The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, October 13, 1904, Image 2

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    Sev ess i
EE A Soo a Gs
CARS GUARDS TO FRONT
The infant Czarevitch’s Honorary |
Command in Division.
FOUR RUSSIAN SHIPS DAMAGED.
Japanese Land Batteries Said to
Have Done Effective Work on.
Vessels in Harbor.
A special dispatch from Mukden,
dated October says there has beeu
Bo change of importance in the gen-
eral situation there. The blockade ai
Port Arthur appears not to have been
80 effective recently, as a number of
messengers have slipped through.
Latest advices stated that the fort
ress has sufficient ammunition and
provisions to enable the garrison to
hoid out nine months.
It is reported in “Tokyo that the
fire of the Japanese land batteries
severely damaged four Russian war-
ships in the harbor of ‘Port Arthur.
It is stated that one of the vessels
was completely wrecked. The names
of none of the ships were given.
There is still an absence of serious
fighting about Mukden, though the
outpost skirmishes continue. OKku is
steadily pushing his advance lines
closer to the railroad and Nodzu's
divisions are slowly moving toward
the Hun river. Both of these com-
manders apparently are awaiting
rd from Kuroki indicating that he
is ready to strike.
Gen. Zaroubaieff
Mukden, in the absence of Kuropat-
kin. who is said to have gone to Tie]
Pass.
Gen. Rent
uncted to 1
right wing a
field now with
will depend the decision of
Japanese attack.
The first troops of the Imperial
Guard left St Petershurg for the
front. They consisted of the Second |
division of the Finland Guards. of |
which the infant czarevitch is the}
1el. !
honorary colione
Prince Mirsl
{he interior, has
from Odessa in which the internal
unrest in the empire was discu
and the best methods by
over. It is no secret that
ous outbreaks are giving his ma-
"jesty and his new minister very Seri
ous concern, and it is recognized that
unless some means can be devised
for at least temporarily ending the |
se
discatisfaction which has led to the
outbreaks, that Russia will he seri-
with
ously handicapped in, the war
Japan.
TO BUILD NEW VESSELS.
Steel Corporation Preparing to
Handle its Own Tonnage.
The Pittsburg Steamship Company,
States |
the marine wing of the United
Steel Corporation, will place con-
for five]
ery at
tracts within the next week
stee} freight carriers for dc :
the opening of navigation in 1905.
The United State
pacity to 16,000,000 tons.
ROBBER IMPRISONS GIRL.
Steals $1,700 from Bank and Locks
Assisiant Cashier in Vault.
A robber walked into the savings
pank at Treynor Ia. and at the point
stant
cashier, Miss Frances Flood, to take
$1,700 from the cash drawer and
vault and put the money in 2 bag he
carried. Then he drove the young
woman into the big vault and locked
her in. Later customers heard the
girl’s screams for help and released
of a revolver, compelled the as
her from the vault.
MONT PELEE IN ERUPTION.
Volcano Emitting Stupendous Black
Clouds and Balls of Fire.
The captain of the British steamer
Sibun reports that when the steamer
passed the island of Martinique on
September 30 Mont Pelee was in full
eruption. The spectacle was witness-
ed by those on board the Sibun at
95 o'clock in the morning of the day
mentioned, the volcano emitting stu-
pendous black clouds and balls of
fire. This accounts for the dust
clouds reported to have been seen
throughout the Windward islands.
Early in May, 1902, Mont Pelee
broke into violent eruption, wipi
out the city of St. Pierre and reach-
‘ing other-towns nearby. The loss of
life on that oceasion was estimate d at
10,000.
FIETY KILLED BY EXPLOSION.
Destruction of an Ammunition Maga-
zine at Sebastopol.
was destroyed.
Recluse Found Dead. °
Charles Traylor, who lived alone |
upon his farm near Jacksonville, W.
with
a bullet in his head. It is believed
he was murdered. Traylor was 60
It was known he had at
feast $600 cash and probably more in
the house. The money cannot be
covered.
Va., was found dead in his hot
years old.
sound. No clue has been dis
Mrs. Emma Ewing Palmer, last of
is dead at
the two “ossified” sisters,
Sherburne, N. Y., aged 50.
COL GAS CAUSES DEATH oir orimenn o mame.
Kin Gives Orders for
| Heroic Engineer Gives Up His
o
2
on October 6 the Russi:
Woodstield, (0O.). postofi
postoffice, worked
coid 1 int . 1 1 s
ald to be In| the safe and teok the $5,000 consigne
command of the Russians now about |
: The "money was
1kampff has been 1in-|
over the Japanese
y cost, and is in the
practically all the |
Russian cavalry for that purpose. |
Upon the result of his scout in force}
Kuropat- |
kin as to where he will meet the]
the new minister of
; held several consul-
tations with the czar since his return
| it would seem, were all friends and | ; .
would seem, were all friends and y5,0nt a number of stones to this
Madge Corcoran,
sed
which it can |
be met and overcome Were talked |
the numer- |
address not known;
THIRTY LIVES ARE LOST.
Estimates Place Damages to Property
| las, Tex., concer
bridges are gone, and
and Santa Fe trains
s Steel Corpora-
tion is preparing to be in a position
to handle all of its own ore and it is |
estimated that nine steamers will
have to be added to the fleet. In
1302 the steel company used 13,000,
000 tons of ore and had a carrying
capacity of 10,000,000 tons. The five
new steamers will increase the ca-
Reports indicaie
ed sections mentioned.
Operator Forgot Order.
on the Panhandle
with a light freight engine,
John Rauch, fireman
Sweeney, Harry Sloan,
and J. A. Wells. os chris
tower had been instr
Wheeling express
the light engine arrived, tut went off
duty and forgot to give the
AMISH: SCHOOLS MUST CLOSE.
Parants Prosecuted
Patronize Public Schools.
promised to abolis
believe that the worid was
recognized schools.
A telegram {rom the {Russian {ron-
tier reports that 50 persons were |
killed by fire and an explosion of an
ammunition magazine at Sebastopol. |
An immense amount of ammunition
ets Six Months.
States Passes Away.
Henry C. Payne, postmaster gener-
al of the:United States. a member of
the National Republican committee,
a stalwart of his party, with the his
| tory of which, both jn his home State
SIX PERISH IN TUNNEL. i and nationally, -he has been identi
fied for many years, died at his
rr | apartments at the Arlington hotel,
aged 60 years, The end was peace
i Tul.
cuers Are Suffocated. Mr. Payne had been in poor health
| for at least two years, but his last
. | illness covered. only seven days, an
Six employes of the Grand Trunk! atrack of heart trouble last week
railway were suffocated ito death by' precipitating. the end at a time,
cos! gas in tht St. Clair tun-| when, after a rest, he seemed (0 have
nel, under the St. Clair river between | recovered a small measure of his
Pom Huron and Sarnia, Oatario. A vitality impaired by years of arduw
coal train broke in two in the tunnel! ous labor. Death came after nearly
and three of the train crew were! six hours of unconsciousness.
suffocared while part of the train lay Henry Clay: Payne was born at
stalled; the engineer lost his life Ashfield, Franklin = county, Mass.
when he returned and endeavored to, November 23, 1843, his parenis be-
push the stalled cars back to safety, ing Orrin P. and Eliza Payne. He
and two other rescuers perished in was educated in his native town and
vein attempts to penetrate the gase- at the academy of Shelburne Falls.
ous atmosphere of the great tube. where he was graduated in 1859. He
The dead are: A. S. Begg, Port entered business life at once at
Huron, superintendent of terminals; Northampton, Mass., but in Septem-
Engineer John Coleman, Port Huron: ber, 1863, removed to Milwaukee,
Conductors J. B. Simpson and D. T. Wis, where he had since made his
Life for Others.
Long Train Breaks in Two and Res-
Tinsley, Brakemen Thomas McGrath home. Up to the time of his appoint:
and D. A. Gillis, all of Sarnia. ment as postmaster of the city. he
_——— was connected with the dry goods
® FIVE MEN DROWNED. firm of F. R. Sheridom & Co. His
——m first active appearance in politics was
Victims Belonged to the Crew of the in the Grant-Greely campaign of
Gunboat Vixen. 1872, when he took part in the
organization of the Young Men's Re-
‘2 men were drowned in Pensa- :
publican club.
€
bay by the capsizing of a sail-
boat in which they were returning SOLD HIS AUNT'S JEWELS.
fron Pensacola to the navy yard.] ~ 0 0 oe
The dead are: Otto BPBrunse, water : :
tender; Richard Lewis, machinist; Young Man Arrested in Huntington.
H. D. Hartley, fireman: W. G. Foster, W. Va. After Long Chase.
fireman, and N. McGinnis, aa oiler. After working secretly for six
The boat contained nine men, months Chief of Police Davis of
eight of whom were members of the Huntington, W. Va., unearthed dia
crew of the gunboat Vixen. Four monds valued at $6,500, stolen from
were rescued by a crew from that | Mrs. Theodore A. Piatt at New Or
vessel. who heard cries of distress leans last March. Walter Piatt, a
and rowed half a mile to the spot nephew of the owner of the dia-
where the boat capsi monds, disappeared at the time of the
EINE theft.
WHISKY KILLS FIFTEEN. The young man was heard of in
. St. Louis, then Cincinnati, later in
Huntington and word was sent Chief
Davis in April. He secured fowl
Fifteen persons have died in eight; diamond Tings, the lost, of the Stolen
days in the neighborhood of Forty- jewels, wile Waiter Piatt i Jacked
third and Forty-ninth streets, on! ub. Young Dian represented himse)s
erty avonne. Now Vorh The 15 as the son of a wealthy diamond
en enue, Hew OFA ¢ : | proker in South Africa, that he
cola
Coronar at Work to Find Man Who
Supplied Drink.
TRambers of =n Hnorganized suicide | country and was willing to dispose .ot
club. hey all drank the same| nem at a bargain, as he was finan
whisky. The sympathetic survivors | .jally embarrassed. Several society
artendo 4 +s S00 @ ” hr : My
attended the Tuneral of each who | jaaders purchased stones, thinking
tied until the last one when there | hey had bargains.
Te NO. Sur Sos, . All of the diamonds were bought
Loroner Scholer Says an epidemic back with money furnished by Mrs
of alcoholism prevails in this vicinity, ! piatt. The arrest has caused a sen
and that someone has been selling a, sation in society circles here, where
particularly deadly whisky. Autop-| the young man spent money lavishly.
sies have been performed on all the ——— ee
bodies. The Coroner says alcoholism CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LEGAL
was the cavse of deaths. | mg aT
LE New Hampshire Supreme Court De:
WATER SUPPLY FAILS. | cides a Case
Consequences of Long Con- The legality of the practice of
hristian Science in New Hampshire
tinued Drouth.
in the Chartiers valley ared was upheld by the Supreme court of
from the most severe famine | the State in a decision handed down
years. Canonsburg is the! in the suit of Mrs. Jennie Spead, to
fferer. The water company | recover damages for alleged injuries
‘ely shut off the water from | 2S the result of treatment by Irving
ns, and the electric plant has | W. Fomlinson, a Christian Science
down, leaving the town in ab- practitioner, also of Concord. Mrs.
solute darkness. Houston and Mead-! Spead claimed that Tomlinson had
owlands are almost as badly off, as failed to cure her of the illness for
wells have gone dry. ; | which he treated her, and that her
The Pittsburg Coal Company at] cute was greatly delayed by fhe time
he Midlands is supplying the town | spent m taking his treabment.
wells drilled for boiler supply. The gue vas qacided In Tavor oF
ington is the only town in the the defendant in the lower cont
valley which is well supplied, the re-| hut: the plaintiy 2ppenied ie hn
cent completion of a 304,000-gallon | promo Count now firms the decision
Tay ow Ln Pe | and dismisses the bill. In substance
reservoir giving the city reserve sup- and dismisses in :
' the court holds that the practice of
Tere Christian Science is legal, and that
: er patients who have resorted to such
Killed at Christening. treatment cannot recover any dam-
One man is dead, another is fatally ages in case the practitioner. uses
injured and two more are seriously the Christian Science method of
a result of a riot following treatment. ~The plaintiff claimed
( ening celebration among Ital-| damages on three grounds—negli-
ians employed in the stone quarries | gence, deceit and breach of warran-
at Pemberton, on the Pennsylvania ty.
railroad east of Altcona. The dead: ————— er
Francesco Ambraski, 27 years old. Crew of Fourteen Drowned.
The injured: John ski, 24 years The Norwegian bark Sir John
old, and the seriously injured are | [awrence, from London, has struck
Dominick Ambraski, brother of the| on sunken rocks outside the harbor
dead man, and John Nuzi, slaver of | at Frederickstad, and has broken up.
raski. The crew of 14 were drowned.
Serious
hurt
Killed His Father. Town Without Municipal Tax.
Maj. Bright, a wealthy rarmer liv- It has been discovered that Barton:
ing near Findlay. O., was shot and | ville, I1l., where the State asylum for
killed by his son Carl, aged 15. incurable insane is located, is the
i and son had quarreled fre-. only incorporated town in the United
quently and violent threats had been | States that does not have to levy a
made. The father went to a room | municipal tax. The population of
« with the Bartonville is only 300, but the town
h a haich-!| collects $4,000 annually in saloon li-
where the hoy was sleep
intention of killing him wit
et. The lad awakened ir time to | censes.
seize a shotgun and bww off his .
’ head. | On Verge of Starvation.
LT At a meeting of the Manchester
TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. | city council it was announced that
Miki {i : owing to the hard times and depress
amienae Xey. oi years 1 as Fx x 3 : 1
. Diet ael Mikey, 50 years-old, a Slav |, in the cotton industries between
laborer, stepped in front of a Pan- hil 50 08 .
handle freight train at Newark, O., 40,000 and 50,000 people in the poor
and was killed. { er parts of the city were practically
ed in a firei on the verge of starvation. Similar
| conditions prevail in London and
other large cities of the United
Four persons peri
which destroyed the Tracey Hotel in
= St. Joseph, Mo.
~ 1 Kingdom.
‘harles Saunders and Mrs. Ela > Dom, pa
H nond_ of Newd Del., were in- ; |
: : kins Earthquake Feit in Italy.
te ¥ killed by ‘a tr while cross- G y
A strong shock of earthquake was
: hp 3 | experienced in the south of Italy, ac
Phe ® IhiePnationd! Peace Congress | .ompanied by floods of rain. The
Boston adopted resolutions calling greatest force of the earthquake was
Russia and Jap to end the ;.1t ip Calabria. Three houses fell at
war, and upon the signaiory DOWerS| gayjly and many others were render
of The Hague convention to put an | ,q° ypsafe. Fortunately no one was
ie
ng the track in a carriage.
end to the strife ! hurt
Niasess ti Er
Massachusetts Repyblicans. a Conspiracy Nipped.
Massachusetts Republicans nominat- What the United States Customs
ed the following ticket: Governor, | officials declare is a widespread con-
John LL. Bates, Boston; lieutenant gpiracy of Chinamen in Philadelphia,
r ry . tis h. 1 r 3 od ry
governor, Curtis Guild, Jr. Boston; | New York and elsewhere to smuggle
{ secretary of state, William M. Olin, | gpjium into this country became
Boston; auditor, Henry E. Turner, | publicly known through the arrest
Malden; attorney
Parker, lancaster;
rer, A. B.| g large quantity of the drug in a
Chapin, Holyoke; elect arge, | Jaundry at 3707 Spruce street by
William W. Crapo, New d, | three local and four New York cus
Herbert | o¢ two Chinamen and the seizure of
Fight Occurred.
STOESSEL’S MEN HOLDING OUT.
Russian Commander Says Japanese
Lost 10,000 Men During: One
Week’s Fighting.
A london news agency sent out a
dispatch dated Tokio, October 5,
saying: “It is reported that the Rus:
sian squadron made a sortie from
Port Arthur, and that a great maval
pattle occurred. No details are giv-
en.” .
It is .reported that the Japanese
advance posts have been driven back |
river and Bensihu.
Lieut. Gen. Stoessel says the Jap- |
anese losses were 10,000 during the |
attacks on Port Arthur from Septem- |
ber 19: i to September 22. He |
reports that no incident oc- |
curred from September 23 to 30,
axcepting outpost skirmishing. The |
last Japanese attack to which Gen. |
Stoesse]l refers was on a rill called |
High mountain, south of Inthan. He |
gives instances of the heroism of |
the defenders; especially the case of |
a lieutenant, who threw hand bombs |
into Japanese trenches, .causing a|
panic. {
Gen. Stoessel's dispatch, which was |
dated September 30, says: “On the
night of September 23 the Japanese
after being repulsed by Lieut. Poggor-
sky, fled in panic. They are now
ments. The bombardment was
the buildings within the fortress.”
GROWING CONFIDENCE.
Increased Volume of Buying.
The Iron Age says: The growing
confidnce in the general business
situation and in iron circles in par-
ticular is beginning to show itself in
an increased volume of buying. It
is not very much to brag of yet, but
it looks clearly as though we were
at last heading in the right direction.
The railroads are buying somewhat
more freely. Some pretty good or-
ders for rolling stock have been plac-
ed, among them one lot of 3,000 steel
cars for the Erie road. In the aggre-
gate the orders for steel rails in
small lots figure up rather surpris-
ingly well. ;
The lake shipbuilders have taken
five additional vessels, making a to-
tal of nine for which the material,
aggregating .about 30,000 tons, has
the United States Steel Corporation
contemplates placing an order for
four or five large carriers at an early
date.
The disposition both of sellers and
of buyers is still to proceed very
conservatively until the future has
shaped itself. Thus, in, staple lines
like in wire products, the leading in-
terest will not sell beyond 60 days,
and in other branches a similar at-
titude is maintained.
No individual large transactions
lines, but there is quite a good in-
quiry and a fairly large tonnage is
being figured on.
MAY FORFE!T CHARTERS.
Attorney General of West Virginia
Brings Suit.
canse of an alleged deficiency on the
statute.
to the ass
the settlement.
OHIO’'S WHEAT CROP.
a Good Average.
bushels short of a good average.
$3,000 in Diamonds Stolen.
nessed the robbery.
Portuguese Troops Slaughtered.
and Edwin TU. C is. Boston | toms inspectors
ed
all along the line between the Hun |
working very actively and are ap-|
proaching by a tunnel and entrench-
maintained both upon the forts and |
Situation in Iron Circles Indicates]
been placed. It is understood that!
are reported in any of the finished
A suit which will work the forfeit- |
ure of the charters of some 12,000!
corporations, which are well known |
and located in every State in the |
Union, has been brought in the Cir- |
cuit court of Charleston, W. Va., by |
the Attorney General of West Vir- |
ginia. The suit was instituted be-!
part of these 12,000 corporations to
make reports and appoint the statu-
tory attorneys as required by the
There is only one way in which!
these corporations can now save!
themselves, and that is, according |
stant attorney general's
statement, by paying a large fee for
Report Shows Product Is Short of
The crop report issued by the State |
poard of agriculture gives discourag- |
ing figures regarding wheat in Ohio. |
The report says that the wheat area
harvested was the lowest in 25 years
with the exception of 1896 and 1900.
Of the wheat area seeded last fall,
for the harvest of this year, it is
sstimated that 18 per cent, or 338,-
128 acres, were plowed in the spring.
The wheat crop for 1904 shows only
18,693,067 bushels. This is less than
one-half of a full crop for the State,
the product per acre being about four
Albert B. Gaines, president of the
Jefferson Hotel Company, St. Louis,
reported to the police that his room
in the hotel had been entered and
$3,000 worth of diamonds belonging
to his wife stolen. Mrs. Gaines wit-
The minister of marine announced
in the chamber that a detachment of
Portuguese troops, belonging to a col-
umn operating in Portuguese West |
Africa against the Cmanhamas, was|
surprised by the tribesmen while
crossing the Cunene river. The de-
-achment, which numbered 499 |
»fiicers and men, lost 254 killed, in- |
LOREE RESIGNS.
Rock Island Meeting Results In
Disagreement.
wy . » %
Lenor Fresnell Loree, the highest
salaried railroad president in the
world. suddenly resigned as the
executive head of the Chicago, Rock
Island & Pacific Railway Company.
His retirement came at the conclus-
ion of a series of stormy sessions
with the owners of the Rock Island
properties lasting through an entire
week, and at which radical differ-
ences regarding policies developed
and failed of adjustment.
Mr. Loree’s resignation came as 2a
sensational surprise to the railroad
world. Nine months ago he was in
duced to leave the presidency of the
Baltimore & Ohio railroad by the
payment of a cash bonus of $500,000
and a five vears’ contract at an an-
nual salary of $75,000. This contract,
liberal in its terms as to be al-
most beyondieredit, provided that in
the event of his leaving the service
of the Rock Island his salary should
continue during the life of the con-
tract and that in the event of his
death his widow should continue to
receive it.
FIVE PERSONS BADLY BURNED.
One Expected to Die as the Result of
an Explosion.
A terrific explosion took piace at
the Scottdale, Pa., plant of the
United States Cast Iron Pipe and
Foundry Company. Five persons
were badly burned, one of whom i3
likely to die. The injured are: Mike
Shulic, a Polish laborer, aged 25;
badly burned about the head and
body, expected to die. William But-
ler, foreman, aged 50; entire upper
portion of his body burned. August
Peterson, ‘cupola man, ' aged 60;
severely burned about the head ard
face. William Whiteside laborer,
aged 80; face and hands badly burn-
ed. Nicholas Andrew, laborer; hair
burned from head, face cut and
otherwise injured.
The explosion was caused by
water being in the bed under. the
cupola when the bottom was dropped
after a cast. The coremakers’ shed
was blown to pieces.
Boston Wool Market.
A free movement of wool continues
in the Boston market. Some stocks
of
low for this early in the season.
This is especially true of medium
grades. Territory wools are selling
actively at firm prices. Pulled wools
are steady. ‘There is little doing in
foreign Wools on Spot. leading
quotations follow: Ohio and Pennsyl-
vania XX and above, 34@35c; X, 30
@31c; No. 1, 33@34c; No. 2, 33@
34c: fine unwashed, 24@25c; 14, %
wool have become surprisingly
and 1% blood unwashed, 28@23c;
unwashed delaine, 26@27¢c; fine
washed delaine, 36c. Michigan X and
above. 26@27c; No. 1, 30@31c; No.
29@30c; fine unwashed, 21@22¢c;
NEWS IN BRIEF.
Three men were kilied and a num-
ber injured by the wrecking of a
stock trail near Bismarck, N. D.
The Spanish Institute of Social Re-
forms voted for the prohibition of
bullfighting.
Owing to the hard times in England
thousands of persons in the cities
are on the verge of starvation.
English prelates were hooted by
anti-ritualists at the annual Church
of England congress in Liverpool.
The Supreme Court of Wisconsin
decided that the La Follette ticket
should go in the Regular Republican
column on the ballot.
William Herman, a bartender, was
found dead in the basement of a
Detroit saloon. His head had been
nearly cut off and the cash register
in the saloon had been robbed.
George Washington Curray, the
colored former Representative of a
South Carolina district in Congress,
has been appointed fourth-class post-
master at Huger, Berkley county, S.
C.
Failures this week in the United
States are 222, against 223 last week,
225 the preceding week and 239 the
corresponding week last year. Fail-
ures in Canada number 25, against 18
last week, 30 in the preceding week
and 17 last year.
In succession to Mr. Payne, George
Bruce Cortelyou, former Secretary of
the Department of Commerce and
Labor and now Chairman of the Re-
publican National Committee, will
become Postmaster General.
Richard Cottingame was fatally
shot from ambush on Big creek, four
miles from Hazen, Ky.
John Morrison, who killed W. T.
| Floyd Saturday at Kershaw, S. C,
was taken from Jail and hanged by a
mob.
The Nicollette Hotel at Minneapo-
lis, Minn., has been sold to the United
States Realty Company of New York
for $400,000.
Major General James F. Wade, the
retiring commander of the Philip-
pine division, sails for home on the
transport Thomas October 15. Pend-
ing the arrival of Major General Cor-
bin, who succeeds to the command of
the division, General lL.eonard Wood
will act as commanding general.
The suit of the Modern Woodmen
of America to collect $100,000 from
the estate of the late E. H. McCutch-
eon, a banker at Holstein, Ia., has
been dismissed. Upon McCutcheon’s
death it was found that his bank
was insolvent. He was a leading
Woodman and had $100,000 of the
order’s funds in his bank.
In the Iroquois Theater {rial at
Chicago, Business Manager Thomas
J. Noonan and Stage Carpenter
James E. Cummings have been grant-
ed a change of venue +{o another
county.
P. P. Maury, representing an im-
porting drygoods firm of New York,
was found dead in the bathroom ad-
joining his room at the McGee Ho-
tel, St. Paul, Minn. Death had been
caused by suffocation, the gas jet in
: = a - the room being turned on. Maury’s
cluding 15 officers and 50 wound-| geath is thought to have been acei-
ental.
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