Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 48, Number 11, Jasper, Dubois County, 24 November 1905 — Page 2

WEEKLY COURIER

EN fcl. IHI4.N:. rub!UMr.

JAS! TM

IND1 v.N.

A fheay with her bank scandal it ow entitled to claim to rank with iMitt .lie or CI. a:i 1

Anzona PtOachOfl want AlisoM admitted as a (tare under a const : tut :on Biak.cg prohibition perpetual. 1 he K . iV . ia of go kl three feet long and fmntilBjf among Its ornament 200 nflrtfj and 15 ..i : .. !

W WEEK'S NEWS TERSELY OUTLINED

An Epitome of the Most Important Event at Hame and Abroad the Fait Week.

NORTH, EAST, WEST, SOUTH.

There w re 1 S"" rUyre feast a: S.Brittany, and 3"y them ;n an OBBB fl.

guest s at a marnae. r.- .i: : r!a:x. rvants waited on M

Among the e.. of o .fr eai

tusks, while in Asia these ally reatrfeted to the n.a

aants. ix;a the sexes spev.es havo ivory

a: g . :

Nome will

KOhi ID IN), .1 1004, which ws year !n gold yi production of A Xj for 1905

prodaco li 'i .if 1 1 1

An ingenious man has rev. mended a new remedy ;o thin people who wish to get fat. He advises them to fall off the roof of the Flatlron building, and

saures tnetn they BiU come plump.

Flowers and trees, blossoms and greenery, all over Paris some of it if mun:clpal gardening, some private taste, but no spot is too small, too obscure, too mean, to escape the universal greenery and flower

A striking instance of hereditary la afforded -a Fr.,r.. . K . h. -h- il ir.-gar-.an statesman, who has been striving to enlarge his country's liberies aa his father, the famous patriot trove for its independence. With him largely rests the peace of Austro-Hun-gar

An interesting ratio of the war of 1S12 was recently hauled from the depths of Curtis bay in a fish seine ..y B. R. Stull, of Baltimore. The reite I a shell which is supposed to haw been dropped OTBtBoafd fmm one of the Brrish warships wich assailed Baltimore

In the " planet incline'' is another deadly invention. Ia a big gl Mat car men and women are placed as passengers The great ba'l rolls down an incline, shoots ;p a BsOOBd IBM rol'i ! -.vn a th.r 1 : 'og-raa mil : brought to a stop. But the slisrh ft variation in the course would precipitate the occupants to the ground luu feet bakwf.

Imi. Drvrliiprnii'ula in the InlfrI Iniiililc In ItilkkiM. lotielix-r .Ii ItesSS ( lm-rl i ulkil I iui ili- I in rlii ii I "" ff "'WfJ All O er lUr urlU. I SUE IITI 1 ION IN HI Au eje-witness : iLe recent riot m nadivoatoa, recently arrived at NaffBBhl, Japan, -ay that nearly half the c . was buri ed and ikM of the garrison

UllOd, G.-n Ka; jiek i nUsdng. The i : ; Tt;- loss estimate., at 15,00 .-

Kltsstan prisorers of war are ahOVir.j. a ittpadtloa to mut.uy on ;.:.,; re; a' frju Japan to K i-.-:an ter ritory. The i n-ervat i ve leaders in the coun-

of workmen in St. rsbttfi carI tied a rocohttiOB against any attempt to inaugurate a muemvnt tor an e.tlu-

n ; be ur daj . The workingru n'u organization of

St. Pieersburg has issued an appeal to the soldiers and sailors to strike in behalf of their court-martialed comrades of Croastadt Over 20.' v.' for ign passports had been issued M Bt i'-rsburg during iL, two t. ks l I A . the 17th. The imperial manieio conveying to the Rus.- .l Ha.-..u-s part of the imperial domall h...- :. en issued. The workmen of Moscow are opposed to the gen ral strike advocated ty the St. Petersburg leaders. Agrarian disorders are increasing in the inlen r of llussia The empl yes cf the wire mills at ( Lit au organized a court and tried, sen- j tenced and hot a clerk who was accu?"d of inciting Jewish masacres. The tzar and empress and their fam- ; ttf have again takeu up their abode at Tarkoe Selo. It la sa d that many of the policemen In Odessa secured sufficient plunder during the recent disturbances to enibie them to retire in independence.

Few persons have any coac:p:on of how generously England has rewarded ner naval and military heroes and their often unworthy descendants. For his military vic-or.cs the d ike of Marlborough was arrant ed a perpetual pension of $.. The taxpayers built h:m a grand palace and ;:: ohasd aa estate for him at a 0001 of over $1.:4"."00. in addition tc which ne drew emoluments of S 32

a year. Tae family has be -n paid ortf H.000,000 for battles gain. 1 by tiieir ancestors pow thaa tO0 years ago.

Mr Prem s I.-icraham. the American author, long before his death a year ago succeeded in breaking the record attributed to Dumas. In the OOOn of 40 years' authorship Mr. Ineraham turned out the amazing number of 1.0hi novels, a-'-r iri sj.rtie 000 words 25 novels a year for M years' His most successful novel, which went into many larsro adftiona, was wri"?n with a pen within a f rtaight. at an average rate of MMHN) words a day. In later year-, by ,!: atlag to shorthand writers. Mr. Ingrabam found he could easily increase h.s Immense output of work.

How quickl;- the inhabiraavs of our Asiatic islands may become animated with the progressive spirit of American ways and institutiooa is proved in the case of Jooa Bfffioa, a HJ ;.::.) lad who is one of the brightest students a tae Cincinnati university technic a! acbool. BurgT. who is 17 years o d. Bad stands at the head of his class, is kobsf educated at the expense of tae Filipino government. He is said to be the only Filipino football player la the Pnited States, and is making an nviable record on the class tOBBI fcy quick, decisive plays.

Besides creating Lord X! son's brother, the cienryman, a p er. and purchasing a fö'.M .... . . .. f,,r l ni In W.l shire, a gra'iJul country conferred a perpetual pension of $'". a year on the earldom. For deeda wrought by b.s great uncle l'"t y. a-s ago. he present earl, an old man of 2. who has never b-en conspicuous for anything but straight-laced piety. ha drawn fmm the national UOBOfJTJ I1.7rj0.000. He possesses an es-ate v( over acres and a rent roll of tear y ...(M) a year. The Xelson pension wts the last perpetual

M pal Qaaifsj n. Liasley. ho is the hew kn(. n . ,i-.r ;n N'.-w j..r. sey. bo ds a nmiarkable t- -.i Bas been a teacher for .5 y.-ars. and for : years was principal of P-iblic School No. 1. D Jersey City He established the nrst normal school in the 8;a:e. and waa lu principal for 20 year His friends and associates paid a mnarkable trlbme to bis worth when hey gathered tlitfcai on tho day that markf the OBBipUliOl of his active work. By an act of 'he leglsla-

.-r. mm win now enjoy oe Of 1UO0.

a I if y Bogt

8KXER.ll. M.s IiDMü. Kin- Al;. goo of Spain and Princess Ebb of B t'nberg. only daughter of PriBOess Beatrice, widow of Prince Htnry of Battaabort, are to be married c May. ttM. 0m hi; n. red lives were lo-t by the Brock of the Southwestern railway

:ri-cnir.nel steamer 1 'itharr.p'on, Engiand.

ar the north coast cf France. Tire broke out in a cheap lodging I 1 MM in (;:a-L'o-,v. S. tland. and out of EM icmate.s :;: were suffocated or burred to death and 32 were injured in various manr.ers. A new convent n hvs been cegot;Stl i betw.'en .'a,.:in a:;d Korea -ab-

l..-h;ng the Si. ralnty of Japan over

the Hermit kingd -m. The foreign affairs of Korea are to be conduc ted at Tkio, but ex sting treaty obligations are to Le respected. By the 1,-irnii.g of a bonded warehouse at Bradford. Pa, COQOtOd ;th the A. Uverholt distillery. 81"."'0 ti.'ons of whi.-ky wes de-troyed and a 1 of $i ...... entaile.:, fully covert d by insurance. The town of Steelton. Pa., has been left In Jarkne-s at Dlgkt by the dcttnirtion of its electric light plant. lOBfl Chaney shot and killed Mrs. Kan I EUia and dangerously wounded Ibneaa Veatch, a bystander, in a fit of j&:qiis resja at Hopkinsville. Ky. Fire in the lumber yard of the Bcbarbaeb Lumler Co., in Chicago, cci.fed a k - of .o.ooo, and a nu niter of adjacent dwellings were partially 'trnye.l. The rarnicipal counril of the Isle of Plata AOClara that the grievances of the Ameri.an re-idents have been grossly exactrerateil. Ir Em:! Preetorius. editor of tb Wtatlleaa I'ot. died, on the Uth inn.. ( ' blood poisoning whirh followed a n.ere --crati ta. at hlJ home in St. Louis, Iged 71 years. The delegation of the XorwegiaB ft rthing which went to Copenhagen t.. offSBfatly notify I'rin.e Char.e of h - eiertli.n a- king of Norway met With an enthusiastic reception Rev J D Resser. I) I) . professor of biblical literature at Wilson college. Cliaml eiMuirg, la. die.l ,,f paralysif, ae! 8 years. The remains were taken to St. Charles. Mo . for interment. tf.er of the British squadron wMrh recently visited New York ar.d Anrainl;. dec lared, on the eve of sail-

Ins f r Gibraltar, that the storie of de'ertior from the feuadron were Bjwly exaggerate l. William S. McSwaln and William Col.- hare been arrester! In C&teafO i'i a charge of attempting to biackSBaJI members of the firm of Armour At Co in connection with the beef trust invest (cation. .Iocph!ne Ootn mas instantly killed and her f.ster probably fatally wounded by a highwayman In the outskirts of Grand Rapids-. Mich. The two g'rls srere riding In a wagon with their fat'hr -Ia r.i Oom. whn the highway-

KlMr , boonot the old man refused to p Eicbt lives were lost as the result of B pas exp'.' a. on in the new shaft of 'he Tranell Coal Co , on he outskirts of Bcr.t.eyTil'e. pa. A dozen persons wore Injured in the railroad yard at Carbondale. Pa., by the fig railroad express "flyer" runBlnt; nto its "helper "

Pie,! Ci S haffer. a wealthy Btlalfig man of Denver, has. gVen to tae Denver Press club a $1 IM bar of bullion i.i I n.ven .o a I : .. foi :': t story on Colorado ritten by anyne attendir.g tin annua! no-en;;; of tlte Xat.onal

A i a; ton of I'ress clubs. The shingle manufacturers of north . Washiujttou have decided to shut down for Co days, beginning IVeeniber 1 The final count of the raOttll of the KonreglaBj pitMoelti aaoari WJHt votea In favor of calling Prince Charles cf Peiimark to the thro.ie Mb fides in the n.gaiixe. The iarl of Mmro. who succeeds Lord CurzoB as viceroy of !ndia has arrived at Bombay, and Lord Curzon

h.is starte i fur h. '. The big plant of the Republic Iron

& Steel Co at Covington. Ky . has

ii.n closed, throw lag 300 men out of

work The work will be trausferrel to Younctown. O. The loBfM i by the r. nt prairie fire in South Dakota are estimated at half a million dollars Many farmers are practically ruined.

Two ru n were fatally injured by an vpliisi n of gas while eng.oted in ;. pai: ing a main in Chicago. The Bomber Of fatalities from rafft road aeddenta IB Chicago for the past !1 months -::.'l -exceeds the record for all of Knpland. Bradatreot'l sas 'hat the onlydrawback to the fulles' development & 'he country's present phenomenal tHtsl&esj activity is the widespread

I railroad blockade.

With the opeaiOl ff the main shaft. Michigan Central Railroad Co. has begun the acttial construction of the projected big tunnel under the Detroit river from Detroit, Mich., to Windsor, Ont. Former United States Senator Mason, of Illinois, ia an argument before Jadg Land is in the United States district court in Chicago, declared that the writ of habeas corpus, the foundation of American liberty, has become a myth in Illinois, because the Judges have BgrOBd not to r view the findings of one another. The Montana supreme court has declared the ami trust law of Montana unconstitutional. Pre a Knoxvf.le. Tenn. destroyed the building occupied by Sutter & Beiler. par.ts makers, and the wholesale clothing house of Bickley. McClure & Co . the less aggregating $200,040, Rev W. A. Patterson, of Princeton. Ind , declared befre the Presbyterian Psalmody convention in Chicago that lad. Kindly Light." was unfit as a song of praise and worship of (Jo'. .Minnie Mitchell, aged 23. and Aline Bowers. h'T cousin, aged 2.wer found dead In their flat in the western part of St. Louis, evidently the victims of poison that had overtak. n th.-m sud-

dealjr. as they fell and died in their kib beta just as they had finished washing their lunc heon dishes. Vtoe-Presldenl Rossel Haritn? of

Hilda, from i the Erie itailroad Co. has resigned and for St. Malo, will eo ino swteata msinea

C OBtli Jttt ns for the suffering Jews in Russia, up to the 10th Inst., had reached a total o! MSt.t7t. Criah It. Wilson, the oldest mem'.er of the Old Timers' Association of Tel-

grapher, and one of the founders of

FOR CLEAN Hi MANLY FOOTBALL

THE IUIU MHEITIH iM'l'.MSTATi x. ns.

President Roosevelt Takes Time t Discuss the Matter.

WANTS THE GAME CÜNTINUEL

Bestallt i mmi VoaJ Psatf Iboftld ite-ft-lw Ilia- Same I'u I Ii me 11 1 t BBBflSMI I drill or trlWIus I .nil lu lluititM.

I'luladelphia Nov. t,- Pr. J Wlll.aiu White, pn feasor of surgery at the Uuivers;ty of Pennsjlvania and a member of the university commit lee ou MPJoUotj has returned from Washington, wheie he had been sumnioi.ed by President Roosevelt to discuss matte: :, ulaci.c to football. In an imeniew. Dr. White aid: "The pi evident did me the honor ol aaVtng me to lunch with him at tht White House for the purpose of disCaaalBg with him the situation as to Amer:ian football. An arf.ile of mine published in last WOBks Outhok was the OCOMtOfJ of the invitation. fwwpm f the pisesisslaav

"As tu what took place during my visit, the president has permitted me to say that we are in complete tOCOrd as to the need of the permanent abolition 3f brutality and foul play; of the increase of the powers of the officials, and of the severity (Ü the penalties as being necessary to bring about such abolition; as to the desirability of careful consideration of any changes in the rules that may be required to minimize danger while preserving the essential, manly and vigorous characterlotkl of the game, and as to the urgent need of earne-t effort to Meura a simple and uniform eligibility code for all American colleges and universit .e. The president said he emphatically bei.c l es in continuing the game ' llrutnlll sliuulal br I'unlalieS.

I tie pres. dent added; 'Brutality and foul play should receive the tatao i SB" ishment given to a man w ho cheats at Cards, who strikes a foul blow in boxing. The umpire must have the widen latitude in enforcing this principle, even to the extent of ordering not only indivi.i'.ia! players, but srttok loan I the fiel 1, and coilepe pr, . , :.ts .-In i,ld !.. 1! to the sharpest accountability the umpire who permits foul or brutal football la any game. We want simple rules, not (omp!:ated rules, hilf IllBl

complicated rules offer too many loopholes. A Co-lit I em mi (nririn.nl. Te responsible authorities of the several colleges whose teams play together should hae what may be raUfd a gentleman's aureement among thernk ves that these rules should he enfoKcd in sj irit as well as in letter, eath being responsible for what goes

on in their own colleges, and each .-ee

The Platfotm iVinuuls a Territorial Form of Government. Iii. . H ii I, I ii lleleunle In imurria mill V ii me . una I limine III I lie Mtatsio i sws Ken in i'm .-e. Seattle. Wash. Nov-) The Alaska conroatloa atteptad a platforai ami a liumher of resolutions to be pre-enied to the national congress by a delegate to be selected by the convention, The puifonn deiuandH territorial form of lOVOraaiatlt; a delepate lu 0PaV nr. ss and BBaMRMM BBBfOB in the mining law s pending the giant ing of self government. uti.er laaportaat faatttraa at Iba request to COadprOBj are for an aiproprlatlen of 11,000,000 to bO Uaad in building reads, relieving 1'nlted States judges of administrativ duties and plai ing such rower In the governor; additional lighthouses) for the Alaska coast, application of tho earnings of the government cable on extensions of the ty stem, and the removal of tha

arnual tax of $100 a mile on railroad.

GIFT FROM T. P. SHONTS i iif c helrsasM f the Isthsslas :;- mi BWBslsslea Gives mio.ooo . Mil II III. Ill I Ii ollere M nmouth. in, Nov. 21. Theodora P. Sh.i:i. chairman of the lMhm..ui canal BOtamlfflOB, has Just given to

Court Hit:- Pn.tory Bonns, In'lmrtap By u declaloa 0tho appellate ooari ladlaas i i, will Ih. prevente.1 fI( tomuM to MBJiitfactBrtn i for loeatlBfl facion,,. ,i, ,,,,,,, hi ing tliat a city has no tdghl 0 PJOfiay raised by taxation and ,.. .,.

II lo sueli piirixiss...

that the benefit

THn mini'i ...

- - 'hi ,

resulting to ,. ..

by the establishment of BMBUfl at ao; difTent in glad rrooi the i . tt; nnsing from the establishment sad aparaiioo of pttoary toraa. Toa maaul i. iwrer. men bant, mechanic an ! t isirer are equal promoters of the pul -lb fjood and ecpiadly entitl.il to pu uid. ' No line can be draw n in fav. i i one of them to the SBClttfion of thf oth. rs. an.) reoOgftUtoa of the r . thus t distriimte moMy procured b tax ii ton would Bul.j.ct BBUBlclpall

to laaportuaitiaa and ImpositioBf DUm fable," says tBf court.

:n

m aW

Can its Secret to Grave. Princeton Louis livid, uf Haatl ton. thU county. Is dead of par Jyojata, iukin vrtUi him to las ravt the sei ret formula for a powerful explosive he bad Invented. Bytd was the son of George Hyr.l. a trin k in: in sr. Last January he Invented a bias) lug powder, which he trid sn. . ly In Arkansas. The exj.losne waone third as cheap as ordinary blasting powder, much safer ami three tines as powerful. No one in Huzleton knew f the invention until Hyrd's younger brother tried three drachms of the powder in a shotgun and ftUnosi had his head blown off. That the boy had a fortune in his invention is tha belle! of Iiis friends.

Ann Arbor. Mich., died in Denver. Col.. ; ing to the permanent' removal fr m the

agea , , vtars.

As ,i - u.iple of the election methods in New York one case Is elf d as shown by the canvass, where in the twelfth preetgtCt of the Second assembly district William T. Jerome was not credited with a single vote In the return, whereas the tally sheet ahowed that ha received f, Actini; Public Print r Ricketts told the Joint eongreasional committee that the report of the board of lady managers of the Louisiana Purchase yaftloa w hich was printed at public Bipeaae In a privat, office could have ton 'lone much more economically In the govt rnment office. Emperor William of Germany has sent his congratulations to the Manhattan Chess club on its victorv mm

the Botita Chess Society in the "recent cable chess match. Harry Hunkers, the former San Francisco state senator, convlctel of bribe;- and Baatemoad to five years' imprisonment, his been denied ä newtrial by the appellate court. Upwards of SOf bales of cotton were destroyed, about l.noo bales badly scorched and several hundred bales damaged by Are In a warehouse at

i oinmous. Ga.. used Jointly by ihe OeatraJ Railroad of Georgia an l the Atlantic Compress Co. Loss. $150.000; fully Insured. Pr.snl.nt Richard A. McCurdy of the Mutual Llf.- Insurance Co. created a sensation at a special meeting of the board of trustees by announcing that, at his own request hi? salary had been cut from tir.o.fuhi'a year to $75. i. Two men were killed and two seriously Injured by a triple explosion at the Ruckoye powder works at Ed wards station, northwest of Peoria, 111. Several others received tiiiuor hurts. The Standerd Oil Co. has declrred a quarterly dividend of $10 a share

The hundred th msard farmer

members of the I'a'rc ns ..f Husbandry at- asked by (Jrand Mast.r Aaron Jones to take rBOaaaraa to cure present Insurance ills I y th? formation of mutual companies Bishop Earl Cranston cf the MethM Episcopal tht.rch and Miss Lurla Masbn Parlier were married st the home of William Christie Herron. aa UBeto of the bride, in Cincinnati. flrantsburg, Vis.. suffered $5.000 BsUBBja by flre. n-mpt asslsta. . from Ruit City md North Drr.n.1, saved tho town from probable destruens Two cases of mellow- fovcr have re eeatly dvelopd lr, Havana. CaBB, on. t.f the stricken persons being A. Z Outwater, of Pawaic. N. J . a tourist visiter, the other a member of an Italian opera company.

Rama BOt only of the foul or brutal player. 1 ut of the man who is not a bona fide student and amateur. It would Le a teal misfortune to lose so manly and vigorous a jtame as football, and to avert such a possibility, the COHaaa authorities In ejeh college should see to it that the game In that college is clean. rfce PeaeKasrt t:pininra. "The president explained t, me tht

seleition of the institutions that came to the hite House last month by saying: ' "I was asked to call It by repre-en tatives of Harvard. Yale ami Princeton, ar.d I called it accordingly If Pennsylvania, Columbia and Cornell repre sentatives happened to make the suggestion, then only thoee three CoUaaaa would have been asked. Desires tin- Oasse nndnurii. "He spoke more than once of the desirability of continuing the game and of extending to as many as possible is advantages with the safeguards already mentioned He said that five or six leading colleges should get toethr and agree to play one another under such agreement as he piOBt I Iliad. He also spoke of the far greater relative danger of other sport-, and pastimes, some of which he enumerated. Hf showed characteristically keen interest in and thorough acquaintance with the whole subject." DUE TO PTOMAINE POISONING riniei Isalsrtaase n statin Fninllt iil. I., i, uirr Cntluu ' oftnae I hfrie.

THEODORE P StIONTS Monmouth college $1" no ; irt of the 930,000 needed to scnure an additional 190,000 VhtCh Andrew Carnegie had promised to give the sol lege for a library. Mr. Shunts is a graduate of Monmouth college. FIRE AT SHREVEP0RT. LA. The t ili Hull. Will, II, ,,,,,. , ity Murk. I il ml Oiln-r II I Iii I u.

Ilm lie. I on v I. If,. I Sil Shreveport, La, Nov. 21. -Eire destroyed the c;ty hall, city market, two

More buildings adjoining it. on the west, slightly damaged the city prison, caused the death of one person and the injury of three firemen. The property !o8 is estimated at 978,000, with only about IS.OOO insurance. It is believed that the. blae orlglBBtad from the ex-l'-i.n of a can of gas...ine in a market underneath the Ity hall. All rec- : Is of the c ity ourt. police station an.', i ity eiK.ii : oil,. were üeatroyöd. BIGELOW BREAKING DOWN

The MlliMiukii. lie. 1. 1. Ilefia niter SIiimiOiu Mmi nt llreuklliu l. ii I ii PrlM n

Widening the Channel. Jefferson vi lie. A large amount of work has hoafl dOM recent ly at this point toward widening tbi channel of the Ohio river 00 the falls The estimated amount required fot completion of the froth la $itt ... . l-ist July the balanre BTBllahU WBI only $78.419. The Improvements already completed are of great benefit to traffic, and the Indiana c bote will now take heavy draft coal boats with saM at stages ..f 11.5 feet on the appei canal gauge. As boats come down however, on an ight -foot stage, mm b Stork lemains to be done.

Accident Proved Fatal. Alt. Vernon. Capt. Tom Stevens Is dead of Injuries received by beiag struck by a VOhlCrf winl crossing a street. He was I years old. Cait. Sieens was a native of Indiana. Hfl served in the Maslcaa war When th. civil war aOM hi joined the Ninety-first Indiana infantry and he lost an arm in the campaign of Atlanta, tetiring in 1004 with the rank of captain Me was the si) republican eTflt elected treasurer ol Potey county.

Milwaukee, Nov. 21-Private information received by a MilMsaukee government official from an officer at the Fort Leavenworth prison states that 'rank (1. Iligelow. the defaulting Milwaukee banker, apparently is beg.nning to realize the full en. rmity of his offense, and thit he appears to be utterI; crushe.l in spirit. It is s,ii,i Bigelow gcjes about his duties in a seemingly 4aM I condition and sellom converses with any one. The prison officials believe It is doubtful if the ex bark president will live to serve nut his term. He is employed In the photograph gallery of the prison.

UNEMPLOYED OF LONDON I lie) Waat Wort. Nut Ii n r 1 1 1 I Ii r y Taesre t n LtatH i iiuiii ii ii Kurt rn in-. .

Run Down by Train. Anderson. While walking along the railroad track Lewis Muncie 17. years old, and Mollie Tin kle, au. ii 17. were run down by an inbound passenger train. The body of tin girl was so badly mangled as to makt identification difficult. Muncie was fatally injured and taken to St. Johns hospital, where he is expected to d e The couple in trying to avoid an ai BfOBChtaC cut of cars, s'epped to Hit main track in fr.-nt of the PaaVaOfei train.

Pawpaw Is No More. Peru.-The town of Pawpaw, in Richland township. this county is no more, as by an order ol the county commissioners the plat hat: been declared vacant. For some time the land has been used for farm pur poses, and as the taxes did not Justify keeping the land in the original plat the few residents petitioned that it 1 changed. At one time there were L'ei people at Pawpaw. A railroad ! ing built two miles away killed the town.

St. Ix)uis. Nov. 21 Six members of the family of John Gernhardt, a metal patternworker. are slowly recovering from the effects of ptomaine BntaOBJag,

which nearly caused the death of every member of the household Sunday. The timely arrival of a physician probably prevented six tragic deaths in a family which had succumbed on by one from the effects of the deadly patsOB, contracted by eating cottage cheese and coffee cake. CJrmliiKe.l I mm Vnl- In Hi, Lansing. Mich, Nov. 21 Kev. J S. Lord, aged 97. sild to have been for mnnv years the oldest living alumnus of Yale university, died at the DOOM

of his daughter. Mrs. YV J. TWotBOB, at Laingsburg. Kev Mi Lord graduated from Yale in the class of IS. 1. Tin- BflSaaa .enrj nmr. Boston. Nov. 21 At a conference betwee;, District Attorney Sugrhue and counsel for the defenedants. it was de elded to begin the trial of the various persons indicted In connection with the death of Sustn Geary next Mol day.

Iondon, Nov. 21 Thro was another "poverty parade'' In the stre. ts of laindon. Home 1,001 to 1,000 unemployed men and a sprinkling of women marched along the Thatn. s embankment to Hyde park, where thv Itateoad to BSJOaehaa and adopted resolutions condemning charity as a cure for lack of employment, and demanding the summoning of parliament to Initiate works of national utility. Rad Uagr, were seen, and la-.inets beariag taeb devices as "Cone your charity, wo want work," and "Tbero bl a limit to human aajdaratioe," indicated the temper of the procession lata. The mann, however, was pnto orderly, and the strong police force on duty had little to do.

He . I . ri Imi.Ii Pewter. FI Pas... Tex.. Nov. 21 - Kev. Henry Moore, r Princeton graduate. s ad here He is said to have ofTb iate i at the fun-ral of every gambler or sa

loon man buried here in the !iFt ten years. BoJooB' haopara raiaad $;,o. last summer to give him a vacation Unit rnainl Oei- in Bight llmea. St LOftif Nov. 21 Mme. Fredetbk YaeaaetBlB, a native of Paris, who had crossed and recrosfed the Atlantic o. can SO times. s dead l)er father manufactured the first artlfl. a flo'vers In this rltv.

Bar Cupid After Ten OClock Logansport .' Cupid's Ten O'Clock elub." an organization of younfr women for the purpose of limit ing hours of lovemaking, has been founded here with l.'i (barter meml'.n and Miss Florence Moore as president The members pledge themselves tc limit swains to two calls a week an.! to bid them good night before th clock strikes ten. The penalties pro vlded for violated obligations are s! o be "something awful."

Newsy Brevities. Hartford City. The salt watet turned from the oil fields has killed a great number of quail in this vicinity. Hundreds of them havi be !, found dead along the hanks of the streams. A number of sheep hav. filso been poisoned by the water. Newcastle Farmers and sportsmen both reMrt quail scarce In this county Although a number of hunters were In thfl field, few bagged any of the birds Farmers generally disprove of the kill Ing of them, nml the last farmers' Inst! tute held In this city passed resolution1 favoring a law prohibiting the killing of them for a period of ten years. Kvansvlllo. A ne w bank to be known

as the Commercial Hank of Kvensvillfl. capitalized at f.onno. has been organ i:i and will legin besiness January 2. This will be Fvansvllle's tenth bank. oath PSend.-- William Huributt. PJ Buchanan, Mich., near this city, still under do years of age, ha.; already had six wives, four of them coming from two families. Five of his wives have (lie,! I.aporte. Owen I Usher, of Marshal1 county, fell from a hayloft on to a pitchfork. Dea'h reaulted nfter great agony.