Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 100, 25 May 1908 — Page 8

THE KIUHMOXD PALLADIUM AN1 SU5-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, MAT 23, 1908. CONFESSES MURDER PRINCESS TRIED TO PAWN HER JEWELS. 5S IE Ik mi it caw cum ii ilqs JJg&&5 ii(Uv(ss Husband Says He Slew Sixteen Year Old Wife and Unborn Babe.

rAGE ErGHT.

THREATEN MOB VIOLENCE.

Newark, Ohio, .May 25. Tbe murder fof his ' sixteen-year-old wife and her unborni babe has been confessed by ErnestTerwiIiger, a stove molder, coniflnedin the county jail, around which iuch a throng gathered that police reserves were called on to prevent 'mob violence. The murderer, a nervous wreck, Icowers in a corner of his cell, and, aside from confessing guilt, has said little (of his crime or the motive. ' The1? body of Mrs. Terwiliger was found, at 7 o'clock Sunday morning in

a room-she had occupied with her hus!band fn the home of Charles Nutter, lit wasdiscovered by a member of the family'who went to call the man and .wife to breakfast. She was lying on jtho.bed in her night dress. Her tonigue protruded from the mouth, and ;thf throat was blackened with the imjprint of fingers, showing that death came, from strangulation. The room was in great disorder, the husband ;gone, .but his collor and necktie were on the i bed. f The killing, with the air of mysitery 'surrounding it during the day up iiintil Terwiliger confessed, aroused !the entire community. Hundreds of people flocked to the Nutter house to jview the body of the beautiful girl, jwho had been highly regarded by her .acquaintances, i Many joined the police in the search for the missing husband.

COUNT HAS MARRIED

Wan Who Gained Fame as a Globe Trotter, Is Making Pretty Wife a Home.

ONE. PREPARES TO WRITE.

Spokane, "Wash., May 24. Count t)ella Ginesti Reggio Salvadore, who started on a tour of the world seven years ago to win $20,000 in a wager -with another Italian nobleman, has comet to Spokane, wooed and won an olive complexioned damsel of the land of his birth and will pass a couple of years in preparing the manuscripts of a series of books dealing with the incidents of his experiences and travels around the inhabited globe. The money he won as the result of his long hike hasvbeen paid to a charitable institution in Italy. The count and his igirl-wlfe are living at 3315 Monroe I street, where they have established a 'comfortable home. While the young countess entertains lavishly her tilted husband is busy with his secretary and living "the ordinary life." as he calls it. He passes part of the time in jtramping among the hills and fishing in the nearby streams. Count Reggio declares he has visited every city of importance in the United States and Canada, and he speaks of them with a knowledge that could not have been acquired in any other manner.

SHE IS LEADER Wife of Senator Foraker of Ohio, Is Popular in Washington.

;BEST EFFORTS AT HOME.

Washington, May 23. People may differ in their estimate of the senior senator from Ohio, but Mrs. Foraker remains one of the most popular and capable leaders of congressional society. ', Senator Foraker furnishes an index of his wife's character in a remark made recently: "I never have disregarded her opinion on a subject, that J did not regret it." Mrs. Foraker possesses a fine intuition. She "feels" when things will turn out right. Though she makes no 'special effort to understand the great American game of politics, there are

Princess de Montglyon, whose diamond earrings were seized by the United States customs authorities in New York when she endeavored to raise a large loaji on them. The authorities wanted to learn how she brought them into this country. The Princess satisfied them that she brought the diamonds here as personal effects, and they were returned to her. The gems are among the largest in the world and were presented to an ancestor of the Princess by Marie Antoinette.

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few better equipped to give advice on political issues. She has accompanied the senator on his campaign trips through Ohio and knows the people and can estimate the strength, reliability and general capability of voters. But Mrs. Foraker does not claim political ecumen nor essay the role of a public woman or leader. Her best efforts are put forth in her home. There is no detail of housekeeping at which she is not an adept. In her early married days she managed her own home with one small maid and she takes charge of a retinue of servants just as efficiently. The mansion which the senator erected about fifteen years ago on the corner of Fifteenth and P streets is magnificently furnished and every room shows the discrimination of an intelligent mistress. There are five children in the Foraker family, three daughters and two sons. Only Miss Louise Foraker and the youngest, Arthur Sinclaire, are now at home.

THE DANCE OR DEATH

It Was One of the Two for Young Wife of an Easterner.

SHE ATTEMPTS SUICIDE.

New York. May 24. Unable to decide whether to give up dancing or give up her husband, there being no other alternative, pretty eighteen-year-old Maud Conover, bride of a twelvemonth, yesterday swallowed iodine at No. 336 E. Twenty-ninth street and then fell unconscious into her weeping husband's arms. She was taken to Bellevue, where it was said she would recover. When this news was carried to the erstwhile weeping husband, George Conover, he grew angry. "I think she's a bluffer," he said; "I'll never live with her again unless she quits dancing." Conover and his wife met at an east side ball. The young woman, according to her husband, was very fond of dancing. He declares she often went out Saturday nights and whirled herself around on waxed floors till 2 a. m. They separated. She went home to mother. He took up board at his brother's. Yesterday the bride came To the brother's to see her husband. He asked her, he says, if she would give up dancing if he returned to her. She refused. "You know that I still love you,' she cried, "but dancing is the only pleasure I have. But I cannot live without you." She took a bottle of iodine from the bosom of her dress and drank half of the contents before the husband could dash the vial from her hand. Then she sank unconscious in Bis arms.

E-G Girl Still Occupies Attention Every man we meet on the street says: "Say, that E-C Girl stunt was one of the greatest advertising schemes ever pulled off. "But what gets me is the food that E-C that's great. "My wife's crazy about it. She 'didn't used to eat any breakfast, just a cup of coffee. Sometimes not that, but now she's there regular. And this morning she had two bowls of it. She feels flie. "The kids lik'e it too. We all feel fine. E-C is the stuff."

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VASSAR IS FOR TAFT

Unanimous Choice of the Chic Little Women of Eastern School.

INTEREST THERE IS HIGH.

Poughkeepsie. May 25. Taft is the Vassar girls' choice for the presidential nomination In the college Friday night a national republican convention was held and Taft was nominated, but his supporters had to fight to win the honor for him. The secretary, of his ponderous shadow was there and made a short speech, after his nomination. Hughes and Fairbanks were also on the platform, or persons who looked like them. President Roosevelt and family occupied the principal box in the gallery. Newspaper men also were on the platform taking notes and pictures of the distinguished men present. Messenger boys ran up and down the aisles with telegrams and water and oranges yes, and chocolate drops for the speakers. Since the election of the delegates on

Thursday the college has been in a state of great excitement. Posters for Taft, Hughes, Cannon, Foraker and LaFollette covered the trees and windows all over the campus, but with the decision in favor of Taft there will be no further excitement for the republicans until the elections next fall. All the states were represented and all the delegates had banners and badges for their candidates. Eloquent speeches were made in the nominating of each man and in the seconding of his nomination. Two ballots had to be taken before there was a definite choice.

THE CITY NEWS 111 BRIEF

HE DENIES REPORT

TITLE IS' INVOLVED

One of Richest Mines in Wisconsin the Cause of Dispute.

A CIVIL WAR CLAIM

Duluth. May 24. Suit has been filed in the district court by Mary A. Skinner, administratrix of the estate of John R. Skinner, deceased, against Wellington R. Burt and the Lake Superior Consolidated Iron Mines Com-" pany, which involves the title to the Burt mine, one of the most valuable properties on the range, and estimated to be worth $3,000,000. The plaintiff claims that John R. Skinner served in the Union army during the war of the Rebellion and that under a soldiers' additional land grant, given him by reason of his honorable discharge, he filed on the east of the northeast V of section 31 and northeast 4 of northeast hi of section 32. township 58 north, range 20 west, located in St. Louis county, and was in possession of the title to it at the time of his death in 1900. The company claims that Skinner, in common with many other Union soldiers, sold the soldiers' scrip given him on account of hia honorable discharge, and In July, 18T5, "signed a blank power of attorney to go with the scrip on account of a ruling of the land department requiring that land be entered on under the soldiers'

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20-7t Warren Shumard of Richmond spent Saturday at Hagerstown. Frost Thomas of New Castle was in Richmond on business. Dr. H. B. Boyd of Cambridge City, was in Riohmond recently. Leroy Carmen and Hc.y Newman were in Cincinnati Sunday. Reports to the police show that a large number of bicycles have been stolen in the past few weeks. Rev. B. G. Howard, Richmond, preached at the Lutheran church at New Castle, Sunday afternoon. An unusually large crowd of Richmond people was at Glen Miller Sunday. The park presented a most beautiful appearance. Fishing and picnic parties were popular Sunday. A large number of people wooed nature during the day along the streams and in shady countrj'. The Modern Woodmen will hold their annual memorial Eervlce June f. by attending the morning service at the United Brethren church, in a body. Miss Edith Doney, of Earlham college, spent Sunda.y at her home in Cambridge City. Miss Doney is nearing the completion of the four years' college course. She is preparing for the profession of teaching, having successfully passed the examination for teachers' license.

Son-in-law of William Jennings Bryan Says Divorce Talk Is Idle.

NOW PAINTING A PICTURE.

PARK TO OPEN..

Jackson's Park will be opened Wednesday evening, May 27th by the Twentieth Century Dancing Club of Centerville. An orchestra consisting of six pieces will play for the party. A special car will leave Centerville at seven fifty-five for the members and their guests. This is the closing dance for the season given by the club, though they will give a number of extra dances during the summer at the park. All efforts are being used to make this dance a grand affair.

Teacher Tommie, what la the plural of pauper? Tommie Why, porpo'ses. ma'am. Yonkers Statesman.

TRAMP SECURES A FORTUNE OF $50,

Weary William Residing at Liberty, Lucky.

Paris, May 25 Wm. J. Leavitt. artist son-in-law of Wm. Jennings Bryan, with shirt sleeves rolled up and palette in hand, today welcomed your

correspondent to his Latin Quarter studio and showed him the head of an Apostile which he is just starting on a huge canvas, depicting the "Last Supper." This painting the artist declares to be his greatest work. "That is, if my friends and eager American reporters give me a chance to gain the concentration and mind necessary for such an undertaking," said Mr. Leavitt, laughingly. "It seems I have been interviewed regularly every week concerning an absurd report that Mrs. Leavitt and myself would be divorced. The final and the most eloquent denial of that report that I can give you is to show you a letter which I recently received from Mr. Bryan." "If the press and public realized the contents of these letters from my wife here Mr. Leavitt unearthed a packet, tied with blue ribbon, they would cease this Idle gossip. I wish they would never have started the report, which only causes annoyance to such a sweet lady. "I expect to join her in Lincoln, Neb., where she now is with her father, as soon as the 'Lest Supper' is completed. That will probably be in July."

PRINCESS ELOPES STIRRING NATIVES

Police Asked to Keep a Close Lookout.

TALKING JS AN EVIL London Physician Holds That Excessive Prattling Is a Cause of Insanity.

Liberty, Ind.. May 23. Jack Egbert, a tramp, who wandered into town several weeks ago and was given work around the livery barn of Ammerman & Fordyce, has received word that John" Egbert, an uncle, of Greenfield. Pa., on his deathbed recently had bequeathed him about $20.VtO in cash, a bunch of railroad securities and a lot of real estate, the fortune being estimated at ?.V,ono. John left for Greenfield and promised to give up the life of a tramp.

Mr. Blackburn, "The man behind the pills," has adopted the distinctive coined name, Casca-Royal-Pills for the sweet little pills heretofore known as Castor-Oil-Pills. The ingredients are the same.

SILENT ONES ARE HEALTHY London. May 25. A London clergyman holds that excessive talking is the cause of the majority of nervous

diseases and of insanity. The Rev. B. S. Lombard advanced this theory in a lecture on "Silence as a Factor in Healing", delivered to the "Psycje Thereapeutic society." "People silent by nature" affirms Mr. Lombard, "are never ill." Very cften those whom the specialists rerpCeive in their consulting rooms are great talkers. To talk about symptoms is a fatal habit" Mr. Lombard quoted the case of a lady who came to his house badly broken down. She had been to specialists without result and now came to him for a silence cure. After staying for some time and avoiding talk, she left perfectly cured. Unfortunately her women friends forced her to talk so much in describing the cure that she got 111 again. A London specialist. Dr. Stenson Hooker, suggests that every hospital should set apart at least one room for the silence cure.

Paris, May 25. The city Is stirred by a sensational story in circulation that a Princess of one of the most Illustrious royal houses in Europe has eloped and 1b fleeing to London to be married in a registry office there. Discovery of the elopement was not made until some hours after the Princess had fled, and it caused consternation in the royal household. All European embassies of the government have been telegraphed to and ordered to stop the elopers at all costs. Police of London, Paris and Berlin have been asked to watch incoming trains and catch the eloping couple.

It is admitted by the Paris police that the princess may be a member of the Austrian royal household. They are the daughters of the Archduke Frederick and are the Archduchess Marie 25 years old; Archduchess Gabrielle, 21 years old; Archduchess Isabella, 19 years old and Archduchess Marie, 15 years old. It is believed here that the eloping princess referred to may be among the four named.

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PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

BREWERIES WORK AGAINST SALOONS

Forcing Less Desirable Ones Out of Business at Lorain.

Lorain, Ohio. May 25. Thirty of T -ra r' c 1 OA e i 1 n o niiit hncincce at

midnight Saturday night, the brewer- i ies refusing to pay the tax to allow the j saloons to operate. It is stated the i breweries are forcing some of the less j desirable saloons out of business in ; hope of influencing the vote in the ap j proaching county local option election.

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Among the pictures appearing in the Indianapolis Star child-life contest yesterday, were those of Martha and Marian Handler, and Dorothy Robbins, Richmond; Chauncey Locke. Cambridge City and Earl Hatfield, aoid Edith. Morris, Dublin.

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