Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 55, Number 52, Jasper, Dubois County, 17 October 1913 — Page 6

WEEKLY COURIER BEN ED. DOANE, Publisher.

INDIANA

JASPEH

And now the Next?

fore and aft" skirt

The season for fish tales is irever closed.

l

Fashion la writing a New Freedom or women,

The autumn girl is a symphony in tan and freckles.

Aviation will have to fly fast to equal the- accident record of travel on land.

Optimists often get laughed to scorn; but being optimists they don't mind.

A flight to the moon is now predict'ed by a far sighted aeroplane .en thu-slasL

TARIFF BILL SIGNED

PRESIDENT WILSON PLACES SIG

NATURE TO DOCUMENT IN PRESENCE OF NOTABLES.

COTTON FUTURES TAX NOT IN

SENATOR REED

New Act Goes Into Operation at Once With Exception of Ratet Upon Wool and Sugar Currency Legislation Now Due.

The world Is always profoundly

grateful to the man that can make It

laugh. Woman's dress, instead of becoming original, is rapidly turning toward aboriginal. Bachelors, go to Berlin. It Is crowded with spinsters, according to the last census.

FEATURES OF THE NEW TARIFF LAW. In the opinion of its makers, the Democratic leaders of congress, the most important features of the new tariff are: Reduction of nearly one-half in the average tariff on foodstuffs and farm products. The placing of raw wool on the free list and reduction of nearly two-thirds in the tariff on woolen clothing, especially of the cheaper grades. Reduction of one-third (average) on rotton clothing. Reduction of sugar tariff and Its abolishment in 1916. Reduction of one-third ( average) in tariff on earthenware and glassware. Abolishment of all tariff on meats, fish, dairy products, flour, potatoes, coal. Iron ore, lumber and many classes of farm and office machinery. General reduction on all important articles in general use.

0

HYAN GAVE TO FUN

PROSECUTION IN IMPEACHMENT TRIAL SPRINGS SURPRISE WHEN CASE IS CALLED.

VENUST1AN0 CARRANZA

FINANCIER'S SON ON STAND

Lawyers Have Protracted Wrangle Over Admission of Testimony, Which Is Finally Admitted by Judge Colfax's Order.

Albany, N. Y., Oct. 7.-The prosecution in the impeachment trial of Governor William Sulzer sprung a surprise on the defense by asking the court for permission to reopen its case and present more testimony.

In preceding his request Attorney Stanchfield stated that the new testimony was of great importance, and had come to the attorneys for the board of managers since Thursday last He said that he wanted to call

four witnesses. Wrangle Over Ryan Testimony. The first of these was Allen A.

Senator Reed of Missouri had an Ryan, son of Thomas F. Ryan, the altercation with .John Mclntyre of financier He wa questioned by M, Philadelphia, a . member of the Na- Stanchfield. who was apparently Je-M,..V,..r-r association. In sirous of securing information about

the committee room of the senate and a $10.000 contribution When Mr.

SULZER ASKED AID OF MURPHY t A. A. Ryan Testifies Governor Sought Relief.

WOULD "DO WHAT'S RIGHT'

Impeached Executive Attempted to Make Termi With His Arch Enmy to Avert Trial, Is Story Told to Court.

Mr. Reed slapped the face of Mr. Mclntyre, breaking his eye glasses.

When a man knocks his own tivn it's a sign that his neighbors are holding tho offices. Having one's jewelry stolen seems to be an indication that one belongs to the inclusive set.

Washington, Oct. 4. Surrounded by

representatives, senators and mem

bers of his cabinet, President wnson

ROOSEVELT PARTY SAILS FOR SOUTH AMERICA

Stanchfield asked if Ryan had had a telephone talk about the middle of October, 1912, with Mr. Sulzer, there was a long wrangle over the admissibility of this evidence. Chief Judge Cullon admitted the evidence, saying that it would not be

considered, as having any weight un-

Ä new portrait of General Carranza, the Mexican constitutionalist leaderwho is said to be the choice of his party for president.

signed the administration tariff bill at wm Expore southern Republic 1 400 less really had a direct hearing

ten minutes after nine o ciocit. xl

became effective as a law at midnight

Wilson Comments on Bill.

thf meas- New York. Oct.

liiu yicsiucui. icicnuu i-w i

Mile Journey to Head Waters of the Paraguay River.

4. Col.- Theodore

Pride Is a good thing, but to protect ure as the first step in the emancipa- Roosevelt and party sa lied today for

'it from misjudgment, see that it is not tion Qf the country from monopo y. " w

mistaken for a grouch. The second and final step, he saiQ, - ;

would come with the enactment oi gia uiuuutaxu

South American state.

uoon the articles of impeachment.

"I can't recollect exactly what the conversation was," said Mr. Ryan, when allowed to answer. Said Sulzer Got $10,000. Ignatius V. Metflone, private secretary of Thomas F. Ryan, took the stand after Ryan had been excused

temporarily. McGlone testified that

HANS SCHMIDT IN FRENZY; TEARS BEADS INTO BSTS Slayer of Anna Aumuller Causes Scene In Court Prisoner Charged With Murder.

New York, Oct. 4 Just as the "millionaire" jury in the court of Coroner Feinberg was finding Hans Schmidt, the renegade priest, guilty of the murder of Anna Aumuller, a dramatic incident ensued which interrupted the

inquest.

It is hard to tell whether women the currency bill. Immediately after boutn American state. temporarily, mcuioi Coroner Feinberg appealed to memiu is lmiu tu w j Anthonv Tiala. the erratic explor- Up mpt Snlzpr at 115 Broadway ana ! . , J , aa

i1rp?a to nlease the men or to excit the president's signature lu " - " - , . bers ot me jury, wmca was ueaucu fhe onvy o each other. it became a record of the state de- er, whom the colonel selected to pre- what the overnor sald he was going ghon ident of

nartment Mr. Ben Davis, cmet cieris. v- , " , UUL tu luclIVC tl ,.o- the interborough Rapid Transit com-

wfmonf roPPivpd it from the trip, was one of the party who needed money. McGlone declared he

tales seems ju t a little grim as a Secretary Tumulty' and filed it in the sailed with Roosevelt. wonld give him no money until he tales seems just a utt s o J From Buenos Aires . 1,400-mile jour- talked with "somebody else."

alLUlVCa. J . r 1 1 -I 1 J. i.V. I ... . . .. I 1

The new law became operative with ney Dy water win do mauo tu tue Tllls "someDoay eise provea to ue the excention of schedules on Wool waters of the Paraguay river. Thence Allan A Ryan. Sulzer then received and sugar they wiU strike in Matto Grosso' a for' $10,000 from McGlone. The house agreed to the conference est-covered territory intersected by McGlone said that he went to see report the final action of that body on water courses, in the center of Bra- Sulzer after he saw SOmebody else"

Albany, N. Y., Oct. S. Govarnor Sulzer attempted to win tha iufluonce of Charles F. Murphy to stop tho trial of his impeachment and in roturn therefor said he "v,as willing to do whatever was right," according to the testimony of Allan A. Ryan at the trial. The testimony was given aftor the court by a secret vote of 41 to 14 decided to admit in the record Ryan's testimony. This was that that Sulzer asked him to see Senator Root and request him to induce State Chairman William Barnes to influence the Republican votes of the members of the court to declare the impeachment proceedings illegal because they were brought during an extraordinary session of the legislature. Sought Peace With Tammany. The admission of this testimony, stricken from the record, opened the doors to Ryan's story of the governor's alleged attempt to make peace with Tammany on the eve of bis impeachment. Ryan said that Sulzer asked him to see Delancey Nicoll, his father's attorney, and to request him to see Murphy. "He wanted me," said the witness, "to have Mr. Nicoll sway Mr. Murphy to call off this inquiry by getting his following to vote that the assembly

had no right to impeach him. He said Mr. Nicoll could be the go-between and he (Sulzer) was ready to do whatever was right." Went Out and Forgot About It. "What did you do in regard to see-

motto for a city hospital.

Vivid bathing suits with white

nnnrtio flnps on the side, now have a

purple past at Atlantic City.

At least the man who takes his bath

on Saturday night .3 demonstrating

that cleanliness is next to godliness.

the tariff bill. Speaker Clark overruled

all

zil.

and handed the governor $10,000 in

fnr funds with which to bury

the dismembered body of Anna Au- ing Delancey Nicoll?" asked Attorney muller to save it from the potter's Stanchfield of counsel for the impeachfield. Before a member of the jury ment managers. could move there came a shower of "I told the governor," replied the currency and silver from the back ot witness, "that I would see what I could the room. The spectacle caused some- do, and went out into the country and nnp amnne- thfi 500 snectators to forgot about it."

laugh. Schmidt, with a scowl on bis Previous to this Ryan said, in ro-

And talking about anti-klssing cam

paigns, why not start a movement to

try to alp tne ocean ui y wuu .

Still, when you come to think of it

in the light of tho well known law of

gravitation, the leaves can do nothing

but fall.

rsAr. hv Tnpmhprs In a little explored territory be- t bills The gOVernor told him that . ' y,zc nhnir tpnr- snonse to the governor's request that

Uli UU1ULO UL U1UC1 ixau.hv u; j V5,, LiXViG, DUlaUg uuui aaj .w. - ' " , who contended that action by the tween the rivers Tapajos and Xmgu if McGlone( was ever in Albany a string of beads and a crUciflx, he get Senator Root to see Barnes, he house was not necessary. Colonel Roosevelt will Penetrate he wanted nim to come and see him. hig thrQat hurled them int0 the had promised to sound "Republican nark and Marshall Sign. where few men have gone before. Jun- The governor also desired McGlone to crowd behind him. sentiment" in the court of impeachOlarK ana marsnan f y gles abound where bands of Indians express nis thanks to Allan Ryan for . addition to Foreman Shonts, the ment himself, and with that purpose .J1BT9 ' r0 , Wmf said McGlone. other members of the jury were Vin- in view he saw a "friend'' whose name ,

mK uia öisiuiLuic at x.u. At zne iareweu ainner tu v,uiuu A11 Rvan. recalled, told of a con- . A f n n MnTinff Marens ho did not disclose. This friend, ac-

. . I W J I'HI I I I VI V J - VA. '

r j w I

D..r.Wlrinf f.T orohQ I I CltTTipn 1H -f-fc IL 1 T . TT 1 riirrhr VIT I . I -.w. f - i.

vice-riBsmcut noobevea iu nyw iuiniaD. m6u. versation with Governor Sulzer in Mortimer Rosenberg. Benjamin cording to Ryan, dictatea a statement bill at 1:34. Gifford Pinchot said in part: which the governor had asked him to r OrPPnhiit Georse W Fairchild, to him, on the situation, which he said On the heels of the j failure ,of con- MissKellor, Colonel Roosevelt, see Senator Root chairman Wil. ckeo', Edwin Marston. he showed to Governor Sulzer. gress to legislate in the tariff Dill to members of the Progressive service R.rnp. Jr and PP.t thfiir influ- TT , r n -ro nnd Pat- i Th statement, ülaced in evidence.

I X1UWU.IU reu, uumum I -

A Pennsylvania man has died after

fastine for 56 days. He must have

succeeded in leaving a snug sum for

his heirs.

The average man "observes" the Sabhath by smoking too many cigars

and reading the "yellow" parts of his

Sunday paper. "Stockings to match gowns," says a fashion note. Should it not, in view of the prevailing styles, read "gowns to match stockings?"

prevent gambling in cotton futures, and of the Progressive party, men and ence tQ chek the RepUDiican assem

. . T T" . O "ÄTirrOlT . I . l r 4- i-

Representative narnson ul Women wnose great purpuas xd w hlvman from imneachine him. This

pi introduced a resolution proviaing make our government serve our peofor an international campaign against pie: We are met to give Godspeed to such speculation. our leader on his journey. We are I m a it. 1 r r r

MofnhR Witness Slanlna. nere to strengtnen our&iv

lvwMMaww - " - - m w-

blyman from impeaching him. testimony was stricken out.

Sulzer Sought Aid of Root.

rick O'Laughlin. Most of the members of the jury are millionaires, prominent in the world of finance.

After hearing the evidence it took

Ryan testified that Sulzer requested

Vnm in ern fn Wnshinirf rvn ?ind ask Sen- I -?,-.T-rr -tncf 9ß miniTtp; to rp.ach a

I . - , , , . 1U - I JLliiAi tS'-' ' " C I .L1S JU1J J 1J w .w - u r,. fhi rying on the good fignt during Lne pnnf tn cq hla inflnpnoo tn trot ji.i mi.i i fV,of Ar..

ine reSOlUUOn WUUiU iciiussot L fV. r V,lo na-nna an that -nrVlPn vvwv vV ww w vv o VerOlCt. J.U1S iu cu-cv-c, president to negotiate with Great Bri- months ot ms aosence, so mat wueu wmiam Barnes to attempt to induce na Aumuiier came to her death on tain and other nations with a view to e returns the Progressive pa rty may Republican senators of the impeach- September 2 last from a hemorrhage mrmniPH a r,lan to nrevent cotton be even a better instrument tor tne ment cQurt tQ hM that the impeach. . , f Hans Schmldt

ion Public Sood, even a Keener weapon nroceedines were invalid. Tho nH.n.Pr lovenlv and unkempt calling Samuel A. Beardsley of TJtica.

, , 1 ,,V. .nnfvn thlC ni1TI ' .. . . . , . -I i i 1

in appearance, looked coldly into tne Mr. lierricK said ne mienaea to suuv

said in part: "The Republican organization, as such, will do nothing; it will give no advice and no order, and will leave every Republican genator to do as ho sees fit. The chairman says distinctly he will not permit anyone high or low to speak to him on the subject." Bars Story of Refusal of Gift The defense then opened its case,

speouiLiuu. against the men who control this coun Tnnfol hv tho Tirpc:1r1pnt TO Witness 0

the signing of the measure were Chair- try zo 3 man Underwood and members of the house ways and means committee, ENVOY GERAflD IS AT BERLIN

Chairman Simmons and members of

the senate finance committee, VicePresident Marshall, President (pro tern.) Clark and Majority Leader Kern of the senate, Speaker Clark, members of the cabinet and newspaper corre

spondents.

Ambassador to Germany Goes to Hotel Assumes the Duties of His Office.

An indignant citizen guided a police

raid on a poker room where he had not been allowed to play. What a noble thing is conscience! Ex-King Manuel may have lost his throne in Portugal, but he has landed near another in Germany through marriage into the kaiser's family. A European physician says garlic used freely prolongs life. An excellent example of the restraint exercised by man toward his fellows. A Philadelphia girl who participated i . ; i nvirrinfp n vear atro says it

o Almost nnv kind of a are at sea to know what congress ac- t f the city near the imperial chan- mirs Mrs. Robinson answered an

wnrrh i likelv to be a success for tually meant by the provision of the cellor'S palace and the foreign office, advertisement for a woman to care for

A i.A. W-b CD w

ROBBERY CAUSE OF MURDER Jurom-eyes, but gave no show ?t feel- through the that Beards.ey of-

ing. .f ollowing tne nnng ul tue vei- Lereu lu tuumuuic o.vw . diet Coroner Feinberg held Schmidt ent" to Sulzer and that the contributor action of the grand jury. tion was declined. The court by a The trial of Hans Schmidt, the priest vote of 29 to 24 then decided not to who confessed the murder of Anna Au- receive any testimony tending to show muller, will take place the first or sec- contributions were refused. Beardsley ond week in November, the number of is said to have been an attorney for cases on the calendar of the district the late Anthony N. Brady, attorney's office preventing an earlier Herbert H. Lehman of New York, date treasurer of Sulzer's campaign fund.

Should Schmidt be adjudged insane, testified he gave bulzer b,UUU in casn

September 25, 1912, without reserva-

Motive for Killing of Miss Ida G. Leegson, an Art Student, Said to Be Theft. Chicago, Oct. 7. Coincidence in the attack and murder of Miss Ida G.

Berlin, Germany, Oct. 7. James W. Leegson an art student, teacher and .Gerard of New York, the new United n;irSfi and a violent attack on Mrs.

The president signed the bill with states ambassador to Germany, ar- PiTnrnn M "Robinson, a trained nurse.

fnr -none Tho npn with which he a

inu "J- " i' IlVCU. ucl C, auu u.b vyxxvy i 3fJX,Il IUI cU tU LUC 1 lei Liu. i- jl tuen , , . wrote the name "Woodrow" was given sumed the duties of his office. He is gaiiant by a telephone call from a ne will be sent to the state hospital

to itepresentauve uuueiwuuu auu cue not quaiinoa to act omciany unui ma mSLU wno said ne wished to employ 1U1 L"c "".

other, with which he completed ms presentatio.a of his letters ot credence. d ew the attention of the

signature, was presented to Senator Ambassador Gerard has taken up his poIice. It was believed that the man YUAN IS NAMED NEW HEAD

äimznons. resiutiinje iui tue lcacuu ax, a uwi. w0 mUrdered Miss .ueegson near Currency legislation took posses- No definite arrangements have yet Argo tu., was the same one who atsion of the congressional stage, the beeu mau6 ln regard to the acquisi- tacked Mrs. Robinson several months taritf bill having been disposed of. tion of an embassy building, but it " 0 Miss Leegson inserted an ad-

Officious of the treasury department ig ulluerstood that a house in the cen- vertisement offering her services as

tion. The governor's attorneys declared they would show that this was a part of the money the governor used in Wall street.

Parliament Elects First Permanent President of China Several Persons Are Injured.

FIRE SWEEPS CITY OF NOME

a year.

new tariff law allowing a five per cent. .g under consideration.

reduction of duties on goods imported

a sick child. The police established

Pekin, China, Oct 7. Yuan Shihkai was elected president of the republic of China at a joint session of

Bij Conflagration Follows After Storm Inundated Town Residents Battle Flames.

The young Cornell woman who -lived in American ships with the condition Liu, v uuiifo vw m,. .y,Q ffT-on Hnl chnnld not he con-

20 weeks on 50 cents a week is going

tc try to lower her record. What's use? Who wants to live on 50 cents a week, anyhow? Once more the Parisian fashion makers announce that the crinoline is coming back. They may lead woman to the hoopskirt, but they have yet to make her wear it.

An Italian nobleman, traveling in this country, thinks the men superior to the women. But this compliment, tho native gallantry of Americans will net allow the men either to appreciate or appropriate.

that the differential should not be con

strued to abrogate or "impair any existing treaty between the United States and a foreign nation. Literally interpreted, it is declared the provision would give a five per cent, decrease to goods in American bottoms and automatically grant the same privilege to the same ships of the many nations whose treaties with the United States guarantee no dis-

uiimdudicq k-PFPQ 3fi !W IÄ1I in the murder of Miss Leegson.

numi iuu-v, w Milwaukee, Wis., Oct. 7. Miss Ida

G. Leegson, victim of an atrocious

the fact that robbery was one motive and lQWer houses of the ? i. 3 n -H Tin T nnerrnn I 1

f i t i tir:t l

Governor ot wasnmgwn wm du

Asked to Pardon Those Punished by Judge.

murder in Chicago, formerly was a Milwaukee school teacher. She graduated from the Milwaukee normal

school with the class of 1S97, and

Seattle, Wash., Oct. 6. Six women tallent in the Bartlett Avenue school

and thirty-two men are in the county -n igo3 she was engaged for only

inil for refusal to pay fines imposed rtT1 OQrnocf0r oponrdint? to Miss Flor

J I UUj 3 UUJ.vU vv-a ww 0 I . -

on them for contempt ot court D ence A Clark, another teacher, who A"J"

.Tudsre Humphries. One man paid the Hn . t the school.

crimination between tneir vessels ana S1Q0 fine against him and was freed

those öl America. At a meeting, cauea oy tne i?ree r-ii-rnmnrn MIMCD IC

. .. , ii.ni Via I UliiDuu mim-ii onwi-

May Create ueTicit. bpeecn irauc, "'"vu v.

rrv,jP onnctrnr-t nn w l nh would be preseuicu ... . m,,. TU5. ! M

Jll .- ,- , . , 1 I I iMT nrHV LU I III - ' ,

, nnrdon tiiose senienceu oy juukb . . ..

a norizoniai reuueuuu ul uc yci tent. - Bcardina House." öays wian

in the tariff for importation from most nuuipuww. . .. i.t u i n-vQ ATiinio.mal leasue instructed a

of tne great countr.es ui tue wunu, m- : , u , tz

,.Mrfla nrnhnhlv SI 0.000.000 ill rGVenUß COinraiUBe tu uu6ul5 cC a.11111

Ul T 1' w - T J T

national assembly here. Three hailots were required to bring about this result. At the end of the balloting a photographer took a flashlight picture of the scene, greatly alarming the members and visitors, who thought a bomb had been exploded. In the stampede that followed several persons were

On the third ballot Yuan received

507 votes out of 703 and Li Yuen Hung, 179. Yuan thereupon was declared elected first president of the permanent government of China.

to Rescuers.

PANAMA HAS NEW QUAKE 000,000.

Nome, Alaska, Oct. 8. -Fire has broken out in the city of Nome, closely following a storm that wiped out a great part of the town. The flames have attacked the Pacific Cold Storage plant where 'is stored the chief supply of meat for the winter. The fire apparatus was destroyed in the gale. Front street is a seething mass of wreckage into which seas are breaking, while hundreds of homeless persons are struggling to save necessaries of life. Receding seas are carrying away the contents of wrecked houses and stores as well as parts of wrecked structures.

The loss is estimated at close to $2,-

A urooK.ju ."T r " I I ' n, mh ,t Mlon of justice in the county

man convicted oi mansiaugiiiei lu it; i ior int cimucin, wt, vv..

T-mnP "T will not send vou to prison," instead of a surplus m treasury as has courtb.

ho Rnid "I will let remorse be your been estimated by the tariff framers.

The question undouoteaiy win ne re

Centralis Pa.. Oct. 6. Thomas Tremors Lasting From Ten to Fifteen UyiATOR BEACHEY KILLS GIRL

punishment." Still he might at least have slapped him on the wrist Dr. Page of Boston comes to the defense of the fly, asserting that it is a natural sanitarian. Still, if a sanitarian insisting on skating across our bald spots on a hot day we should deem it entirely justifiable to swat hira.

Parisian scientists have discovered that the flea is troubled with an annoying parasite of Its own. Now if we could be certain that lh(3 mosquito's night song was only a painbitten dirge, much could b forgiven in the glad revenge.

Toshesky, prisoner since Friday of last week in an abandoned chamber of the

Continental mine of the Lehigh Valley

Seconds Shake Buildings, But Do

No Serious Damage.

ferred to President Wilson and Attor

ney General McReynolds and ultimately "will reach the United States Su

preme court.

EX-JUDGE C. C. COLE IS DEAD

ROAD CONGRESS ENDS WORK Coal company, walked into the open

air at 7:48 in the morning.

Adopts Resolutions on Building of

Highways and Adjourns Place of Next Meet Not Decided.

Detroit. Mich., Oct 6. The third American road congress ended with

Supreme the reports of officers and commit-

Panama, Oct 6. Another earthquake occurred on the isthmus. It

T,mt before the end of the tunnel was less severe than the shock of last

was enlarged enough to permit the week, its duration being from ten to passage of his body from the place fifteen seconds. where he had been entombed, the res- Buildings were severely shaken, but cuers were chatting with him. One apparently no damage was done beasked what he was doing. "I am get- yond the falling of plaster and the .j,. 4. v. "Twe nnpninp of slicht fissures in & few

rintr renuv tu uiuvc, aaiu. j. i'

5

Her Sister Badly Hurt VVatchlngt Flight at Rochester Aeroplane Swoops Too Low.

rormer rncmu. u. .w?- tu J7 11 't-' I ,nn. h. hoarding house, no L-ood bed. no structures.

Court Expires Alter uong career tees aim WB aWpu i.u- ieec Renorts from the canal zone offi

. . i . i ... r . j- m rnz-k. hni rimir nnn c nyi ti 5' iiu uii.c uuui uiii 111 uw. i

in tne Law.

with reference to the building ana spring, uu uite iu..

maintenance of good roads. It was

i . - , .

ta A?noe lo Onf n RwTnfiff AonXpx. n.t tne last minute to leave

IIIJS y 1J tLl. , - " o I uv-u"-

hester C. Cole, in the first rank of the question of the

i t i .11.1 1 . TT l! i t l Vk

Iowa jurists, aieu nere. xau uuu noi meeung u... - - tuA fn h HIVa has been officiallv fixed a

been in active practice for severa which will inspect the convention Kineu iuui nuumm. 7 V , " -T fua Wrtt.r,r of ?ears. He served for many years in facilities of Atlanta. New Orleans, the explosion blew the dead man oOO nine o clock in the morning, of Oc

Rochester, N. Y., Oct S. Whilemaneuvering in a new aeroplane at Hammondsport, Lincoln Beachey swooped too low. His machine struck Ruth and Helen Hildreth, daughter of H. E. Hildreth of New York city killing the former and probably fatally injuring the latter.

cials indicate that neither the locks . r- ii i i

Ölast Blows Man Far. nor any part oi tne caiuu buumcu m 1 i .

. . I i. . . a ... I Hin n n i Ii n i n r ir I i. fifiiiur I i n I 1 1 1 . u i i 11 m w w w . .

Chester C. Cole, in the nrst rank" of the question oi ue piace oi no 'MU"-' 1'" . nmP fnr hlowine un tho Gam-

meetine to the executive committee, nt. a sawram near uere " I " V V . .rf

the Iowa supreme court

Denver and Peoria.

yards.

"Tattooed Man" I Dead. Boston, Oct 8. Frank Bellfontaine Barnums original "tattooed man," died at the homeopathic hopitaL Death was due to an attack of appnd&itis, combined with nart failur.