone until the arrival there of ("Jov Magnon Got. Davis le suffering from malaria. Wilhelm Deitz, who killed Russell M. Lindsay, near Kan-a C-y. Ka . on April 29. 1897. has been pardoned by Gov Hoch of Kan-as He had served about seve n yars of a ten-year-sentence. Thoma A. Ileal, clerk of the court of the first judicial district of Oklahoma, is charged In a federal warrant sworn out at Guthrie, with embezzle n.ent . Felipe Alore. a wealthy ranchman. camored of Mrs Fran. !sto Montorio. wife of & member of one of the oldest familbs. shot and kille I Mr and Mrs Montorio at Bingham. N M , and then killed himself. Th" So i'hewestern Iowa Bankers' association, at a meeting in Council Huffs, adopted a resolution -supposed to embody the views of Secretary of the Treasury Shaw condemning the nasal bankruptcy lews an.l urging
their immediate repeal. By way of inaugurating the seventh session of the International Railway congress in Washington, a flash 1 ua; ;- v i- -jsly arranged for was s nt II .-ind rhe world. The circuit was made in Jut seven second. The nw Iowa ditch law ha been declsred constitutional by JudK r,aynor of the district curt at Onawa. la. which will result in hundreds of drainage ditch enterprises being car ried out. A torrado vlaWc! 'he vicinity of Norfolk. Neb. Buildings were razed, small grain ruined and much other Jamas? done
Dinner H Glenwood Springs to Hit Compuu'ons ot ihr Hunt. AN EVENT ALL WILL REMEMBER
A 14 u 1 1 1 I V 1 1 11 t 1 k Co Mall, ColiiM I " I.ur. li n . I rrt-ar-luu I .r ili, 1 1 in "ltd Hi. 11 ml I r 1 1. Glenwood Springs, Cot., May $. Presid. nt Roosevelt entertained at dinner. Sunday night, his companions on I..--: : c- k !. in !. lb ky mountains. After the dinner he bade them an affectionate farewell and promised that all would live forever in bis fondest memory. At the dinner were P. B Stewart. of Colorado Springs; Dr. Alexander T. Lambert, Guides Jake Borah, John Goff. Brick Wells, Jack Fry and G. M. H Sprague, Courier Kirn-r Chapman and Sec retary Loeb. 1 ae Hit- oiii) Du. 1. In describing the function. Chgpmgl sa'di "We sat just as we did in camp Mr. Loeb was the only dude at the party. You reporter fellows ought to have been there. You could have got ail kinds of pieces for your papers. ' Other numbers of the hunt said the party talked over the events of the lhr.-e vv.iK- and had a 1 : generally. Needless to say. it was a dinner none wi'.i forget The president
ours' drive through the woods, where e president went to study Colorado irds, Mr. Stewart is a naturalist, ho know m every bird in the mountains ad can tell its habits and imitate lU n nn In (iiriii.il Vttilr. The dir.n-r was s- rved in a private ir.icg rixim of the Hotel C dorado. The uests were Irev.-eil mu h as they were : the mountains. Flannel shirts were
HE m EXTREME PENALTY Bandit Bill Rudolph Hanged at Union, Missouri. The- wJaevM npsstavg imp. ! IkS MiM'txra I ri.ii 11 11 11 il Htm II. Iii I n it I i Ml ii 11 1. I Union M". May l "Hill" Rudolph. I o k rohkor ami bandit, was hanged for 'he murder of Plnkerton Detntive S bunia'ber The trap was sprung by Sheriff Louis II Gehlert.
IHE TEAMSTERS'
WIB CONTINUES
Both Sides to the Chicago Strike Claim Advantage.
ACCESSIONS TO THE STRIKERS
one. The p
it and Mr. Loefa and ir. Lav. . rl r- :n plain business
HILL" RI DOLPH. About IV persons witness, d the execution, while a large crowd Mood without the inclosure. At 1:10 the sheriff BOttfied Rudolph to prepare, I am ready any time you ar. henff." was the answer. Rudolph maintained tu v rve till the la-t A few minutes after the drop the physicians pronounces! him dead. Rudolph's body was convey. 1 to an tmlraUing establishment adj.iiniug the jail.
Fa-hr McF.rlat.e t..ok eharge of the 1 ly and ordered that it be shipped to St Louis, there to be interred in c 1 rar 1 tsnetary. William Rndolpfc and "..rge Collins I robbed the safe of the Cniou bank Betectivs Sehuma. l er trailed them down, and in a flj:ht he was killed. Colline
was hanc 1 a year ac Mr- Btaa, a midwife, made request that she tie allowed to see the execution of Rudolph "I was presegl hn he came into the world, and I think I skogt4 have the right to him po out." She aid. Her rwtueot was refkoei THE MISSOURI LED THEM ALL
it.... gwtsfeee tweea 1 mini Mavtee MSSShlSIS, In V hl. h Ihr
11 I i-il m lll I , 1.1.
they were not to be printed, and the wishes of the president will be repectf ! II can be said, howe-ver. that they rela'ed entirely to Incidents connected w Ith the hunt. prut it Qui t SWSVgST' F' 'lowing his usual custom, the pre-ldent sp'-nt a quiet Sunday. Thne weeks ago the railways planned to run ex urslons into the springs. Sun lay. but the plan was discouraged by Secretary Loeb. who said that no preigramme would be permitted which called for an address i y -h- presid-n' In spite of that fact, large numbers of persons came ln by every train, anc ra'her than disappoint them, Mr Roosevelt stepped out on the second floor balcony of the hotel, aft-r lunch eon. and spoke briefly He said. J 11. 1 a l V..rrl. "I did not anticipate having tht p!ea'ir of mee'ina: you to-day. and as it i Sunday. I am not going to try to make a apseck to you I sha. man -nv how grea'ly I am enjoylu my vfaU to this beautiful sta'-' I wih that in the last wee-k up ln the mountains there had been a little more w a her like this. If the re had been. I 'hink we would have gone about twe , . ar Letter. But still as I g.t ten 1 to not think we Lave any rieht tc complain I am sure I need not te you how mu h I have enjoyed my holi day here and how deeply I have ap 1 the kindness, with which 1 have 1 14 n t ated by the people of your state, the people In your cities and the ram aasen right in the inrmediatf : jbkormood Of where I was hunting It WM a peefi pleasure to se the men of Colorado, to see the women, and I do not know but what I am even morf glad to see the small folks. I shall not try to make you a speh I shall sim p y -ay apain how clad I am to se. you and be your puest." I n SS)tS I 11 I a rd. The president's party was up early Sunday. After br'akfast a limited amount of mail was gofen out of the way. and then the party went t the Presbyterian church An invitation to the president and his party was extend, i b Kev J Wilson Curren and wa 1 ao pted. The special left Glenwood Sprintrs at flve ... lock this morning A tsvyllgM run will be mad" to Denver. In order to give the party an opportunity to enjoy the rssMry. The trsln will sop ten m.nutes at Hanging Briilee. one of the prettiest views on the DenvT & Rio Grande railroad. Hrlt.-rtl to II l.nat. M-xico City. May 8. It Is belieed new tba' the Hamburg Amerb an frciuht steamer Castilia Is lost. She '.a 3i days overdue at Vera Cruz.
I lr.lt
!.... ... ItrtmnS.
Newport News. Va . May 8 First Lieutenant Moses Ross of the artillery corp. stationed at Fort Monroe was drowned in the moat at that post early Sunday morning He was riding a bicycle along the cement walk which skirts the moat when the chain broke, precipitating him Into the water. raiiihr4 to Wll PSWOOV Washington. May 9 New was rerejv..! !n Washington las' night of the diath of R. R. West, auditor of the Panama canal commission, st I a name, of vellow ferer.
N w York. May Iv New I of the Ä1 , r 0 an ra.-. in which seven big United states battteoklpe patticlpntad, was beoagkt here by the battleship Alabama. which arrived In command of R ar-Admiral Charles H Iav i. and Will go to the navy yard to le overhauled because of the poor showing which she made in the contests. The ships were coming up the coast last Saturday, and were about IM miles south of Cap- Henry when the WWd as given for a speed te-t For two hours it waa nip and tu k By that time excitement was running high or. ' card th battleships, and the speed contest had developed into a race. I t ally the Massachusetts and the Alabama began to fall behind, and wh-n the signal ending the race was fla-hed both theae ships were far ln the rear. Th- AlaMma. which has th- record of leeing the fastest battleship in the navy, was fu ly a mile behind the Mao sac husetts. At the finish the battleship Mi-souri. which had drawn from the others, was only mil's sevith of Cape Henry, hav ing covered 126 miles in the eight hour NAN PATTERSONS FUTURE. Ii l 14 I ni'irlnln. n Mr. .Ii rnme lm In Mm llarre In iWtlta Hie n)S)-f tlSSl f Mull. New York. Mav '. Nan Patter-on's future it m!1 unrertain. Bail has bStal jirovib-l frr her. but Histrict Attorney .b ronie ha- not yet to ldd hat action he will take in her ca-e Monday afternoon, after a long confer, tie uith Mr Jerome and bis a--SHtant. Mr. Rand. Misa Patterson's counsel was compelled to bear to thegirl in the Tombs the lisappointinK news that she may have to remain In prison for a' least a week longer. The prisoner bore the announcement
with fortitude, although she had been led to believe that she might be granted hr freedom Immediately M least two bondsm n are said to rtodp M give bail in any reasonable in mint, and counsel for Miss Patterson say the surety will be provided without delay as soon as the district ato mey exposes a willingness to a -ccpt it. Mr .?.-iome is in no hurry to take hCUoa in the matter. Igaaietsd ' aWwesass t oart liar. Wa-hii;:M..n. May 9 Senator Clark, of W tning. the prospective chairman of the senate committee on the Judiciary, was admitted to practice In the
supren." court of ihe I'r.ite.l States. Ufaahlegiaei ii.il.- g-sanl, Bitrhain. N. C. May Washington Buke, founder of the Duke Tobacco Co . which has a national reputation, died here Monday afternoon. Mr Duke bad lecn in ill health for some time, and bid condition had been regarded as critUal for the last few dsys. Booth 1 latseer's w nr. DUon. Ill . May 0 -Mrs. William Cravens, wife of Rev. lr Cravens, died at the residence in this city. Ir. Cravens has been psstor of the First M E chunh here for the latt four Hats
Thr I'.iiiplii) rra Kruillnn Ur hYavBsaM Voavo imi Wfeeav Thiea l 11 I .Hill Injiirril I u U-i ' It lot t u B. Chicago. May ! Moth rmployera and sinkers claim gains Monday lu the hstlltera' strike The eiuployere de tlare that they have gained a decided advantage 111 the number of wagons bent out and the amount of business transacted. The strikers' claim if lad on the fact that 1150 drivers for the various furniture dealers in Um city will strike this morning, and aim l'o paint workers employed by the H. ath A: Milligan company The strike of the furniture dealers' drivers wa foreshadowed on Saturday, when at a convention of the Furnitur' Dealers a hi . '...t v was dr. Ian d lha' th- ir f.- t! mal... d'.iv.r.. irre-spec-livc of strike conditions. Monday they ordi n I th ir nun to cany nodi to the boycotted houses, and the strike w 1 ' be the result. U Ihr) W Hiked Oat. The paint workers of Heath & Milligan are the first Mem ben any hbIoO not a ROmbe r of the teamsters' organization to go on strike ln support of th.- t. artiste rs. They have walked out because of the delivery of goods by non-union b anisters. The State street department stores ai d large dry goods houses sent out nearly their complement of dettverp WWfiXMM Monday morning and throughout the day tlWatWCted business on al
' mo .1 normal ba;
Vinn- H 11 t. Manned. Fiffeen hundnd wagSHII mann d b mm union men were operat. d from State street Monday, and the number will bo materially Increased to-day. Ni more colored men are being hir d either by the State street storc-i or by the Employers' Teaming Co.. and arapidly as possible those now at work are being supplanted by white men. At the OaaCO of the Employers' Teamit '.. i: wss announced that 1JT. whit, tu. n had be n imported during the day fiom t'tneinnatl and Kansas City, and 7 more had been secured in Chicago Individual contracts were made with all of th mm. and they will be giv. en permanent employ mi nt. Three I alall Injuresd.
The rioting. Monday, was of a sharper charai'er than that of SaturdayThree men were fatally injured and a number of others badly hurt, althe ugh the number of the wounded is Is rot, as a whole, nearly so large as on some, of the days t he middle of la-t w. "k The majority of the affrays occurred during the early part of the afternoon. ihr I h ;p CenaavSsslssfta The (Ivb commission appointed by Mayor Dunne to invest irate the strike commenced operation Monday. It did little but organiz for future work. hoWCTar, and the promise for the sur-i-tul pcrforman.e of its mission do. - not seem to be bright. It has m power to summon witnesses, and must therefore rely upon volunteer teatt mony The members of the Employer association declare that they had n ived no official notice of the creation of the commission, and would have no dealings with It until they had been properly notified of its existence A FINANCIAL PHENOMENON. riltaburic "urprUeil al the Kslale ul llrnr W Ofltl -r. Im vv nm m llu 11U rn.l IS Iran . Pittsl.urg. Pa.. May 9.-Tbe executorcif the estate of the late ib -nry W. Olivir. of Pittsburg, have filed partial accounting here. The flgur- -proved a surprise, as they show th;.Mr. Oliver was one of the wealth of Pittsburg's ri'ti The s'a'eiii.-n: filed deals only with his personal prop' ftp, and dos not touch his lasasase real estate holdings in this city and in the east, an '.'em v.hih in Itself Is partes to eaanarat to more than hi londs. stockt and ia-h accounts. It is now thought that his estate will ra. b MO.OOP.app. Fifteen years ago
he as a bankt upt.
ANOTHER STRIKE AT ZEIGLBR areaacasen asgwated in lea rin it lh LaVttes Hlir if gWOWiS "Irlke tliiiln! m Cut. Durpioin. III., May 9. Jos ph Lei:er s mine at Zeigler is the seene of anjther strike Most of the men enga 1 in 1 baring the coal workings of th leafM of th recent explosion in which 60 lics wer lost, are out now. The workmen quit on account of reduction 1 In wages. Scarcely one hundred stay l at their pots. and the task of put' the mine ncaln In condition for operation H progressing but slowly. Owl Oik- LIN I SOti Vlneyardhaven, Mass., May 9. The Jov line Hteamer Aransa. Boston to New York, was struck by the coalladen barge Olendower, and sunk, near Pallo k Rip Shoals lighthou Out of 47 paateng' r and 29 mmil .-r- of the ere, only one life was lost. Mae Maseg-setaea Killed. Belgrade. May 9.--Nine Macedonian Immigrants, who recently return. I home from America, has been murdered at the village of Zerb taaaaVi they refused to subscribe te the revolutionary fund wblle they were In America.
