The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, November 29, 1906, Image 2

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    70 BAERK BANDITS POWER
Powers Plan to Prevent Further
Anarchy in Morocce.
SAFEGUARD L
Will Be Sent
Armed Fleets
to Prevent
any Possible
of
le pu
1 .
and are
increase
been mat
cautions
signed
y to meet the recy
ments of an emergency and to
guard the lives and property of
eigners at Tangier.
Pending the formal policing in ¢
ports of Morocco, to be undertaken
upon the final ratification of the in-
ternational agreement reached at Al
geciras, cach power will maintain;
warships at Tangier and be prepared
to land a total of 3,000 men. France
has decided to send the battleships
Buffren, Saint Louis and Charlemange,
tn command cof Admiral Touchard, to
replace the cruisers Galilee, Jeanne?
d’Arc and Forbin, which are now in
Moroccan waters, The Lanvive will
accompany the I'rench vessels, trans
porting troops irom Algeria should a
landing 1@ Necessary. |
It netly understood
joint movement will not assume
nature of an occupation, and nei
yanish flags
been
dis
is
the French
be rai
nor
an er
advance
ment }
Franc no objec:
to then
$2,230
nett of
£ district was flex
2 600 on the ficor of a baill-
juntington, W. Va. and J.
t C. Kirkman in a Cincinnati jail
EF awaiting extradition papers.
A week ago Cougressman Bennett
attended a banquet of the Mystic
! Shriners at the Hotel Frederick in
EE Huntington. The Congressman was
beckoned to the door by Kirkman,
who whispered he was broke and he
needed $20. The congressman told
Kirkman to write a check for $20 and |
he would sign it. Kirkman drew a
check for $2,000 and hastened back to |
the ballroom.
The congressman did not notice the:
amount and readily affixed his sig- |
nature.
P
INDIAN PREFERS OLD ORDER
Chief of Greek Indians Makes Dra-
matic Plea for More Freedom.
. Crazy Snake, chief of the Crazy
Snake faction of the Creek Indi
made a dramatic speech before
senate comuitice on Indian affairs.
He pleaded for a return to the condi- |
tions existing under the treaty of |
1832, when the Indians held land in |
common and roamed the forest and
stream in nomadic fashion.
“Jn 1492, when a man landed on
‘American shores named Columbus,
f whom did he find here?’ cried Crazy
Spake. <'Did he find the white man?
No. He: found the Indian. What did
he say to the Indian? He said. ‘The
fand is all yours. 1 will protect you.”
The general sense of the Indians, of
whom about 39 testified, was for re-
: moval of the restrictions on all lands
! except that of the fullbloods and on
faomesieads.
Russian Murders.
Two employes of the Visiula rail-
road were murdered by persons uni-
ytglide, known to the authorities. The bride
¥ of a detective was shot and Killed
by terrorists. A bomb was exploded
fn an unoccupied house in Piwna
street, in the neighborhood of the
governor's palace.
the |
”
TEM BARGES WRECKED
River Craft, Enveloped in Fog, Crazh
In Piers of Bridge.
In a dense fog +hat suddenly set-
tled after they left Cables Eddy the
towboats Raymond Horner and G. W.
Thomas struck their coal fleets
against the channel spans of the Pan-
handle railroad bridge, at Steuben-
ville, O., which have long been a mei:
ace to navigation.
Ten barges and flats were wrecked
and sunk 125,000 bushels of coal lost
It was reported that two men were
drowned off the Thomas, but. this is
denied.
Coal barges are sunk in the chan-
pel for a distance of two miles.
Mormon President Fined.
Joseph F. Smith, President of the
Mormon Church, appeared in the Dis-
¢rict Court before Judge Ritchie, at
Salt Lake City, Utah., pleaded guilty
to a charge of unlawful cohabitation.
and a fine of $300 was imposed. The
charge under which ® the Mormon
prophet was arrested and fined was
based on the .recent birth to Presi-
dent Smith's fifth wife of his forty-
third child.
Caruso Fined.
properly toward women
Park, New York, was :
by Magistrate Baker in the Yorkville
police court and was fined $10, the
maimum that can be imposed in this
court.
Fall River's cotton mill employes
won a battle for an increase 10
wages, and 30,000 operatives will
come under a seale giving them 10 per
gent more than the present rate.
I men.
| not been landed anywhere, and unle
| agreement
Enrico Caruso, the great Italian
tenor, who was accused of acting 1m-
in Central |
found guilty |
STUART'S PLURALITY, 48,435.
Official Vote of Pennsylvania in Re-
the recent
in Pennsyl-
the office of
1 Edward
Mou
H.
Thome seat
tering, 54,656
Secret {en-
John
George
24547; H
nane,
A. McConnell, Social :
seattering, 8. Houek’s plurality, 92.-
235. ;
The vote for the Rt ylican nomi
1ees includes the
the
minees
as the
six occupants
crowned were
John Harri-
engi
son,
PP », assistant
engineer; David White, Prescott,
deckhand; Harry Gregory, Port Col
borne, fireman; in Burns, Port Col-
Charles
Thcmas
berne; on, Christiana,
Norway. \
"The No~werian bark “"-7-- has
bh 3
been lost on Red Island rcef with all
on board. She carried a crew of 14 |
When the Madga sailed from |
Quebec she carried as pilot Charles |
Pelletier of St. Michael. Pelletier has |
he has been carried to sea this furn- |
ishes proof it is the Madga which
struck on Red Island reef and went
down with all on beard.
TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES.
The barze Athens, supnesed to
have gone down in Lake rie with all | ,
on board. is safe, cud the cartain and
crew are alive and well.
was found near Northeast shoal,
where she broke loose from the
| steamer Pratt.
The Canadian government has noti-
fied this Government that the postal
between these two coun-
tries will be abrogated on May 7 next.
A prairie fire that swept from West- |
ern Texas into Eastern New Mexico, |
burned 1,000,000 acres of grazing and
homestead land bare of foliage.
The Oriental limited on the Great
Northern Railroad was wrecked today |
a mile east of Donon, N. D. The en-
gineer and two firemen were killed.
Two mail clerks and three passengers
were injured, but net fatally.
The United States Army transport
Sheridan, which went
bers Point, Hawaiian Islands, on Au-
gust 31, was guccessfuly towed into
San Francizeo, by the United States
transport Buford and the United
States tug Slocum.
Arrangements are reported for the
cstablishment in Newport of a Gov-
ernment torpedo factory, where all of
this class of explosives used in the
United States navy will be manufac-
tured independent of private concerns.
Charging that his wife was driven
insane by a Northern Pacific railroad
conductor's
in Montana in April, 1994. Joseph |
Figelnaki of Green Bay, Wis, has/
sued the company for $50,000 dam-
ages.
! Bellingha:
destroyed 2a
buildings at
The loss was $100,000.
The Nebraska Bankers’
went on record as opposed to the plan
of currency reform proposed by the
committee of the American Banlers’
association.
Fire destroyed the plants of the
Whittier Coburn Oil Company and
Barber Asphalt Paving Company, at
3
, Wash,
hotel and
Nooks
City,
association
Seventh and Hocper streeis, San
Francisco. The loss is $500.00.
A monster |
Ellwood, Pa.
Tube Company,
than 1,500 men
the center of
country.
J
bv the Shelby Seamless
which will employ
and make that town
tube industry of the
lant is being erected at
VY
ON MERCER
{| PLAN HALF-BILLI
| Chicago Concerns Have Scheme to
Solve Traction Problems.
Plans are under way for a $500,000,-
of all the public service
in Chicago. The con-
included in the consoli-
| dation are the local traction com-
| panies, the Peoples and
| companies, the Edison and Common-
wealth electric companies, t.>% Auto-
| matic and Independent
| companies and the Chicago
; Company.
| 000° merger
| corporations
| cerns to be
Funnel
i election
The barge |
ashore off Bar-
gruffness while traveling |
. 22.—Fire |
seven business
Wash. |
Ogden gas |
te_dphone | Will
MOUNTAINS ARE SHATTERED
South Sea Archipelago.
Earthquake Causes Damage in|
GREAT FISSURES IN ROCKS
|
—
Tidal Wave Swept the Low-lying
Ceast Devastating Country for 40 |
Mites.
Alarming in |
shocks
earthat
New Guinea, Bismarek |
tidal waves, |
the |
by the steamer
pelago, foll
much
causing
natives, were rsportet
among
fu
uth sea.
yorted that near
Finchafen his steamer rolled and vi-
brated considerably, due 10 seismic |
disturbances. The efiect was plain |
ashore, fissures being visible in the |
ins. A tidal wave swept the |
low-lying coast, devastating the coun- |
trv for 40 miles. At Chiassi island, |
in Dampier straits, the tidal wave |
wrought great havoc, hardly a native |
hut being left. |
Along the New Guinea coast Cap- |
tain Prejawa saw fissures in the moun-
tain sides 200 feet long and 100 feet |
|
t
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Miowera, the Sc
irom
deep. The only European property
destroyed was the German mission
station. Captain Prejawa was unable
to estimate the loss of life, but thought
it considerable.
TEN "INJURED IN WRECK
and Roll In- |
and Orrin |
ightly in-|
J. Bale-|
and Mrs,
sutawney, Pa; ‘Mr. |
yf Bradford. and GQ. H.|
Dul Pa.
3e accident is un-|
known. The train was running at the |
rate of about 30 miles hour when |
the baggage ef wo day coaches |
n toppled over in
ditch. The remained on |
rails.
the
OHi0'S OFFICIAL VOTE
Head of Republican
Pluraiity of
Columbus, O., Nov.
canvass of the vote
Ticket Has a|
56,390.
22 —The official |
cast at the late
in Ohio was completed Dy |
the Secretary of State today. The:
total vote was 812,263. For Secretary |
of State Thompsgn, Rep., received
408,066; Hoskins, Dem., 351,676;
Hensle, Soc., 13,432; Hughes, Pro,
Jisenberz, Soc.-Labor, 2,211;
ering, 19,903. Thompson's plur-
ality, 56,390.
he vote for other State officers
sliows: Member of Board ef Public
Works—Watkins, Rep., 412,118; Nies-
| wonger, Dem. 346,180. Watkins”
| plurality, 65,93¢ State School Com-
| missioner—Jones, Rep., 411,917;
| Haupert, Dem. 246,081. Jones’ plur-
| ality, State Dairy and Food
| Commissioner—Dunlap, Rep., 416,832;
| Diegle, Dem. 341 767. Dunlap’s
plurality, 75,065.
MARINE DISASTER
Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse and Mail
Liner Orinoco Collide.
| It.is reported that a number of men
| were killed in a collision between the
Kaiser Vilhelm der Grosse and the
Royal Mail liner Oronico, off Cher-
i bourg. Both vessels are reported
badly damaged.
1t is said four members of the crew
of the Kaiser Wilhelm were killed,
while 12 were injured. Five mem-
hers of the crew of the Oronico are
missing and are supposed fo have
heen drowned.
Knocks Out Two-Cent Fare Law.
In the Virginia Supreme Court of
Appeais Judge Cardwell handed down
4 . decision affirming the decision of
{ the State Corporation Commission,
declaring the 2-cent passenger rate
act by the Virginia
trary to the Fourteenth Amendment
of the Federal Constitution. The case
| was a test one involving the require-
| ment that the railroads place on sale
500-mile 2-ceni rate books.
Grange Condemis Free Seed.
The National Grange convention at
Denver adopted resolutions condemn
ing free seed distribution by the Gov-
| ernment as being of no benefit, op-
posing a national fertilizer law, and
| favoring amendment of thz oleomar-
i garine law by striking out the word
“knowingly” to the end that conviec-
tions may be procured for violation
of the law.
Rohhers Kill Two Men.
i Two masked men in an attempt to
hold up the St.
kansas City. Kans., shot and killed
William Goff, a clerk, and mortally
wounded S. A. Haplin, an actor. The
| robbers made their escape.
Choctaw Negroes Enriched.
| The reversal by the interior depart-
nent of a decision of Commissioner
Tams Bixby, of the Five Tribes, en-
| titles all negroes in the Choctaw na-
tion who are known as freedmen, un-
| der the age of 21 who were living on
| March 4, 1906, to a place on the rools.
Between three and four thousand per-
| sons are affected. Each individual
| receive the equivalent of 40
i acres of lard, commercially worth $15
| an acre.
legislature con-'
Charies hotel at Ar- |
RAILWAY EARNINGS.
Stupendous Figures Show Average
Returns of $10,543 Per Mile.
A preliminary report of the inter-
state commerce commission on the
income accounts of the ways of
the United States for the end-
ing June 30 ‘ust contain om
companies ai ing niles of
| tines. about $9 per cent. of the mile-
age that will be covered in the final
report.
The tctal 8 5. of | the
| roads were us
to $10,543 per 3.1 Pas
ings were
$618.5
2 $1,640,942,-
perating ex-
mile, ane
$62, or $7
penses
per mi
Hearty Greeting Given in Many
I
ship
or $6,963 p
i . Ww
The net earnings of the roads were 1
$787,597,877, or $3,580 per mile. In-i|
come from other sources than
of operation -regated $152,624,982.
The dividends paid amounted to $229,
406,598 and s $68,903,288
ARREST STANDARD OFFICERS
Resident Director, Secretary
Treasurer Give Bail.
H. P. Mcintosh of Cleveland, a
director of the Standard Qil Company
of Ohio. one of the men indicted by
the grand jury last week, arrived at |
Findlay, O., and was formally placed
and
under arrest. Subseouently Mr. Mec-
Intosh was taken into court. He
pleaded not guilty to the charge of
violating the Valentine anti-trust law
and was released on $1,608 bail.
M. @. Vilas and *J. M. Robertson,
treasurer and secretary respectively,
of the Standard Oil Company of
Ohio, indicted th’ John D. Rockefel-
ler and H. P. csh appeared in
court. They did niead but each
gsiened a bond for 31. for their |
€ December when
indice
GATION ANNULLED
Court
z
<
m
«
=
| to
of Appea
The Supreme Court of Appeals
West Virginia, put an end to the
ate Investigation Cou
ed just before adjournment of the last
session of the State Legislature to
charges of malfeasance in
ttee appoint-
office preferred against former Gov-
ernor White by State Senator Cald-
Reese Blizzard.
well and Jud
The Court's decision declares the
committee to be without legal au-
thority and Caldwell and Blizzard are
released from tine nominal custody of
Sheriff Carter of Wood county. The
Court holds that a committee ap-
pointed by one: branch of the Legisla-
ture is without authority after ths
Legislature adjourns
GET $1,500,000 FOR MINE
Colonel Guffey Confirms Reported
Sale of Colorado Property.
Colonel J. M. Guffey of Pittsburz,
confirmed the report of the sale of a
Colorado mining property, in which
he holds a large share of the stock, |
to a syndicate of Chicago capitalists |
for $1,500,000.
The mine is owned by Colonel Guf-
fey, J. H. Galey and W. E. Renshaw,
is located near Idaho City, and has
been in operation for four rears
It produces both goid and silver and
is fully equipped with first-class ma- |
chinery. The coinpa owns a light
and power piant, which, in addition |
to supplying the mine, supplies Idaho |
City. |
EXPLOSION FATAL!
CELLULOID
Owner of Plant, Wife and Son Are
Blown Out of a Window.
By the explosion of celluloid in the
plant of the Bouftard Comb Company
i
|
{
|
i
i
|
on East Seventy-fifth street, New
York, the owner of the business.
|
|
i
Charles Bouffard, his wife and a boy |
employed by him were blown through |
the window. to the street below. The |
woman was instantly killed. Bouffard |
was dying and the boy is gariously in- |
jured.
The explosion wrecked the third |
floor, and fire that followed, though |
it was soon extinguished. badly burn- |
ed several emploves of adjoining |
plants, among 300 of whom there was |
a panic for a time. |
Someta ts me ee 1
Dr. Crapsey a Heretic. |
Rev. Dr. Algernon S. Crapsey, of |
St. Andrew’s Protestant Episcopal
| Church, Rochester. N. Y., is condemn- |
ed to suspension from the church, as |
a result of the decision of the eccles-
iastical court of review, made public
The court sustains the decision of
the lower court, which was that Dr.
Crapsey should be suspended for
heretical teachings.
New Oil' Field Found.
| An oil well, estimated to be good
for 300 to 500 barrels per day, was
struck on the George Brenneman farm
on the West Virginia sid2 of the
river just opposite the mouth of Yel-
low creek. Much drilling has been
done in this vicinity of late, but this
is the first genuine strike. It opens
a new field. Other wells will be put
down at once.
eal
Coo] Meather Kills Hindoos.
| The Hindoos imported to work on
| yailroad construction in British
| umbia are suifering intensely
from
lack of clothing suited to their cli-
mate. It is said several have perish-
ed, low temperature and thin gar-
ments being the cause.
Millionaire Weds Stenographer.
Henry Chisholm, millionaire son of
Wilson B. Chisholm and a member of
‘he most select social circles in
Cleveland, O., and Miss Anna Laugh-
ray, a stenographer, were married by
the Rev. Patrick Farrell at the Bis-
| hop’s house of St. John’s Cathedral.
|
|
|
|
|
Allegheny anti-annexationists car-
ried their fight against a greater city
into the supreme court, thus staying
for awhile the consolidation of the two
| cities.
those | &
b
a
|
| ing
pectant throng,
| been in their places all night to wit- |
ness the
{ As the
crowd cheered i
| Presidente.”
were over the Pre i
by Gov. Winth
delivered
O
C
I
ena
hasten*that day
will
which mus
out
PRESIDENT IN PORT RICO.
Tow
PARADE BY SCHOOL CHILDRE!
once {i
i.oul
oard the vessel
‘ho
The P
and
and.
shore
y a delegati
nd citizens.
| profusely decorate
| honor, was crowded with people from |
| the surrounding
| greet Mr.
RO
in spite of
piace
Presi
bui
evel
f the
rowed
The
“1 shall
secure
am CO
and all
be unce
path
peoble.
was
school.
children h
“America” as the President drove up. | jacq
The presidential party left Ponce at j fone
{10:30 for San Juan over the famous |
| military
{ conveyed the party.
was escorted by
| Pius
letters containing
Before
driven t
extended a
was
was
incoming
enthusiast
leavin
road.
|
|
ns and Cities. !
Island to San
in Autcmobiies.
by
i welcome
at
greeted at
once
the pier |
resigent
officials
3
on of prominent
The town, which Ww
»d in the Presiden
+ oe
=
uw
country eager oO
osevelt. .
the early hour the land-
crowded with an ex-
many of whom had
of the Louisana.
dent stepped ashore the
him, crying: ‘Vive el
When the greetings
cident, accompanied
was driven to the |
city hall, Mrs. and Mrs.
| Roosevelt follow
The Pres s kept busy ac-|
knowledging ct all along the two-
mile line of om the landing |
place to the plaza of the
{own. 1
At the cit vddress of wel- |
ccme was { to the President. He
He
trom t! /
useing the
in ‘Ponce.
in the
y do
My efforts
to help vou aloig
f-government,
a union
come
{Oo
for its ba
and honer.”
ident said:
rt as fel-
Ponce the President
o the Roosevelt high
and
assembled sang |
Eleven automobiles !
Arriving at San Juan the President |
|
|
the Porto Rico pro-
| visional regiment to the governor's |
palace. The city: was elaborately |
| decorated.
He received a particularly warm re-
i .
| ception as he pass2d the Casino, the
t exclusive Spanish Club.
FOPE
IS THREATENED
Recsives Letters From Anarch-
ists Who Seek His Life.
The Pope
has received personal
threats that = he
will bs assassinated in the Apostolic
| palace as a
ent orgamniza
The Anare
protest against
tion of society.
ts, it is said, are ready
the pres-
to employ every means to destroy all |
institutions
by military forces.
The Pope
ported by religion or
has kept one of the nails |
which formed the charge of the bomb |
Illinois Central railroa
| §ireet nec
1
DUPED MANY PEOPLE
With Brokers
cC
ndesrwriters in League
With Whom They Divided. .
Several underwriting and broker-
o companies, of Chicago, which are
leeod to be fraudulent, were attack-
United States marshals, as-
1 by postoffice inspectors, and
» men, accused of promoting the
qd fraudulent enterprises, were
to Federal. officers, the
4 obtained nearly $1,000-
persons throughout the
The men arrested and the
s with which the Federal au-
they fol-
are
say connected
WwW. N.
and W. D.
of the Central
and Guarantee
Rook,
vice
president;
Endicott
rarles Brown, president
of the Prudential Securities Corpora-
tion. brokers.
Frank S. Winslow, president Ameri-
can Corperation & Security Company.
Ezra C. Barnum, president of the
National Stock & Guaranty Company,
and the Bankers’ Credit & Mercantile
Jompany.
David C. Owings,
Guaranty Company.
Hulbert, Root and Welch gave
bonds of $5,000 each. The other men
were unable to furnish bonds.
According to Federal officers the
underwriting companies were in
league with the brokerage companies,
with whom they divided the fees tak-
1 from the underwriting.
BIG DAMAGE BY STORM
National Stock &
Away in Tennessee.
Owing the pressure of water of
against two spans of the
d bridge across
is, Tenn., they
Mempl
y.
houses in Alabama
Johnson avenue collapsed
and fell into Bayou Gayoso.
The country schools have closed in
most of the districts, owing to the im-
passability of roads. All roads lead-
ing to the country from Memphis are
of county levees
the greater por-
The
miles
ier and
probably destroyed.
water
tion is
McQuinn drydocks are almost a total
isss, and a’ ferry-boat in Wolf river
has been sunk.
More than 50 county bridges are re-
| ported washed out.
Here several hundred school | 4 2
The Nashville, Chattanooga‘ & St.
T.onis railroad has suspended husi-
and other roads are in bad
shape.
Boston Wool Market.
The wool market is in a healthful,
progressive condition, with steady de-
mand and prices prevailing. A feat-
ure of the situation is the scarcity of
wools runming to three-eighths and
half blood grades. This is particu-
larly noticeable in territories and in
fleeces. Attention. is now being paid
to clothing wools. Pulled wools are
steady. Individual transactions in
territories touch the 500,000-pound
mark. Foreign grades are firm. Lead-
ing domestic quotations follow: Ohio
and Pennsylvania XX and above, 33%
to Jc; X. 31 to 32¢; No. 1, 40 to 41c¢;
No. 2. 38 to 3%c; fine unwashed, 25
to 26c: unmeschantable, 29 to 30c;
half blood, unwashed. 33 to 33%c3
three-cizhths blood unwashed, 34 to
3414¢; quarter blood, unwashed, 32 to
22a. delaine, Washed, 35@ to 36¢; de-
laine, unwashed, 29 to 30cC.
CURRENT NEWS ITEMS
he United States supreme court
decided against the national counkcil
in the Jr. 0. U. A. M. litigation in
| Virginia.
exploded at St. Peter's as a sou-
renir of the explosion. Many mes- |
sages expressing indignation at the
outrage have been received by the
Pontiff.
Sugar Trust Fine Heavily.
The American Sugar Refining Com-
pany was found guilty by a jury in
the United States Circuit
New
Yori
Court at
of accepting rebates
amounting to $26,000 from the New
York Central railroad.
The New York
Central was recently found guilty of
giving rebat
ar Refining
000.
| States Steel Corporation, aggregating |
es to the American Sug-
Company and fined $108,-!
WAGES INCREASED
United States Steel
Corporation to
Give 10 Cents a Day More.
A wage a
from $3.000.¢
which it is
fect every t
mill of the
the great combine, was announced in |
York by
of
New
Chairman
of the Steel
affects an
United S:ates of 110,000 men.
the Pittsburg
than 50,000 men.
fects in
10 cents a
dvance by the United
300 to $6,060,000 annually,
hought will eventually af-
ranch of labor
subsidiary companies of
Judge E. H.
the Board of Directors
Corporation. The advance
estimated total in
If af-
district more
The increase will be
dav for all employes and
goes into effect January 1.
Dix's
To the d
steamship Dix eight names were add- |
{ ed, making
Col- |
| clerk of the House.
as a result
are still
near where
collision wi
United Stat
searching
Dead Number Fifty.
eath list of the wrecked
a total of 50 known dead,
of the disaster. Parties
along the shore
the Dix went down. after
th the steamer Jeanie.
marine inspectors will
es
i begin an investigation of the wreck.
Republican Majority 58.
The first
official report on the mem-
bership of the House in the Sixtieth
| Congress has just been issued by the
The Republicans
| 3 Sed c=
| are shown to. have a majority of 58.
| The Republican membership is
and the Democratic membership 164. | lower
i
The direc
222
tors of the Chase National
bank of New York have declared a
cash dividend of 400 per cent, amount
ing to $4.0
12 to stock
ber 30.
00,000, payable December
holders of record Novem-
{ ma canal
in every |
Gary, |
the |
| President Roosevelt provided a new
i system of government for the Pana-
zone, making Chairman
| Shonts supreme there.
A gaug of yeggmen blew open the
| safe in the Sinclairville,
postoffice and escaped with $400 and
$300 worth of stamps.
According to the official report
made public the gold production of
the mines of the Black Hills for the
past year was $6,986,900, a decrease
| of $250,000 from the previous year.
| city by John Jacob Astor camp of
Spanish War Veterans, the action of
{ the President
{ion of negro
| fifth infantry was indorsed.
Ralph H. Churchill, cashier of a
| meat market. at Findlay, O., shot and
instantly killed himself. He was 30
vears old and came {from Sandusky
i several months ago.
Justice Greenbaum in the supreme
court of New York transferred the
Thaw case from Recorder Goff’s
| court in generalssessions to the crimi-
nal branch of the supreme court be-
fore Justice Newburger. The trial
is set for December 3.
! $2,000,000 For Missions.
{ The address of President D. B.
| Lyman, of Chicago, opened the form-
| al business session of the fourth mis-
| sionary conference of the Laymen’s
Forward Movement in the fifth mis-
| sionary department of the Protestant
Episcopal church, at Cincinnati. The
| proposal to raise $2,000,000 as a thank
i offering for 1907 the three hundredth
| anniversary of the church, was pre-
| sented in an address by Rev. Holmes
| Fhe of Dayton.
|
|
|
{
|
|
{ At a campfire given in Washington
|
|
in dismissing a battal-
trocops of the Twenty-
|
|
Woman's Suffrage Favored.
The American Federation of Labor
declared for woman’s suffrage. The
onvention, with but one dissentiig
vote, adopted a reselution calling up-
| on the judiciary committee of the
branch of congress to report
to the house the joint resolution
which provides for submitting to the
legislatures of the various states an
amendment ‘to the constitution of the
United States allowing ' women ta
vote.
Q
(N, ¥.),)
.
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