Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 29, Number 37, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 11 November 1908 — Page 6

The Nappanee News G. N. MURRAY, Publisher, NAPPANEE, INDIAN A ISlil § FOR THE I g Most Important Happen- g R ings of the World 8 8 ~ Told in Brief. 8 personal. Charles W. Morse, the New York financier, was sentenced to serve 15years in the federal prison at Atlanta, Ga., for misapplication of the funds of the National Rank of North America and making false entries in the books of the bank. Alfred H. Curtis, former president of the defunct bank, who was jointly tried and convicted ‘'with Morse, was given his liberty on a suspended sentence. ——— ~ President-elect William H. Taft, Mrs. Tait and Fred W. Carpenter, private secretary, left Cincinnati for Hot Springs, Va., where Mr. Taft will remain for rest and recreation until Thanksgiving. Wilbur Wright, the American aeroplanist, was banqueted by the ACro Club pf France and presented with the 'club's gold medal and the special medal of the Academy of Sports. President Charles W. . Eliot,’ for more than 40 years' the head of Harvard university, tendered his resignation to take effect May 19, 1909, The seventy-fourth anniversary of the birth of the dowager empress of China was celebrated at Amoy, and the event was made the greatest day of the festivities in honor of the visit of the American fleet. Mrs. Alice Cheney Brown of New York swindled a : Chicago brokerage firm out of $20,000 in bonds, was arrested as she w as leaving for Denver, gave up her plunder, confessed and was allowed to go. B. C. Whitney of Detroit, proprietor of several theaters, sustained a fracture of the skull in an automobile accident at Brownstown, Ind. Thomus F. Levis, postmaster at Grant Works, 111., was arrested on the charges of embezzling S9OO and making false reports. GENERAL NEWS. An explosion at the mine of Col. W. P. Bond, three miles west of Benton, 111., wrecked the shaft, and as a result four shot flrers were entombed and probably killed. Vice-Presit'snt-elect Sherman forwarded to Albany for filing with the secretary of state, a statement of his expenses in the campaign just closed. It showed his expenditures to have been $2,800. The rreight steamer B. M. Whitney of the Metropolitan Steamship line was sunk in the East river while on her way to Boston. The loss on vessel and cargo i? about sßoo,ooo^ The second squadron of the American battleship fleet left Amoy for the Philippines. The Union Telephone & Telegraph Company, having a telephone system in Rock IslaniJ-j and Moline, 111., and Davenport, la.,' and “capitalized at $550,000, went into the hands of a receiver on an application filed by the American Trust and Savings bank of Chicago. —, A small steamer carrying 600 passengers from Amoy to Tutigafi. Chlna, sank and 200 of the passengers were drowned. Thrilling Escapes and heroic work by a Costa Rican student, Rubena Herrera, marked a fire which burned to the ground the Bliss Electric school in North Takoma, a suburb of "Washington. James T. Mulhall was sentenced to 15 months at the federal prison at Leavenworth, Kan.; Edgar McConkey to one year and one day at Leavenworth, and Felix Nathanson to six months in the county jail by Judge Milton Purdy at Minneapolis for fraudulent operation of the Nicollet Creamery Company. / . Talk of the election of Theodore Roosevelt to the United States senate to succeed Senator Platt of New York was revived in Washington. The Japanese steamer Taish Maru sank in a storm and 150 persons were drowned. The general committee of foreign missions of the Methodist Episcopal church, at its session in St. Louis, began the work of itemizing the appropriations'for the year 1909, after vot- ! to appropriate a total of $1,060,678. President Edmund J. James of the University of Illinois, issued an address on the subject of hazing to the students, in which he declared that the sport will not be tdlerated and that any student found guilty of hazing wi.U be dismissed from the university. . An official statement made public at Paris sets forth that France y intends to insist firmly upon -arbitration, in the Casablanca incident. The Unionist party won In the elections in Porto Rido and Tulio Larrinaga was reelected congressional delegate.

John Cooper, a student at the University of North Carolina, and a member of the 'varsity football eleven, who was injured during the preliminary practice of the team in September. is dead. ' Two women and five children perj ished in a burning farmflouse near : Swan Lake, Man. I Chancellor E.ftßenjamin Andrews of the University of Nebraska resigned, | to take effect January 1. The people of Plauen, Germany, j were terrified by a violent earthquake ! shock. The Citizens’ and Farmers’ State | bank of Arkansas City, Kan., closed its | doors. 1 |y: j The suit to oust the Western Trust and Savings bank of Chicago as trus- } teeerfhe Tro,ooo,ooa bow-wstife of The ■ Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railj road Company was begun in Milwau- ■ kee by Alexander Beaubien, bondj holder. • ’ 1 Boston’s park system fund has been I increased by more than $4,000,000 by I the terms of George F. Parkman’s will, made 30 years ago. Mount McCulloch, which last year thrust its head up from the center of Bogaslov island, 60 miles west of Unalaska, has disappeared in the throes of another volcanic change. Many mills and factories that have been running on half time have begun operating on full time. While attempting to arrest Jesse Rice, a negro, at Riverside, Pa., Constable George Brown shot him dead and was himself fatally shot in the abdomen by the negro. Phil Short, one of the best known newspaper men in North Dakota, was shot and killed by Clayton Yeakins while they were hunting deer in McKenzie county, N. D. John Hagen, a hotel keeper at Scranton, N. Y., killed his wife and son and attempted suicide. Nine laborers were killed by a premature blast on the Grand Trunk Pacific road near Dryden, Man. Fire in the business "district of Blanchard, N. D., destroyed $50,000 worth of property. After announcing he “would make the jump if he broke his neck,” Peter,. Kramer, an aeronaut from St. Louis, was killed at Princeton, 111.,.by being dashed against a church steeple. J. Nelsoh Veit, a young New York broker, killed his wealthy, mother and himself presumably because she wouldn’t be reconciled „-to his marriage. Prince Louis d’Orleans-Braganza and Princess Maria-Pia of BourbonSicily, were married at Cannes, France. .. - Fire destroyed $200,000 worth of property in the business portion of Sherman, Tex. Business property valued at $500,000 was destroyed by fire in Pembroke, Ont. Near Jefferson City, Tenn., Victor McMahon, a prominent farmer, probably fatally shot Mrs. John Wilkes, the wife of a tenant on his farm, while shooting at her husband. Wilkes then emptied the contents of a shotgun into McMahon’s breast; Israel Janesson, former cashier of a bank in Lindersburg, Sweden, who was arrested by a detective at Yankee Bush, Pa., has, it is alleged, made a complete confession, admitting he abstracted 127,000 kroners of the bank’s funds. s Maj. Henry Burnett, 60 years old, of Osceola, Ark., shot A. B. Chaney, a saloon-keeper of Chaffee, Mo., who killed Burnett’s son last September. Mrs. Catherine Louis Lynn of Chicago, while mentally deranged, killed her baby girl and cut her own throat. The - anniversary of the independence of the republic of Panama was celebrated enthusiastically in Colon. An edict issued by the emperor of China confers a decoration upon the dalai lama of Tibet who has been absent from Lhassa for the last four years, grants him an annual salary of SB,OOO a year and orders him to return to Tibet. , Two of the Wisconsin connterfeiters, Albert and Hugo .Donnerstag, who sawed their way out of the Dane county jail during a rainstorm, were recaptured at the* home of their brother, Rudolph, in the wilds of northern Wis-. consin. While* 10,000 spectators were loudly cheering his successful flight with a glider, when 70 feet in the air, Lawrence J. Lesh, the 16-year-old areonaut, fell to the ground with terrific force at the Morris park racetrack, fracturing his ankle. Robbers entered Hubbell (Mich.) post office, blew open the safe and stole SSOO worth of stamps and some valuable papers. v A spectacular fire that was marked by many thrilling incidents destroyed the lumber yards of R. A. & J. J. Williams, in Philadelphia, entailing a loss estimated at $750,000. News was brought by the steamer Antilochus of heavy great loss of life in Formosa. All the rivers in the neighborhood of Keelung, Ciram and Tanko oerflowed and 40 junks were wrecked. Harry Sampson, a nephew of the late Admiral Sampson, was found shot to death in his residence near Palmyra, n. y. Justice Stafford of the supreme court of the District of Columbia overruled the motions for new trial fnade bv. Frederick A. Hyde and Joost H. Schneider, convicted last spring of conspiracy to defraud the United •States—in connection with steering land grants* in Oregon and Washing-" ton. Charles A. Hengerer, son of the.Ta.te William Hengerer and former vicepresident of the William Hengerer Company, one of the’ largest department stores in Buffalo. N: Y.V'committed suicide by Jumping Into the river and going over Niagrara falls.

THOUGHT HE WAS SENT FOR. Balloon the Cause of Few Agonizing Moments for Colored Man. A group of aeronauts were telling balloon stories in the smoking room of a Cl ago hotel. Capt. H. El Honeywell, who with the Fielding-Antonio ballooon was later to break all longdistance speed records, laughed and said: “The great Elyot made a balloorr ascent from Charleston one hot summer afternoon. A thunderstorm came up. j Elyot, amid buckets of rain, the roar of thunder and the flash of lightning, was blown about like thistledown. On toward midnight he found himself over a plantation apd threw out his anchor —a grapnel at-the end of- a long- rope. “It happened that a colored man had died in one of the huts of this plantation. The funeral was to take place in the morning. A dozen friends of the dead man sat in the soft summer night before the hut, telling ghost stories. ' “Suddenly, in the darkness above them, they heard strange noises—a flapping as 'of great wings, menacing cries. And they saw dimly a formless black shape. "All but one man ran. This one man, as he-cowered on his stool, had the illluck to be seized by the grapnel. “The grapnel, going at a great pace, whirled him up four or five feet in the air and jerked him along at the rate of 15 miles or so an hour. “ ‘Oh, massa, massa,’ he yelled, j squirming and kicking in that strange j flight, T’s not de one! I’s not de cawpse! Dick’s in de house, dah! In de house dah!’” MAKES TRAINING IN STRATEGY. Popular Japanese Game Shows Bent of National Mind. A letter from Japan published in a German paper says: "When one sees how popular the game of shogi is here it is easy to understand the superiority of the Japanese as strategic officers. The game is played on a board and is in some pespects like chess, but it has so many peculiarities that it is a thing in itself. Each player has 20 pieces, the direction iri which they j move is indicated by arrows on the top or smaller end of the pieces. A captured piece is not laid aside, but becomes the property of the captor and is impressed into his service. This is characterls‘ic of the people, who know so well how to. utilize the works and ideas of others. Another feature of the game is that when a piece succeeds in crossing into the enemy’s' territory its value becomes increased and its identity as to superiority is established by reversing it, turning it on its head. Despite the complicated situations the rudiments of the game are easily acquired, and hence its popularity.” ' * French as She Is Spoke. The restaurant customer pored over the bill of fare until the waiter began to shift ostentatiously from one foot to the other. Then finally the cus- • tomersaid: “I’ll have ‘emince of turkey.’ ” “Wot’s that?” “Emince of turkey.” The name gave the waiter no clue. “Why, look; here it is,” said the customer, And he pointed out, t to the waiter the exact spot on .‘the bill of fare where the name of the 'desired dish appeared. . “Oh,” said the waiter, vastly relieved. “Eminence of turkey, you mean. Yes, sir. Whole -portion—or half?” Reduced to Decimals. It has been known, theoretically, that the tides act as a brake on the rotating earth and tend to lengthen the day. The effect, however, is so slight that it cannot be measured in any length of time at man’s disposal. -TU-may- be-estimated with the aid of certain assumptions, and, using the data .available.. Mr. W. D. MacMillan has recently made the necessary computation .by the formulas used by engineers.; He finds for the inereaseuf the length of the day one second In 460.000 years. THE MARKETS. New York, Nov. 9. LIVE STOCK-Steers $4 25 @ 7 45 Hogs ... 6 55 ip 7 60 Sheep 3 15 @ 5 85 FLOUR—Winter Straights.. 450 @4 60 WHEAT—December 1 11 (a) 1 11% May 1 11%@ 1 11% CORN-May 71%® 71% RYE—No. 2 Western 83 @ 83% BUTTER—Creamery 19 @ 28 EGGS 28 @ 46 CHEESE 10 @ 14% CHICAGO. CATTLE—Prime Steers $6 25 @ 7 75 . Medium to Good Steers., 525 @6 25 Cows, Plain to Fancy 3 50 (H> 5 25 Plain to Fancy Heifers.. 400 @6 50 Calves ... 3 00 @ 7'76 HOGS—Heavy Packers ...... 580 @6 15 ' Heavy Butchers 615 @6 30 Pigs „ 4 0o @5 00 BUTTER-Creamery 20 @ 29% Dairy 18 @ 23 LIVE POULTRY 7 @ 13 EGGS ..... 16 @ 29 POTATOES (per bu.) 60 @ 67 FLOUR—Spring Wheat, Sp’l 6 10 @6 15 WHEAT-May 104 @105% December (new) ........ 1 00%@ 1 01% Corn, December ......... 6,1%@ 61% Oats, May. ......50%@ 50% Rye, May ........ 76 @ 79 MILWAUKEE. GRAIN —Wheat, No. INor’n $1 06 /cl 1 06% December 1 o!%@ 101% Corn, December .......... -l%@ 61% Oats, Standard . 51—@. 51% Rye, No." 1 ' 74%@ 75 KANSAS CITYGRAIN—Wheat, December.. $ 93 @ 93%, May 97 @ 97%' Corn, December.......... 55 @ -55% oats, No. 2 whi&“. 46 •© 4s ST. LOUIS. CATTLE—Beef Steers $3 75 @ 750 Texas Steers 2 75 @ 6 40 HOGS—Packers 5 25 t 5115"“ Butchers 5 75. Si 620 • SHEEP—Natives 3 00 @ 4 75 r OMAHA. CATTLE—Native Steers ... $4 00 @7 00 Stockers and. Feeders,,.. 275 @5,00 Cows and Heifers' ...TJTU 275 @ 4 25' HOGS -Heavy 5 80 @ 5 ,85 SHEEP—Wethers 4 00 @4 50

HE fl. PRESTON .. t NEVADA’S STAR PRISONER, LATE CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT. Young Man Undergoing Long Sentence for Murder Committed During Labor Troubles—Nominated by Socialist Labor Party. . Carson City, JVev.—Just south of Carson City, at the site of one of the innumerable hot • springs - that' gush up at intervals in that barren Jand, is situated the Nevada penitentiary,"conconvrets. it probably is the most delightful penal establishment in the world, and is conducted upon such a liberal basis that the residents of the state refer to it as the hotel in Nevada. Asa matter of fact, there is some satire in the general comment, because the sentences being served there are for the most part excessive, the natural result of the administration of law in a new and mining country. Among the prisoners there is one of more than passing interest, a young fellow 24 years old, with a clearcut, intellectual face, big, Clear eyes, a gentle maimer, a sweet, musical voice, white teeth, the address and bearing of a gentleman, who is serving a sentence of 25 years. He was the candidate of the Socialist Labor party for president of the United States at the recent election. His name is Morrie R. Preston, and his crime is murder, committed under the stress of influences engendered by the Federation of Labor in the mining districts of the west. A gentler murderer you could by no means find, not if you sought him through all tho pages of romance and history, nor a

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less likely aspirant for the office of president. He was the candidate of his party with a view of securing his release from prison, but such is the antagonism of the laborers and employers in the state that his being named on the ticket is only another holt on his prison door. Preston was a picket working for the miners at Goldfield, and in front of the establishment of a restaurant keeper charged with unfairness to a female employe, a member of the union. The restaurant keeper attempted to drive the pickets away, and drew a pistol, whereupon Preston shot him dead. Preston pleaded selfdefense, but was found guilty and recommended to mercy. The judge sentenced him to 25 years' imprisonment. • "My defense was the one which rests on the first law of nature, selfpreservation,” said Preston to a visitor. "My candidacy was the product of sympathy by the members of my party. The latter probably will be as unavailing the and my declination of the nomination was not listened to. Tam the creature and the victim of circumstances. I am n8 murderer, and no politician.” To understand how the prisoner came to his fate, would require a revreW'of {Tie whole'Tabor question as presented by the miners in the west. The federated body of labor have demanded too much, and the employers have exacetd too much, and Preston has been caught between the two millstones, which will grind him. up without a doubt. The Socialist Labor party is not strong enough nor homogeneous enough to exert a definite influence for his benefit, and until the bitternesses have been hllayed there is but little likelihood that he will obtain his release. Still, sympathy for him is increasing. His trouble is that he is ranked with Harry Orchard and Haywood and Pettibone, when, as a matter of fact, he is as alien in spirit and disposition to those men as water is to oil. As to his candidacy for president, it is only neecssary to say that he would not command attention as aspiring for constable under other conditions than that of a victim of the law. His fellows in prison form a body almost as noticeable as .himself. Recruited from the mining, camps, they are for the most part yohng men, selected lives and peculiarly intelligent youth, drawn in many instances from the universities and colleges of the east, who, unable to withstand the temptations of gambling and drinkk, were rounded up and corraled in prison. Folly. There may be a pearl in the occasional oyster, nut anyone Wanting pearls would be foolish to go to a sea-food house to buy them.—Detroit Free Press.

EXCELLENT WEATHER AND MAGNIFICENT CROPS REPORTB FROM WESTERN CANADA ARE VERY ENCOURAGING. A correspondent writes the Winnipeg (Man.) Free Press: “The Plncher Creek district, (Southern Alberta), the original home of fall wheat, where it has been grown without failure, dry seasons and wet, for about 25 years, is excelling itself this year. . The- yield and quality are both phenomenal, as has been the weather for its harvesting. Forty bushels is a common yield, and many fields go up to 50, 60 and over, and most <af.it No. 1 Northern. Even last year, which was less favorable, similar yields were in some cases obtained, but owing to the season the quality was not so good. It Is probably safe to say that the average yield from the Old Man’s River to the boundary will be .47 or 48 bushels ter acre, and mostly No. 1 Northern. One man has just made a net profit from his crop of $19.55 per acre, or little less than the selling price of land. Land here is too cheap at present, when a crop or two will pay fcr it, and a failure almost unknown. Nor is the district dependent on wheat, all other crops do well, also stock and dairying, and there is a large market at the doors in the mining towns up the Crows Nest Pass, and in British Columbia, for the abundant hay of the district, and poultry, pork, and garden truck. Coal is near and cheap. Jim Hill has an eye on its advantages, and has invested here, and is bringing the Great. Northern Railroad soon, when other lines will follow.” The wheat, oat and barley crop in other parts of Western Canada show splendid yields and will make the farmers of that country (and many of them are Americans) rich. The Canadian Government Agent for this district advises us that he will be pleased to give information to all who desire it about the new land regulations by which a settler may now secure 160 acres in addition to his 160 homestead acres, at $3.00 an acre, and also how to reach these lands into which railways are being extended. It might j be interesting to read what is said of I that country by the Editor of the j Marshall (Minn.) News-Messenger, who made a trip through portions of it in July, 1908. "Passing through more than three thousand miles of Western Canada's agricultural lands, touring the northern and southern farming belts of the Provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, with numerous drives through the great grain fields, we were made to realize not only the magnificence of the crops, but the magnitude, in measures, of the vast territory opening, and to be opened to farming immigration. There are hundreds of thousands of farmers there, and millions of acres under cultivation, but there is room for millions more, and other millions of acreage available. We could see in Western Canada in soil, product, topography or climate, little that is different from Minnesota, and with meeting at every point many business men and farmers wlio went there from this state, It was difficult to realize one was beyond the boundary of the country.” FOR THE LADY OR THE AUTO.

Expressman—l don’t know whether this comes here: The address is indistinct. 1 . • Housemaid—l. guess it’s all right, it’s either anew tire for the auto, or anew hat for the missus! How’s This? offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hair* Catarrh Cure. . F. J. CHENkY A CO., Toledo, O. We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Waldino, Kinnan A Marvin. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills s for constipation. Might Be.“C•wrote to your father asking him for your hand." "I know it, and he has been perfectly lovely ever since. 1 don’t understand it.” “Understand what?” • “His being so tickled; I know he don’t like you.” “Maybe that’s why he is tickled.”— Houston Post. Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind YOU Have Always Bought. Author’s Wife Motor Enthusiast. Mrs. J. M. Barrie, wife of the author, is said to be ojie'-of the most expert motorists in Great Britain. She owns three cars, in which she takes long tours with her husband, but she always manages the car herself. In Chicago. Ella—That man slipped on my foot; Stella—Why don’t you put. ashes on it?

TOUR GIRLS Restored to Health by Lydia B, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. . Raad What They Say .

Miss Lillian Boss, 830 East 84th Street, Now York, writes: “Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound overcame irregularities, periodic suffering, and nervous headaches, after everything else had failed to help me. and I feel it a duty to let others know of it.” KatharineCraig,23ss Lafayette St., Denver, Col., writes: “Thank# to Lydia E. Pinkham’# i V-egetaMeCompowfcl I- - well, aftersuffering for months from neiv vous prostration.” M iss Marie Stoltz* man,"of Laurel, la., writes: “ I was in a jdownconditionandsuffered f romsuppression, [indigestion, and poor circulation. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound made me well and strong.” M iss Ellen M. Olson, lof 417 N. East St., Kewanee, 111.,says: diaE.Pinkham’sVegetable Compound cured me of backache, side ache, and established my periods, after the best local doctors had failed to help me.”

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FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN* For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills,, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with, displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities* periodic pains, backache, that bear-ing-down feeling, flatulency,indigestion, dizziness,ornervous prostration. Why don’t you try it ? . % Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass.

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