Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 29, Number 30, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 23 September 1908 — Page 2
The Nappanee News G. N. MURRAY, Publisher. NXPPANEE; INDIAN V. sss FOR THE | Ml g Most Important Happen- g 3 ings of the World q jjj Told in Brief. 8 POLITICAL. Charles Evans Hughes was nominated by the Republican state convention on the first ballot to succeed himself as governor of the state of New York. He received 827 out of a possible 1,009 votes, -as against 151 for James W. Wadsworth, Jr., of Livingston county, speaker of the state assembly, and 31 for former Congressman John K. Stewart of Montgomery. New York Democrats nominated a state ticket headed by Lieut. Gov. Lewis S. Chanler for governor, and closed their convention with a great meeting which was addressed by Mr. Bryan Henry B. Quinby was nominated for governor of New Hampshire by the Republicans. Judge A. Heaton Robertson of New Haven was nominated for governor of Connecticut by the Democrats. The Republican party was victorious in the Maine state election, Bert M. Pernald of Poland being chosen governor over Obadiah Gardner, the Democratic nominee. The Republicans also elected all four congressmen and maintained their majority in the legislature, although the Democrats made a good gain in their representation. The plurality received by the Republicans was not much over 7,700, the smallest received in any presidential year in 25 years. Ex-Congressman John F. Lacey was chosen by the standpatters of lowa to oppose Gov. Cummins as United States senator to be voted upon at the primary in November. James A. Tawney, James McCleary and Clarence B. Miller were winners for congressional nominations in the three disputed districts of Minnesota. Miller had a landslide in the Eighth district, defeating J. Adam Bede by three to one. PERSONAL. Congressman Laning of Ohio was acquitted of the charge of misapplying funds of the Laning Printing Company. Count Leo Tolstoi has been elected to honorary membership in the faculty of,, the University of St. Petersburg. • > Mrs. Carrie Nation called on Judge Taft and tried to discuss the liquor question with him. Wilbur Wright broke the European record for sustained flight with an aeroplane, remaining in the air more than 39 minutes. Senor Corea has resigned as Nicaraguan minister to Washington and Dr. Rodolfo Espinoza has been named to succeed him. Wilson Collins, former cashier of a bank ®at Elkhart, Ind., was released from the federal prison at - Leavenworth, Kan., after a six-year sentence for violation of the national banking law. GENERAL NEWS. ' V While Orville Wright was making a two-man flight in his aeroplane at Fort Myer a propeller blade broke and the machine was dashed to the ground. Lieut. Thomas E. Selfridge .of the Army Signal corps, who was with Wright, was so badly injured that he ._.di*d a.-lew hours.later.. Wright sustained very severe but not fetal injuries. The tragical mishap was witnessed by about 2,000 persons. The board of signal officers was convened at Fort Myer by Maj. George O. Squler, acting chief signal officer of the army, and made an official inquiry into the aeroplane disaster, which resulted in the death of Lieut. Selfridge and the injury of Orville Wright. It blamed no one for the accidtatr n With masts and smokestacks broken, boats washed away and upper works , badly smashed, the steamship sma, after a most trying experience in the West Indian hurricane. During the storm three members of the crew who were repairing a water tank in the hold were killed. The will of the late Giovanni P. Morosinl distributes the entire fortune of the former banker and art collector among his five children. W. W. Reamer of East St. Louis tried to burn his house and family and then made two attempts at suicide. Lured to a lonely spot in Oklahoma City, Okla., Mrs. Harry Pearson was ■hot and killed by Harry Parker, a grain inspector from lola, Kan., because she wouldn’t elope with him. The business section of la., was partly destroyed by fire, the loss being $50,000. Dr. George Morton of New York was arrested in Philadelphia on a fugitive warrant from New York, charging him with securing SIOO,OOO by means of fraudulent notes.
A cablegram from Fanning island said the long missing British steamer Aeon was wrecked on Christmas island but all the passengers and crew escaped and were camping comfortalby ashore. Many towns in Maine were threat-ened-by forest fires. Dispafches from Tabriz said the bombardment of that city by the shah’s forces was imminent. Jilted by an 18-year-old girl, John Smith of Calhoun, Wis., shot and fatally wounded the mother of the girl, Mrs. Agusta Grabow, wounded the girl herself, and then wounded the sheriff, whe came to arrest him. The explosion of 260 gallons of gasoline on board a barge at the Mare Island navy yard resulted in the death of Chief Machinist Teddy May and injuries to three other men. The American Atlantic fleet, under the command of Rear Admiral Sperry, left Albany, Western Australia, for Manila, 3,600 miles away, where it is due to arrive October 2 or 3. Heavy rainfall in northern Michigan and Ontario checked the forest fires and insured the safety of the threatened towns. Maj. Gen. Charles Edward Luard, retired, whose wife was mysteriously murdered near London August 24, committed suicide by throwing himself in front of a railroad train. He had received letters accusing him of killing his wife. Forty men were overcome by smoke in a fire which threatened the destruction of Swift & Company’s packing plant in South SL Joseph, Mo. Tlje loss is about $60,000.. The Oklahoma election board refused to put the Prohibition electoral ticket on the ballot. -—The home of Mark Twain at-Red-ding, Conn., was entered by two burglars. Later the men were captured and in making the arrests Deputy Sheriff Bangs was shot in the leg. Three hundred and five cases and 115 deaths from the Asiatic cholera were reported for one day in St. Petersburg. The municipal administrations are under fire from all sides for their criminal inefficiency in handling the epidemic. Minority stockholders filed a petition in the circuit court asking that a receiver be appointed for the State Trust Company, a St. Louis real estate firm capitalized at $1,000,000. Edward Quick, a penitentiary guard at Michigan City, Ind., was murdered in his home by a burglar. Five persons were killed and 16 injured by a boiler explosion in a mine near Aix-la-Chapelle. Joseph James, the negro murderer whose Crime helped start the race riots in Springfield, 111., was convicted and sentenced to death. When Judge Gerard in the supreme court granted Miss Helen Maloney, daughter of Martin Maloney, a Philadelphia millionaire and papal marquis, a decree annulling the marriage ceremony which she went through with Arthur Herbert Osborne, a young broker, on the afternoon of December 25, 1905, it came to light that the young woman was Influenced into taking the step by the fear that she was to be forced into a marriage with one of two titled foreigners known to her parents. The Bay Shore hotel, at Green Springs, la., one of the largest hotels on the west coast, was totally destroyed by fire, 40 guests having narrow escapes. Fire in the library of Johns Hopkins university, Baltimore, did Inestimable damage to ancient papyri and parchments.: John Cook, aged 78 years, a farmer living near Philo, 111., shot and killed Mrs. Edna McClelland and attempted suicide. Dense fog in Chicago caused accidents on steam and street railways that resulted in the death of two men and the injury of many others. The Interparliamentary union met in Berlin to discuss anew the peace of the world and how to maintain it through arbitration. A powder magazine near McAlester, Okla., was struck by lightning, the explosion killing one miner and seriously injuring eight others. Police Commissioner Bingham of New YorlT publicly retracted his recent statement in magazine article that half the criminals in New York were Jews. V The New York stock exchange house of E. R. Chapman & Cos. was victimized to the extent of $30,000 by means of fraudulent checks. The American battleships Maine and Alabama, the vanguard of the American fleet On its round-the-world voyage, arrived at Naples. Suit for the of SIOO,OOO damages, alleged to nave been sustained because of a boycott, has been begun against the United Hatters of America by D. E. Loewe & Cos., of Danbury,. Conn. John and Wilbur Patterson, charged with holding up a street car near Boston, Pa., last May and robbing 11 passengers and the conductor, were convicted in the criminal court at Pittsburg. The Republican state convention of Utah nominated a ticket headed by W. E. Spry for governor. The average wages per hour In the principal manufacturing and mechanical industries of the country were 3.7 per cent, higher in 1907 than in 1906, While .retail prices of food were 4.2 per cent, higher, according to the July report of the bureau of labor.- / The United States circuit court of appeals at Richmond, Va., sustained the of* Judge J. C. Pritchard in the famous case/Jf the Flieschmann Company and others against the South Carolina dispensary commission, holding in effect that a state cannot conduct liquor traffic, that being a private business., ->
HOOSIER BREVITIES NEWS OF THE WEEK IN THE STATE OF INDIANA. ASKS CROSSING GUARD Wishes Flagman Where King Family Was Killed—Suit Began in Whitley Case Being Pushed by the Authorities. Indianapolis.—The state of Indiana, through the attorney general, has taken a hand in a case now in the appellate court relating to the placing of & flagman'at a crossing of the public highway and the Pennsylvania railroad in Whitley county. Interest is added to the case from the fact that the crossing was the scene about two months ago of a tragedy in which six persons lost their lives. Those who were killed were Sherman King and three members of his family, living at Fort Wayne, a young woman who was riding with them in an automobile, and the chauffeur. The six persons were crossing the tracks in the auto just after a fast train had passed. They yere struck by another train and hurled to death. The original proceeding for a flagman at the crossing was begun in March, 1907, before the board of county commissioners of Whitley county. After hearing a petition, the commissioners ordered that a flagman be placed at the crossing. The case was appealed to the Whitley circuit Court, and the decision of the court was favorable to the petitioners. An appeal was then taken to the appellate court. Me^iiwhile the tragedy occurred at the crossing. The attorney general believed that the question of protecting dangerous crossings was one in which the state was vitally interested, so he filed a petition asking to appear in the case as amicus curiae, and his request • was granted. The chief question that arises in the case is whether or not the placing of entire trains on side-tracks so that other trains may pass on the main track may be termed "switching.” Wants Damage for Marriage. Warsaw. —Lloyd Taylor of near Milford, who married Mrs. Sarah Davis of Lima, 0., 20 years his senior, and who was arrested on the charge of passing a forged check, lay in a hospital, a victim of consumption. He was found unconscious on the high way. Mrs. Davis-Taylor is threaten- ! ing her erstwhile husband with a damage suit. Wants SIO,OOO for Love. Columbus. —An interesting case was placed on trial in the circuit court. It was Hurby Ham against his mother-in-law, Mrs. Martha E. Leslie | of Elizabethtown, claiming SIO,OOO as a price for the love, companionship and affection of his wife* Lottie, who, according to the plaintiff, was alienated from him by the acts of her mother. Students Dress as Salomes. Logansport. Forty high school freshmen,, painted and garbed as Salome or wearing Merry Widow hats and directoire skirts, were paraded by upper classmeh, preceded by drum and bugle corps, to the town pump, where their faces were washed without ceremony or soap by the captors. Injured by Dynamite Explosion. Shelbyville.—Marshall Parmer, who resides in Fairland, was perhaps fatally injured by the explosion of a stick of dynamite. Parmer's right hand was torn off and he was injured in the back of the head. A physician found it necessary to amputate his arm near the elbow. Water Damages Stock. Shelbyville.—When one of the real estate offices was closed after business hours in the second floor of the Knight? of Pythias CaStle tha proprietor forgot to shut off the hydrant. Water was dripping through the first floor on the goods in the O. L. Means store. The damage, SI,OOO. - poy- Plan Mock -Eleciyj3n> ' CrawfordsvHJ^.— -The boys of This city between the ages of ten and 17 years will hold a mock election on Saturday, October 10, at the Y. M. C. A. building, when they will cast votes for presidential and g.uberuatorial nominees. Millers Want Receiver. Bloomington.—Suit was filed by the Bloomington Milling Company against Jottfi g."""MafflteWs~~lhlir Albert E. Matthews, breeders of fancy Polled China hogs at Ellettsville, asking that the company be placed in the hands of a receiver. Boys Coast on Dry Grass. Martinsville. —The boys and girls enjpyed a toboggan slide on Cunningham’s hill at the north edge of this city. The drought toughened the grass and the hot sun burned the blades until they are slick as glass. Saved from Death on Rails. Shelbyville.—Carl Burns, a stranger, was crossing Harrison street when he was overcome by heat and /ell unconscious on the I. & C. interurban tracks. The limited was apj proaching rapidly and it was stopped only about three feet from the young , man's body. Drowns in Barn Trough. Crawfordsville. —■ John E, Brown, a farmer near Alamo, committed suicide by drowning himself.in a watering trough in his barn lot.
DROUGHT BHRIVELB CORN. Cuts Yield Average of Twenty Bushels Per Acre. Indianapolis—Pessimistic reports of the condition of the corn crop of In-, diana continued to drift into the-mar-ket centers and practically every corner of the state was affected by the drought, which held the corn belt in its fiery grip. The stories from the corn lands all bore the same tenor — scorching sun, no moisture, the green plant shriveling in the dusty fields. Yield, one-half to 60 per cent, of a normal crop. In many portions of the fertile corn zone of the state the hill lands showed parched and wilted stalks standing half grown and Immature, with no possibilities of a yield, saVe dry fodder—and poor at that—for the farmer’s beasts. In the lowlands conditions were somewhat improved, though in some river counties the late planting, on account of high water, was caught by the dryness and the harvest will be cut one-fourth. The outlook In Gibson and Posey counties. while not so bright as In other years, gave promise of a fair yield, with good quality If the frosts stay away until after the middle of October. In the central section of the state the cry for rain went up, many counties not having a real “clod-soak-ing” shower since early planting time. Great fields stood as dusty, gray deserts, only relieved by the stunted, sun-shriveled stalks. All reports conceded that the dry spell was the worst in years and came at a time when the most damage could be done. The southern tier of counties reported lack of rainfall, with the crop drying in the fields, the ears not filling nor maturing naturally. About one-half .yield of normal was estimated. The lack of rain was felt over the state and affected fall wheat sowing, farmers not caring to risk their work in drilling wheat in the dust. Jokes with Passengers; Held. Richmond.—John C. Hunt, Jr., the 18-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. John Hunt of Bath, Union county, was a little careless in the way he joked with a passenger on a C., C. & I. train, and he was arrested and placed in the Richmond jail suspected of complicity in a murder at Bath. After spending a few hours in prison, unti' his mother could be communicated with, it was found he was a runaway, He was. released. Get* Murder Trial. Laporte. The trial of Albert Boubick, who is charged with the murder of Emil Kvasnicka, a Chicago jeweler who had a summer home near North Judson, has been placed on the calendar In the Starke circuit court The state will demand the death penalty. Wabash Veterans Meet. Wabash. —In a reunion Wabash county veterans of the civil war elected Adin F. Spaulding, president; James P. Ross, secretary;-S. J. Payne, treasurer. Dr. Charles H. Good, Republican nominee for congress, and Congressman George W. Rauch made addresses. Angry Son Ends Life. Wabash. —In a fit of anger at his. father, because he was rebuked, Lemoine White, 21, walked one-hali mile to the butcher shop the two owned in Dora, this county, kicked down the door, secured a shotgun and blew the entire top of his head off. Freed of Strange Cruelty Charge. Warsaw. —A jury in the Kosciusko circuit court found Samuel Marks Trepeck of Chicago not guilty of the charge of driving a horse belonging to ex-Sheriff William Mabie all day without feeding animal and then drowning the animal. Stabbed with Corn Stalk. Franklin. —Joseph Baker was per haps fatally injured while cut ting corn on his farm in the western part of Johnson county. While tying up a shock he fell backward, and, alighting on an upright corn stalk, It penetrated his body. Insane Man Beats Mother. , Kendallvllle. —Albert Wehmyer, 30 years old, said to be incurably Insane, aitacked his mother, terribly beating her until neighbors ln> terfered.. He will be returned to Longcliffe. Factories Resuming Work. Anderson. —The various manufao Turing industries are resuming operations in this city and a large number of workmen who have been idle during the summer are returning to steady employment. Telephone War Averted. Crawfordsville. —The telephone war with which Crawfordsville was threatened has been averted by the Home Telephone Company withdrawing its petition for anew franchise. Methodists Begin Work. Shelbyville.—The Indiana Methr odist Episcopal Church conference was opened here with more than! 300 ministers in attendance.Says Doctor Took Clothes. Evansville. Albert Bauley, an alleged faith doctor, was placed under arrest on charges preferred by Mrs. Adelia Hollins of Evansville, who says that the-"doctor” took her clothing when he was called In to see her and found her delirious. Plant Will Be Rebuilt. Shelbyville.—The portion of the Roof furniture factory destroyed by fire yvill be rebuilt as soon as possible. The damage to the building wag about SIO,OOO.
BHD BY PLAGUE r ’ ASIATIC CHOLERA INCREASING IN BT. PETERSBURG. THREAT OF MARTIAL LAW Municipal Official* Finally Aroused to ~ Action —Alarm General Throughout Russia —Other Countries on Guard. St. Petersburg.—St. Petersburg Is In the grasp of the Asiatic cholera, which already has exceeded in severity and numbers of victims the visitation of 1893. The disease Is increasing daily at an alarming rate and, unless the authorities show in the future a much greater degree of ability to cope with the situation than they have In the past, there Is every reason to fear that It will get out of hand. The government has threatened to ] apply the provisions of martial law ! and this threat has driven the municipality officials to bend all their energies to the campaign of clearing the city of the scourge. The aldermanic council Sunday voted a preliminary sum amounting to $250,000 to enlarge the hospital space, to purchase and distribute the supply of which in St. Petersburg Is well-nigh exhausted, and to expedite the interment of bodies which has been notoriously slow. The dead houses are ovei> crowded and many corpses lie unburied. Advices from all parts of Russia show that -the alaim is very general and that there Is good reason for 1L At Moscow a quarantine has been established at all railway depots and passengers are placed under the strictest surveillance. Up to the present Moscow has been immune. A death has occurred at Helsingfors from the disease and ten Russian steamers have been denied entrance to Vlborg harbor for evading quarantine at Trangsund, a roadstead eight miles from that port. .- Germany has become alarmed over the spread of the disease and the 1 German authorities have taken precautions to prevent its crossing the frontier. Austria has done the same thing; Sweden and other near-by countries hhave declared a quarantine against Russia, and France is ready to meet any exigencies that may arise. GREAT FIRES IN PARIS. Central Telephone Building, Post Office and Store Burned. Paris.—Fire broke out Sunday night In the Central Telephone building and spread with such rapidity that the telephone employes were j forced to flee hastily to the streets. The entire building was soon in flames, and this together the post office, which Is located close to the Place des Vlctoires, was totally destroyed, j The loss is estimated at $5,000,000, but a much greater loss is likely to be in- ; volved through the complete interruption of all telephonic communication in the center of Paris, as well as communication with the provinces and abroad. The telephone building was comparatively new and was fitted with the costly new central battery system. It will take more than a month to reestablish the service. Sunday was a record day in the history of the fire department, the men being out all morning and afternoon for a big fire in a department store In the Fauborg St. Denis. Damage to the extent of SBOO,OOO was done here. BLOODY FIGHT WITH POSSE. Murderer And Wife Have Fatal Battls with Sheriff. West Plains, Mo. —John Roberts and his wife Sunday resisted a sheriff’s posse in a desperate battle near Prestonla, one mile south of the MissouriArkansas line, when the officers attempted to arrest Roberts for killing Obe Kessinger, a neighbor, Saturday night. Asa result the woman and Sheriff Mooney of Baxter county, Ark., were mortally woun'ded, and Roberts and two members of the posse—Max Lowery .and* his - son—were seriously 'hurt. Roberts may not survive- . The murder of Kessinger was cold blooded. Roberts went to the house late In the evening and called his victim to the door. When Kessinger appeared Roberts fired and killed him. RHINELANDER IS IN PERIL, Milwaukee Sends Help to City Threat .ened by Forest Fires. Milwaukee. —The city of Rhinelander, nearly 200 miles north of here, Is threatened with destruction by forest fires and Milwaukee was called upon to aid In saving the city. A steam fire engine, half a mile of hose and a truck were loaded on a special train and started for the scene of the fire at nine o’clock Sunday night. - No word can be secured from Rhinelander as to the extent of the fire except that the city is surrounded by forest fires which threaten to sweep over the city. Georgia Convict Leasing Ends. Atlanta, Ga.—Just at midnight Sat urday night Gov. Hoke Smith signed the convict lease bill, which prohibit! the leasing of felons except by the consent of the governor and prison commission. The bill was passed by th legislature Saturday after $35,000 hSW been spent in an extra session and nearly a month used In discussing th legislation. With the signature <rl Gov. Smith on the bill as engrossed, Georgia has done away with a systen which has been la existence ever slnc< 1865. t
Even the Hash. Embarrassed in the fashionabl# restaurant by the menu written ia French, the Wall street man of buatneas exclaimed: “Hang these froida, entrements and bora d’oeuvres —bring me a plate ot good plain hash, if you’ve got such a thing on the premiaea.” “You mean an olla podrlda, air,* ■aid the waiter, in a tone of dignified reproach. “And afterwards ?” SPOHN’S DISTEMPER CURE will cure any possible case of DISTEMPER, PINK EYE, and the like among horsee of all ages, and prevents all othera in thf same stable from having the disease. Also cures chicken cholera, and dog distemper. Any good druggist can supply you, or send to manufacturers. 60 cents and SI.OO a bottle. Agent* wanted. Free book. Spoha Medical Cos., Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind. Cause of the Break. “What caused that awkward break In the conversation?” "Some on* dropped the subject“ —San Fr&ncisoo Argonaut HELPFUL ADVICE
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[ BOY PAINTER^ 1 ■ ■ ' ■■■s • ' ■ I IT IS FOUND I VPURE WHITE LEAD fagfl|ißl
Pnlnrarln A flne 632-acre farm for salat VjUlUrallU Three miles from end of Aurora car line, eight miles from business center of Denver. Three hundred twenty-live acre* under high state of cultivation, balance under ditch next spring. Improvements, five room house, barns, granaries, machine sheds, scales, windmill, wells, tanks and young five-acre orchard. Farm 1 ies In pathway 6TgrbwirigDeß'f<S?7 Positively the best bargain on the market today. Will be pleased to show you. Write for list of Colorado land bargains. The Denver & Colorado Securities Cos. #lTttr Street;' DSHVIiS, Colorado. fTNCLE SAM’S FREE FARMS In southern California. 160 acres in sonje of the most fertile fruit, grain and stock raising valleys in the state. Pull particulars with township plot, showing lands open for entry can be bad by sending 26 cents. Osbum land Company, 406 Chamber of Commerce, Los Angeles, California. VET (Ia large Mat of flne lows W P HfIVP farms from 40 to 1000 * w ** * *** * acres, ranging in price from 140 to SIOO per acre. Write us kind of farm and location you want. We can furnish lk Corn Bell Land A Loan Company. Du Moines, la. MARCUS DALY ESTATE otters Bight ThonIvl sand acres highly cultivated land on the noted Bitter Boot Stock harm, ideal for fruit growing, dairying and diversified farming. Soil, climate and Irrigation system unsurpassed. Tracts of Twenty acresormore. Longtime—easy payments. For booklet write. Bitter Boot Stock Farm, Hamilton, Mont. We, Wholesalers of California Lands wish agentsin all portions of the TJ .8. Can you Mil the “Best land in this Wonderland?” Irrigated from United States Government Ditch. Wecangiva yon a subdivision on a_casimission basis. Anutroic, Ootau a to., 227 Montgomery St.,San Francisco, CaL IRRIGATED LAND—Ten-acre fruit farms In Washington —Great Yakima Valley. S2OO per •ore: 130 per acre down, balance longtime. Bight a* railroad station. Send ten dollars to-day and we will hold a tract till yon some. Money returned If not satisfied. Will T. El well. Mgr., Calhoun, Denny * Bwlng, Seattle, Wash. fOME TO WISCONSIN to buy land. I have baigalnsranging in price from $lO to S6O per acre. 126 ml. E. St. Paulinthe clover belt. 1 have DOW) acres 4 ml. of Ladysmith and other farms, Buy of u wner dealer in real estate, write me. GEO. H 1., X lEUtfV Ladysmith. Wisconsin. "
