Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 240, 13 August 1912 — Page 2

PAGE TWO.

THE RICH3IOXD PALLADIUM AXB SUX'TELEGRAST. TUESDAY. AUGUST 13,1913.

GRAND JURY GETS VITALDATA TODAY District Attorney Lays Before It Evidence in the Rosenthal Murder.

(National News Association) NEW YORK, Aug. 13. When the grand Jury which Is Investigating the murder of Gambler-Informer Herman Rosenthal and the graft in the police department resumed its labors today. District Attorney Whitman presented the evidence to sustain allegations that a high police official in the department, a prominent lawyer and a hotel keeper are In control of the "system" which has extorted millions in blackmail from gamblers and other law- ' breakers. , Detective William J. Burns who has been investigating police conditions in New York for some time for the district attorney's office, is reported to have furnished Mr. Whitman with names of the three men who are charged with being at the head of the graft syndicate. Developments of the upmost importance are expected to result from the session of the grand jury beginning today. This was the session designed to reveal the identity of the "men higher up" who for years have been talked about vaguely as beneficiaries of the New York police graft system but who have eluded exposure. It was predicted that seven indictments would be returned, one of these against Sam Schepps, the "murder paymaster," who was caught in Hot Springs, Ark. A superseding indictment against Police Lieutenant Charles A. Becker, one of the principal figures in the scandal, was also looked for. Attaches of the district attorney's office admitted that evidence has been piling up at a swift rate within the last few lays. Amongst this is information that Becker has maintained a safe de- , posit box in a downtown vault since la6t December. Mr. Whitman claimed not to know the contents of the box but there was every indication that he believes it stuffed with currency which came to Becker in the form of tribute from the underworld. The box is under guard constantly and no one can get into it without the district attorney's knowledge. "Were all medicines as meritorious as Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy the world would be much better off and the percentage of suffering greatly decreased," writes Lindsay Scott, of Temple, Ind. For sale by all dealers. COURT NEWS Suits Filed in the Circuit Court Today: 16072 John L. Druly vs. Charles T. Smart, suit on notes. 16073 Expartie petition of Celia M. Purdy for change of name. 16074 Thomas Jessup vs. The Dickinson Trust Co., as guardian. Petition by Thomas Jessup to remove guardian. 16075 Mary Burden vs. Earl Burden, for support. In Court Tomorrow. ' McConlough vs. McConlough will be heard tomorrow morning. Action is for non-support. PRAIRIE HAY HERE One of the- four car loads of prairie hay the city ordered from Illinois some time ago has arrived and is being stored in the barns of the various hos? houses of the city fire department. The hay is of good quality. A SCHOOL REUNION The annual reunion of the New Garden township school will be held tomorrow In the old school houso grounds. Special arrangements have ' been made with the Pennsylvania railroad so that the train leaving Richmond at 12:15 will slop at the grounds. By the agreement the train arriving in Richmond at 3:40 will also stop for passengers. Elaborate arrangements have been made for the reunion and it is hoped that this will be the most successful ever held. Washington and the Artists. : Writing to, a friend Ma? 16. 1785. Washington thus described his experience with portrait painters: "I am so hackneyed to the touches Cf the painter's pencil that I am now altogether at their beck and sit like patience on a monument while they are delineating the lines of my face. It is a proof among many others of what habit and custom can effect. At first I was as impnUent of the request and as restive under the operation ns a colt is of the saddle. The next time I submitted very reluctantly, but with less flouncing. Now no dray moves more readily to the thrill than I do to the painter's chair." Infinitesimal Webs. ' Mexico, the land of Monteznma, prickly pears, sand, volcanoes, earthquakes, etc.. has many subtropical wonders both in vegetable and animal life. Among tbese latter is a species of spider so mlnuto that its legs cannot be seen without a glass. This little aranelda weaves a web so wonderfully minute that it takes 400 of them to equal a common hair in magtiitnde. - A Great Deaoent. "I can trace my descent from Hoaer.,, said Lord Slater proudly. ' "Indeed." replied Miss Cresse. who didn't seem to be at all Impressed. "It la certainly a great descent.' Shopping. - first Lady Mrs. Smith. Is too young to go shopping alone. Second Lady Wnat is that? First Lady-She's liable to get excited and bay something. ; Palladium .Want Ads Paj.

WOOLEN BILL PASSED OVER TAFT'S VETO

BULLETIN. WASHINGTON, Aug. 13. The Democratic majority in the house today passed the wool bill over President Tafe's veto. Speaker Clark ruled that the members who merely voted "present" should not be counted in the final vote. This ruling reduced the attendance from 264 to 254 and of the latter 174 voted aye and 80 nay. Nineteen Republicans voted In favor of the passage of the measure. A determined fight will be made to pass the bill in the senate. PRISONERS ESCAPE FROM OHIO PRISON (National News Association) COLUMBUS, O.. Aug. 13 Three convicts escaped over the south wall of the state penitentiary today amid i a fusllade of rifle shots from the guardsmen. Two of them were subsequently captured, one being badly wounded by a rifle bullet. Their names cannot be learned until a roundup is made. BANK WAS ROBBED DURING NOON HOUR (National News Association) COHASSET, Minn., Aug. 13 At noon today two masked men entered the State bank here and at the point of revolvers drove Cashier Stackpole Into the vault and locked him in. The robbers hastily gathered up several hundred dollars lying on the counter and fled. A posse was immediately sent in pursuit. Cohasset is eighty miles northwest of Duluth. HAD BIG CLASS I At a meeting of the Moose lodge, 108 candidates were initiated into the mysteries of the order. Because of the large number of candidates and the 200 members who attended the work, the meeting was held in the Odd Fellows' hall. GIRL SUICIDES (National News Association) DELAWARE, O., Aug. 13. The mangled body of Edna Trautman, aged 15, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Trautman, was found on the Pennsylvania railroad tracks in the north part of the city today. The girl's parents believe she threw herself under a passing train, as she had complained of not feeling well. HIS PLAN 0FJTHE DAY. Rigid Rules of Living Made by Colonial Minister. An orderly arrangement of working hours is fi. desirable and time saving! thing, but whei one reads the plan oi the day made by a colonial parson, be cannot help wondering where tbe good man's family life came in. and if tbe system hold any possibility of relaxation. The record, quoted by William Root Bliss, in "Side Glimpses From the Colonial Meeting House." is taken from tbe diary of Thomas Prince, a minister of the Old South church. Bos ton . 1719. Oct. 30th. I marry. Nov. 10. We begin to keep House. My proposed order Is: At 5 get up and go Into Study. Pray and read in original Bible till 6. and then call up the Family. At 6H go to Family Prayers and only the Porringer of Chocolat for Breakfast till 7. 7 go into my Study till 12V4. then do something about the House till 1 to dinner, except on Thursday study till l(Hs, then dress and 11 Lecture. At .2 Dress and go abroad till Candlelight. Except Wednesdays after Dinner do something about the House and Saturday afternoons visit at Dr. Sewall's till 24. then Home and study till Candlelight. Study till 9Vi 8Vj go t Family Prayera and go to Bed. N. B. 1 eat no Supper. Dickens' Cramped Quarters. Bleak House at Broadstalrs Is of Interest to the Dickens lover because the greater part of "David Copperfield" was written there. Bat it is not j the Bleak Bouse of the novel, whicb is definitely located In Hertfordshire. The novelist and his family appear tc have been somewhat tightly packed in their Broadstalrs home. When Lord Carlisle contemplated paying a visit tc "our watering place" in 1S51 Dickens wrote promising him the North Foreland lighthouse for a night light in his bedroom, and be continues. "Ag we think of putting mignonette boxes outside the windows for the younger children to sleep in , by and by I am afraid we should give your servant the cramp if we hardily undertook to lodge him." During recent years tbe house has been transformed out of all recognition. London Spectator. His Own joke. "I admit I was found in tbe possession of firearms." said -the prisoner, "but it's only a joke ef mine, my lord." "Erplain yonrself." said the magistrate, "Why. I put two pistols in my pocket when I go out to a friendly gathering. Then I start talking ot aeroplanes." "Weltr "Then 1 say my life was once saved by parachutes." "Yes?" "And I pull ont the pistols and say, Pair o shoots.' Ha! ha! Seer "Yes. I see. Did you make up that Joke yourself?" "Yes, my lord." "Two years' hard labor." London Answers.. Old Time Epicures. In Dresden 300 years ago "epicures" used to eat Venetian oysters .that bad been on the way three weeks.

PLOT AGAINST THE CZAR JISRE VE ALE D Conspiracy to Seize Royal Family and Government Nipped in the Bud.

ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 13. Hundreds of secret police are at work today throughout the empire investigating the scope of the most daring plot ever aimed at the Czar and the Russian government. So far as the details have been learned the conspiracy not only included plans for the seizure of Czar Nicholas, the Czarina and the royal family, but a reorganization of the government into a constitutional monarchy. Arrests of naval officers on board the Russian battleship Ivan Zlatoust at Odessa gave the public the first intimation of the cabal. Further arrests in St. Petersburg. Yalta nnrl SehaRtonnl eave an idea of I

Its widespread ramifications. Many!'"7 Have any meetings been omit-

army and naval officers are involved. While the government is making rigid efforts to keep the details of the conspiracy secret nevertheless it was learned today that the plotters conspired to seize the Czar and imperial family while they were enroute from Yalta, Crimea, to Sebastopol on board the yacht Standart. At the same time the Baltic fleet was to have mutined and made simultaneous attacks upon Cronstadt and St. Petersburg, the fleet being split up in two squadrons. M. Chtchegiovotoff, the minister of justice, and Premier Kokovsoff who are personally directing the investigation have learned that the commanders of nearly every important garrison in the empire were approached. The conspirators seemed to have an unlimited supply of money and in adition to offering bribes promised political preferment after the government was reorganized. One party of sixteen seamen on the Ivan Zlatoust have already been arrested, condemned and put to death for their part in the conspiracy. T PETRIFIEDJREES. The "Stone Forest" One of California's Natural Wonders. California, among many other natural wonders, contains n "stone forest." This is located in Sonoma county, only a few miles from the little resort of Callstoga Springs. This "forest" consists of a great many petrified trees, all of which are prostrate. In respect to the great number of petrified trees and their immense size, the California "stone forest" surpasses that of Arizona. Strange to say. very little is known about these wonderful Sonoma county petrifaction so far as the general public is concerned. Many of these trees are of enormous size. The famous "Queen of the Forest" is a prehistoric redwood about eighty feet long and nearly twelve feet in diameter. It has been broken in several places, and these breaks are ns clean as if rut off with a saw. A tree has grown up through one of the breaks and has attained quite a large size. Another giant tree known as the "Monarch" lies near by, which is almost ninety feet long and is without a break. This tree is a fir, and averages ten feet in diameter. Not far away is another giant son of the forest a redwood that is about sixty feet long and nine feet in diameter. This tree is broken into many hundreds of pieces, yet it retains its shape almost perfectly. Scattered about for the area of several acres are many other pieces of petrifaction. So perfect has been the transmutation into stone that tbe grain of the wdod still remains very clear, and the variety of the tree may be easily determined. Scientific American. THE OLD LJBERTY BELL. History of This Relic of the Revolutionary Patriots. Overvigorous ringing' of the old Liberty bell many years agro on the occasion of the celebration of ftje Declaration of Independence was what ' put the crack in it and forever destroyed its resonant tone. It was cast by l'ass & Stow In Philadelphia and hung In the belfry of the now historic statehouse In lower Chestnut street early In June. 1753. It contains 2.080 pounds of metal. Near tbe top of tbe bell were cast tbe words "Proclaim Liberty Throughout All tbe Land Unto Ail tbe Inhabitants Thereof." Prophetic of its destiny, this gave it the name Liberty bell. When tbe British army marched on Philadelphia In 1777 the bell was taken down by patriots and carried off in tbe night to Allentown in order that it might not fall into the hands of the enemy. In 1781 it was returned to the tower of the statehouse. For more than half a hundred years thereafter the bell was rung and honored on Independence day every year before the crack appeared in it. An effort was made to restore its tone by sawing the crack wider, but this proved of no avail. The bell was finally removed from the tower to a loffer story of the statehouse and used only on extraordinary occasions. Subsequently It wag rigged up on its original timbers in tbe vestibule. In 1S93 it was exhibited at the Columbian exposition in Chicago. Ironmonger. The word "ironmonger" has as curious an origin as any other word in the English language. It means literally an eater of Iron and came to its present use in this way. There was once a law that forbade buying fish to sell again, and the fish hawkers, who still carried on their trade in spite of this law. were facetiously termed fish eaters or fishmongers, for to evade the law their large purchases of fish were said to be for their own consumption. Gradually the term monger was applied to other trades, as cheesemonger, until at last it came to mean any middleman as distinguished from a manufacturer and so was applied to the dealer in hard ware. London Graphic. , r

MEETING Discuss Matters Relating to Conduct of the Society. This moraine's session of Indiana Yearly Meeting (Hicksite) in North A Street Friends' meeting house, was largely taken up with the discussion of the practices of the Society in the conduct of both its social and religious aspects. The reading of the Queries and Arv swers from the Quarterly meetings and their summaries by the clerk of the Yearly Meeting occupied most of the time, this exercise being unusually full of interest since each Query was followed with a paper devoted to the elaboration of the substance of the latter. The Queries read: "Are Friends diligent and punctual in the attention to meetings for worship and discipline and careful to maintain devotional solemnity devotional solemnity thereea Are love and unity maintained and if differences arise is due care taken to end them? Do Friends strive so to live as to be a good example to all? "When Friends violate any of our testimonies, is due watchfulness observed to extend to them Christian tare for their restoration?" "Are Friends careful to observe moderation, simplicity and plainness and do they endeavor to train their children and those in their care in a life and conversation consistent with our Christian profession?" Against Parliamentary Usage. One of the papers read included a recommendation that the business meetings of Friends should be conducted more in accordance with parliamentary procedure but this met with fleriilpri nrntest several nlrler Friends stating that the use of the "ayes'" and i ZSX ZitZVLZz n harp inainritv would mnke sppni ! unanimous. One Friend said: "It has been my lot in the past to have to serve on juries. And sometimes I was the "contrary' one. But I would never allow myself to be persuaded against my convictions and, in these particular instances, found, after returning home, that I was. wholly in the right." One aged Friend thought too much leeway was given the younger element In the Society and too little considerations given to the traditions and customs upon which the founders of this religious body had based its tenets, and whose observance had carried the Society to its present state of usefulness and influence. Others thought a too rigid insistence on the observances of the past would alienate the younger membership who had grown up in a modern environment and who did not place as much value on former achievements as they did upon following the advancing thought. Isaac Wilson, of Pennsylvania, a visiting Friend, spoke eloquently at this point on the necessity for recog nition of the services rendered in the past and the value of adjusting these to the needs of the present. Monday Afternoon. The income on the Benevolent Fund of $5,000 was reported to have been properly distributed, and R. M. Roberts, a trustee of the Friends' Boarding Home, Waynesville, Ohio, reported the financial balance on the right side, all the rooms occupied and the health of the boarders good. The recommendations of the committee on the adjustment of the time of holding the three Yearly Meetings of Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, were accepted, that of Indiana to convene the second Monday in August. The committee was appointed for the purpose of fixing the dates of these three I bodies so that Friends wishing to at tend each could be more readily accommodated in the matter of travel. The custodian of the fire-proof safe in which the records of the Yearly Meeting are kept, reported the safe in good condition. Clarkson Butterworth, who was appointed several years ago to obtain information concerning all the meetings that had ever belonged to Indiana Yearly Meetlng, for the purpose of record, reported that he had been unable to complete his work on account of ill-health "but that he expected to be able to doao later. fcy THE SERENADE, rj An Old Romantic Custom That Has Fallon Into Desuetude. In recalling the serenade of tbe Philharmonic society to Mile. Nilsson I am reminded of a custom now fallen into desuetude, but which at the time 1 speak of (1S70) was a favorite method of bestowing a marked compliment upon any one whom yoa wished particularly to honor. The serenade was not only otfered to visitors of distinction, but prevailed extensively as a delicate attention which you might pay to the lady of your choice. It was thought the prop er thing at that period for a man to engage the best brass band be could afford and to proceed with it after midnight to tbe house of his preferred and then to stand beneath tbe windows while the musicians played their most sentimental and sonorous selections. It was not an uncommon sound even to bear a double quartet of malr voices, with a French horn thrown in singing beneath the windows cf some favored damsel, while paterfamilias or the butler made ready some light refreshment for the donor of this grace ful compliment. These romantic attentions have talr en flight with the advent of electric lights, elevated railroads and other voices of the night, but even New Tork bad a few hours of stillness after midnight, and the night watchman lent an indulgent ear to these revelers, who would doubtless be locked up ss dls turbers of the peace did tbey hazard' .such an enterprise under oar modern ! regime. Richard Hoffman's "Musical I Recollections.' .

HICKSITE

ITOWN IS ATTACKED!

TWO HONORED DEAD i Bloody Work of the Southern Mexican Rebels Was Continued Today. (National News Association) MEXICO CITY. Aug. 13. Two hundred persons were killed. 100 of them townspeople, following an attack on the town of Ixtapa in the state of Mexiccby Geneveve Le I-a Or's band of Zapatists Today the soldiers have withdrawn from the town and are marching towards Toluca. the capital of the state, which vis only fifteen miles distant. The fighfand massacre at Ixtapa occurred late yesterday after the rebels had been repulsed by a garrison of si hundred federals at Tenancino, a town Inthe vicinity of Ixtapa. A garrison of 10TTrales. guarded the latter place. The rebels chargedand drove the rurales backMnto the narrnw streets of the village. There they began a murderous fire an1 ndhardly one of the rurales escaped. Then the rebels marched throu&U the streets shooting and stabbing any one they met. A hundred of the villagers mat death, according to reports received here. Among the dead, it is said, are a few women and children. Two hundred bodies lay in the streets according to the reports, after the rebels had withdrawn. Residents in the vicinity and at Toluca are in a state of panic because or the rebel activity. There is only a small force of federals at Toluca and it is believed they cannot withstand the rebel attack. JACK DILLON WILL meet george brown (National News Association! CHICAGO. Aug. 13. Jack Dillon, the Indianapolis middleweight, and George (Knockout) Brown of thi3 city are to clash again for the fourth time. The pair "were matched by one of the Peoria clubs today to do battle for ten rounds on the night of September 10. The state liquor men's association holds a convention in Peoria about that time and the promoters expect a large crowd. The boys have agTeed to do 158 pounds at 3 o'clock. PHILIPPINE VOLCANOES. Mayon Is the Most Famous, and the Teal Cornea Next. The most famous Philippine roleano and one of the finest volcano cones in the world is that of Mayon. Its height is 8.970 feet, and the volcano is visible at a great distance. Since 176G records have been kept of its eruptions. In that year many plantations and Tillages were buried under a stream of lava which flowed down Its eastern slope. About 1,200 lives were lost in the eruption of 1S14. which buried the country around a part of the base of Mayon under the outpourings of lava and dust. A similar calamity In 1823 destroyed the lives of about 1,500 per sons. In the nineteenth century there were a number of severe eruptions. Including one in 1880-7 which continued about nine months. An eruption in 1897 killed 350 persons and destroyed much DroDertv. Twenty-two violent eruptions of this volcano are on record Next to Mayon the Taal volcano is the most remarkable. It is on an Island In the lake of Bombon, and the la land, built up by its outpourings, has an area of 220 square miles. The vol cano is incessantly ejecting dust and vapor from its crater. Taal as well as Mayon bas been the center of numer ous destructive earthquakes, but no very great eruption has occurred since 1864. when four villages around the mountain were completely destroyed. LENGTHY VISITS. The Unstinted Hospitality of Old Virginia. Virginia hospitality Is a byword. The old time country house, says Mrs. Roger A. Pryor in "My Day," was built of elastic material, capable of sheltering any number of guests, many of whom remained all summer. Indeed, this was expected of them. "My dear sir," said the genial master of Westover to a departing guest who had sought shelter from a rainstorm, "my dear sir, do stay and pay us a visit" The guest pleaded business that forbade his compliance. "Well, well," said Major Drewry, "11 you can't pay us a visit come for two or three weeks at least.' "Week ends" were unknown in Virginia, and equally out of the question an invitation limited by the host to prescribed days and hours. Sometimes a happy guest would ignore time altogether and stay along from season to season. I cannot remember a parallel case to that of Isaac Watts, who, Invited by Sir Thomas Abney to spend a night at Stoke N'ewington, accepted with great cheerfulness and stayed the rest of his life, nearly forty years, but I do remember that an invitation for one night brought to a member of our family a pleasant couple who remained for years. For Hay Fever, Catarrh, Quick Consumption, Typhoid and contagious diseases, BRAZILIAN BALM never failed or lost a case, as it KILLS THE GERMS 25c, 50c and $1. ALL KINDS OF CANS Can Lids and Rubbers, Sealing , Wax, Paraffins and Jelly Glasses.

Cooper's Grocery.

JAFT CROWD BOLTS TEXAS CONVENTION Lyons and Followers Rule Supreme and Will Declare for "Progressives.

(National News Association) DALLAS, Tex., Aug. 13. A serious split in the Republican state convention was imminent today when the convention was called to order. Col. Cecil Lyons, with a majority of the state committee, had complete control of the organisation. An effort by the Taft men to read him out of the party failed and the Taft men bolted. It was apparent that the Roosevelt delegates who remained In the regular convention would indorse the Progressive ticket. COMPLETE TICKET. COLUMBUS. O.. Aug. 13 Attorney Waltermeier of Findlay, O., was today selected to succeed General R. B. Brown of Zanesville. as candidate for lieutenant governor by the Republican state central committee. General Brown was selected to make the race ior governor Saturday. AIDES FOR HILLES. NEW YORK. Aug. 13. Charles D. Utiles, chairman of the Republican national committee today announced the names of the members of the advisory committee for the campaign. William Barnes, Jr., chairman of the New York Republican committee, is at the head. Among the other members are Senator Burton of Ohio, Joseph B. Keeling of Indiana; Harry S. New of Indiana; John Wanamaker of Pennsylvania, and Fred W. Upham of j .Illinois. Deaths and Funerals. JONES Flora Jones, aged two months, died last night at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Silas Jones. The funeral was held this afternoon at fouroclock. Burial in Earlham cemetery. Attitude ncPTeraperature. The lowest temperature yet found In the upper air Is beJcw sere 110 degrees F., at an altitude of twelve miles, and this over Central Africa. At an altitude of six and a half miles in different stations cold ceased to increase, end stationary temperature on a slight rise of thermometer occurred. Tbe highest sounding balloon so far la 13.9 miles and highest kite 4.5 miles. It appears that at great heights some gas exists of great tenuity, and this name for It has been proposed, "geocoronlum," to correspond to the corona around the sun. At a height of eighteen miles tbe air is one-seventy-sixth as dense as at sea leveL New York American. The Key to tjie Door of Business is die Telegraph

City Statistics

Every channel of commercial life opens to receive a telegram The Western Union DAY and NIGHT LETTERS place the keys in your hands. Full Information by Telephone THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY

This iQ the Last Week: of Dickinson's Mid-Summer

Wato

If you've been putting off the purchase of a watch, this announcement will serve as a reminder to act this week, for we know that you do not wish to pass up the opportunity of saving a neat sum. A large number of persons have already availed themselves of this money saving chance, and it is our desire that as many as can, come this week. 5 MORE IPAYS 5

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"Where Qa-Iify J weir y Is Sold For Le"

All APPROVED BEEF MAYjyiSEASED Government Stamped Piece of Meat Investigated by City Officials. An investigation of a piece of meat, supposed to be diseased, is being conducted by city oficials. The piece ot meat, a beef roast, was purchased ft r the Stillwell hotel Sunday morclr. of a local butcher. Mrs. Stillwell. saw a small red spot on the ou'.si-ie it the meat, and cutting into it 'ound a deep red mas which she believed U) be a cancer. She instructed her CxTs how to detect such diseased meat, and saved the diseased section for official inspection. Monday a man stating he was a state meat inspector paid a visit to the Stilwell hotel, looked at the meat and said that he would call in other authorities. The meat was found to be the product ot a Chicago packing house, and to have a government meat inspection stamp on it. Yesterday Dairy Inspector Flook received a telephone message from a man, telling him of the supposedly diseased meat found at the Stillwell hotel. Flook investigated and took charge of the meat. Last night he sent It to Indianapolis to the state laboratories, to be analysed. If it proves to be a cancer, as local authorities tear, an investigation will be made to discov

er how the diseased meat came to be passedupon and approved by the government Inspector at Chicago. Mrs. Stillwell this morning stated she hadlmade a study ot cancerous growths., and saya she has found several ofKhls nature In both beet and pork at her hotel In the last few. y ears, SUPPOSED WTLDcMAN BREAKS UIT PICNIC A man hiding In the buabe by tbe side of a private drlvewaydeadlng; to the Thistle thw site pond north ot the) clty'laat evenlngvcaueed a pernio among a crowd of gtrl picnickers. T man crawled about on his handavand knees emitting strange sounds. and would not leave theebushea, behind which ha was partly concealed. The ptenlo broke up hurriedly in. ronseqejsmoa. Officer Lawer was aemt to the aoane to arrest the alleged wfld man, bat could not find him. ChOdraa of the neighborhood cure keeping close) to homo now for the man. Is at large No description of him haa beefi' ae. cured. Polger P. Wilson Henry JPoWasayer Harry C Downing HarvsyT. WTlesa FUNERAL Dl its Phone 1336. IS NjtfOOitBU Automobiles, Coache lanoa Servlc

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