Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 51, Number 34, Jasper, Dubois County, 21 May 1909 — Page 3
Ill
ALL DAYTuN TURNS OUT TO GREET WRIGHT BROTHERS.
OVATION
TO AIRSHIP MEN
Presented With Laurel Wreath With rje!, jn of Mercury Flying Above World."
ONLY MONUMENT TO INDIAN. Bronze Statue of Chief Mahaska Given to City of Oskaloosa. Osknloosn. la.. Spoclnl: with fit-
mi I'uruuionioti ueroro 'n nnn
tors there was unvollod horo a bronze statue of Chief Mahaska, of thy Iowa trlbo of Indians. It Is believed to bo the only Btatue ever dedicated to an
Jlllllllll. 'Hie statue was given to the city by J. D. hdmundson. of Ovh .Molnea. In memory of his faihor. the first sheriff Of .Mahaska county. It stands nine feet high, surmounting a mngnlfleont pedestal in tho public square.
I
i
GREAT NORTHERN FAST MAIL
LOOTED NEAR SPOKANE.
CAUSE COLLISION AFTER HOLD-UP
Railroad Company Offers Reward of
$10,000 Each for Capture of the Robbers.
W" a, ; o' u I
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!(. Special: Crowned by .is nionarohs of tho air; . princes and potentates . t.-ted by nearly all gov-Hi.-conquerors of prncn marlon for military pur,i and Orville Wright, the i i In "Dayton Flier" re-
' ir nonie city nisi week . . t.-d as famous sons of . i In a manner uniquely . wHcoino was intended . I. miliary to the great eelir in this city on June ..Km the municipal, state
nt medals will be prc-
.iinh.'d Into a much larger
Mum and their sister.
e. alighted from the . ii Is of voices created a
ni Unmindful of the 'In' great crowd, the
, i-hed forward and stood
..Mon Rales, calmly wait
I'i'w of emotion, until the
.' !'. kcl
:".n the train yards into
i' f. the noted Inventors
i "i with lloral tributes.
pted smilingly by tho however, paid little aV
.il tributes showored up i i the aviators wore pro.
.i laurel wreath executed Th design shows Mer-
.iiti've the world holding - iddft. At the top of the ' . :s Caesar's famous mosi Udl. vici." "'iio contends tho Wright i.atlve sons, and Is shnr- - them, Indiana also has - I proud of one of the ' illuir Wright was born In. I.. In 1SC7. Orville !'iton In 1S71. The first f both was in a cracker i ly their uncle near I Ml -t of the brothers' aero- - n arhlno was made at N C, In 1903. In 1905 i successful long-distance I'-iMnn. They have record"it- articles the fact that !.'elnp a science of aero- : 'ttff and patient experi-i-practically all the text"i- subject faulty. Tholr "I has been groat flnnn'w s mechanically, it is .if in France and Italy
collected more than
' 'I- tights to their ma
"utMdc of these sums they
; nzi's estimated at 1250.
' " v apparently are destined
i. iiiionalres.
"f the brothers In this
' slmrt. not longer than ' ' - They will complete at ' U.' Kovornment aeroplane ast summer, and It Is : - lilted that they will reJj . mio offered by the gov-
'iccpHsrui demonstration - machine. Then they will I. rope to give exhibitions ' indon. Herlin and other
front out of their invnn
- :.mr the right to use them
"'inurles. Several temnt
n-iuuin in tne United
$50,000 Wager on Derby.
Iondon. Cnble: A single bet of $50000 to $5.000 has been laid against tho American colt. L. winan's Sir Martin In tho English Derby, it Is one of the largost bets made In tho winter book for many y(-ars Tfie backer of the horse B said to be an American. The derby will i.
Wednesday, May 2, on the wound day of the Epsom summer meeting.
1EIIHG
ARE HAPPY OVER THE ACTION OF U. S.' SENATE.
RESTORING DUTY ON IRON ORE
Demolition of All Party Lines Shows That the Tariff Is Not a Politlcal Issue.
!'en jnade to them In
PARIS IN STRIKE GRIP.
-"u'ui""-i i rying io
Tie Things Up.
Par
crij Itr., . ,! .fi in-, . W; t, la-.-
Th.
ha. , if Ens' ,.
Th
10 tfi. Ceil ;hf i ,') . iart.i. , fa I Ii v raar .1. :
IV.. . .
J') .It, ' . atpri ; i Bn)j.,irniv
All
Paris Is feeling tho i'.tmen and telegraphers' " s-'rlke leaders say they ' ' "mplete cessation of mail h prvIce, with the ex- ' envernment's wireless ' md and France, and will "im inicatlon with Italy. postmen say that thev " I i -vented the departure enments of mall, one for ' i th.- ther for America. ' f order has prevailed up t time, but the govern- . "-henslve, and Increased r troops In every Paris Ml the postofllces and tele- : i m the city ore heavily service throughout the "intry Is not yet seriously 1 "WillK tO tho ton 11,0.
' fow of the telephono :v struck.
MET, ENGAGED, WED,
Sp.ce of Thirty Minutes After
rtatlon in Cafe.
Washington, Special: Slxtv-one Senators votod Thursday to place a duty of 25 cents a ton on Iron oro. Twenty-four Senators votod to put It on the free list. Tho present duty Is JO cents a ton. Tho House of Representatives abolished it. The Senate Committee on Finance placed it at 25 conts. A light was bectin W ndnesflnv in
have the Senate concur in tho action of tho House. Crawford, of South Dakota, one of the Republican insurgents, started It, and Incidentally made a bitter attack upon the United States Steel Corporation, otherwise known na
the Steel Trust. The debate on this Item continued until almost 5 o'clock
Thursday, when tho vote was taken. It was positively amnzinir tho wnv
the political parties split on this narn-
graph. Eighteen Democrats voted for the twenty-five cent duty, lining up with 13 Republicans. Of the 24 votes which were cast in fnvor of nuttinir
iron oro on the free list 10 were Republican and only 14 were Democrats.
The majority In favor of the dtitv
was a surprise, even to Senator Al-
drlch. who Is In charge of the revision
bill. He had confidentially counted
upon some kind of a marcln. but
shrewd strategist that he Is he did not
anticipate It would be so large. The Democrats who supported the Finance Committee's schedule did so for various reasons. Dankhcad and Johnston, of Alabama, for example, did so because their state
has extensive Iron ore beds, and there were other minority Senators who were Inspired by a similar motive. Other Democrats favored n duty because, as they attempted to explain, free ore would be more beneficial to the Steel Trust than to Its independent competitors. This, too. In spite of the statement made by Smith, of Michigan, a Republican, that Charles M. Schwab, once President of the trust, and now head of an Independent steel company In Western Pennsylvania, had advocated free ore because ho and his business associates controlled almost Inexhaustible ore deposits In Cuba. No vote thus far taken more em
phatically demonstrated that politics no longer enters Into the construction
of the tariff. It Is purely a business question, and diverse Interests control or govern the action of Senators, regardless of the party to which they
belong. When the debaters finished wrangling over the ore paragraph, it was extremely ditlicult for a poor layman to make up his mind whether the
Steel Trust would profit by tho duty
or whether It preferred txee ore.
bpokane, Wash., Special: Bandits
bold up and robbed Groat Northern
fast mnll train No. 3 nine miles east of
bpokane, botweon Colbert and Mead.
about l o'clock Sunday morning.
According to the report at Hlllyard the bandits obtained booty amounting
io more tban ?20,000 from tho mall
car.
Twenty persons wero Injured when thp engine and mall car. runnlnc wild.
collided with tho remaining cars of
tbo train. All the Injured will recov e.r.
The bandits detached tho engine and
man car from tho train, ran them
down the track a considerable distance and then, after the registered mall had been opened, they sent the englno back, to collide with tho cars standing
on mo track.
The conductor saw the wild cars
coming down the track at a rate of
twenty-five miles an hour when they
were a considerable distance away,
ami no nnd one of the trainmen placed a tie on the track In an effort to stop their wild flight. The engine and car wore partly stopped by this menns, but plunged into the coaches. There was a loud crash nnd the passengers were thrown from their seats, most of tho Injured being hurt by glass from the broken windows. When tho train reached Colbert some switching had to be done. While the engine crow was busy with this work two inon suddenly appeared on tho engine cab, and, thrusting a revolver against the body of the engineer. William Miller, told him to do as commanded. The engineer and Fireman John Hall obeyed. Soon after the train stopped, the conductor, G. L. Robertson, jumped
irom tbe enr, but was driven back by a dozen revolver shots. Hastily climbing Into tho cab, the outlaws sent tho engine hurrying down the track how far is not known. As soon as the conductor was aware that this was a holdup he ordered a brakeman to the rear of the train to prevent a collision and had another Urakemnn cut the telegraph wire to send word to Spokane. A third member of the train crew was hurried to the station with tho news. About a half hour after the engine and mall car had disappeared they were seen coming down the track and hurried preparations wore made to ditch the runaways but without complete success. Two special train loads of deputies were hurried from Spokane when the word of the holdup was received. Doc
tors also were taken out on the train
to care for tho Injured. Chief Ryan of
Hlllyard went out with a posse and
surrounded all the roads leading to
ward Spokane. No trnce of the rob
bers was found.
VICTIM CF NIGHT RIDERS. Reelfoot Men Hang Juror Who Con vlcted Their Comrades. Hickman. Ky., Special: Notwithstanding that tho family took the theory of suicide, close friends of Mansfield Haraldson, a prominent planter of Lake county, Tonn., Just ncross the Kentucky border line, who was found dead In his barn, dungllng from a scantling, believe that the night riders in the Reelfoot Lake dlstrlct have claimed victim No. 1, as they swore to avenge the death sentence passed on six of their band during the trials. Haraldson was a member of tho Jury thut convicted the men who were tried for killing Captain Quonton Rnnkiu. Notes wore received at that time swearing vengeance- on tho Jurors if they returned a vordlct of Kulty-. It Is believed that Haraldson was decoyed from the house and was hung by frif-nds of the six men he he! nod to
condemn to the gallows.
It
ID IS INI
ID
II
HAVE NOT BEEN CHECKED BY VIGOROUS CAMPAIGN.
SAYS G01HAM PHILANTHROPIST
Abolition Will Begin, He Declares, When It Is a Crime to Sell Milk From Diseased Cow.
$13,000,000,000 PRODUCED SINCE
AMERICA'S DISCOVERY.
DISAPPEARS FROM T ME TO TIME
But, Dear Reader, Very Little of the
Precious Stuff Goes Into the Editor's Wesklt.
Washington, Special: A prelimi
nary summarization of a series of tables oearing on tho production of gold, prepared by the Bureau of Statistics, was made public this week. Accord-
Ing to the figures presented, the world's stock of Kold has increased
about one-half In the last decade, and
doubled in the last quarter of a century. The stock of gold money has meantime grown in even creator nro-
portlons. being practically 75 per cent more than a decade uro.
The tables show the uold nroductlon
of the world since the discovery of
America, and the amount of gold money in the world, country by country.
l ne gold production from the discov
ery of America to the present time."
it is stated, "agrreijntes $13.000.000.-
uuu. speaking in very round terms; and the amount of gold now In eIstonco Is estimated by experts, still
speaking in round terms, at $11.000.000.000 In value, while tho value of
ho gold coin in all tho countries of
the .world from which statistics are
available now aggregates $7,000,000,-
Washington, Special: That the vigorous campaign against tuberculosis has failed to check tho great white plague was tho startlinK charge made by Nathan Straus, tho Xow York philanthropist, at tho fifth annual meeting of the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis here. Mr. Strnus hacked up his assortlon by official statistics from the Now York Health Department, showing an Increase of 33 per cent In two years In cases of tuberculosis in tho city thnt Dr. Koch described as leading Ihe whole world in tho fight agalftt the
disease. Tho reason for this failure to make headway, Mr. Straus declared, was tho neglect of tho mischief wrought by the tuberculous dairy cow. Citing the rcBtilts of scientific Investigation and his own 18 years' experience In snving lives, he summed up by saying that tho abolition of tuberculosis would begin when It was made a crime to sell milk unless It came from tuberculin-tested cows or had been properly pasteurized. Homer Folks, of Now York City, one of the Vice Presidents, presided. Several hundred delegates prominent In the anti-tuberculosis campaign from all parts of the country were In attendance. In his address Mr. Folks called attention to the progress of tho fight against tuberculosis during tho year and declared that ono of tho pressing needs now was for adequate hospital provision for consumptives In tho In
termediate and advanced stages. The report of the Executive Secretary Livingston Farrlngton. showed a now membership of 000. mnking a total of 2,107. One of tho most striking advances mado during the year wns that 31 out of 40 State Legislatures had considered tuberculosis legislation. RevlewlnK the work accomplished In the South, It was shown that the fight was carried on in Tennessee. Alabamn, Florida and Georgia, and during the coming year it is planned to oporato in the Carolinas. Mississippi, Louisiana and other Southern statos.
IN THE GARRET Of a Widow's Home the "RevenuersM Found a Big Still. AühovMlo. N. C. Special: Hidden In the loft of the one-story log house of widow Mary Jones, six miles from Marlon, revenue raiders found a moonshine outfit. The celling of the house appeared to be of rough boards, but a log floor had been laid above it and a trap door allowed fuel and wator to be hoisted from below-, while the smoke went out a flue of the kitchen chimney. The refuse passed down a concealed pipe Into an underground drain. A furnace had been built of rocks so large that the officers wore obliged to tear down a gable of the house to get the apparatus out.
Twenty-three Hanged In Public. Constantinople, Cable: Thoro were 23 public executions Wednesday and tho bodies wore left hanging until noon. They were the men condemned by court-martial In connection with the assassination of tho commander of the battleship Asar-I-Towfik when ho trained the guns of tho ship on Ylldlz Kiosk. Other officers on the battleship were slain whoa they tried to suppress tho mutiny.
$15,000 by Shining Shoes. New York. Special: With $15,000 and a pretty American bride, the money the result of nine years of shining shoes at the Waldorf and St. Regis hotels. Donato DIglllo Is on a honeymoon trip to Italy, proud to bo an American citizen. The slgnor saya ho would rather bo an American citizen and shine the shoos of fellow-cltl-zens than be the son of the King of Italy.
Weds at Seven. Addis Abeba. Abyssinia. Cable: Prince lidj Jeassu, aged 13, grandson of King Menellk and heir to the throne, has been married to Princess Romanic, ngod 7, tho granddaughter of the late Emperor John, and nleco of Empress Tnitou. The marriage la of great Importance politically, as It unltos the two dynustics and tho families of powerful chiefs.
Kaiser Too Extravagant. Rerlln. Cable: An attack Is being made by tho press upon the Kaiser for his reeklesH extravagance. The nation has alrondy an annual deficit of $125.000,000 and the parers are beginning to complain that the nation can not afford to pay $0.000 for the cost of the journey when his Majesty travels from Potsdam to Vonlco.
CUTC OFF FATHER'S ARM.
BLINDED BY FLASK EXPLOSION. Operator In Tower Feels Way to Key
to Call Help After Blow-up.
Indianapolis, Ind., Special: "I am
badly burned nnd blind," was a mes
sage slowly ticked In the Panhandle
railroad dispatcher's office at Logans-
port, Ind., late Saturday night from G.
E. Frazel. an operator In a block tower
near Marlon.
The dispatcher ordered a freight train to stop at tho place, and the
crew found Frazel suffering terrible
agony from burns. He had been scald
ed by the explosion of a bottle of cof
fee he was heating on a stove, and
had felt his way to a key to call for
help.
Frazel was taken to Marlon, where
n physician says ho fears he can not
save Frazel s sight.
Idah , w an i th ,
t a I,,
V.
to!,.
CCt-,!, ,,
MTw. Col., Special: To ;;' onfiase,! and be made ' . all within 30 minutes, ; t bv Edward L. Mosher, wn,r' an!J M,S9 Claire is nit0 wa,tle " table Miss Hale caught the eye iw stammered and Mosher proposed, it was '" drove to a clercv- - he knot was S
p Wo man Goes to Prison. :,k'' -V D., Special: rmh
1 right, formerly of Wn1 been taken to the
sfrfiii
Irs ash.
Ort l.
, ' -in state penitentiary to :or foster daughter, Reulnh
AlhJrn? KJlled LD.V BlMt.
inw,.; ,,'; special: Twontv
W.n 1 "y " I'fcmaturo blast
H-thlohom nW (,,inrry near ,esl of Albany C" m,,C8 80Ut"-
PASTOR'S PRAYER
At Opening of Court Results In Mis
trial of Alleged Slayer. Mt. Vernon, Ga., Special: Followng a prayer at the opening of the
Court's session, offered by Rev. Joe
McDanlel, a relative of W. C. Beasley, for whoso alleged murder Jordan Swain Is on trial here, the defense In
he case at once moved for a mistrial
nnd it was granted.
Rev. McDanlel In his prayer asked
compassion for Swain, referring to him as a "man whose hands are stained by the blood of his fellow-
man."
Slays Man Who Maligns Her. Trenton, N. J., Special: This city Is stirred up over a sensational murder In the Hungarian colony. Pearl Palska, eighteen years old, nnd smnll and frail for her age, Is under arrest for the killing of John Lucntz, a fellow
countryman two years her senior, with a wife and children in Hungary. Tho pollco learned that tho killing was duo to aspersions which the man cast on the character of the girl after she had warned him to desist.
BREAKS BANK THREE TIMES.
Polish Visitor to Monte Carlo Has
Great Run of Luck.
Monte Carlo, Cable: Playing at trente et qunrento in the Casino, a
Polish visitor, gambling at two tables at the same time, won a large sum, said to exceed $00,000. The bank's funds had to be replenished three
times within nn hour and a hnlf.
The same man next day won $1G,000,
and continues playing with equal suc
cess.
A peculiar point Is the winner's ex-
.traordlnary demeanor. When he loses not a muscle of his face moves, but
after winning he becomes tho picture of misery, much to the amusement of
tho huge crowd surrounding him.
According to the tables a very ranld
Increase In gold production in recent
years is shown. "As the result of this
rapid growth." It Is said further, "the
gold output of the world's mines during the ten years ending with inns nc-
gregated, according to the figures In
question, $3.400,000.000: while the product of the Immediately preceding fifteen years aggregated $2,100,000,000: making a total of nearly $G,000,000.000 worth of gold produced In tho last twenty-five years out of a total production of $13.000.000,000 since the discovery of America." Meantime. It is stated, althoueh
gold Is more carefully conserved than any other article of man's production, some portions of the $13,000.000.000 have disappeared, and the best estimates put tho total world's supply of this metal at tho present time at about $11,000.000.000, of which onethird Is the product of the last ten years, one-half tho product of the last twenty-five years and three-fourths the product of the last sixty years. The
summary adds:
That considering Its distribution
by countries, the United States has a greater supply of gold money than
any other country, tho figures being according to this table: United States, $1.013.000,000; Germany. $1.014.000,000; . France, $920.000,000; Russia, $917.000.000: United Kingdom. $505.-
000.000: Austria-Hungary. $303.000.000; Italy, $25S,000.000: Australia.
$15S.O00,00O; Egypt, $140.000.000: Ar
gentina, $140,000,000; Turkey. $152.000.000: India, $113,000.000; Japan. $90.000.000; Canada, $00,000,000, and
Hrazll, $51,000,000.
Girl, at His Command, Uses Ax to Free Him from Debris.
Women Rule Washington Roost. Washington, D. C. Special: Women out-number the men by 15.42S In the national capital and Its suburbs, according to the police census. The census shows a total population of 343,003 in the District of Columbia, an Increase of 3.000 over a yoar ago. The negroes number 97,142.
Dowden. Ga., Special: The name of 15-year-old Mamie Price will be presented for n Carnegie medal.
Tbe home of her father was wrecked by storm and all the Inmates, except Mamie, were buried in the ruins. Sho
procured an ax and, guided by the groans of the victims, proceeded to cut them out of the debris. Her mother died before she could be released, but the girl rescued her baby brother
alive and unhurt. Her father was caught under heavy timbers and his left arm crushed. Tho girl cut all the timbers except thoso holding his arm. The father knew that the member would have to be amputnted anyhow, and at his command the girl brought the ax down on the crushed place, thus releasing him. She then made a tourniquet and went to get help from neighbors.
"GENTLEMAN HIGHWAYMAN"
Buddhist Temple Burned. Tokio. Cable: Zojoji. the famous Buddhist temple, situated in Shiba Park. Tokio, was destroyed by fire, the damage amounting to $200,000. Only thoso who know the pride of the Japaiiese in tliqir temples can conceive tho offoct of this loss on the people.
BASEBALL STANDINGS.
National League.
New York
Won. Lost. PcL . 10 9 .040 .15 12 .556 . 12 10 .f5 .14 ,14 .500 .11 1 12 .478 . 11 12 .178 . 11 14 .440 , 9 13 .409
American League.
Boston
And Musical Prodigy, Formerly of Indiana, Dies in Mexico.
Killed In Play With Children.
Lockport, N. Y., Special: Howard Wilcox, although CO years old, met
death while playing hide and seek
with several children. He was "It," and had selected the box stall of a
livery stable, where there was a horse,
for a hiding place, tho hqrse kicked him In the forehead, laying open his scalp, so thnt his brain wns oozing
out
Man Is Kneaded With Bread. San Antonio, Tex., Special: otto Pulzer, 25 years old, was caught In a dough mixer In a local bakery and crushed to death. When discovered half his body hnd been drawn through tho mixer and every bone was crushed. Wabash Pearl Brings $1,200. Princeton, Ind.. Special: William Hopple, mussel digger of Mt. Carmol.
111., found a forty-two-grain pearl In the Wnbnsh River, and at Mt. Cnrmel Fold It to Dr. Pepper, n pearl buyer, for $1.200.
Young Plunger Makes Killing.
St. Louis, Mo., Special: With his twenty-fifth birthday still to come,
Wllllnm N. Aubuchon, Jr., has mado n
little more than $100,000 this spring by
following the lead of James A. Patten
In wheat deals out of a working cap
ital of less than Sl.uuu. Mr. Aubuchon
traded exclusively on three-cent mnr-
clns. Ho declines to admit how much
less thnn $1,000 ho Invested nt the stnrt, but he turned his capital manV times and reinvested all of his profits till ho drew out finally far ahead of the came. 1
LONDON SCORNS T. R.'S HUNT.
Expedition to African Wilds Arouses
but Little Comment. London, Cable: Tho English papers
nt first devoted considerable space to ex-President Roosevelt's African trip,
but now from time to time only a
short paragraph announcing the bag appears. The public's expectations, perhaps, have been disappointed. Something out of the ordinary was looked for on the trip.
Women and men tourists and people
here In general know too well, how
ever, how big game shoots aro arranged In India and Africa for distinguished royal nnd noted political
visitors to regard the results of ono
of them of sporting Interest.
Lord Randolph Churchill's descrip
tion of his bag of eight lions In South
Africa some twenty years ago was n
Joke in England until the end of his
life, nnd the Joke hns been revived and some little fun Is being extracted from the ex'resldent's trip.
Auto Accident Kills Four. Liege, Belgium, Cable: A remark
able and fatal automobile accident occurred here Inst week. While one ma
chine was trying to pass another In
tho road It skidded against n wall nnd
crushed tho life out of two children who were passing. Tho car then wns
carried by Its own power down a smnll embankment and was thrown against
a passing raiironu train, it was a
heavy machine, and as It crashed Into
the train two pnssengers wero serious
ly Injured while tho chauffeur and tho
owner were killed.
Indianapolis, Ind., Special: Herbert Gorhnm, musical prodigy nnd "gentleman highwayman." for whom Indiana authorities searched In vain three
years, died April 29, near Mexico City, and was burled there. Equally versatile as a safe blower, highwayman and musical wonder, Gorham kent the no-
lice busy In Indiana. He was nn as
sociate of the notorious Guy Van Tas?
sei, now serving a life sentence at Jollet for murder; Noah Baney. a well-
known Indiana crook, now dead, who
confessed to the murder of the wife of Rev. Dr. Hlnshaw, and Charles Hanson an Indianapolis pollco character.
Capture Negro Night Riders. Galveston, Texas, Special: Follow
ing a series of depredations by a socret organization of negro night riders In Angelina county, 20 blacks were captured by a posse of white men. The negroes had assaulted many farmers
and their hired hands, damaged property and threatened a reign of terror. The negroes wore given 30 lashes each nnd severely flogged with cowhide whips and then turned over to tho authorities.
SL Louis .. Washington
'on. Lost. PcL 10 7 .090 14 S .036 13 9 .591 12 9 .571 11 13 .458 9 14 391 9 14 .391 0 10 273
American Association.
Indianapolis
'on. Lost. PcL IS S .092 17 11 .C07 17 13 .507 12 14 .402 12 14 4G2 12 10 .429 11 15 423 11 19 3C7
THE MARKETS.
Walks All Night In Sleep. Hudson, Mich., Special: After having walked all night In her sleep, Mrs. William Church, nn Invalid, was found by her husband seated by the roadside eight miles north of her home. Mrs. Church was awake when found. She could give no account of the journey other thnn that she was awakened by a smoldering pile of stumps suddenly bursting into flame.
Went In for 'Extremes. Princeton, Ind., Special: When tho family was out a cook stove with flro still In It and an Ice cream freozer wero stolen from tho residence of P. Folty, nt Mt. Cnrmel, III. Two mon sold the stolen articles at a secondhand store for $8.
Four Drown In Rowboat. New York, Special: Four young women and one young man, forming a party of eight, all friends -and neighbors, were drowned In the I lackensnck River while rowing toward Hacken sack from Bogota.
Indianapolis. Wheat No. 2 red $1.43 Corn No. 2 white.... .75 Oats No. 2 white.... 5S Hay No. 1 timothy.. 14 25 Poultry Cocks .00 Old torn turkeys.... .12
iien turKcys .17 Chickens .12 Ducks .08 Butter Country .11 Eggs Fresh 19 Cattle prime steers. .$0.35 0.85 Hogs heavies 7.10 Q 7 40 Lights 0.90 fj 7.1u Sheep good to choice 5.00 H .".50 Com. to best lambs. 5.60 s o0 Spring lambs 7.00 fj 9 50 Chicago. Wheat No. 2 rod.... $l.i:, Corn No. 3 white... .$0.78 tfi .70 Oats No. 3 whlto.... A0MU 59 X New York. Wheat No. 2 red.... ?i.42' Corn No. 2 white M Oats No. 2 white 1,0 Esperanto Is Spreading.
Berlin. Cable: Tho Polytechnlkim at Coethen has added to Its curriculum a course In Esperanto. The Interest In the universal language Is spreading, and the Berlin society is periodically holding popular lectures, for which no admission Is charged, In order to attract the general public Wife Slayer Shot Dead. Presho, S. D.. Special: William L. Ianslng was shot dead by a pursuing posse on the Brule Indian reservation after his wife had boon found In their cabin with hor skull crushed.
