Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 52, Number 9, Jasper, Dubois County, 3 December 1909 — Page 3
J. J. HILL SOUNDS WARNING. That We Are Consuming Too Much of What We Produce. St. Paul, Minn. Special: While not ontiroly agreoing with tho rocont statement Issued by Bradstroefs,
t n WASASH MAN'S DIVORCE Ems fiirs
ra
I) I) Is Annulled After Sensational Litigation of Five Years.
wEULMAN bAYS NARRATIVE DELIBERATE IMPOSTURE.
IS
GVES ALL CREDIT TO
PEARY
,w..m vllt North Pole in
Man who wuw A.rship Attacks Man Who did Stunt on Foot.
0" .1 'i
etat' 1 ' ' 11
BD 1 1 rr. i ' c; ' cimI 1 Ml I ew'i' i
wti.r
1" liK
In f..!1-
Vi.-
itI'. d (.! f t! I M
r
i,n.ton. Special: Waltor Well-
lvl.oxf preparations i"i ...I. nJi u-nrn nllllll-
i, .. i the announcement of tho
, of IJr. Frouoncu i. ouu
:,u.aiidi-r Robert js. ronry. hum a long Htatomont in which no , tin- narratlvos of tho two
.. clarlng that of Peary workmanlike, consistent, , hi every particular," and detliat of Hr. Cook as a self- , iui.l eun dellborato imposture. ,k - hiory is suspicious both in
,l,,cs tell and what It noes dedaros Mr. Wollman. "He vague and indoflnitc, but. ' . 1.1 nlnaa rmMrelv
1! im Weil ll III -t.sj. v....... ...r
nt tho wrong piuco. ino-
,,,.s his story ring truo. It Is an approximation of reality This is true of his figures, his
1, .ms. everything. . f.f us who have had a sharo , ,, wnvk." says Wcliman, In coni, - tus nnnlvsis. "and who have ,.,m. in that no blot of fraud ! -t;iin the pi oud record of of-,'- , sacrifice had a ilrst hope .r '.(.k would be able to demon- . i,N pood faith. This has tils- ! m airilvsls of his own story. ..(pud hope -that ho was tho ,.f some hallucination or men-i.,-and bellevod himself ho
n at the poio. uiougu, ui was uot vanished In tho
arll'M and subso(piont events.
i. mains, though ono says it
. in st renret. only tho wretched
i ,-. !i mat the Journey which ho i,, i . . and tho report which ho
f it were deliberately planned - , o itset."
. -t of Mr. Wollmnn's finding
. , it nith his meager party and
nr Conk could not pos
la. accomplished tho feat; that i nmical dRta are too minutely
ti, hnvo been made under as
! (: ndithms in the field, and that
.:loi.r's dash for tho lecture
m .-mil his acceptance ot
. I . 1 . . 1.1
n' nwers iiwicvu hiiuii mo
innocent women and chil . ,e submitting his field rec i. iitinr examination, all con hi discredit. '
iman attacks first Cook's
wlilch Intimates that the consumption of food products in this country hat caught up with production, Jarnos J. Hill na; that tho point has been noarly reached, and that wo aro so close to it that there is roason for alarm. "It is a matter which should be seriously considered," said Mr. Hill. "Our present balance of trade is an Indication that tho margin botweon our production and consumption is bo-
coming narrower. Ixiok at tho figuros ton years ago and then look at them now. Our enormous balance of that
time has dwindled away. Wo aro not
exporting foodstuffs as we were. We
are consuming them ourhelves.
"The reason for the Increase In price this year over last year is a
matter of supply and demand.
Vl 'I t.v, . r , llL-' wr'
dM F'lM In.M T
hi- .'- t' ' tf..
f
1 ., !
i:rcn ( ,U t-1'it Mr
Ft.. " ' bis journey. Ho points out
tha1 :i iic sledging is not a now ven
t". ii. I an experiment, but has boon
ru i.. I aln. out to a science. He pror ... o ttie proposition that the ilrst ti, i s to le don In advancing over i . i i n. Ids is tb reduction to the
t inn um of the food and fuel to be
i. ri. ! and secondary tho orgnniza
n supporting parties that can be
m v i.iik from tho dwindling main
h..' until the few who are hardiest
f i. . mi th" final struggle to the goal
T!,. '.Milser tho route. Mr. Wollman
h. fntth. neccK-arily the greater w ,t of food and fuel, and in conse-
i c a much slower pace
r a
I
DICTATOR'S ARMY WITHOUT MU
NITIONS AND RATIONS.
INAL GRAPPLE NOW ON
Uncle Sam Will Force New Govern
ment to Make All Kinds of Good Promises.
111.1 L n m . .1
it ikit Kn inn sruwi i ' in iiit u-
F P.OAI P1F1 n SHALL RP OWNED K.-l. fi-. .. 7. :.Z'.wL a . -...1 CAPT. DEPLIDGE TUHNS '
Clinrie N Junes, former Council-
BY MONOPOLIES
DECLARES 6IFF0BD PINCHOT
Says Water Power Should Not ue
Given Away Forever to Special Interests.
Washington. Special: Tno latest
reports from N'icaragua Indicate that
the days of Dictator Zelaya are uum
bored
His Cabinet has gone hack on him
his army is without rations and short
of ammunition and many of his old
followers havo gone over to join the fortunes of Estrada, tho rebel president. In fact, his abdication is momentarily expected. The Nicnraguan insurgonts are now engaged in what is expected to bo tho final struggle with tho Zclayan forces. The advices indicate that fighting is in progress both at Rama and Grey town, and that a general assault on Managua, the capital, will
follow.
Washington. SnocliU: The fight be
tween Gifford Pinchot. United States
Forester, and Richard A. Ualunger. (
Secretary of tho Interior, win nui
down. Pinchot Uns again mrwwn down the gauntlet to Ilallinger In the
issue between them in regara 10 uie conservation policy.
He declares that Congress wm nae
to decide at its forthcoming s.-ssion
whether tho great coal fields or tm-
country shall continue to remain in
tho hands of the people or ue giuuu-
up by monopolies, and wnetner me great wator power sites shall be given i.r,,.iiii tit.roats nr tio con- I
trolled bv the neonle.
Mr. Pinchot makes known his views upon these two "chief sources of j jKiwer of tho present and future" in a letter to Dr. Lyman Abbau, of New York, in response to a series of questions asked by the latter on "the national conservation policy." Referring to tho development of water i-ower and coal, the Government Forester snys that in most cases actuul development of the former can host he done by private interests acting under public control, but that "it is neither good sense nor good morals to let these valuable privileges pass from the public ownership for nothing and forever." "Congress must decide at this session." Mr. Pinchot says, "whether the groat coal fields, still in public ownerl.in hall remain so. in order that
their use may be controlled in the monopolistic interests of a few. "Congress must decide also whether Immensely valuable rights to the use
of water power shall be given away to nnoHal interests In perpetuity and
without compensation, instead of beinp imM and controlled by the public.
"Why Is it important to protect the
water powers?" asks Dr. audoii. uu in ronlv Mr. Pinchot points out that it
is of the first importance to prevent
man-at-Large and wealthy owner of milling property in Wabash and Toxas. ww annulled after a sensation al lltigRiion of five yoars. Jonas was divorcod and soon ro married. Then his first wife alleged this divorce was secured secretly by fraud and asked it bo annulled. Thon the second wife brought divorce proceedings on the ground of humiliation and won. The Jones divorce was opened so that Mrs. Jones could get alimony, but she spurned offers of alimony, insisting only on annullment. This has been done and the two are again husband and wife. ti.; probably will not live together They are very wealthy and proniibem socially.
AF
TER 24 YEARS.
HE FINDS 22 GRANDCHILDREN
Four Generations Participate In Welcome to Man Who Was Supposed Dead.
1111
! INDIANA EMBEZZLERS
LOST FALSE TEETH. iefore Thanksgiving Dinner and He Killed Himeelf With a Razor. Chicago. 111.. Special: "I havo lost my false teeth.' complained J. J. Shoppard, nt the Colonial Hotol Thanksgiving Day, as he entered the apartments of his frlond, C. A. Cator. "This is a had day on which to loso
one's teeth." responded Cator sympathetically. "Anything I can do for you?" "Yes. let mo take a razor, will yon?" Cator produced the razor and Shoppard repaired to his own npartmonta and cut his throat. Acquaintances said he was soparated from his family.
TI. rm nti.1 .immun! Hon ianrfwl 1 ironi passing 1
UVllman continues, mapped
. e . t J il. .1
f r !.! plans careiuuy xor uv uu.aim ;,!. started with fifty or sixty DKM it" docs and twenty-one sledges. !! i!'iie. his party so that ho had f. . ".porting parties who hept opon t! I irk trail and In leaving tho main 1" '. lightened the loads that men and dfi: wi re compelled .o draw. Dr rook had no supporting party, sa- Wrllman. except for the first thrc ila8 HIß party consisted of ttr..- men. twenty-six dogs and two sl.'.l'v in the long dash he made. Thai which he declares to have don. declares Mr. Wcllmnn. referring to ('iK)k. "with his equipment and organization was physically impossiMe It is beyond human power." La'er in his statement ho adds: ' Tt.i laws of physics and of mechanical forces can no more bo defied ar l ignored in the arctic resdons than cist where, save in tho imagination."
MOOSE WENT FOR PARKER But Mrs. P. Let Him Have Both Barrels and all Bets Were off. St. Paul. Minn., Special: Mrs. II. P. Parker, of Chicago, one of the boat flints In Illinois, saved tho life of loth her husband and also an Indian p'ddc. when a charging moose attaik. Ml them in the north woods. They riaihod St. Paul on their way home. Mr and Mrs. Parker and John arrease. an old Indian guide, prched a camp near Sucker Lake, w.ii the north share of Lake Suporl"i. throe weeks ni;o. The first mornin there the guide went down to tho lake for n bucket of water. As ho raised himself fiom the edge i f i lie water he saw tho moose about to roach him. Ho yelled for Parker. Parker ran down without his gtm. The guide climbed a tree and the mouse started for Parker. Mr. Parker heard the commotion, and gabbing her rifle started for tho late She saw the mrse plunging thioncb the undorbnuh about to mike her husbnml. Quickly raising hir nun. sho fired. The animal stopr '! A second shot and he tumbled over dead.
Baboon Whips Its Keeper. Portland. Ore., Special: Fred Wilson, of Rrnzll. Indlnna. a trainer employed by an animal show, fought desperately for half an hour with Kokotno, a pink tailed baboon, that attacked him in the cage. The savago beast clutched Wilson's throat, but fo long as tho trainer could keep on his foet ho had tho best of tho fight. At length ho fell, exhausted from ptraln and loss of blood, nnd the animal gnawed hla legs in n frightful manner.
from the Norwegian steamer Xtstein nro believed now to bo In the hands of the Insurrectionists, and prompt use of them by Estrada's forces is expected. Tho Department of State declared it had received no advices of any kind from Nlcnragua. All inquiries as to tho landing of marines on N'Icarnguan territory were met with evasive replies, but these were such as to give rlso to the belief that some force has been put ashore to protect American interests and rcconnolter. Definite reports to tho Navy Department from naval officors transmitted to tho State Department, and its report from Consul Caldera at Managua, justify the State Department In
expecting tho fall or tne z.eiaya government probably before the Buffalo can reach Corlnto with its battalion of marines. The State Department gives no encouragement that iho theory that its
grave cause of quarrel with tho constitutional crimes or Nicaragua can ho settled by a "commission." On the contrary, they say that a commission might precede the dispatch of n naval squadron, but that a naval squadron would hardly be sent In advance of a commission. In other words, the present case is not one for further diplomacy In cne the Zelaya Gorernmant should disintegrate Iteforo the arrival of the marines nt Corlnto. naval officers commanding ships In the Carrlbean and the Pacific near Nicaragua will bo given instructions how to deal instantaneously with the new government. A new Government can only come Into existence under documentary pledges to the United States for n settlement for a long psrlod of time for all causes or present quarrel and of future quarrels between the two republics. SULTAN'S CROWN JEWELS Will Be Sold at Auction by the French Pawnbroker.
Paris. Cablo: The Monte de Plete. ns Franco's state monopoly for pawnl.rnWn is en'itled. anrounces by
larco advertising hills th sale of a
rich collection 01 jewvis. uuriuuuis on December C and lnstlrg a week. Ttinue nlthou!-!! the ad vertlsement
docs not state tho fact, are some of
the crown jewels 01 aihjui zjz. ev Sultan of Morocco, who pawned them
t.s 1 -mo ono frnuco ($240.00) two
IUI .,.--"- vnnrrt fl0.
As the interest baa not bren paid M,nv will be sold at auction.
Tiie collection contains hundreds of nd 20 watches, tho wholo
weighing 460 pounds. Denver Mint Will Reopen.
nvor. Col.. SroclaJ: The Denver
mint which was shut down last July wnimo of n surplus of all denomina
tion of cold coins, will open the first
of the venr with between $lS,O00,O00 and 52Ö.0O0.O0O In gold bullion on hanfl which will bo coined Into money
of small denominations. Calls $18,000 Beggarly. New York. Special: Honestly,
could you live on $ii.uuu a year.
rtimtlnc In the high price of eggs and
milk? Burnett Young Tiffany, son of the late Charles L. Tiffany, says It is linccnrlv. Ms father left him the
.,r,nnr nortlon of J3.000 n year, with
tho proviso that the executors might add $15.000 to this If tho young man's habits improved. When ho climbed on to the water cart the executors
compiled wltn mo um.
If thore were enough pcaco keepers
tho peace matters woum nm oc neou
cd.
I .hin aa i lov- hnre been doing, be
wt n i i a f - ii a & j ----- -
cause the greatest source of power
la fftlllns water.
"Under our form of civilisation." he
savs. "if a few men ever suoceea m
controlling these sources of power ther will eventually control all in
dustry as well. If they succeed in ... li.r. all Industry they will
luiiuvmng ' . .. necessarily control the country. CAN'T BAR OUT CARRIGAN.
Not Even a Bishop Can Excommunicate This Denver Priest.
AFTER PLEAS OF GUILTY
Nearly a Dozen Men Involved In Sen
sational Embezzlement Cases Appear In Federal Court.
Indianapolis. Ind.. Special: "Bank
ers' Day in the Federal L-oon
brought before Judge A. B. Anderson nearly a dosen men involved in recent cnnnaliniuil t-mbeczlemeM Stories in
Indiana. Fiv former bank employes
received sentences of five yoars imprisonment each In the Government
penitentiary at x Lesvenwuna, Kansas.
William II. Marker and Noan K.
Marker, charged with the embezzlement of SIOO.iMK) from the First National Baak of Tipton, lnd- pleaded not guilty and will be tried later.
Oscar F. Cochrane, a former Doorkeeper of the American National Bank of this city, charged with having embeuled JT.OOO, and Paul C. Gaul, charged with complicity in the enibexxletuint of 5Mh0 from tne Capital National Bank of Indianapolis, also pleaded not guilty.
The followiiiR pleaded guilty:
Chicago, Special: Henry Deplldge, for twenty-four yoars separated from his children and supposed by them to be dead, walked into tho home of one of his daughters in Chicago Saturday night and there was a reunion in which four generations woro represented. Tho mooHnir hfltWCCn Deplldgö, Ills
T children, his grandchildren and his
' great grnndchlldron took place in uiw ! home of John F. Tyrrell. 4247 os
End avenue, a grandson or .Mr. ueplldge. by virtue of his marriage to one of the granddaughters. Mr. Deplldge is 79 years old. and. since a young man. has sailed the great lakes, first as a common sailor and later as mate and captain. He rotired six years ago and has been living in Bpffalo. Without kith or kin to comfort him In his old age. Capt. Deplldge decided a few days ago to come to Chicago
and search for his sons ana uauHu-
ters. He took passage on tho steamer Boston from BufTnlo. arriving in Chicago harbor Saturday. The Boston on its return trip was wrecked off Kennworth and the crew taken from tho vessel by the life-saving crew of Evanston. Twenty-four years had made so many changes In the appearance of the city that when he arrived here Capt. Deplldge almost gave up hope of finding any one who might know blra and wandered down along the river front. There he found some of his old cronies of tho days when he was a cantain of a lake boat running
out of Chicago and through tnom finally located John M. Barber, 2SG hl son In-law.
UIOWIl ..ww, , , . Sirs Taylor announced that wniie Mr. Deplldge had five children and two grandchildren when he went away from Chicago, he now had twonty grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. All of the children are still llTOne of the great-grandchildren Is Miss Jessie Frances Tyrell. daughter of John F. Tyrell. To further compl -
cate matters. Mr. l yreu s ow
HIRED A LUNATIC. And Did Not Know It, and It May Cost Mrs. Sullivan Her Life. Now York, Special: When Mrs Ellon Sullivan omployod a man of all
work at hor boarding house snc odsorvod that he acted strangoly, hut she did not know that ho was a maniac. He had been at work only a few hours when, under the pretonse of showing her a lenklng wator pipe, ho lurod her into tho basement, and thero attacked her with an iron bar, indicting injuries from which the hospital surgeons say she will probably die. German Aeronauts Killed. Berlin, Cable: Dr Brcnktaann and Hugo Francke, the two ucst .iarlng members of the Areo Club of Berlin, have been killed through the collapso of their balloon "Kolmiu." Their bodlos were found near Flutne. Austria-Hungary. Near by was their bnlloon, a huge renf in the envelope cell
ing tho story or tnoir tieawi. Sextuple Slayer Will Die Richmond. Va Special: Howard Little, charged with the sextuple murder of Mrs. Betty Justis. George Meadows, his wife and throe members of his family, was found guilty of murder in the first degree. He was sentenced to be eloctrocutd in uicn-
monu, January (. Indianapolis Lawyer Disbarred. Indianapolis, Ind., Special: Tho crusade of the Indianapolis Bar Association against attorneys who aro suspected of engaging in practico contrary to law resulted In a verdict disbarring James S. Rutherford from practicing before any Court in Indiana. He was found guilty of tho charge of subornation of perjury.
Max. C Emmerich, bookkeeper of falaer. T. R Tyrell. and his father, fm v-.ttinl flank nf Indian-! t- l- n Tvroll of the W OS)
Donver. Col.. Special: Despite the formal notice of his excommunication, which was read in most of tho Catholic churches of Colorado, Father J. P Carrlgan. pastor of St. Patricks Church, conducted services before a large congregation Sunday.
Father Carrlgan Winsen reu i his congregation the formal notice of his excommunication 6y Bishop Matz
He then discussed the nonce in at-
tall. explaining cnarges orougai inst him bv Bishop Matz and
charncterizine the document as
last stroke or a desperate man. consumed by the spirit of revenge against his brother." r .
Father Carrlgan s stand in reiusuig
vacate the pastorate 01 oi.
upheld by tne locai
the Capital National Bank of Indian
apolis. embezzlement of $ 40.000. Harry C. Prinzler, complicity with Emm-rich. E. X. Detzer. teller of the First National Bank of Ft. Warn. Ind., embezzlement of $7.000. J. H. Phillips, bookkeeper of the Terre Haute National Bank, embez
zlement of Hi.000. Frank II. Nicolai. Assistant Cashier of the City National Bank of Auburn. Ind., embeaslement of $6.000. Norman Hamilton, clerk of the Indiana National Bank of Indianapolis, theft of $500. j.ilco Anderson sentenced Tinnierirh. Prinzler, Detzer. Phillips and Nicolai to serve five years each in the Ft. Leaenworth prison. ft Caul and William H. Marker and Noah R. Marker are to be tried on March 7.
to
Patrick's was
courts.
HERO ACT
Of Former Cornell Student Results In
Engagement to Pittsburg Girl. Pittsburg. Special: Tho engage
ment of Miss EJIxsbetn Heron, oi
Pittsburg, chum or Heien rncs. to nrrv M. Curry, son of former part
ner of Andrew Carnegie, has been announced. Both the young people have
Kient fortunes, and tne engagement is said to be but an eclm of tho famous "half-billlon-doUar chorus." The Intended bridegroom is a Carnegie hero, having received a silver raeoal
for bravery in a firo at tmeii Allege where he was a student In 1&06. Curry almost lost his life trying to save a fellow student named Mc-
rtMtmi The act loo to tne en-
v v gagement.
Would Steal John D. rievoland. Ohio. Special: Because
of an alleged plot to kidnap or to kill
Teddy Sees a Lion-Killing. T nnrilnr i Ilrltih Vant Africa
the j . i KIa Alarinal nnACAVfkll PT ort if
wwa-sw " aix-a Roosevelt, Edmund Heller And Leslie A. Tarlton have arrived here from Gaus Inghlsu plateau. All are in splendid health. Colonel Roosevelt expressed himself as delighted at again meeting R. J. Cuniagbame and members of the American party who awaited him here. The former President Is greatly elated over the success of the hunt on the plateau Among the sights witnessed was a display of lion killing with spears by Mandl warriors. The exhibition was a thrilling one.
Against State-Wide Prohibitlcn. Mobile. Ala., Special: Official returns from Monday's election to decide whether prohibition should be incorporated in the state const it niton show that the vote opposed to the amendment has gained a victory by over 20.000 majority. It was a complete laadslide. The surprise was Jefferson county, which gave a majority against the amendment. There the amenders had placed their confl dence In victory. Sixty-one out of sixty-seven counties give the aatis a majority of 26.42.
Killed In Blind Tiger. Terre Haute. Ind.. Special: George W. PMrcell. formerly a state ani an
international o&ieial of the United
John D. Rockeicuer. tue police o. , "V(rfc . ljlbor Cam
fnocuii lire- - - . -
rivi ann mm.- wi" i" - . . r.t
r,l thn OH Kinc when miseiont r, no w saimraa u ,"n!JL1 in a blind tiger at Atlas by
no leii ' It irrtgt illll and 'Taylor Suttle. the proprietor, died .lKJlyXonAay. Sattle says Purcell at the same will be teJ , hlm he refused to aet
spend the winter.
Rockefellers will
For Wholesale Executions. Fargo. N. Dak., Special: Judge Chnrlcs Amidon. of the United Stat.s District Court for North Dakota, advocated the execution of the professional criminal and the hopelessly Insane in an address at the Congregational Church Fight Indiana Mine. Blaze. Unton. Ind.. Special: One hundred and fiftv men are fighting a fire in the Summit Mine, one of the larcest conl mines in this field. It Is estimated that a loss of $20.000 already has been caused and the fire is still raging although the mine has been flooded to a depth of several foot. Death Claims 33 Hunters. Chicago. Special: The verified record of tragedies of the fall hunting season in Wisconsin and Michigan since ScpL 1 Is thirty-three persons killed and thirty-seven wounded.
drinks for both of them and he shot in self-defense.
Big BllHard Run. New York. Special: Georre Sutton, of Chicago, with a ran of 235 In the concert hall at Madison Square Garden broke all records for a champion ship tournament at IS balk line billiards. Gets Divorce in Five Minutes. Anderson. Ind.. Special: Mrs. Elizabeth Clifford filed a suit for divorce from her husband. Clinton Clifford, and five minutes afterward the decree was granted by Judge Austin, of the Superior Court. Clifford is alleged to have threatened to kill his wife. Warren Votes "Dry." WilllamsporL Ind., Special: By a majority of 92 the voters of Warren county Tuesday voiced their approbation of the -dry- regime which has been in effect for the last year.
Capt. Frank r. uyren. m i
Park Police, came 10 j" in the festivities, making four generations on both sides of th family. Capt. DeplidKe. in telling the story of his separation from his ramraid that he left St. Joseph. Mich which was then their home, on a steamer bound for Buffalo. When tho vessel reached port he became ill and was taken to a hospital. In the meantime his children moved from St. Joseph to Chicago, and loiters sent to the Michigan city wore returned unopened. Why Meat is High.
New York, Special: Charles Spraguo
Smith, head of tne reopi- .m... is demanding a federal nveatigatlon . ,uance in the irice of food
-.-fro Tn hack uo his demand, he
shows the figures reported to the v-. Vork Stock Exchange by Armour
& Co.. which show that for tho year ending October 2S the immense pack
ing house made sa per win u ital of j20.0P".OOQ. Big Prize or Discoverer.
Philadelphia. Special: Dr Ijiwrence Pitfc leader of the anti-ttKTCulosis
forces for this state, confirmed the report that a prominent Yale alumnus, hw na.ni is withheld, has offered
sinoooo to the first m rson who dis
covers a cure for tuherruh s. Twenty experts will compose a 1ury to pass on the merits of the eure. submitted
to them in the next ten ears. Writes 100 Words a Minute.
Q Insenh. MO., bl eciar At ttie
meeting of the Mlsronrl Valley Com
merclal Teachers ssocia ion n. u
Hlaisdell. of New York, made a new
world's typewriting record, writing
i rjs wonts from copy he had not
een before In fifteen in fifteen rain
Htes This was a little m- re than 10 words a miaute, the previous high rec
ord being ninety-live worus a minute.
Orders Spencer Bank Closed.
Silencer, ind . Special : Tho private
hnitk of Beem. perlen ft Co was closed
Sat unlay by order of h" Auditor of ktate on the ground that a larger
..nonnt of its assets wa employed In
Investments than the s'ntc banking laws permitteil. The liabilities of the bank are alnit $260.000 and it is expected that they shall he met without
dlScHlty.
"Unwritten Law" Frees Girl.
Auburn. Cal.. Special: The unwrlt-
in inw that a slrl may kill the man
trtin has deceived her was upheld by
,i iiinr which h-sard the evidence
.Min.t Alma Bell and then freed
her althouch she admitted that she
had murdered Joe Armes, her erst-.-htl weetheart. ' I killed him. but
he mad love to me and betrayed me. and then forsook me to follow a prettier face." was the girl's sole de
fense.
Zelaya Orders 40 Killed. San Francisco. Special: News of tho execution by a firing squad forty citizens of Nicaragua at Corlnto by order of President Zelaya because they cheered on hearing of a victory by the Insurgents against the Zolayan government was brought to
San Francisco Dy tne passengers anu
the crew of the steamer uty ot t'ara.
Great Gold Production in U. S. Wftthlnaton. Special: The gold
mines of the United States produced
194 550 000 worm oi me precious metal during 19055, according to the United States geological survey and ih hiireaii of minus, which have co
operated in preparing an analysis of the reports from private refineries and federal mints and assay offices.
Cook Sends Data to Danes. New York. Special: North pole da' a
and reports, compiled by Dr. frre.l-crick-A. Cook, were sect to Copen
hagen last week in charge of waiter Lonsdale, the explorers private secre
tary. The records, which contain alxjut 30,000 words, will be guarded carefully until the destination is reached.
He's So Nervous! Vew York. Special: SuTerin? from
a nervous breakdown an a rejult of the mental strain under which he has
labored in . e,.iriun o. ii"uv mr the University f Copenh;.; n, Dr.
Frederick A t ",k. o"n-r oi uie
north Ol-, u" 'lammau
inn tn Bronxvi) e. and is at tho homo
of friends in Manhattan
George Has Some Spunk. ;ew York. Special Became h
married Beusi- an.-es. a now gin Georee H. Mulligan. Ji . s-n f a ti.illi'onaire contr.icor. lias b -n disinherited bv his fa'-her and is n ,w drlv ii.e n Fifth a'nue automobile stace
for a livinc u " ,a it-jjunvu to bo worth $:UHl.00.
THE MARKETS. Indianapolis.
Wheat-N" 2 red... Corn No. 2 white.. Oats No. 2 whie. .
l!nyNo. 1 ti'uowy. Poultry cocki .
Old torn turKey.. Hon ttirkes Chickens
Butter country .. Ecas freali
Cattle prime s'tors
Hogs hoavtes . .
l.ti-hts
Com. to best lumbs too Chicago.
uihnni No. 2 rod... 1 I'J
Corn No. 2 white.... Oats No. 2 white....
New York.
Wheat No. 2 red.... Corn No. 2 whlto Oats No. 2 white....
jr. :.! s 15 7.r
C3
$1-174 .rs .40 M 23 -7 15 17 .11
u s on 'i 8 no 'i S M 7.00 if 1.23 4P C-Ti 42 1.174 62 4ou,
Died On Firing Line.
Dos Moines. Iowa, Special: On his
way to his home at Ottumwa, after having completed his last trip, a. D. oMnwm seed years, said to havo been the oldest traveling salesman in America, fell dead from bis scat In a
Rock Island passenger tram. Pive Die in Auto Crash.
Tji Aneoles. Cal.. Special: As the
result of a collision of their automo
bile with a trolley car, nve memners of the Nicholas Jacobs family were killed, two were fatally injured and
three others siignuy nuru
Rescuer Gets $5,000 Reward. Prt Cablo: A special from Ma- ' T-......n TIInln Ihn
drld says mav r,ui,vii ".hh.."-. Vow York yachtsman, has made a nre;ont of J5.000 to the man who rescued him when his yacht, tho Vnruna, was wrecked on tho northwest coast of tho Island of Madorla.
Holds Corn Yield Highest. Crnwfordsville. Ind.. Special: Geo. Phehus, of Darlington, says he has the record yield of corn for this seaBon. having husked 021 bushels from a six-acre field. This Is an average of 101 bushels per acre.
