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About Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911 | View This Issue
Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.), 23 Sept. 1910, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053178/1910-09-23/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
MONTANA SUNLIGHT A non-union iron works plant at ' - Peoria was wrecked by dynamite. Lomm[R RESIGNS Army men are not in favor of the Dudley Axtell, Publisher O'Rourke plan for raising the Maine. At the commerce commission bear- ing at Chicago railroad men insisted their revenue was not enough. • Follette swept the state in the Will - WHITEHALL, MONTANA. cousin primaries'. stlestalltastlitstataitiesuitstlestan Mayor Gaynor of New York was I FONDENSATIONS NEWS AND NOTES HERE ji taken from the hospital to his coon• try homer Roosevelt announced his political I creed, which is that of progressive X republicanism. I Senator Burkett introduced Ex-Pres- AND THERE. (dent Roosevelt on the occasion of his Omaha speech. • PERSONAL AND POLITICAL „„ T eeh n ere la wwayse rsanat an tL gr a y reaxiclhroaanr rate Otner Matters of interest Con- densed From the More Important TeTegrams. escsoakaskitraidelastioislitielsistakiskie Washington. Montana lands to the amount ot 669,760 acres have been designated by Acting Secretary of the Interior Pierce for settlement and entry under the provisions of the enlarged home- stead act. This brings the total amount of land in Montana designat- ed up to date up to 30,355,966 acres. With an increase of $3,273,325 in the . public debt and a totalkdeficit of $17,- 371,468.08.. the United States treasury closed the second month of the fiscal year, keeping on even keel, all eireue iftetiffer.1 , iSitahdtitS67 IstrE X 'Vest% balance of $3Q,826.0057.23 on. hand and the general fund dowit to $8 9 , 523 , - 207.69. Attoroey General Wickersham and Secretary Nagle, who have been in Alaska all suramr, will land at Seat- tle. Wash., on September 6. It is gen- erally assumed they have been in Alaska making a special investigation of conditions there for President•Taft. The attorney general will probably go to Beverly at once on his return. Approximately 679.555 acres of land La Arizona and New Mexico, eliminat- ed from the national forests by Presi- dent Taft as being chiefly Tel:Sable for agricultural purposes, have been opened to settlement under the home- stead laws by authority, of the secre- tary of the interior. The lands will be- came subject to settlement Novemtjer 112. but not to entry until December 21. Foreign. Sixty-eight Chinese students Sr lived at Honolulu on the steamer China on their way to Elan Francisco to enter various American universi- ties. Thirteen deaths from cholera and twenty -live new cases of the disease were reported from the Infected dis- tricts of southeastern Italy during twentrfour hours During the dinner at Berlin Emperor William toasted King George and afterward detained Lord Roberts for al hours in ani- mated conversation. The newspapers in Berlin deny, aP parently with authority, a story print- ed in • French paper La Vie Nouvelle. that Emperor Willis has written a letter to Pope Plus regarding the re- gent congress of religions. King George's shooting party at Balmoral was thrown Into excitement when Lord Kilmalmock, second secre- tary in the British 4Iplomatic service. received four pellets through the ac- cidental discharge of a gun. The sec- retary was not seriously injured. In consequence of high price of cot ton and the general depression in trade, seven cottok mills in Bombay. India, have announced thet they will close dowk September 30. Seven thousand bands will be affected by this curtailment and a dozen other mills are expected to follow suit. General. New York city has gained over • million in ten years. Senator Burrows of Michigan was defeated for renominationto the sen- ate. President Ripley of the Banta Fe defended the proposed increase in railroad rates. Mr. Roosevelt discussed state and national authority \before members ol the Colorado legislature. ' - An unconfirmed report has been received that five negroes were lynched near Carlton, ten miles east of Athns, Ga. Returns of the first direct primary election held in Idaho ;indicate that Governor James H. Brady is renomin. ated by the republicans. . Two trans-Atlantip steamships, one of them the liner Lusitanfa. were held up by the New York health authorities because of the cholera icare abroad. If the prosperity Is to be measured by the flood of Americans returning from abroad, never has there been such a prosperous year in this coun- try. All records for receipt of cattle at the Soutar Omaha market were brok- en the *her day, when 16,281 head were received, mostly steers from western rangee. Cromwell Dixon, the dirigible aero- naut, had a narrow escape from being driven out to sea in his airship when his engine failed to work as he was 600 feet in the air over the Harvard CVI-\ ,, - ' AA\ • - A presidential boom for \Sunny Jim\ Sherman was launched by an a wirer at Marshfield, Mo. At the close of a meeting of miners and operators in Chicago, It was an- nounced that the strike situation In the Illinois coal flelde had virtually been brought to dn end. Jerry B. Sullivan, one of the most prominent democratic leaders in Iowa and a candidate for governor in 1903, has returned from New York city, where he declared it was the under- standing among politicians that Colo- nel Roosevelt was already a candidate tor president in 1912. Three =eked men held up an in- terurban street car at the San Mato. (California) county line, lined up the passengers and crew and robbed them of their money. Dr. Hawley H. Crippen, jointly ac. cuted with Ethel Clare Leneve of the murder of his wife, has suffered a nervous collapse and was removed to the hospital ward of Brixton jail. An investigation into the alleged prevalence of the opium -smoking hab- it among the soldiers stationed at the PresIdo has been ordered by Gen. T. H. Bliss, commanding the military dc• pal - talent of Caltfornia. hearing at Chicago. From eight to ten thousand people listened to the speech of Ex -President Roosevelt in Omaha. A demented man jumped from a train near Mialsouri Valley, meeting tImost instant death. Medical Washington was stirred up bra Nebraska physician discussion of infantile paralysis. The financial showing of the govern. Ment for the second month of the fis- cal year is satisfactory. Soepe federal heads may be looped off at New York for too active par- ticipation In slate politics. Governor Hay of Washington takes issue with Roosevelt and PInchot on the question of conservation. Proclamations announcing the an- Qf.ifoge/.-..41ttJagAa-t published at Seoul and Tokio. Wiljjam Barnes, jr., of New York declares himself shocked at utter- ances of Roosevelt in the west. The treasury department has a task on its hands in the printing Of bonds for postal savings banks. The railroads may make inquiry \oncerning the profits of the shippers as a result of the Chicago hearing. Colonel Roosevelt was obliged to break his Sunday resolve and address the crowds as he traveled to Fargo. Mexico's celebration of the one hun dredth anniversary of her independ- ence began Sept. 1st and will eoa tinue until the end of the month. A movement is under way te have Justice Harlan promoted to the chief justiceship of the supreme court, with the understanding that he soon retires. C. S. L Brown, former pastor ot the Christian church in Lee Federal Soldiers Guard Colonel Roos'. 's Summit, Mo., shot and killed Mrs. volt at Columbus. • Columbus, 0.. Sept. 10. -Coming to- day to the scene of the street car strike riots which kept Columbus in a state of disorder for weeks. ex -President Roosevelt in a speech here denounced in the strongest terms the acts of law- lessness and the men who committed them. The state capital is stIrbeing guard. ed by militia, and Colonel Roosevell was escorted by United States troops from the Columbus barracks. As the strike is still on J. A. Met- calf, chairman of the Roosevelt•recep- lion conemittee asked President Taft to assign reguler troops to guard the ex -president today and the president consented. Colonel Roosevelt was met at the sta. lion by the regulars and state militia and a committee representing the Chamber of Commerce and citizens of the city. He proceeded at the head of the parade to the park, half n mile from the station w i pere he delivered his speech, Mayor George S. Marshall oc- cupied a seat on the platform from which Colonel Roosevelt spoke. It has been announced that after to- day Governor Harmon would with- draw his control of the situation here and the municipal government under Mayor Marshall will have full cnrge. MEMBERSHIP IN HAMILTON CLUB OF CHICAGO AS RESULT OF TURNDOWN. fRIENDS NOT TO ACCEPT Resignation Written After Consulting With Friends Who it Was Thought Would Resign, But Now Reconsider. Chicago, Sept. 10.-A terse note el resignation from the Hamilton club, of which he has been a member many years, was the *newer maim nere to- day by United States Senator William Lorimer to the action of the club pres- ident, John H. Batten, in withdrawing his invitation to the Roosevelt ban- quet Thursday night, ° The invitation was withdrawn at, the demand of Roosevelt who refused, ab- solutely, to attend the banquet at which Lorimer also vvas a guest. \ While Lorimer urge& his resIgna- tion'be opened immediately, it is said tonight that the senator's friends on the club will refuse to Vote .their ac- ceptaneati Together with the resignation today news of correipondence from tmaident Mew etioL:.:41eAe- sitoweeepadaloisserasig that the* junior' Illinois senator ale° was to have been the guest of honor and it wee the hope of the club to make the dinner notable as a harmen- ious occasion where all faction• of Chd republican party had broken bread to - get her. At least three invitations were sent Lorimer, each urging him to attend the banquet, and to the last of these, he sent his acceptance. After this, on the day of the ban• quet came the sudden recall of the in- vitation r - The note of resignation was written after the conference of the senator with a number of intimate friends and at Met was believed to be a cue which would be followed by a number of his admirers in the club. Later it was de. &led by his friends to refuse to ac• cept the resignation. TALKS TO STRIKERS. Anne Lamphere, and then committed suicide. Virtual martial law prevails in Bar letta, the center of the Italian chol- era zone, as the result of a clash be- tween several thousand starving and unemployed people and the military. Juan Amer, editor of the Satirical Weekly Chantecieer, of which the first issue had Piet appeared, was Shot and killed by Jose Pennine, a liberal candidate for city councilman in Hay - Ina, Cuba. A gross valuation of the estate ot the late Grover \Cleveland in New York has been filed showing -439'650, less taxes, commissions. etc. The residue is $32,468, the bulk of which goes to the widow and children. Davis Elkins arrived in Paris from Carlsbad en route to Vichy, where he will join his mother and his sister, Miss Katherine Elkins. It is under- stood that the three will sail for the United Staten about October 1, At a La Follette meeting in Madi- son, at which Senator Cummins of Iowa and Francis J. Heney. the San Francisco graft fighter, were the chief speakers, Congressman Norris of Ne- braska' was also present and made a talk. Bishop of Salisbury, England. will start for this country, arriving here September 21. He is to preach the opening sermons at the Protestant Episcopal convention, which is to be held late In September at Cincinnati, Ohio. At Terre Haute, Ind., John Mitchell, the labor leader in a Labor day ad- dress, spoke in favor of better laws for the protection of workingmen. Dr. Mautln, deposed president of the Nicarauguan republic, is to take up the pActice of law. Major Henry Reed Rathbooe, who was an aide to President Lincoln. and received a stab wound in at- tempting .to save the life of his chief on the night of the !nation Is near death in the criminal ward of the insane asylum at Hildershelm, lermany. After a conference with the forestry service officials the officials of the American National Red Cross \ an- nounced that it would pay the hospital expenses of the government employes Injured in fighting the forest fires in the northwest. It is estimated that 'the expense will amount to about $1,- 000, which will be paid out of the re 'let fund of the Red Cross. Personal. Clara Kuenning committed suicide by hanging near Syracuse. Colonel Roosevelt was the Labor day orator at Fargo, N. 13. The anniversary of John Brown's tight was celebrated at Osawatomie, Kas. Kansas republicans adopted a de. cidedly progressive 'platform. James J. Hill sounded a warning on the food supply shortage. Roosevelt was greeted by large crowds in Colorado and Kansas. An unknown man caused a commo- tion at Farm N. D., by denouncing Roosevelt as 'a liar. President Taft delivered a long and carefully prepared address at the conservation congress. At the age of 99, Walter T. Carpen- ter, former superintendent of Earl. ham college and a renowned educe. ter, died at Richmond, Ind. Gasernor Deneen opened the cam- paign against the jackpot legislators in Illinois. Official announcemedt was made at Beverly of the appointaient*of George E. Roberts of Chicago atl director of the mint, succeeding A. Platt An- drews, recently named as assistant secretary of the treasury. Isaac W. Hallam, probably the old- est telegraph 'operator in the country In point of continuous service, died at Wilmington, Del., aged 81 years. He was an employe of the Western Union Telegraph .company for fifty-two tears. No Need of Bank Failures, Washington. Sept. 10. -Close upon the heels of the radical shake up in the ranks of bank examiners, by which twenty men on Thdrsday were shifted to new fields, Comptroller of the Cur- rency Murray. today announced that he would make a personal investiga- tion of the conditions in all examina- tion districts. In deciding upon this coul-se of acti,on the comptroller, In a' statement addressed to the examiners said: \in almost every case of a waticmal bank failure since I have been comp- troller, the insolvency could have been' averted had the national bank exam- iner determined the true condition and reported his findings In time for me to force a correction in the adminis• 'ration of the hank's affairs. • Eucharistic Congress in Session. Montreal, Sept. 10. - A \throng of 75,000 persons assembled on Fletcher@ field today for the first open air cere- mony of the Eucharistic congress. Archbishop Farley of New York, who presided, drove out to the place of assemblage with Archbishop Bruchest Applause greeted the archbishop all along the route to. the field. On his arrival he was escorted to • temporary chapel erected at the foot of Mount FtoY L where for several months woecers have been engaged in build- ing an altar at which Archbishop Farley today said mass. Find Youthful Tramp. Minneapolis, Minn., Sept. 10. -Harold Seaborn, aged 14, who disappeared from his home in Sesiborn. N. D., Aug. 27, was picked up by Berkeant John Hohler In a freight car at Northtown Junction, in the railroad yards today. The boy had a little money and said he had been preparing to return home His parents have been notified. Endorse State Convention, Helena, Mont., Sept. 10. -After cor- lally indorsing the stand of Governor Norris at St. Paul, in upholding the theory of state control in conservation of resaurces and demanding direct pri- mary, the democratic state convention nomlneted C S. Hartman for congress, J. O'Leary for clerk of the supreme court, and Peter Sanger for railroad commissioner, adjourning shortly after midnight, The Clark forces gained an important victory in - defeating the proposition of enorsing the senatorial candidate, and this is taken to m that the Butte copper king again w be the senatorial candidate. DAMAGES TOTAL $75,000 FRIDAY MORNING'S BLAZE WAS DISASTROUS FOR FARGO. Cmmeroisil Club Loses Headquarters-- Pirie's Cafe in Ruins -Made Hard Fight for Firemen, Fargo, N. D., Sept. 9. -Fire, which started shortly after 1:30 this morning, Completely gutted the business block occupied by the Pixie Co., as a cafe. confectionery and delicatessen, and by the Commercial club, and did consid- erable damage in the Fargo National bank block, the Haas block and the Darrow block . The entire upper floor of the Commercial club block, which was owned by the Sterne, and of the Fargo National bank block were gutted: The buildings burned are in the center of the Milanese section at the Intersection of Broadway , and N. P. avenue. The total loss Is estimated at 175,000 which la the greatest loss by tire suf- fered in Fargo since the great cen- flagration which wiped -out ithe greater part of the business section in 1893. AH the buildings and contents were well covered by insurance, itemized lists of which were furnished by Thos. Paker, jr.'s agency and by the Anheler. Repert and Carpenter agency, Those suffering mostly from the his fire were the Pirle 'Co., whose cafe is a complete wreck, the loss being esti- StreesiViaaaereili directly above, of whfch there js hardly enough left to identify the Pince. the Pine Co. laundry, under the portion of the Fargo National bank building occupied by H. Amerland, the offices of the Amerland Co., City At- torney W. H. Shure, Ma's -or V. R. Lov- ell, Ellsworth & Jenkins Land Co., Fargo Loan & Building Co., and M. P. Lough, over the Fargo bank, 'Disaster on Lake Michigan. Ludington, Mich., Sept. 9. -One of the worst marine disasters in the his- tory of Lake Michigan navigation oc- curred early today when the car ferry Pere Marquette No. fs, the flagship of a fleet of six steel car ferries owned and operated by the Pere Marquette „Railroad Co., \tank to the bottom of Lake Michigan, twenty miles off Port Washington, Win, with a loss of twen. ty The boat was valued at $400.000 sat the cargo, which included twenty-ninei !dada' cars. at $100,000 to $150,000. The total loss will exceed half a million dollars, which is covered by insurance. The lost car ferry carried a crew of fifty men and had on board two lady paseengem, said to be from Saginew. At this hour the Cau2e of the acci- dent Is unknown, Marleemen are ut- terly at a loss to account for the shock - Mg disaster. No. 111 was one of the finest and most oostW car ferries ever built on the great lakeg, and only yes- terday the craft was Inspected by gov- ernment officials at this port and found to be in first-class condition In e every respect. International Tubiiroolosis Congress Washington, Sept. 10 -Official an- nouncement of the Seventh Interna- tional Congress on Tuberculosis was made today front the American head- quarters by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tu- berculosis. The congress will he held in Rome in 1911 from September 24 to 80. This gathering, which meets every three years, and was last held in Washington, D. C., in 1908, will be un- der the direct patronage of the king and eueen of Italy. The secretary general M Professor Vittorio Ascot!, and pres- ident Professor Guido Baccelli. Accident en Battleship. 'Newport News, Va., Sept. 9. -Ac- cording to men landing at Old Point from the battleships the three men who met death - aboard the North Dailleta yesterday were not killed by the 'ex- plosion of oil as at first reported, but were drowned when. ;re room No. was flooded to prevent the spread of the !lathes, and the explosion' of the magazine located just over the fire. The bodies were recovered when the corn - pertinent was pumped out. The affair was another of those tra- gedies which go to show that a sailor offers his life to his country in time of peace as well as in time of war. The accident happessal far from any shore and for sevenel hours the wildest rumors circulated thVough communities that having the widest n be- ing to the effect that the Delaware, • Mater ship of the North Dakota, had been blown up Republican Committee Elects Officers. Bisniarck, N. 13., Sept. 9. -The meet- ings of the republican state . central committee ended here last evening with the selection of Bismarck as campaign headquarters for the Miming two years. The following officer* were elected: Frank Talcott, Buffalo, chairman: oe Devine, Grand Forks, secretary: and E. G. Wanner, Valley City, treasurer. Cholera Alarms Offieiale. Washington, Sept, 11.-The ravages of Asiatic cholera in Russia. Germany and Italy and the possibility of the plague being brought to this country by Infected immigrants has alarmed the public health and marine hospital service. Surgeon General Wyman has detailed Surgeon H. R. Carter to visit plague centers at once and reort by cable. Path of Destruction. . Washington, Sept. 9. -The tropical disturbance which caused considerable damage in Porto Rico during the night of Tuesday and which centered yes- terday off Santo Domingo, has ad- vanced On its westward course to about 250 miles from Porto Rico, leav- ing in its wake destruction of pro- perty in San Domingo and HOU. Will Pick B Washington, Se t. 10. -Assistant inding Site. Secretary hues today assigned Fletcher Maddox of the supervising architect's office to visit Williston, N. D., to look over various sites offered to the government to the propsed new public building. May Have to Annex Panama. Panama. Sept. 9. -In an interview today Richard 0. marsh, chare d'af- fairs of the.AmerIcan legation at Pan- ama, intimated that if the Panama government should ignore the wishes of Washington, the Urited States would be compelled to occupy or -an. nee the republic of Panama. Signal Service Wants More Flyers. Washington, Sept. 9. -The signal service of the army ''Ill renew its efforts at the next session of congress to secure an increase of its force and to obtain an adequate appropriation r its aeroplane work. Sheriff Saves Convicted - Negro, I Waco, Tex:, Sept. 9. -On learning that a mob was (coining at Marlin to lynch Ben Myatt, convicted of the murder of his wife, Sheriff Poole last night brought Myatt ,,In an automo- bile to Waco. Later in the night he was taken to Dallas. Myatt has been sentenced to be hanged, but his. case has been appenled. Kermit in Paris. s Paris, Sept. 9. -Kermit Roosevelt, who recently .Niterned from Turkey, is at present a guest of the Duke and Duchess of Robert at the chateau' Josselia. ER DOCTORS FAILED LydiaE.Pinkham'sVegeta- ble Compound Cured Her Knoxville, Iowa. -\I suffered with pains low down fin my right side for a year or more and was so weak and ner- vous that, I could not do my work. I wrote to Mrs. Pink - ham and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound and Liver Pills, and am glad to say that your medicines and kind letters of di- rections have done more for me than anything else and I bad the best physi- cians here. I can do my work and rest well at night. I believe there is noth- ing like the Pinkham remedies.\ - Mrs. Crarts.Frutwas, &F.D., No. 8, 'Knoxville, Iowa. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be used with perfect confidence by women Iffealisslikt _bum displaceineffilkliulamr ma ti on ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir- regularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing -down feeling, flatulency, indi- gestion, dizziness, or nervous pkostra- tion. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills, and suffering women owe it to themselves to at least give this medicine a trial Proof is abundant that it has cured thousands of others, and why should it not curt, you? If you want special advice write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn. M ass., f or it. IA is free and always helpful. A STUNNER. beclis-Mrs. .13wellington is a Ken- ning woman, isn't she? Weeks -I should think so. She hit me with her automobile the other day. and it was two hours before I woke Vermont Thrift. Robert Lincoln O'Brien, editor of the Boston Transcript. is, a great admirer Of the thrift of the Vermonters, but thinks sometimes they carry it too tar. O'Brien was up in Vermont last sum- mer' and went to dinner with a friend who had some political aspirations. As they came in the door he heard the lady of the house say to the hired girl: \I see Mr. Jones has somebody with him for dinner. Take these two big potatoes down to the cellar and bring up three small ones. Does Engineering Work. Mlle. Bandurin is superintendent of ail engineering firm in Russia. She - was graduated from. the Women's Technological Institute in St. Peters - 'burg, and has had practical expe- rience In engineering. She built a steel warehouse for an arms co-oper- ative society, has been assistant en- gineer in building a bridge across the Neva and has done other important weft. Remarkable Young Lady. From a feuilleton: \lier voice was low and soft; but once again, as Janet Fenn withdrew from the room and closed the door after her, the fiendish gleam came into her odorless eyes.\ If we hear any more of Janet we will let you know. -Punch. PRESSED HARD. Coffee's Weight on Old Age. r When prominent men realize the in. jurious effects of coffee and the change in health that Postum can bring, they are glad to lend their testimony for the benefit of others. A suberintendent of public schools in a Southern state says: \My moth- er, since her early childhood, was an Inveterate coffee drinker, had been troubled with her heart for a number of years and complained of that 'weak all over' feeling and sick stomach. \Some time ago I was making an of - tidal visit to a distant part of the country and took dinner with one of the merchants of the place. I noticed a somewhat peculiar flavor of the cof- fee, and asked him concerning it. He replied that it was Postum. I was so pleased with it that, after the meal was over, I bought a package to carry home with me, an had wife pre- pare some for the next Meal; the whole family liked it so well that we discontinued coffee and used Postum entirely. \I had really been at times vefy anxious concerning my mother's con- dition, but we noticed that after using Postum for a short * time, she felt so much better than she did prior to its use, and had 'title trouble with her heart and no arck stomach; that the headaches were not so frequent, and her general condition much improved. This continued until she was as well and hearty as the rest of us. \I know Postum has benefited MY - self and the other members of the fam• Hy, but In a more marked degree in the case of my mother, as she was a victim of long standing.\ Ever read the above letter? A sew oat Appear. from time to time. They are ovule% trete, sad tall of human interest ALLEGE COMBINE INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY ACCUSED AS TRUST. IN MISSOURI OUSTER CASE Mammoth Concern In Pronounced Merely Selling Agent for New ersey Company -Report Ren• dared to Court. Jefferson City, lefo.. Sept. IL -Special Commissioner Theodore Brace in his report to the supreme court in the ouster suit filed yesterday declared the International Harvester Co. of New Jersey a trust and a combine formed for the purpose and with the effect of destroying competition in the manufacture and sale of harvesting machinery. The International Harvester Co. of America is declared to be used merely as a selling agent by the New Jertey company in evasion of the Missouri laws which Mehibit the licensing' of the New Jersey concern by reason of Its enormous capital of $120,000,000. The subsidiary corporation, accord- ing to Commissioner Brace, Once had a capital and now it has none. Its existence as is separate corporate en- oteioyeviaea waseeogetalisfeve els f wade- the-. laws of states whose policy is not to encourage such vast accumulatlop of wealth and power In the hands of a few as may injure the welfare and prosperity of the many whose policy Is to keep open the field of commer- cial and industrial enterprise to all citizens. EVIDENCE IS DAMAGING. Cliemist Swears to Selling Deadly Poison to Crippen. London, Eng., Sept. 8. -Ai the re- sumption today of the trial of Dr Haw- ley H. CripPen and Ethel Clare Lens\. for the murder of the former's wife, Public Prosecutor Hs mphreys intro- duced evidence to establish the claim of the crown that parts of the muti- lated body found' In the Crismen home once•formed the part of the Demon of Belle Elmore, the missing wife, and to strengthen what has been popularly regarded as a missing link in the chain of circumstantial evidence against the accused. The first witness called was Mrs Adeline Harrison, whose acquaintance with Belle Elmore had extended over a period of twelve years.' Mrs. Harrison IMO asked to examine the strands of hair found when the dismembered body was uncovered, and having dose so she swore that she recognized till. exhibit as similar to that worn oy Belle El- more. When Mrs. Harrison left the steno the prosecution called a chemist who claims that he sold hyoscine, a deadly poison, to Crippen. The witness testi- fied the doctor had purchased five grains of drug on Jan. 19, explaining that he required the poison for usit in homeopathic preparations. Inspector Dew, who arrested the fu• gitive, re-entered the witness box to- day and read a lengthy statement signed by CrIppen when the police first asked him to make an explanation of his disappearance from London after suspicion had been directed against him. The gist of the statement had already been covered by Huraphreys his opening address. The statement which Crippea made to Inspector Dew concluded: \My be- lief is that my wife has gene to Chi \ago to join Bruce Miller.\ Conservatioh Congress to Close. SL Paul; Minn., Sept. S. -It IB pos- sible that the national conservation congress, which 07 the programme should continue tomorrow, win dose tonight. President Baker said that he would crowd the programme as much as possible to this end, and perhaps hold a night sesion. It has been a strenuous convention and the delegates and visitors want a rest. The presidency of the congress is ex- pected to go to J. B. White of Kansas City, the present chairman of the executive committee. Gifford Feedlot, who is president of the National Con- servation association, told his friends that he would not be a candidate The members of the resolutiens com- mittee met early to whip the mass of reoommendahons into a platform. Refused to Attend Banquet. Freeport, Ill., Sept. S. -Colonel Roose- velt, refused fishy aids,- to attend a banquet to be given tonight by the Hamilton club in Chicago unless Unit- ed States Senator Lorimer 12 exoluded He demanded that a telegram to that effect be sent to the 'senator. A committee of sixteen members of the Hamilton club, headed by ex -Judge John H. Batten, came to Freeport from Chicago in a special car today and met Colonel Roosevelt, who is here to at- tend the county fair. They came to make arrangements for the dnner to- night. The committee met him at the fair grounds and the colonel at once asked who was to attend the dinner. Insurance Men in Convention. Detroit, Mich., Sept. 8.-Ineurance underwriters from every 'tate in the union gathered here today for the twenty-first annual convention of the National Association of Life Under- writers. Chicag.) Is making a strong campaign to secure next year's con- vention. May Have to Annex Panama. Panama. Sept. 9. -In an, interview today 'Richard 0. Marsh, chare d'af- fairs of the American legation at Pan- ama, 'intimated that If the Panama government should ignore the wishes of Washington, the United States would be compelled to occupy or an flex the republic of Panama. Signal Service Wants More Flyers. Washington, Sept. 9. -The signal service of the army AI renew its efforts at the next session of congress to mecAre an increase of lie force and to *fain an adequate appropriation for its aeroplane wprk. Sheriff Saves Convicted Negro, Waco, Tex., Sept. 9. -On learning that a mob was forming at Marlin to lynch Ben Myatt, convieted of the murder of his wife, Sheriff Poole last night brought Myatt in an automo- one to Waco. Later In the night he was ''taken to Dailhs. Myatt has been sentenced 'to he hanged, hut his case nits been appealed. Kermit in Paris. Paris, Sept. 9. -Kermit Roosevelt, who recently returned from Turkey, Is at present a guest Of the Duke and Duchess of Fenian at the Chateau IOWA in Busy THEN. The Private Citizen -A general has an easy time after the war is over. The General -Not for very long, though. You soon have applications for your autograph and invitations to banquets. Red Cross Christmas Seals. Arrangements for the sale of Red Cross Christmas Seals for 1910 have been announced by the National Are soclation for the Study and Preven- tion of Tuberculosis and the Amen- . can Red Cross. \A Million for Tuber- culosis\ will be the slogan of the 1910 campaign. Two features of the Bale this year are unique and will bring cbosiderable capital to the tuberculo- OM • fishtevv. - Tits loneektan National' ' Red Cross Is to issue the stamps as in former years, but this organization will work in close co-operation with the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, which body will share in the proceeds of the sales. The charge to local associa Vons for the use of the national stamps has been reduced also from 20 Per cent. to 124e per cent,, which will mean at least $50,000 more for tuber- culosis work in all parts of the United States. The stamps are to be desig- nated as \Red Cross Seals\ this year and are to be placed on the back of letters instead of on the front. The Enemies. Apropos of the enmity, now happily buried, that used to exist between Minneapolis and St. Paul, Senator Clapp said at a dinner in the former city: \I remember an address on careless building that I once heard in Minne- apolis. \ 'Why,' said the speaker in the course of this address, 'one inhabitant of St. Paul Is killed by accident In the streets every 48 hours.' \A bitter voice from the rear of the ball interrupted: \'Well it ain't enough,' it said.\ Speaking of Fires. Roy Bone, a brother of United States District Attorney, Harry Bone, several years ago was a reporter on the Wichita Beacon. In going to a fire one of the members of the fire de- partment was thrown from a hose cart and killed. Bone wrote a head, with this as the first deck: \Gone to Ws Last Fire.\ The piece got Into the paper and Bone was promptly \fired.\ -Kansas City Journal. $100 Rewaa, $100. TIN modem at Ma Mere will he pleased to lean Ilbat there Is at leut ose dreued disease that emu* has bee she to cure in all its stage& and that Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only putties turn now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh WWI a conatituuonal Moue, require* a tonetlial• Haul treatment. llttarrh Cure Is taken Ia. tornallY. seting dIreettY upon the blood ud mucous surface. of the system, thereby dearnyIng the foundation of the disease, and living the Maui strength by building up the constitution and ualet. km nature In doing Its work The proprietor• have so touch faith in Its curatne powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for ore rue that It falls PI Ouse. 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