Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Dec 1900, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

% 00. nxmoia 0*« Mr. tt»ra« of General Interest Told in ^ Paragraphs. COMPLETE NEWS SUMMARY t Rapponlnrs of KMk or Uttl* | ImpnrtftiiM frum All Mti •( th« Ol*~ -J '̂tUsad World--Prices of Ikni Uroduti In WdUrii Markets. * -fr Twwity thousand persona viewed Jdy of Senator Davis, lying in Btate «t St Paul. Talk in Washington of calling Re­ publican caucus to consider repeal of "War taxes. Abrogation of the Porto Rican tariff being seriously discussed by island press. Oscar L. Boose, West Point cadet, dying at Bristol, Pa., from effect at hazing • .Committee of fifteen appointed to crusade against vice in New York. .N (Sneak thief stole $25,000 from ofltae f j|| J. N. Boe, Toledo, O. . Reared by some that Cub* la not , ;Ipiady for self-government. Transcontinental railroad b*M»H *«e forming a lobby to fight tin Nfca- .^jgljgua bill. % . > President Kruger paid farewell calls in Paris; Berlin press disc sated bia coming visit cautiously. vTwo Mormon eiders seeking prose­ lytes for Utah church, roughly handled fey mob In Hungary.. Richard Croker assessed on 9100,000 " Worth of property in England against Ms protest. r. Cnur continued to show signs of ia- fo^eaMnt. <X4>ulsGilmore. captain of high school football team at Lowell, Mass., tied of Injuries received in game. Provisions for important changes In the army embodied in Secretary Root's bill for reorganization. Number of dead in glass works ac- v- ©Went at San Francisco now seven* tOen; more are expected to die. Delegates to National W. C. T. U. ^convention transacted preliminary business at Washington. Secretary Long ordered supplies sent natives of Guam who are starving •; Si result of typhoon. Chief of Police John W. Campbell St Louis, Mo., accepted post of «ftief of police of Manila. "Second" will of William M. Rico Hit by attorneys of Albert T. Patrick, $ork. MacArthur confirmed death on four Filipinos convicted of '^fnsTplatit of Sanford Manufacturing my, Chicago, destroyed by ftre. $135,000. is gives Nebraska population of increase of less than 1 per 3.048,710; Oregon, 413,636; 1,893,810; Utah, 276;. 1,329. |oot will frame a army of power to begin pro- Charles of tho Porta- thlcrlKfcdan of an ference ed on Pre- at 9 o'clock erview listl our. The subje is unknown. Kruger mler Waldeck-Rousseau and remained for ten minutes. M. Waldeck-Rousseau returned the call at 9:30. Later on Kruger attended the,, reception of the municipal council at the Hotel de Ville. Replying to speeches by the councilors Kruger said Jie was thankful tor the splendid reception accorded him ever since his arrival at Marseilles. s Commissioner Wilson Dead. Georgq Washington . Wilson, com­ missioner of internal Revenue, died in Washington Tuesday. Pneumonia, following a severe cold caught last Thursday, was responsible for de&th. Mr. Wilson was 57 years old and a na­ tive of Ohio. He entered the union Army when 18 years old as a private in the 54th Ohio volunteer infantry and served throughout the war, com­ ing out a first lieutenant. In 1866 he took up the practice of law and in 1869 entered the internal revenue serv­ ice. He acted In various capacities, rising from one important position to another until he became the head of the bureau. atiflcation arrived in Wash- ©»• la Flood In TUmhw ' North of Dyersburg, Tenn., a wom- aa and two children In a!buggy were' thrown into deep water by the collapse of a levee and all were drowned. At4_ the south fork of the Forked Deer rlv er a colored track hand of the Illinois;. Central road was drowned. A mail carrier was drowned in Ca- ney creek, near Glymph, Lauderdale county. His buggy upset as he was attempting to ford the stream. No names are known here so far. P--pilrto Hnbhtrd la Killcdi In a desperate fight at Middlet&OfO, Ky., John Hubbard, formerly of Stink­ ing Creek. Knox county, was killed by Lieutenant of Police John Turner and Deputy Sheriff Zack Steele. Hubbard, a desperate character, fired three of the seven shots. He was hit in the arm. in the abdomen and. above the heart, the last wound causing his death almost instantly. Hubbard was resisting arrest on the charge of car­ rying concealed weapons. MaKlaloy's 1 hsnkftgl vlng Dinner. , All the executive departments of the government were closed Thursday In observance of Thanksgiving day. It was a quiet day at the White House. President McKinley attended service at the Metropolitan M. E. church in the forenoon. Mrs. McKinley took a short drive during the morning. Ac­ cording to their annual custom, the President and Mrs. McKinley had their Thanksgiving dinner alone at 7 o'clock In the evening. i:' iley's annual mes- completed. Recom- llng of Philippines perma- i firm attitude on China, law regulating trusts and I reorganisation and increase of - 9* $ Skeleton of young girl found li old ~ on Brunott farm, near Pana, III., body of Jane Brunott Was a year and a half ago. L«oadon bric-a-brac firm with claim $385,000 obtained order in New rk Supreme court restraining Gould •tees from paying any money to itess de Castellane until farther of court >rge W. Wilson, commissioner iternal revenue, is critically ill. -vice meeting in Denve#. scored igo as a Godless city. rry and Pat Holland, found dead sru, Ind., may have been poisoned, ry society broke up a boarding for boys at Tackaboe, N. Y., , Jiccount of the master's neglect of -piSpis.- Jobn W Hendril, philanthropist, .died aft, Sound Beach, Conn, ifl Xnnau report of pootoffloe depart* lament shows revenue of $12,354,579 and 3.000 new stations established. Letters from Lieutenant Peary reed in New York club. Robbers tm tonUlaaa. Siars dynamited the rard, La., a village west of and secured several hun- jStrfMfS in cash and a large mim- stamps. The sheriff, with lounds,1 is in pursuit of the rob- Allegvd Hold-Dp Man Shot. Thomas White, known to the Min- neopolis police, was shot in the head at that city by Police Sergeant Mous- aou, whom he had tried to kill. White may recover. A detective had ar­ rested him on suspicion of having com­ mitted numerous highway robberies. He escaped and in fleeing met Mous- sou, upon whom he sprang with drawn revolver. 'Moussou fired and White fell with a bullet in his head. Mow 8nK»r Refinery Starts. The immense new sugar refinery, costing, with appurtenances and res­ ervoirs, $1,000,000, started at Sugar City, Colo., and the occasion was cele­ brated by a harvest festival. Sugar City is only seven months-old, and has 1,800 population. The surrounding beet lands are irrigated by the use of water stored at Twin I*akes, 200 miles distant. Twelve thousand acres are being leased for the beet crop. Clgarmakar* on Strike. " ̂ "7 spite of the agreement made let pa, Fla., to hold the general strike eyance until the committee from esistencia organization and the ational Cigarmakers' Union 1 get together, the general strike declared Monday. Nine local ions obeyed the order of the Trades ssembly and refused to go to work. It is estimated that 1,400. men have answered the first call and are out- Bod* Am Unruly. Reports from Denver say Adjutant General Overmeyer has wired troop A, cavalry, at Grand Junction, to be In readiness for an immediate call in case Game Commissioner Johnson's force should not be equal to the In­ dians in the White River district This troop is known as "Overmeyer's Rbugh Riders," and Is made up of pioneers, cowboys, and crack shots Qf the western slope. Rallwft/ Clerk's Big Theft. Word was received at police head­ quarters in New York that a clerk of the Seaboard Air Line had been ar rested at Fernandina, Fla., for the theft of $50,000 from that line. It is said that the money taken by this clerk was lost through speculation with the firm of C. B. Lawrence ft Co., that recently failed in New York and the principals of which are now under if Diplomatic Negotiations Art In 4 , , .Progress . In • % i SOME BOXER DISTURBANCE*, Chancellor Ton Bnlow of Germany DidIm that That Mai Ion Has Territorial Do- sign* on China--German* to Claim •f Baaaftts. % ̂ A j • r *» * ' ? r Monday, November SS. Li Hung Chang, according to the Shanghai correspondent of the Morn­ ing Post, is seriously ill and has tele­ graphed tor his adopted son, LI Ching Fang. McKinley's cabinet said to be opposed to preliminary terms fixed 6y envoys at Pekin. Friends of Colonel Charles Deriby believe he will be sent back to China as United States min­ ister. Tuesday, November *7. Instructions went forward to Min­ ister Conger Tuesday directing him not to assent to the agreement adopt­ ed by the ministers of the powers at Pekln uhtil its terms had been greatly modified.' # ° llltSl bttrgllai* entered ths . oTJamsa Gk«hsin, two miles east of Stanton. iEftdh.. bound Mr. audi Mrs. Graham fast to their toed with ropes and.' ransacked the house, securing $28 In cash and * gold watch and other articles. The burglars then bitched up one of Graham's horses and left About ten minutes after they left Gra­ ham freed himself, bfrt never gave the alarm till daylight tll*t Death la Zion City* . The first death in Dowle's zfbn city colony. Waukegan, 111., has occurred and the result was a claih with the coroner. The 5-year-oM son of Mr. and Mrs. Hauck died or enlargement of the brain. The father applied to Coroner Knight for a permit to ship the body to his former home at Ot­ tawa, 111. . The request at first was re­ fused, but later the forwarding of ths body wae allowed. Bleh Mas Becomes Jn«»ga> Herbert Barnes of New Raven, Conn.; a director In the Swift Beef company of Chicago, president of the Hygienic Ice company and a member of the firm of Strong, Barnes, Hart & Co. of New Haven, has become men­ tally deranged and was removed to Dr. Stearns' private retreat for the insane at Hartford. He isverywealthy. ACCIDENT ON INSIDE OF BLAST FURNACE AT ILLINOIS STEEL I' V 'u i Only rare presence of mind and the agility of a trained sailor saved An­ drew AnderBon from the fate of his three fellow laborers in being dashed to the ground from a scaffolding on the inside of a new blast furnace at the Illinois Steel company's works, South Chicago, 111., Wednesday after­ noon. Four men were at work upon the Inside of the huge tank of the furnace, when a chain running Friday, November SO. German expedition to Kalgan re­ ported to have met with disaster. Colonel Yorck, * commander, said to have died. American missionaries in China write the state department insisting upon the burning of cities and the kill­ ing of the emperor, empress dowager and high court officials. Decrease la Beer Drinking. "Beer drinking Is on the decfease In Wisconsin." So says Henry Hage- melster of Green Bay, treasurer of the Wisconsin Brewers' association. Mr. Hagemeister asserts the days- of for­ tune-making In the brewing (business have passed and that large brewing es­ tablishments now fall to return a fall percentage on- the money invested. Mangled body Beside the Track. M. J. Morse, apparently a man of wealth, - living at Fremont, Neb., jumped or fell from a train on the Pennsylvania while it was entering Fort Wayne, Ind., Tuesday night. He was found beside the track with the skull fractured and. otherwise badly mangled. He cannot recover. . Death of R. A. Hinsdale. Prof. B. A. Hinsdale of the Univer­ sity of Micfhigan died at Atlanta, Ga. He came south several weefks ago suf­ fering with nervous collapse. He was accompanied by his wife. Prof. Hins­ dale was the author of albout fifteen books. The body wiLl be taken to Ann Arbor for burial. arrest. If- Jeff Davte* Stavo la Accustomed to a life of plenty, Mrs. Adelia Burton, colored. Is compelled in her declining years to face actual poverty. Notwithstanding that the woman, who Is 87 years old, was It slave during the greater portion of her life, and that the hardest dutiee she was asked to perform were those of maid in some of the best southern families, including the family of Jef­ ferson Davis, Mrs. Burton's only place of refuge now is in a ahed hi the rear of No. 7323 Railroad avenue, Chicago. Killed by Jealom Has band. Dr. Hamilton was shot and killed at Marysville, Iowa, Monday. Alfred Ahn is under arrest charged with the crime. Ahn's wife left him, and Ahn held the doctor responsible, and it is alleged that he made threats that he would kill him. Vt PV Actor Favemham Near Death. William Faversham, leading man of the Empire theater stock company, is still near death at his home in New York as a result of an operation tor appendicitis. <» m. .» ..fe: Plot on McKloleyi Life. The police of Hoboken, N. J.,,have received a letter alleging the existence of a plot to assassinate President Mc­ Kinley. The writer of the letter gave In his communication the name of the alleged chief conspirator,'which the police refuse to make public at this time. through the tackle which ktiftiwfrted their scaffolding broke, letting the whole platform fall with a crash to the ground. Anderson, with the quickness of a cat, sprang for the center beam, technically called the "mast" of the furnace, and grasping it as a sailor would a rope, slid safely to the ground. His three companions did not fare so well, but were picked up. battered, bleeding and unconscious and taken to the company's hospital. Akron Rioters Sentenced. Judge Kohler Monday sentenced five of the Akron (O.) rioters wbp have been convicted to date. Harvey Earl, Frank Sickles, David Davis, and Oliver Morgan were sent to the Ohio reformatory for indefinite periods, and James McClelland to the penitentiary for one year. Thomas Ryan, charged with attempting to bribe a witness in the Eppley case, attempted suicide by banging in the jail. Express Train In River. At 1:15 Wednesday morning the night express for Cleveland on the Cleveland and Pittsburg railroad was thrown into the river two miles be­ low Beaver, Pa The Information at hand says one man was drowned and four others were badly hurt The man who lost his life was the Adams Express messenger, and his name was Casey. He lived at Cleveland. Ant I-Football Law Orged. The Winnebago county board at Oshkosh, Wis., by fa close vote adopted a memorial to th| Legislature asking that body to prohibit the playing of the game of football in the state of Wisconsin onme ground that "it is dangerous to |the health and life of the persons playing it, and many ac­ cidents and evlen death are caused by the game as it is now played." Standard Oil in Control. The Standard Oil company,*' Bays the Bucharest correspondent of the London Express, "has obtained conces­ sions for mining and erecting pipe lines on all the government tracts, as well as almost a monopoly in sinking Oil wells in Roumania. The prioe of ths concession was £400,000." Bogvs Priest Held Over George Richter was held to the grand jury by Justice Kersten in Chi­ cago for obtaining money under the guise of a priest for the Alexian Bro­ thers' hospital, A priest's cowl was produced as evidence against him at his hearing. Richter sai| that It was his mufflsr. Over tOO Men and Boyt Fill on White-Hot Furnaca, THEY CRASH THROUGH ROOF, Waning* Vnheeded by the Teiiisreeonie Jtoilowa. Who Were Witnessing a Foot­ ball Game from the Roof of • fffcctoi-- Thirteen Dean, Others D l̂n^pr Thirteen persons were kitted and more than 100 injured, some of them fatally, by the collapse of the roof of a building from where they were sur­ reptitiously viewing a football game between .the Stanford and University of California teams Thursday after­ noon in San Francisco. All tihe hospital and police ambu­ lances were called into requisition and private carriages were taken from the paddock of the football arena and pressed into service. Dead and wounded were hurried away to various hospitals, and In some instances to their homes, so that it Is impossible to make up a complete list of the victims, although eighty-two have been cared for. The accident occurred- at the San Francisco and Pacific glass works, lo­ cated at Fifteenth and Bryant streets. Despite the efforts of a large force of police and private guards at the works, 600 persons had broken through the lines and clambered to the roof, which afforded a fine view of the game. Warnings Mot Heeded. The proprietors of the factory rea­ lised the danger to those on the roof, i v but repeated warnings were turned ' back by jeers. The nearest police sta­ tion was notified of the condition of affairs and a squad of officers' had just arrived to dislodge the trespassers when the roof gave way. Ninety- eight persons fell through the roof to the floor below. The furnace was in full blalt and the heat wae terrific. The dome of the furnace is broken 111 one spot, and it is here that Gumper Is believed to have plunged through to a frightful death. The crash of the breaking roof and the shouts and screams of the victims were heard for blocks. The dense crowds that Imme­ diately gathered around the glass­ works made the work of rescue diffi­ cult and added to the general excite­ ment and confusion. Bodies were brought out and speedly whirled away In express wagons, private carriages, ambulances and whatever conveyance was most available. Crowded the Hospitals, The Southern Pacific hospital, with­ in two blocks of the scene of the ac­ cident, was speedily .filled and many of the wounded were turned away. The late comers were taken to St Luke's, near by drug stores or the re­ ceiving hospital-. Ambulances were reserved for the Injured, while the cor­ oner removed the dead in express wagons. Twenty thousand persons were in the amphitheater and paddock, two blocks away, watching the foot­ ball game, and when white-faced ush­ ers scurried through the crowd, calling for surgeons, the game was abandoned and the spectators surged to the gates, anxious to see what had happened and help the injured. In this crush to get out a number of persons were trampled upon, dresses were torn and there were many minor injuries. A majority of the victims were boys, ranging in years from 10 to 15 years. The fires in the furnaces had been started for the first tlirie Thursday, and the vats were 'fall of liquid glass. It was upon these that the victims fell. Some were killed Instantly and others were slow-, ly roasted to death. r • Lone Rebberw Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Llnter of Cedar Rapids, who had been visiting In Bur llngton, were on the way to the Bta* tion Thursday to return home when they were held up by a lone footpad at Fourth and Locust Btreets, Burling­ ton, Iowa. Mr. Llnter struck at the robber, who Instantly shot him through the heart, killing bim instant­ ly. Mrs. Llnter sprung forward as If to shield her husband and then turned to flee, when the highwayman shot her in the bcuck. the ball penetrating the left long. Thaaksgtvtag Day la London. More than 400 Americans were pres­ ent at the Hotel Cecil Thursday even­ ing at the Thanksgiving dinner given under the auspices of the American Society in London. F. C. Van Duser, president of the society, was in the chair, and the guests included Baron Alverstone, lord chief justice of Eng­ land; William Court Gully, speaker of the house of commons; Sir Junes Charles MaAhew of the queen's bench division of the high court of justice; Frank Green, lord ;mayor of London, ,/ ^ ... _ ^ jr"idfeiLvd6k/.r.\f ^ ' .-JS Railway to Vw Telephones The Northern Pacific railway has de­ cided to substitute the telephone foi the present telegraph system of the road, and will lAilld and equip long­ distance and divisional telephone lines to take the place of the telegraph wherever it Is deemed practicable. Oscar Wilde Is Dead. Oscar Wilde, once famous English author, died in cheap hotel in Paris, where he lodged under an assumed nam?. His works praised before hiB downfall. Aasbwhed By nftftina*. A detachment of the Third United States Infantry was ambushed Sunday near Malolos. The Ladrones fired a volley at the Americans, killing two privates of. Company F and wounding three. The insurgents escaped into a swamp. While returning by steamer a detachment of Americans landed at San Vincente and attacked a body of rebels, killing seven, k branch party attacked a party beyond Palestina, killing five and capturing nineteen. The Americans had no casualties * .jifcti'fi d! >J Leonard Day, rich young man of Minneapolis, stabbed to death in fight over a woman. 'DR." DOWIE'S PROJECTED LACE I Corn- No. 3 1 northern, 4, 60@62c; No. 7c; 110 grade, 50£ , fttOfiOc; No. Z yellow, white, •&: No. 8, J J " ~"7c: No. S yell w&lta. S*e; No. * BKc. Mess pork, regular, . IF,S3: rt-rlb sides, Pick­ led hams. 109121 ba, WWc. and T« lbs, 8^ picnic hams. 6&&Ac; bellies, V6& jOVfcc; smoked tiame, 8%01(H4c; skinned Cattle-Native shipping and export steers. >4.76@6.66; dressed beef and butch­ er steers, S4@5.25; steers Under 1,000 lbs, $3.25@4.75; stoekers and feeders, $2.2&@ 4.40;' cows and heifers; |2@4.8i; canners. |l.25®2.75; bulls, $2.50@3; Texas and In­ dian steers, $3@4.65; cows and hciters, $2.30@3.40. Hogs--Pigs and lights, $4,750 4.S5; packers, $4.80(^4.90; butchers', @5. Sheep--Native muttons, $3.50@4.10; lambs, $3.75®5.25; culls and bucks, $2.25® 4; stockers, $2@3. Poultry--Live turkeys, fair to choice, 7%c per lb; gobblers, V&c; young turkeys, 7%c; chickens, hens, 60; springs, 6c; roosters, 4c per lb; ducks, 7@7%c per lb; geese, $4g)6.25 per doz. Dressed--Turkeys, choice. 9&c; fair -to good, 769c; chickens, 6ij7c; ducks. 8@9%c; geese, irac. Potatoes--Burbanks, 41gp44c; rurals, il®44c; peerless, 40@42c; Hebron, 40€M2c; rose, 89@41c; Kings. 40®42c; mixed, 37@41e. Green Fruits--Apples,' $1.G0#4.&0 per brl, according to quality; general run. |1.50®L Butter--Extra creamery, 23c; firsts, 20021c; seconds, 16&18c! dairies, choice. 20n&lc; firsts. I8@l9c, ladles, good to fine, 13#13Kc; roll* 13916c; pacKing stock, 12H013C. ' Fetr • BolglM Bare Post. Secretary Wilson of the United States department of agriculture views with alarm the greatly increasing num­ ber of Belgian hares in the west. In his last report, just issued, he said: "The state board of agriculture of Cal­ ifornia has estimated that several thousand of the animals are already at large In that state. If they increase as rapidly when at large as tbey do in captivity, they will undoubtedly be­ come a source of danger, and stringent measures may be required to keep them under controL Still more dan­ gerous would be the Introduction of the Belgian hare into Porto Rico, where the question of Its acclimation has already excited Interest." Oltlsons fight Bank Robbers. An attempt was made to burglarize the bank at Oblong, twenty-five miles south of Greenup, 111., but the effort was frustrated and the robbers driven off after a fierce fight, in which many shots were exchanged. Dr. Hamilton C. Kibble lives opposite the bank and was aroused by crashing glass. HHe notified Cashier Dennis O'Dell, and these two, armed with a shotgun and a revolver, attacked the burglars and drove them away. Five shots from the robbers penetrated Kibbies's house near where the two men were stand- D«th Breaks Up • Pcai Awaiting the return home tor Thanksgiving dinner of Herman Levy his family sat at the table in Chicago and waited several hours for him. Just as they were giving up hope of hear­ ing from him a messenger brought them a telegram announcing that he bad been found dead in Hotel Jullen in Dubuque, Iowa, where he stopped on his way home. Mrs. Levy fainted and Is now seriously ill. Indian Woman Sooks Divnrea. A divorce case has just been filed in the superior court <at North Yakima, Wash.', to which two prominent resi­ dents of the ITakima Indian reserva­ tion are parties. Kate McCaw, a teach­ er in the government schools at Port Simcoe, filed an action for divorce from her husband, Samuel McCaw. Both are Indians and own allotments of eighty each on the reservation. / Report on Ismlthlan CaaltL- The report of the Isthmian canal commission was given to the President for transmission to congress. It goes into details of tbotb plans, but does not recommend either. It favors a waterway not Iabs than thirty-five feet deep and 150 feet yide at the narrow­ est point. NUUHTEST "Dr." Dowle of Chicago, has i^uiaed the building of a town located near Waukegan, in., to Ibe known as "Zion City." According to the plana of the faith cure "doctor," It will be an In­ dustrial city devoted to lace making and other manufactures, Dowle hat riiTj^ru-Lru-u-u-j-j-ij-j- nnr r - - - » - recently had trouble at his meetings la fjondon, and his efforts to get lace- makers Into this country from Europe have attracted the. attention of the labor commissioners, and the whole country. The treasury department finally concluded to admit the lace- makers. •fosleans Moot Savors 1ms> Two American miners who arrived at El Paso Te«., brought news of a fierce battle last Sunday between Mex­ ican soldiers and Yaqui Indians near Soyapa, Socorro, Mexico. The troops had been sent in pursuit of the In­ dians who had robbed the two minora, 8eth Tompkins and William Lrfywe, and made them prisoners. The sol­ diers had twenty men killed and> the Indians six. During the battle the Americans esca|>ed. •aitng Majr KID Wsst MtMS Oscar L. Boose, a young man, SI years of age, lies at the point of death at his home In Bristol. Pa. A year ago Booze was appointed by Congressman Wanger to the West Point Military Academy, and the parents declare that the hazing administered at that time was of such a nature that the death of their son may result. It is alleged that pepper sauce was poured down Booze's throat, red pepper was thrown in his eyes, hot grease poured on his bare feet, a tooth knocked out and other outrages indulged la. • Lovar Shoots Woasaa. F. A. Hudson Observed Thanksgiv­ ing by shooting Belle Walker three times and crushing her skull with a hammer. He then fired two bullets into bis own body, and as neither shot proved fatal be tried to beat his brains out with the butt of his revolv- ver. The deed was committed in the woman's room at the Hotel Vickery, 1204 Wabash avenue, Chicago, and is supposed to have been prompted by jealousy. JBoars R«M 4M Wrttwfc General Roberts telegraphs to the war office at London that De Wetes- dorp was surrendered to the Boers on Nov. 23. Four hundred men and two guns were captured by the burghers after the British had lost fifteen men killed and forty-two wounded. Lord Roberts' dispatch furnishes the most startling proof that .the war in Soiith Africa is still full of vigor. It Is poor consolation that the British have since reoccupied the town alter in Ann thgA. withdraw®* ..... RJBGORD OF HAPPKNtl SEVEN DAYS. Bateher Brings Daasaga* Salt Babbl -- Uaa-Oaric Hnptlals • . Bate's Chaaoas fw 1 Unn-Clark Jfapttals, f At the home of Mrs. Adelaide the wedding of Mrs. Clark's Miss Edith Stevens Clark, anft - shall George Linn took place" In,; 'ngton. The ceremony was toy the Rev. Wemyss Smifch, r« St. Matthew's Kpiaoopal church, sisted by a former pastor, the B. Pond of Chicago. Miss Cole erf Bloom ington and Mm, £ fWnum of Chicago were the ants. The home was decorated chrysanthemums and carnations, bride wore white taffeta sUk overdress of white moussellne de < tAfter the wedding dinner Mr. Linn departed for New England, 1 at home Jan. 1, in Bloomlngron. out of town guests were: Mr. and W. R. Linn, Mrs. M. L. Andrews, Mrs. W. Scott Linn of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Linn. Besides th« there were present only the meat of Miss Clark's family and a* fur mate friends. •aspootad Baak BoMwn, Two suspicions looking charact suspected of the Emden bank rabl and attempted killing of Officer ford were captured by a posse 1 hiding in the woods south of Mtnll aud taken to Delaven. They gave th< names as McDought and Hood of eago. They had in their possesslon| revolver, said to have been taken Ollle Albers, the young man was bound and gagged by the rot Albers said they were not the ill men, but it is thought by the offlc that he refrained from ldentif them here for fear they would becoi victims of a mob which had collect They were taken to the Pekln jail Albers accompanied them. Legal 1 plications may arise between Los and Tazewell counties as to the session of the prisoners if ldentifU Tazewell wishes to prosecute them attempted murder and Logan for baij robbery. Officer Sanford lies betwc life and death. Bishop Halo Is Still Altoa. The condition of Rt. Rev. Charles Hale of Cairo, coadjutor bishop Springfield diocese, remains unchanj ed. There does not uppear to be chance for his recovery. Bishop Ha is 63 years old an<di was dean of Davenport, Iowa,. cathedral for years prior, to appointment to his pr ent position in 1892. Grava Crtsoa %s ChargsA Dr. Thomas B. Spalding, a phj clan in Decatur, and Mrs. Lena Rol erts, keeper of a boarding house, wc placed under arrest at that city und^ an Indictment charging an atteB to perform criminal operation in case of the doctor and wlfh_ being accessory in the case of the woma Dr. Robert Spalding of CUnton ai Clyde James, also of Clinton, but no of Oklahoma territory, were also dieted as being accessories. It charged that Miss Slane, aged years, of Clinton, was the subject the operation, and that she was in tl boarding house of Mrs. Roberts in D catur until the police began to l§o up evidence in the case. Then the D catur physician hurried her out town. She is now said to be in a set oils condition at Clinton. Batcher Sacs a Babbl. Abraham Wallowitx, whom Rab Friedman deposed as official butchj of the congregation Agudas AdhJmj Peoria, has sued the rabbi for $10, damages to his business resulta therefrom. The deposing followed quarrel 'between the two and much ui friendliness has been engendered the congregation. One Man Not Thankful. Albert Brown was tried at Bellevll during two days on a charge of burj lary. If he had been proven inn< cent he would have won a bride well as his liberty and the wed din would have taken place on Thanksgi' lng day. He spent in jail what woul have been his wedding day. There a long penitentiary sentence tJhead him and he has, no hope of winnin Ills bride when he Is released. Brown connected with a prominent St. Lou family. He was accused of complicit In a burglary at the power house the Belleville and St. I»uis electro line. To Miss Mamie Gillespie, whom he had previously been payli attentions, he pretested that he wa Innocent. She told him that if he wi proven innocent she would marry hla Voast at tho J»ltat Prison. The dreary and monotonous'life the coovietB of the penitentiary foun brief respite In the annual Thanksgi! ing festivities prepared* by the oOcfa for' the entertainment of the prisoner) The program comprised feasting, TM deviile, music and the allowing of oe tain privileges only given OB the ft Itpliday occasions. • Thjak Salatda Osa»--v v After puzzling the Cleveland, detectives for days the mystery as the identity of the Hollenden hotel su clde may at last be solved. It thought that the man was Thomas Cooper, a prominent citizen of Prlncf ton, 111. The suicide registered 8. Jones of Chicago at the hotel, pal a day's board-in advance and the ne: day was found dead in his room, hai ing taken arsenic in whisky. Insic the collar was the name Cooper. Tho J. Cooper of Princeton, is said to hav disappeared from Chicago Nov. lg. *lroa Altars Fr The Illinois Steel company hat Ju: inaugurated an important chang« the mechanical workings of the J0li< plant, which is expected to practicall revolutionize the handling of pig iroi An endless chain of mtftds receives ti molten metal from the blast furnac and run through & water both, wfaic cools the metal, and as the molds 1 the turn the pig iron falls of its tm weight upon cam beneath. The pn process does away with the sandhotUK in the blast furnaces and renders the work of several ,mm mailto:4.76@6.66 mailto:S4@5.25 mailto:3.25@4.75 mailto:3@4.65 mailto:2.30@3.40 mailto:3.50@4.10

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy