Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 94, 19 May 1908 — Page 2

THE IUCII3IOND PAL JLA1HU3I AND SUX'TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, 3IAV 111. URKS.

l'AGE TWO.

BIG NAVAL REVIEW BY THE PRESIDENT

On Return of Vessels Next February They Will Assemble at Hampton Roads. METCALF WELL PLEASED. OFFICERS AND MEN OF THE ATLANTIC FLEET HAVE BEEN GREATLY BENEFITED BY CRUISE, HE SAYS. THE Washington, May 19. Twenty-four battleships will be reviewed by President Roosevelt in Hampton Roads, Feb. 22 next, the date of the return of the Atlantic battleship fleet from its world cruise. It has been determined that the new ships, Wisconsin and Nebraska, constructed on the Pacific coast, shall be assigned to the Atlantic fleet and will make the return cruise with that organization. The battleships Maine and Alabama, which made the cruise to San Francisco under Admiral p:vans, will make a quick run together, leaving that port early in June and reaching their home station In October. Secretary Metcalf, who has just returned from reviewing the fleet at San Francisco, expresses himself as deeply impressed with the benefit the cruiso has had on both ships, officers and men. Ships are Benefited. "It is remarkable," he said, "that the long cruise should have benefited the shins, but this is a fact. The con dition of their machinery is said to be Improved instead of deteriorated by the voyage. This is hardly more striking than the effect the voyage has had on the officers and men. The officers have been impressed with the efficien cy of their ships as never before and what is perhaps still more satisfactory the cruise has developed an under standing and friendly cordiality be tween officers and enlisted men which has never before existed, and even Btill more important as an improved condition is the conduct and feeling of the enlisted men themselves. "I have no hesitancy in saying that, you could not pick at random 20,000 university men throughout the country who would give a better account, of themselves than the 20,000 men which constitute the personnel of the fleet. The enlisted men of the navy are a very different class of men than formerly. The average age of the men of the fleet seemed not to be more than 23 years. They come from the interior of the country, and are energetic and self-respecting. "Still another of the apparent, benefits of the cruise is the advantage to the fleet which will result in the genuine rivalry and competition between the ships as to coal consumption and gunnery. This alone is a most valuable result." CITY OP BLOODSHED Logansport Has Had Seven Suicides and Murders Within a Week. MAN'S STRANGE VISION. Logansport, Ind.. May 19. Seven deaths in seven days by suicide or murder were recorded when as a climax to a week of tragedy, Myndus Grace, aged 2." years, committed suicide. Six months ago he went. South to work and as he failed to write to his , wife she thought he had deserted her. She promptly committed suicide For weeks before Grace had complained to friends that his wife's ghost haunted him. In the midst of his dreams he rose shouting: "There she Is! My wife'." The vision was so acute that Grace killed himself, leaving this note: "When you bury me beside my wife! she may keep still." The other victims of the tragic week were: A landlord, shot by his tenant; a wife, shot by her husband, who then shot himself; a child who drank a pint of whisky when his parents were absent, and the suicide of a woman involved in a case charging enticement of young girls. Has Filed Suits Against Five Different Brewing Companies. LAW'S VIOLATION CHARGED tn.tta,v,.mi; Miu- 1Q - iten - ev - cnorot t!inho,n V a fite.t . i , against five breweries, alleging violation of state laws. He demands the forfeiture of corporate rights because of leasing saloon buildings, thereby engaging in the real estate business. They also, in nine different ways were accused of violating the criminal laws by operating bawdy houses and gambline daces. The defendents are the j , r, i s-. - .. - i inaianapoiis brewing 10., lerre Maine Krewtne t;o Canital C Itv. Hom mil

BINGHAM MAKES WAR

Affairs of the

(By Tort.) Owing to the hard rain of last evening and this morningjt was necessary for Manager Jessup to call off the Muncie-Richmond game this afternoon. These two teams will play tomorrow afternoon and Thursday afternoon. These two games will be the last ones the local fans will have the opportunity of seeing the Quaker play until Decoration Day. May 30, when the Huntington leaders will be the attraction. Friday, Saturday and Sunday of this week Richmond will play at Hunting ton. .Next I uesday, Wednesday ana Thursday are scheduled to play at Muncie and Friday May 29 will be an open date. On Decoration day two games will he played here, one in the morning and one in the afternoon. The following day, Sunday, Huntington will again be the attraction. The local club has been badly crippled financially by the bad weather and slim attendance and unless the fans give the club their loyal support from this time on it will be impossible for the club to finish the season. At the opening game of the Van Wert series last week 1'mpirc DerWHO WILL WIN? NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won Lost Chicago 13 7 Pittsburg 13 10 Philadelphia 13 10 New York 13 12 Boston 11 13 Cincinnati 12 12 St. Ixniis 10 18 Brooklyn 9 IS AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won Lost New York It; 9 Philadelphia 17 10 Cleveland 13 11 Detroit 12 12 St. Louis 13 14 Chicago 12 13 Washington 10 15 Boston 9 18 Pet. .62 .3fi3 .r.cr, .320 .319 .50' i .337 o n o . J t o Pet .640 .fi30 .342 .50u .4SI .ISO .400 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.

Won Lost Pet. j Toledo lfi S .fif7 Indianapolis IS 10 .43 Columbus 17 11 .G07 Milwaukee lfi 12 .371 Louisville 17 13 .567 Kansas City 12 16 .429 Minneapolis 8 20 .286 St. Paul 7 21 .250

RESULTS YESTERDAY. American League. Detroit, 11; New York, C. Boston, 3; Cleveland, 0. Washington, 5; Chicago, 1. Philadelphia, 12; St. luis. National League. Cincinnati, 9; New Lork, 5. Boston, 9; St. Bonis, 1. 10. Pittsburg, 2; Philadelphia 0. Chicago-Brooklyn (rain) . American Association. Toledo, 6; Louisville, 5. Kansas City, 1; Milwaukee, 3. Minneapolis, 5; St. Paul, 4. Columbus-Indiana lolis (rain.) CLIMBING AN ICE SLOPE. Vain and Perilous Effort to Scale Mount McKinley. The long trail to the north brings out the best in men and the worst, declares Mr. Robert Dunn in "The Shameless Diarv of au Explorer." As a member of a party which made a vain attempt to reach the top of Mount McKinley he tells something of the hardships of one day's travel: Furtively, imperceptibly, the steepness had stolen a march on us. As one line of footholds gave out we had to slide dexterously to another. The steeper slope was swept clear and hard. Steps had to be cut. We have only three ice axes. As I never gave them a thought this morning, all of them were gobbled up when we started, and I was left with only one long willow tent pole. It was never meant to balance you in half cut steps that may or may not hold your toe. As the steps changed from a stairway to a stepladder the other three betrayed no excitement, no uneasiness. Neither did I at first, but 1 felt both. It was not dizziness, not vertigo, but simply that as I looked down the sheer 2,000 feet from where we clung by our toes imagination resistlessly told over how it would feel, how long it would last, what the climax iu sen sation would be, were 1 to fall. As hour succeeded hour I lived each minute only to make the false step. Courage is only a matter of self control anyway. Climbing the highest mountain on the continent with a tent pole! Sometimes 1 boiled in those dizzy, anxious places that I had put myself in such a position with such men. Yet I must reap my own sowing. Once I asked if it wasn't customary to rope on such steep slopes, but no one but Fred an swered, and he said: "" ain't goiu' to, ketch me tied up to anybody. A man j don't want to take chances with any one but himself, haulin' him down from these places." One requisite of explorers besides : aversion to soap and water is insensi- j tiveuess. They can t see: they can t feel. They couldn't do these stunts if they iV. V. TAKEN TO REFORM SCHOOL. : cugene iuisii aim rv:cuarti trigone luivaii ana u:cn.ra tree i man. t wo boys, were taken to the Plainfield home for hoys today by Sheriff Meredith. The Duvall boy is an orphan. He has given the probation officer considerable trouble because of his mistreatment of his grandmother and his refusal to attend school regularly. The Freeman lad was reported as incorrigible. inis cn.-?ras you, -eaa carerui'v. ur aiCtrell s fcyrun Pepsin is positi.eiy kWanceU to cure indigestion, constipation, tick beadi , i.infl- from ttomh trouble.

Sporting World

rick made a decision, regarded as a perfectly fair one by those, who witnessed the game, but which met with the disapproval of the Van Wert play- j ers, so they informed him that "Van Wert got you your job and when we see President Gamble you will os; it." Yesterday morning Derrick received a special delivery letter from President Gamble. It notified him that he was no longer on the league payroll. The action taken by Mr. Gamble angered Manager Jessup and he at once caller! up the chief executive over the long distance phone and it is stated that some warm words were passed. Derrick performed satisfactory services here and his work in Huntington was praised by the Huntington papers, .lust why this good official was discharged is a mystery. According to tlie Sharon, Pa.. Telegraph "Tacks" Fisher, the former clever Quaker, is playing the game of his life. Fisher is leading the O. P. league in batting, swatting the hall at a .;iT9 clip and leading the league in base stealing. There is no reason why this clever player, now that he has at last found his hatting eye, should not. develop into a star of the first magnitude. EARLHAM PLAYS ANTIOCH 1 Colleges to Clash First Time in Many Years. The Quaker base ball squad will line up against the Antioch college team from Antioch, Ohio, on Reid Field tomorrow afternoon at three o'clock. This will be the first game which Karlham has played with Antioch for several seasons. the game which was i scheduled to be played at Antioch the j first of this month, being called off j on account of the rain. Earlham is I in good shape to defeat almost any I team which she will have to play this season. The batting average of all members of the team lias improved wonderfully in the past three weeks THE HUMAN BRAIN. it Is the Most Marvelous Machine In the World. The human brain is the most marvolenti innrliine in the world. It OCCUpies les -snnee tn nrnnortion to its capabilities than any machine it ever

invented. It sends a special nerve to , expected to remain ocr tor mat oicaevery ultimate fiber of some 5O0 mus- j sion. Centerville intends to leave no eles," to many thousand branching j step unturned in the attempt To showtwigs of arteries, to every pinhend j all its former residents the old town area of the numerous glands which ', is even better than it was in the days keep the machine properly oiled, heat- j when they lived there, ed or cooled, to some sixteen square Many improvements have been made feet of skin, which is the outpost about Centerville in t he last five years guard of its castle, with such complete-j and since the advent of the traction

ness that the point of a pin cannot find an area unguarded. It possesses special quarters for the reception and translation of a constant stream of vibrations that are the product of nil things movable or still in the outer world. On the retina of every open eye is a picture of the outer view, a focused imprint of every ray of light and color, and in the visual chamber of the mental palace stands a vibrascope, a magic lantern that receives the retinal picture in its billion speeding series of light waves and throws them upon its mental screen ns a living moving picture of light nnd shade and color. In the chamber of sound is a vibraphone, over whose active wires passes every wave of sound from the dripping of the dew to the orchestral fortissimo, from the raucous screech of the locomotive to the sighing of the wind through the meadow grass. In j the chambers set apart for scent and taste and touch are the secret service guards to report upon the air and food which give sustenance to the palace i nnd upon the solid qualities of the tactile world. And. wonder of all wonders, this complex human brain can think in all languages or in no language and even conceive its own physical mortality. Edward A. Ayres in Harper's Magazine. Where the Tips Go. ! "But 1 can tell you something you ! don't know about the tipping system ! In the cloakrooms of some of the large ; cafes," remarked a midnight diner to his wife. ! 'Why, don't the small boys just' pocket all they get?" inquired she. j "Pocket: Their uniforms are made , without a sign of a pocket so that none j of the tips can find a lodging there, i Those boys get nothing but a salary, i which is paid by a man who has pur- j chased the check room privilege for as high as five thousand a year. The tips are all turned into him. You can! imagine what the privilege is worth i when he can pay down that sum for' the right." New York Press. ' The Oldest Encyclopedia. The most ancient encyclopedia extant is Pliny's "Natural History," ln thirty-seven books and U.4l):i chapters, treating of cosmography, astronomy, meteorology, geography, geology, botany, medicine, the arts and pretty nearly every other department of human thought known at the time. Pliny, who died TO A. D.. collected his work in his leisure intervals while engaged in public affairs. The work was very high authority in the middle ages. The Child's Advice. Little Arthur stood peering down into the countenance of his baby sister, whom the nurse was singing to sleep. "Say. nurse." he finally whispered, "it's nearly unconscious, isn't it?" The nurse nodded in the affirmative and sang on. "Then don't sing any more or you'll kill ltT'-Lippincott's. Th- fiunri Of Life. Infants and children are constantly needing: a .fixative. It is Important to mow what to gire them. Their stomach and bowels are not stronsr enough for salts, purgative waters or cathartic pills, powders or ttblets. Give them a mfld. pleasant, gentle, laxative tonic like Dr. Cakiweil's Syrup Pepsin, which sells at tha stnall SKm of 50 cents or 51 at drug stores. It is the occ great remedy for you to have ia tha Jwom to five raiiiaaji when they ceU it.

IS

SERIOUS

RIOTING

Several Cars Are Wrecked and Two Women and a Man Are Hurt. A LETTER TO STRIKERS. Cleveland. O.. May 'X - Serious riot-: ing followed the wrecking of several cars by dynamite and crashing of windows by bricks today. Two women and one man were badly injured. Six feed wires were cut and the men who attempted to repair them were driven back by the crowds. The Municipal Traction company has sent a letter to the strikers through an arbitration board, which may result, in the calling off of the strike pending arbitra'ion. Mayor Johnson, when appealed to, said he would do nothing more than exercise police power until all violence stopped. The heads of the unions have suggested that public meetings be heid for the purpose of obtaining expressions of public sentiment in the strike matter and that, an effort, be made to submit the validity of the railway company's franchise to a public vote, under the state initiative and referendum law. FOR THE 0L0 POLKS Homecoming at Centerville Is Aimed to Attract Former Residents. SOCIAL MEETING ONLY. "We want it understood that the home coming at Centerville is to be strictly a home-coming and a social meeting only. There will be no carnival attractions nor anything of that kind. We want all the old folks to come back to the town and see us again and that's all there is to it," said Wilfred Jessup this morning. Mr. Jessup is a member of the committee that is booming the home-coming at i Centerville, which will be held Friday, June l'.t. The annual Old Settlers' aj i u uf ouat-i i uc ua, ""f. .1 1, ..1. ...... r., f.Ol r, cr and many of the home-comers will be lines the place has grown rapidly. It has taken on the appearance of a thriving village and in point, of civic, beauty Centerville is behind no town of the size in the state. SHEFFIELD PLATEHistory of This Now Very Rare and Valuable Ware. Sheffield plate differs from all other plated ware in that the plating was done on the sheet metal before the article was shaped. Before nnd since then plating of various sorts has been applied only to the finished piece, as in our electroplating process. Moreover, the plating was done on copper, while modern base metal is usually composed of an amalgam of copper, nickel and zinc. Furthermore, it la possible for the collector to secure examples of early Georgian and so called Queen Anne work in Sheffield plate, while the rarity and high money value of silverware of that period make its acquisition extremely difficult. Sheffield plate historically and artistically is as worthy of a place beside old china and old mahogany as is old silverware. In 1742 one Thomas Bolsover of Sheffield, England, described in the histories as an "ingenious mechanic," accidentally fused some silver and cop-; per while repairing a knife. He began ' experimenting, seeking for a method of plating copper with silver for the man-; ufacture of small articles. In 1743, together with Joseph Wilson, he set up a factory for the manufacture of buckles, snuffboxes and knife handles. Joseph Hancock soon got hold of the secret and, perfecting it demonstrated that it was possible to imitate the finest and most richly embossed "liverware. Settling in Sheffield, he started ; the manufacture of all sorts of domestic pieces. Beginning modestly with horsepower, he later added water power for the rolling process. Other manufarturers followed his example, and She'.V.eld plate soon began to replace ( pewter on the tables of the English middle classes. Altogether we know ! of twenty-three important manufacturers of this ware. ! The industry flourished until th? middle of the nineteenth century, and; so few pieces of copper rolled plate : were made after that time that they need not concern the collector. Electro plating was discovered or invented by j a medical student of Rotherharn. near s Sheffield, K.nd the new process was j patented on March 2o, 1S40. By 1S50 the new ware was on the market everywhere, and the industry had been revolutionized. Country Life In America. DYNES HUNTS SPEAKER. John Dynes, county commissioner j and prelate of Centerville in matters j relating to the veterans of the Civil War was in the city today. Dynes is ' in search of a speaker for Memorial ! Day at Centerville. A number of; names was recommended to him and ' it is probable that the choice will be made from the oratorical talent furnished by the Jay county bar. Dynes claimed that Centerville has not been annexed to Bethel despite the assertions of Colonel Wiley of the latter BMtxopoli.

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f M SUSTAINS AMENDMENT IN COMPLAINT Judge Rupe Takes Action Doney-Laughlin Case. in Special Judge Rupe has sustained the amendment to the first paragraph of the complaint in the case of Doney vs. Laughlin and overruled the motion to amend the second paragraph. The case has been in court repeatedly and has not been put at issue although litigation has covered a period of several weeks. Judge Rupe ruled that if he failed to sustain the motion to amend the first paragraph ho would eliminate the cause for action by leaving no complaint. He cited authorities to prove that in case a complaint is amended the cause for action is based upon the amendment, and the original complaint has no further bearing in the case. He DlDfTri Gu HUNGRY. Neither Did His Partner After Their Scheme Succeeded. The man who once was down and out. but is so no longer, was telling j the other day of one of his poverty time devices. I He was traveling with another chap ! just as much down and out as he. and j both were hungry. Their capital was insignificant, and they didn't intend to spend any of it. But they had a re- ; volver. which suggested to the jrst ! man a scheme. It worked out something like this: j "I went into a pretty good looking ! restaurant." said the prosperous one. j taking a long draw at his cigar, "and as my clothes looked pretty good I 1 wasn't an object of suspicion. I bad an overcoat which belonged to my partner. "As the overcoat and the revolver were chief characters in the ensuing drama, they prominently. have to be mentioned I got a seat right near the door and hung up my coat so that it was only a step away from th door. "Then I sat down and ordered a square one, a meal that it would be Impossible to describe it was so good. It was flavored with the sauce of abstinence from food. "I ate and ate and ate. and by and by my partner came along. Without his overcoat and it was a cold dayhe didn't look good. He hung around the door for a long while, looking like a hobo getting up his nerve to come in and beg. "Just about the time he made a signal to me that showed he was about to enter I got up to go to the cigar counter to pick out a nice after dinner smoke. In came my partner and slunk j up to the desk to ask for a bit of food, j "Nothing doing. He was turned j down cold. Then to make the thing j work better he came up to me and

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nsked: 'Sav. boss, won't you give me a!,list Episcopal conference today. Th lift? I'm down and out.' I repulsed I committee on Mate of the church Mm tmir an a ftr i'-;n amnn,i i made an adverse report on the recom-

he started out. j "I said to the proprietor in a virtu- i ous way, 'I don't believe in helping those bums.' to which he answered with a smug shake of the head, when my partner grabbed the overcoat I knew what he was doing, but I pretended to be very much interested in the cigar until the proprietor yelled out. 'Hey, he's stealing your coatl' "I held ou to the cigar, wheeled around and started for my partner, lie was half out of the door. I yelled. Lrop that" and for answer he drew the revolver and flourished it. "The proprietor dropped behind the counter, and the waiters fled to the kitchen. From bis place the proprietor called out: 'Look out! He'll shoot you'.' And. taking my cue, I let him run out. "Then when the excitement cleared off I raised an awful row about losing the coat, and the proprietor finally came up with the money for a newone, say about $30. Well, did that meal pay me? What?" New York Sun. It yon are troubled1 with sick beadacba. con Etipation. indigestion, oSrasive breath or any disease arising from stomach trouble, get a 50c or 11 bottie of Dr. CaidweU's Syrup Pepsin. It is positively guaranteed to cure jrou.

3E

Style Talks at This

Cravenette Main Coats

at s A lit talk to particular, men and jo'.wu rainy davs Jum because the sun noes r.o1 s-h:ne. is r. not be vi U and t omforta'vy uivM-d u; and the ver bfi-t iu;.'.iy c'.o-hir.i. If von want all these things a rainy d; cvavenotte rain coat and M .tilery Ci a vo

Rain Coat Special $15 up Cravenette Hats $2.50 up

The House of Men's Fashions Rosenbloom, Buntin & Co., 824 Main St.

TWELVE YEARS OLD BUT IS TOBE MARRIED According to Own Statement, Vance Was Born in 1896. The youngest person ever receiving a license to many in this county, according to the records, is John Vance, a painter of this city. By his own statement written on his application for a marriage license Vance says he was born in Montgomery county, Ohio September 2:1, lstui. This would mean Vance will not be twelve years old until September ": of this year. The applicant, looked tit. least ten years old,er than the age represented. Clerk Fenny asked no Questions of the man in regard to his birth other than those customary. Vance is not old enough to be granted a license if figures are to be relied upon. It mai be that the figures are in error, however. INTERNATIONAL ELECTION WEDNESDAY Union Printers Over the Country to Name President. An international election will be held throughout the Fnited States and Canada tomorrow that of the International Typographical union. One thousand or more local unions in as many towns and cities will hold separate elections and vote for eleven different officers. Those to be elected are president, first, vice-president, secretary-treasurer, four delegates to the Federation of Iabor. three trustees for the Fnion Printers' Home and agent for the Union Printers' Home. The Richmond union printers will meet at the Palladium office and cast their ballots. Chas. I. White is president of the local union and he. with Chas. L. Kirk, have issued a call for the poll. METHODISTS DO NOT FAVOR DANCING Paragraph Will Not Be changed by Conference. Baltimore, Md.. May 10. The election of ten new bishops and the retirement of Bishop Thaburn of India, were the chief incidents of the Methmtndation of the board of bishops that the 'Dancing, theatres, etc.," paraj graph be modified Origin of Woman. The Hindoo conception of the origin of the fair sex appears to tie more sublime than that of the Hebrews, because when Brahma, the supreme being, ereated our first parents the two are said to have to-n in one and the same body. The right half of this body represented the father of humanity and the left half, which was distinguished by a fairer molding, its mother. Calcutta Research and Review. NEW BOARD MEMBERS. Judge Fox of the Wayne circuit : court, has anrtointed John Bayer of ;

this city and A. W. Bradbury of Cam- j It lg the lnten.-on fjf a r.umber of lobridge City, as members of the coun- ca Qfl4 Fellws fo zu to jacksonburg ty board of review. The other mem- i thjs ev,nln? to aUend the degree bers of the board will be the county ; r k . lh i0!2.ft thA. ,,iace. jark.

auditor, treasurer and assessor. Mr. Bayer and Mr. Bradbury members of the board last year. Both were PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

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Store men. or. the proper we.tr re.jsou w !;v you r-hould style in ::'t or. of our ow n make or s-ott hat. CELEBRATED XMAS BY KILLING FOUR (Continued From Page One.) into the window of the house and discovered that the children were not In the bedroom where they usually slept. Afraid of Lamphere. Bertha Schultz. a salesgirl in the Laporte Department store, told that Mrs. Gunnoss once said she was afraid Lamphere would burn her house. Mrs. Nina Shoemaker had seen lamphere with a gun going along the road towards the Ouuness house. H said he was going frog hunting. Iater Mrs. Shoemaker learned that Mrs. Ounness had caused the arrest of lamphere charging him with threatening her with a gun that very day. Mrs. William Flynn, wita the aid of a chart of the Gun ness house, described the place for the grand jury. Mrs. Flynn ointod out the two death rooms that no ordinary visitors to the house were permitted to enter. Tho wltr. ss also showed the jury where Mrs. O.unness, members of the family and hired man slept. It is a trifle unsafe at the present time to predict the outcome of lamphere's case. This is a situation where politics have been mixed up with dead men's bone s. Autopsies on Seven. The autopsy held on the remains of the seven unidentified dead exhumed from Mrs. (Inuness' private burial ground was ronipleted last evening, and revealed the fact, according to the reports of Drs. F. T. Wilcox and Georee R. Osborne, that one of the seven was a fema'e. This has aroused new interest in the story of Emil Greening, of Oklahoma City, Okla . who wa employe! by Mrs. Ounness in the fall of 190. Greening worked for Mrs. Ounness at the time that Jennie Olsen. disappeared, and his story was to the effect that on a certain day in September a man and woman came to the hous and that night Mrs Gunness asked Greening to sleep in the barn, for the couple, who she said were the professor and his wif from the Ix3 Angeles college which Jennie was to attend, would spend the night at the house, and would require Greening's bedroom. In the morning Greening saw nothing of Jennie nor the man and woman and was told "by Mrs. Ounness that they had left on the oarly train, taking Jennie aloup. This body, which is now declared to be that of a woman was takn from the same hole as was that of Jennie Olsen and in that hole al.-o were the bodies of (tie Budsberg. of Iola. Wis., and the remains of another male person. All the Ixidies were dismembered, but the trunks o' the four were such that it was possible to identify the hri-s of Jenn'e Olsen nd Budsberg. and today's autopsies made it possible to determine that one of the other two was that of a female. Bio Night's Work. The theory now ad varied is that Mrs. Gunnes.4. on t ie same night that Green in a: slept iu the barn, may have niutdered no only Jennie Olsen, but al-o the man and woman. The stomachs of the four victims in this hoie have been removed "d the contents will be analyzed for traces of poison. The di.sat?x-ara:icr of Jennie Olsen, as well a - The cou'de, occurred in , September, 1 . while Budsberg wats disposed of in May, 1T07. Its wonderful power go-s to th seat of your trouble, vitalize;.. ?rrer.cther:s every part of your bod. There's nothing ju.-r as good; Hoi lis. ter's Rocky Mountain Tea never failrW Z, cents. Ta or Tablets, a. G. Luker & Co. GO TO JACKS0NBURG. sonburg has promised a royal rece--j j0n Ior ajj who come. You 3s' can't beat btf-uita nid mtn Gold Medal Flour. no sah. Mammt.