Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 23 May 1901, p. 7

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People f and lEvento y "'41 V* "The Brettdtvinners." - The attempt at this late day to Had an Illinois woman the doubtful hon- •r of the authorship of "The Bread- Winners" deserves a place among the lluriosities of literature. ; We can readily understand that aa •rents have shaped themselves since 3188 tike real author would gladly es­ cape attention behind another name, for when he wrote the book it la not likely that he foresaw a public or poli­ tical career for himself. Fortunately It is too late for any misapprehension as to the author's identity. That was Settled long ago by external and in­ ternal evidence. Aa to internal evid­ ence alone the book la the boldest apotheosis of snobbery, aristocracy and lb® money power and the nastleft Itoeer at the common people so far >#ritten in this country. J^It had but one purpose says the New Hiork Journal, that was to show the jfeuential vileness of every person not • millionaire and the divine sublimity Of the men that make great sums of noney. According to the teachings of fills book the man that labors with Ills hands Is an ignoble creature and the man that has no occupation but to pursue the refined and elevating Amusements of society is the only re- :: Selectable person in the community. 4 fk? Open Air Pantry . People with plenty of ground Bpace, constricted houses, may profitably ce a leaf from the book of south country household economy. It is common there for country folk to have ft sort of outdoor fresh air closet, a •mall detached structure set in the •hadlest place possible, standing upon four tall legs, with a flat shingle roof Of barely enough pitch to shed rain. The floor is at least four feet from the ground, and the whole structure only U( enough to reach well across. There /»••> • Af- Heath of Archbishop Archbishop Lewis of Ontario died of pneumonia on the morning of May 4 while crossing the Atlantic to England on board the steamer Menominee. When the archbishop sailed he was suffering severely from weakness con­ sequent upon an attack of pneumonia. He-was bound ultimately for Egypt, where, it was believed, his health would be restored. On the night of May 3 his wife and the trained nurse wl||g|^ompanied him obc^a4 tha$ 1 We shelves all around, and the "(leather boarding up next the roof is flill of tiny auger holes. The door fits tight, and fastens with a lock. Around each of the four legs is commonly a tar bandage, applied six inches above the ground. This traps venturesome ants, spiders Slid their kidney, thus keeping the in­ side clear. The structure is white­ washed inside and out twice a year. In hot weather floor and shelves are washed every morning, and scoured twice a week. Such a fixture should Sot cost over three or four dollars^ even If one hires it built, and it is cer­ tainly among the handiest things one have about the house or yard. «Cheap Steel for Foreigner*. " Mr. Charles M. Schwab, president of the United Statfes Steel company, ad- Slits that the American steel manu­ facturers sell their products to for­ eigners at a lower price than they do to their own countrymen. He admits •nd he defends the practice. His rea­ soning is that to produce goods at the minimum cost plants must be run to their full capacity; that when the pro­ ductivity of plants run in this fashion exceeds the demands of the country surplus stocks pile up which must be disposed of abroad if disposed of at all, and that it is for the interest of the manufacturers, their employes and the oountry generally that these surpluses should be got rid of abroad, even if they are sold at a price much below that asked of home consumers, as oth­ erwise mills will have to be closed or run on half time and workmen thrown out of work. Mr. Schwab contends that to obtain foreign markets and •ometimes to keep them when obtained It is necessary to reduce prices below the home standards. ARCHBISHOP LBWTS, he was sinking rapidly and called in the ship's surgeon. In spite of the stimulants applied he sank steadily and passed away at dawn the follow­ ing day. Popularity of Outdoor Life. It is an encouraging sign for the health of the modern American that the popularity of outdoor life in this country seems to be increasing. The number and variety of sports and pas­ times which allure to open-air exertion has grown greatly. Not very many years have elapsed since the time when tennis and football were unus­ ual and golf and the bicycle were al­ most unknown. Yet the influence of these and other sports has been so strong in recent years that open-air life has come to be enjoyed for its own sake and apart from the amuse­ ment associated with it. The house of Walter Baker & Oo, whose manufactures of cocoa and chocolate have become familiar in the mouth as household words, was estab­ lished one hundred and twenty-one years ago (1780) on the Neponset river in the old town of Dorchester, a suburb of Boston. From the little wooden mill, "by the rude bridge that arched the flood," where the enterprise was first started, there has grown up the largest industrial establishment of the kind In the world. It might be said that, while other manufacturers come and go, Walter Baker ft Co., go on for­ ever. What is the secret of their great suc­ cess? It is a very simple one. They have won and held the confidence of the great and constantly increasing body of consumers by always main­ taining the highest standard in the quality of their cocoa and chocolate preparations, and selling them at the lowest price for which unadulterated articles of good quality can be put upon the market. They welcome hon­ est competition; but they feel justified in denouncing in the strongest terms the fraudulent methods by which in­ ferior preparations are palmed off on customers who ask for and suppose they are getting the genuine articles. The best grocers refuse to handle such goods, not alone for the reason that, in the long run. It doesn't pay to do it, but because their sense of fair dealing will not permit them to aid in the sale of goods that defraud their customers and injure honest manufacturers. Every package of the goods made by the Walter Baker Company hears the well-known trade mark "La Belle Chocolatiere," and their place of manu­ facture "Dorchester, Mass." House­ keepers are advised to examine their purchases, and make sure that other goods have not been substituted. An attractive little book of "Choice Recipes" will be mailed free to any housekeeper who sends her name and address to Walter Baker & Co., LUL* 168 State Street, Boston, Mass. An American Dreyfus * j - W f r e L a t e J u d g e K i n g . The Hon. George E. King, one of the justices of the Supreme court of Canada, who died a few days ago, was elevated to the Supreme bench in 1893, and was one of the Bering sea arbi­ tration commission. He was a native of St. John's, N. B. He became Attor­ ney General of New Brunswick in 1870, and in 1872 he succeeded Mr. Hatheway as leader of the government. He became Q. C. In 1873, and a puisne judge of the Supreme court of New Brunswick in 1880. MLeepr the FUh Alitfe. Many a fisherman who prefers live bait to tempt his game has trouble in keeping the bait alive throughout a day's sport, and it is impossible to transport the bait for some distance without los­ ing more or less of it, simply be­ cause there Is no means of supplying t h e f i s h with the necessar y air. As soon as the water uetomes scaie the fish cannot exist and if fresh water is not at hand the fish will die. To prevent this loss Casslus M. Fisk of Ohio has designed the receptacle here shown. The device consists of a pail to re­ ceive the water and bait, with an air pump and storage reservoir at one side, and a perforated tube located in the bottom of the water chamber. It will be seen that air may be compressed to . a relatively high pressure in the air container, and by means of the pecu­ liarly arrange distributing pipes a gradual discharge of the air through the water is permitted, thus keeping the water continually purified and necessitating the use of the air pump only at comparatively long intervals as the pressure becomes too low to prop­ erly feed the air to the water. To aid In selecting the bait for use the in­ ventor has also supplied a sort of net composed of a ring covered with fabric and mounted oa the lower end of a rod inside the pall, which will lift the fish clear out the water until the one desired can be taken out. Queer Idea* of jiutlo*. Some of the justices of this city ap­ pear to have taken a singular view of their duties and prerogatives, says a recent Manchester, England, dispatch. The case of Hugo Shaw and W. H. Hughes--who have rightly resigned a position for which they were clearly unfitted--has created a great sensation, and has drawn a letter from the home secretary in approval of the censure of the city justices. These two gentle­ men have escaped lightly, for they were guilty of about as scandalous a breach of magisterial decorum as can je imagined. From the report fur­ nished by the chief constable we gath­ er that when a local publican was to be summoned for permitting drunken­ ness on his premises these two justices made repeated attempts to induce the police to refrain from prosecuting. Moreover, when the case was called on they were found on the bench, and when the police shifted the case to the other court, Messrs. Shaw and Hughes moved after them. Having done all they could to stop the case they thrust themselves upon the bench out of their turn. There is a strong hint in the chief constable's report that undue influence is frequently brought to bear OA licensing cases in Manchester.- 'i Fly Catcher. It seems somewhat cruel to make a flower holder an instrument of death, feut since the housekeeper will kill the flies anyway, why not make the fly­ trap as attractive .se possible? Ordi­ narily fly-traps are snslghtly and ob- ! e c tlonal objects to have .upon the dinner table, as they expose the dead and dying flies to the sight of those seated at the table. In view of those seated at the table. In view of this objectionable feature the invention we show In the picture has been designed to provide a trap which, while arranged for ef­ fectively enticing and entrapping the flies, is also constructed to form a flower-holder and to present a neat sad attractive appearance, and at the Same time to conceal the files after have entered the device. The up- Hr portion of the trap la In the form of a vase, to contain cut flowers for the decoration of the table, and the guests may not even suspect Its real use, but the under portion has an en­ trance through which the flies gain access to the bait which is suspended Inside. The illustration shows an in­ ner shell, which has an opening at the top through which the flies crawl, de­ scending thence to the gutter, in which is concealed the poisonous liquid which kills the insects. To clean the interior the outer shell can be detached, expos­ ing the trap and allowing it to be rinsed out and refilled. '4- ' I * t i t >• * C * c r~r ' / L&M \SSJssjf" S. & ,rl% ,'jf ..,1 Going Home Via. America. Baron von Bergen, who has been secretary of the German legation at Pekin for the last two years, has ar­ rive in this country on his way home. He has been assigned to the position of secretary of the German legation at Rome, and will assume his new duties soon after his arrival in Europe. Christian Klucker, a Swiss guide in the Rocky mountains, has a record of 2,000 mountain ascents without eft ao> < ddent to Mmwlf or his party. TwMtN Trlefca to BsnbtM. . Mrs. Rosalie Gandolfo is a St Louis woman who has a penchant for ban­ tam chicken pets and has a brood of them of which she is exceedingly proud, for she has trained them to per­ form tricks that are the wonder of the neighbors. Two of her roosters, espe­ cially favored by her, are named Mc- Kinley and Roosevelt. These two little fellows were perched on a newspaper's mammoth bulletin board on election day last November and kept the big crowds shouting with delight at their continual crowing. It seemed as if the little redbreasts knew when big re­ turns came in for McKlnley and Roosevelt, for as the figures were posted up they would emit louder than ever their "cock-a-doodle-do." The roosters will perch on Mrs. Gandolfo's fingers, fly to her arm, shoulder or head at command; will crow when­ ever their mistress tells them to, will eat out of her hand, will guard articles like & watch dog and In other ways will show the result of long and care­ ful training. Mrs. Gandolfo, who Is president of the Rosalie Woman's club, named after her, prises her pets very highly and takes great pains in teach­ ing them new tricks. " "Ttof" Tnfflan Rights association, an organisation of which Philip C. Gar­ rett Is president, and whose headquar­ ters are 1305 Arch street, Philadelphia, is making a strenuous effort to secure the pardon of "Little Whirlwind," a North Cheyenne Indian serving a life sentence in the Montana Btate peniten­ tiary for murder. The convicted man Is described by the association as the •"American Dreyfus," and in order that his case may be fully understood the country has been floated with cir­ culars. "It seems almost incredible in these enlightened days of the twentieth cen­ tury," says the circular, "that a man could be convicted of murder, de­ prived of his liberty, and detained In the penitentiary serving a sentence of imprisonment for life when there was not the faintest doubt of his innocence. Yet such is the case, and the unfor­ tunate man is a young Northern Chey­ enne Indian named Little Whirlwind." After this brief introductory the cir­ cular continues: ; "We appeal to all who love to see justice done, no matter what a man's race may be, to aid us In keeping this case before the attention of Governor Toole and the people of the country until Little Whirlwind Is given that of which he is now so unjustly deprived --his liberty. Nearly the entire civil­ ised world was aroused over the in­ justice done to an officer of the French army, but we have an American Drey­ fus whose case has hardly attracted even passing notice." The "true" story of "Little Whirl­ wind's" crime Is then set forth as fol­ lows: "Four years ago Little Whirlwind and his brother, Spotted Hawk, were convicted on perjured testimony (as was afterwards proved) of the murder of a sheep herder, named Hoover. Stanley, the real murderer, confessed his crime to no less than three wit­ nesses before the trial, but after be­ ing arrested and lodged In Jail he was Induced to make a statement impli­ cating Spotted Hawk and Little Whirl­ wind, under promise on the part of the prosecuting attorney that he would re­ ceive a light sentence. "The two accused Indians were tried separately, although the evidence was practically the same in both cases. In the opinion of fair-minded men the so-called 'trials' were in reality an outrageous travesty of justice, bnt they resulted In a verdict of guilty In both Instances. "JR igMeouene** Hat a Day. Mayor Tom L. Johnson of Cleveland has just given the county auditors of Cuyahoga county some valuable In­ formation concerning the light in which their proceedings are regarded by honest men. The auditors had In­ tended to leave the valuation of the property of a certain railroad at the nominal figure at which it had previ- "Spotted Hawk was sentenced to be hanged and Little Whirlwind con­ demned to Imprisonment for life. Stanley, the real criminal, escaped with a short sentence of five years in the penitentiary. The attorneys for Spotted Hawk (who had . been engaged by the Indian Rights association) took the case to the Supreme court, ^ 'lere not made for a new trial. Little Whirlwind has therefore been oonflnefl In the penitentiary ever since, In ac­ cordance with the decree of the court. Had action been promptly taken on his behalf, he, too, would now be enjoy­ ing his liberty. About a year and * half ago Stanley, the real murderer, died in prison, hut before his death he I r 'LITTLE WHIRLWIND," THE AMERICAN DREYFUS. the decision of the lower court was re­ versed on the ground of Insufficient evidence. The county officials not having any new evidence to submit abandoned the case and Spotted Hawk was given his liberty. "In the case of Little Whirlwind, through an unfortunate oversight on the part of his attorney, an appeal was ously stood, when Mr. Johnson offered a few remarks. He observes: "The company fixes its own taxes. It issues passes, employs influential lawyers and does as it likes in the mat­ ter of taxation. Your method of fix­ ing railroad taxes is unfair and uncon­ stitutional. It wlH be questioned by the courts. I appear before you not as a private citizen but as mayor of "Russian ffobteman Coming. * • Bom for Stray Gats. An uptown woman in New York, the. widow of a supreme court judge, Has devoted her attention to the welfare of stray cats. She has had constructed a cage thirty-two feet long and ten feet wide, where all homeless animals who are found In the vicinity receive food and shelter. The neighbors call it the "cat mission." The cage is fitted with cushions and has a house heated with hot water pipes in one end. A local milkman has the food contract for this asylum and leaves a large can of milk daily for the Inmates. Over forty cats are being cared for at pres­ ent, and news of the Institution Is spreading. OtadMBiad to W««r Wood so OoUhtw A man who had been condemned to wear a wooden collar was seen by some of his friends. "What have yon been doing," they asked him, "to de­ serve this?" "Oh, nothing," he re­ plied; "I only picked up an old piece of rope." And yon are to be pun­ ished thus severely," they asked, "for merely picking up an end of rope?" "Well," answered the man, "the fact Is that there was a bullock tied to the other end."--Herbert A. Giles, in­ flatory of Chinese Literature." Mm oa SaniM r»iaw. A farmer In Dickinson county, Kan­ sas, recently found some queer looking worms in his wheat field and put them in a glass jar to see if they would turn into some destroying insect. One day, while the farmer was away from home, a joking neighbor removed the worms and replaced them with some young frogs. For two weeks there­ after the f irmer neglected his work while carrying the jar around to show his friends the wonder that had been mwrntoL' made a statement to the effect that he alone had committed the crime, and that Little Whirlwind was absolutely innocent. Notwithstanding this, the governor of Montana refused to pardon Little Whirlwind when tne facts were brought to his attention." A picture of the "American Drey­ fus" accompanies each circular. Cleveland, knowing whereof I apeak and accusing you openly. Not only do you, the county auditors, ride on rail­ road passes, but they are used by judges and state officials. No man with a railroad pass in his pocket can honestly fix the taxes a railroad should pay. Your oath of office requires you to assess It at 12 per cent, or one-ninth of Its true worth. Thus you commit perjury. Don't you think you have flung away enough of the people's mil­ lions in these railroad charities? The city of Cleveland loses from 820,006 to 880,000 a year through your neglect to tax. If you want to throw money away don't give it to the railroads." Struck by remorse or shame, or moved by Mr. Johnson's eloquence, or hypnotized by his magnetic force, or otherwise Influenced, the auditors raised the valution of the road by 15 per cent. There was one pretty good day's work for a strenuous mayor. It shows that the possible achievements of an honest official are not bounded by the technical limits of his power. Mayor Johnson had no legal authority to force the county auditors to raise a railroad's asssessment He simply gave them a little plain speech, fired by the manly indignation of an ear­ nest citizen, and he had his way. There is room for Johnsons. A WEEK IN ILLINOIS. RBCQRO OF HAPPEN INQ# FOM " SEVEN DAYS. ' Mai *e um BMiSfM into Cmm m$ IbrtM--Work •! Motkm' CeegMW , as ChuiwtM--Data* af tfc iHtltatM tar Varmvra. nitaola fkmen' IaatUataa, ^•conference of Farmers' InstitntS \ delegates from the counties of the old Twenty-first congressional district, presided over by W. Kinsey, of Tam- aroa, who Is also president of the State Farmers' Institute, met at Comterviile for the purpose of selecting dates and places to hold the various county In­ stitutes. The following were elected: St Clair County--Belleville, Oct. Si and Nov. 1. Clinton County--Carlyle, Nov. 1 and Monroe County--Waterloo, Nor. II and 13. Randolph County--Sparta, No*, It \ and 14. ; Perry County--Plnckneyville, Nor. 14 and 15. Washington County--Nashville, Nov. 5 19 and 20. Marion County--Salem, Nov. 20, XI and 22. * The congressional round up will he held In connection with the Marion County institute at Salem. W. E. Bro- den, of Cutler, was indorsed by the conference for one of the members of the advisory committee of the state university, as provided for by the hill passed at the laat session of the nois Legislature. *»+e*e*e*e4>e4>e*ai*e*e*e+e+e+a***e*e+e*e*e*e.*e*e<l>e+e4< Grand Duke Michael, heir presump­ tive to the Russian throne, according to dispatches from St. Petersburg, will soon pay a visit to the United States. The duke. In a conversation with Am­ bassador Tower, expressed a keen de- f foah*wr Ar< in China* The accompanying illustration Is a reproduction of a curious Chinese pic­ ture of great antiquity, which is sup­ posed to represnt Noah's ark resting o n M o u n t Ararat Aa is well known, religious lit- e r a t u r e o f almost every nation and race c dn- tains an ac­ count of a deluge, but a jMnese man­ uscript r e- cently unearthed follows very closely the story as recorded in the Bible. It is particularly interesting in that the roof of the Chinese ark is of the gable variety associated with Noah's arks which prove such entertaining toys for our youngsters. The Chinese picture, however, shows a double- storied vessel, and, so far from there being only one window In the roof, there are windows in every possible Ton will notice that what ap- sire to enjoy the hospitality of Ameri­ cans. If he comes he wiH clearly show to the world that the traditional friendship between Russian and the United States can never by petit diplomats. pears to be the sun is shown in the middle of the water. This is probably meant to .show, according to Oriental notions, that the water is evaporating. Why American* Win. One reason why American manufac­ turers are taking away the trade of Great Britain is shown in the experi­ ence of the port commissioners of Cal­ cutta. They decided to purchase nine American railway engines. When It was Announced that they would make their purchases In this country, there was a howl from the British manufac­ turers and the commissioners deter­ mined, in self defense, to give the fig­ ures to the public. The American company offered the engines at $6,890 each and agreed that they should be delivered within six months; the best British figures were $7,746 for each engine on nine months' delivery. The American price was 11 per cent lower than that of the Brit­ ish manufacturers, and the American engines were promised within two- thirds of the time. In the face of this difference, the commissioners point out that they could do nothing else than buy the American engines. The publication of the figures has had the dual effect of silencing their critics at home and setting the British manufacturer to wondering. Work of Sothrni' Congee*. The second annual meeting of the Illinois congress of mothers was held at Charleston. Several hundred delegates attended. The board of con­ trol was in session. The address of welcome was given by President Lord \ of the Eastern State Normal school. The response was by Roger B. Mc< Mueller, president of the Illinois con- gress of mothers. The address of the first evening was by Wilbur S. Jack* man of the Chicago Institute, his sub- . Ject being: "How Parents May In* terest Children in the Study of Na­ ture." A discussion followed, led by Mrs. Marian Foster Washburn, vice president of the mothers' congress. The convention was entertained by the local mothers' club and the sev- . eral reading clubs of the city. The sessions were open to the public and the assembly-room of the normal school was filled. . , w ; ' ef HMMtoiS B»a--. ..' The first day of the Hadfield mur­ der trial at Marion, closed after hear­ ing fourteen witnesses for the people I and a few for the defense. X. Davfa • was the first witness 'examined, and ' testified that he saw the prisoner; | dressed In the uniform of the Carter- Jordan on the train, with pistol In hand, and saw him shoot Jordan. Dr. Theodore Hudson related the story in much the same way. Officer Green said he saw Hadfield shoot Jordan and j within a few minutes arrested Mm, What the defense will be Is unknown, but probably an effort will be made to locate the crime in Jackson county. The train was moving at the time and near the county line, but owing to the confusion, it may be a difficult matter to tell to a certainty where the shooting took place. OaaritaM's Visit to Ckta«fl> . '-p 1L Jules Cambon, the French HfT- v sador to the United States, was the | guest of Chicago for a day and from I the time of his arrival over the Penn­ sylvania road at 9 a. m. until late In the evening, when a banquet was given In his honor at the Union League dub _ ; was concluded, he was the central fig­ ure In a series of receptions and fetee. M. Cambon came to that city to offici- • ally recognize in behalf of the repub- lie of France the union of the Alliance -3 Francaise with the University of Chi­ cago. The alliance's purpose is to in­ crease the use and study of the Jtosssk language In all countries. ItOcKfor Ship Canals. Charles A. Cardot of Paris, France, has recently designed the lock for ship canals shown in the illustration, and he claims that with it vessels of any tonnnage may be raised to a height of more than thirty yards without loss of water by a simple oscillating or tilt­ ing movement of the lock chamber, in Which the vessel floats. The lock Is shown In Its lowered position, having just received a ship from the low level. The empty air space between the two thicknesses of the tilting dock would provide sufficient buoyancy to float the ship to the higher level were it not for a heavy truck stationed at the lowest point in the air chamber. This truck is sufflclent to overbalance the lifting power of the >ater, and in order that the doek may flit on Its pivot point to the opposite end of the air cham­ ber, which gradually allows the longer end of the dock to float upward and raise the ship to the higher leveL At In 1886 the free distribution at seeds by the government amounted to 10,000,000 packets, and now It has reached 24,000,000 packets. either end of the dock is a bulkhead, which forms a water-tight connection with each level. The only mechanical work in connection with the lock Is IMPROVED LOCfc 8TB-FRENCH TEM. that of shifting the truck from one 1 of the lock to the other, which < be done in a few moments. It Is now the duty of the Chinese of­ ficials to convince their people *»>»| foreign devil pays the tax.-*. - 'V. TaaetMro Selected at Chart* The Charleston Board of Education met and selected teachers as follows: Superintendent W. J. Sutherland; principal, William Wall is; C. F. Dav­ idson, C. D. Marquis, A. Washburn. Elizabeth King, Jessie Ross, Susan Orvis, May Patton, Orra Neal, Mary Reat, Gay Anderson, Charlotte Davis, Mary McCrory, Ella Miles, Clara Scheytt, Mary Rltchey, Sadie Leitch, Fannie Vail,. Myrtle Harding, Ella Guiney, Bessie Shaw, Maggie Daniels, Loia Clark, Grace Kane, Anna Ro­ mans, Eva Huffman, Ella Bails, Clara Baiter, Myrtle Record, Phebe Robin­ son. FntaniHr O--t--t at Kwrefcwostanfc The contest between the fraternity and non-fraternity men at Northwest­ ern university to secure control o( the university weekly, the North­ western, shows no signs of diminu­ tion. At the election, which takes place May 24, an editor in chief and a '• business manager are to be elected. IM a Tallow Pa Hk Fagan, secretary of the Plots Board Of Health, dispatched Dr. J. C. Sullivan and Surgeon General Wyman, of the United States Marine Hospital Service, an expert on yellow fever to Gardner, Grundy county where they made a diagnosis of the case of Leland, who recently came there Jacksonville, Fla., and who was s posed to have yellow fever. They port that Leland is not only not suffer­ ing from yellow fever, bat er had the disease. Third Matrimonial Vaalaia, 'Jacob Boehmer, aged 58 years SMl Catherine Schmidt, aged 52, both of St Louis, were married at Waterloo by Judge Charles Metzger. They desired their marriage, which Is their third matrimonial venture, to be kept quiet TM|«d)r ©*ar a John Smith was shot and killed fear his roommate, John Pemberton, at Johnson City. They had quarreled Oier H : *v mm ®si j r r , „ */ - • . rtA&w* mi

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