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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Sep 1902, p. 8

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W J&&-. • :f^y THE MCHENRY PLAIHOEALEB --W1IIIIT FLAUTDBALS& OOk •' £ --_ auHSNxr, - • xzxnron. «.v. General Superintendent Machen of the free delivery system of the post- office department has framed esti­ mates aggregating between $11,000,000 and $12,000,000 for the rural free delivery service In the United States during the next fiscal year. . The esti­ mates will be submitted to Postmaster General Payne for final action. Lieut. G. T. Emmons is on his way ,from Seattle to Washington to report fupon the finding of ancient boundary lines between Alaska and Canada, but refuses to talk until his report is 'made. He eays the setting aside of the Alexander archipelago for forest reserve will not interfere with the settlement of the islands of southeast­ ern Alaska and that development in all lines will be allowed to continue. The forests will be cared for to pre­ serve the smaller growths. John T. O'Sullivan, labor editor of the Boston Globe and prominently Identified with national and state la­ bor organizations, was killed by a train at Lynn, Mass. Professor Luthardt, probably the most noted strictly orthodox theolo­ gian in Germany, died at Leipsic. He was 80 years old. A petition signed by 1,033 persons of various classes on the island of St. Croix has been sent to the Danish min­ ister of finance praying him to use his influence to expedite the transfer of the Danish West Indies to the United 8tates. A suit for ^10,000 damages has been filed against the Bostock-Ferari show at the Elks' carnival, Vincennes, Ind., by Otto Brocksmith, who was injured •by the kick oi a horse frigntened by a bear being led by its trainer on the streets. Capt. James A. Lynch, Twentieth Infantry, who recently arrived at San .Francisco from the Philippines, is un­ der orders to proceed to the depart­ ment of the east, where charges are awaiting him alleging irregularities in business transactions. Frank Buchanan of Indiana was re­ elected president of the International 'Bridge and Structural Iron Workers' nnion at Milwaukee, Wis. New York was selected at headquarters of the union. Mrs. Addie Corby, the much-wanted witness in the hearing ot the motion for a new trial for Frank C. Andrews, did not appear in the recorder's court at Detroit, Mich., and the hearing was indefinitely postponed until Mrs. Cor­ by can be located. The German socialist congress which opened in Munich September 15 adopted resolutions providing for the inauguration of meetings throughout Germany to protest against the price of meat and to autnorize the deputies to interpellate the government re­ garding the scarcity of meat and the boycott against foreign meat. The Chinese authorities have agreed to the articles for the restoration of the New Chwang-Shan-Hai-Kwan rail­ way providing for the auditing of rec­ ords and the carrying of troops and Russian mails. It is understood that the line from Pekin to Shan-Hai-Kwan also will be restored October 8. Sir Ernst Satow, British minister to Chi­ na, refusing to relinquish the road at an earlier date. Prof. Yngvar Nielsen of Christiania, Norway, deduces from Capt. Sver- drup's discovery of deserted Eskimo encampments that the northern limit 'witliiu which it is posible lor human beings to exist in the arctic archipel­ ago must have receded at a compar­ atively decent date and that the ice conditions there are so changed as now to render food unprocurable. The Montreal express over the Grand Trunk Railroad killed at a crossing near West Pownal, Me., Abel Bowie, aged 71; his sister, Rebecca Bowie, aged 64, and Addie Bowie, his daughter, aged 37. A parliamentary return issued at Cape Town shows that 3,437 rebels Who surrendered under the peace proclamation have been disfranchised for life. There have been serious collisions between troops and strikers at Guarda, near Oporto, Spain, during which a number of workmen were killed. Acting Postmaster General Madden has awarded the contract for furnish­ ing stamped envelopes and newspaper wrappers for the postoffice depart­ ment for the four years beginning Jan. 1, 1903, to tho Hartford Manu­ facturing company of Hartford, Conn., it being the lowest bidder: Upward of $3,000,000 will be paid this com­ pany under the contract. Their bid is approximately $85,000 less than the next lowest. Monsignore Guidi, the apostolic del­ egate in the Philippine islands, had another private audience with the pope, during which the pontifT fur­ ther emphasized his desire that the Philippines question be so settled as jto render the relations between Wash­ ington and the Vatican more cordial. Naval Constructor Taylor has left .Washington for Havana to take charge of the injured dry dock at that place. An expert ship fitter was sent by steamer from New York to Havana to assist in the work of re­ pair. Louis W. Pierce of Minneapolis^ a , well known dealer in farm lands, committed suicide by shooting. Howard Page, a real estate broker of Kansas City, pleaded guilty to the charge of embezzling nearly $1,000 • and was sentenced to three years in the penitentiary. a President Roosevelt has appointed Rolla V. Clayton postmaster of French Lick, Ind. Bert Owen of Merrilan, Wis., shot j£' and killed himself in the woods. His 4^f^; '!body was discovered by his aged y i f a t h e r . Tf»« dead body of a man supposed to be that of Jeremiah O'Shaiughnessy, a commercial traveler from Rochester, N. Y., was found in East Cleveland. The man's skull was crushed, and it is supposed that he was struck by a train. At Greenville, Mich., Hawley Ham- macker shot his wife three times with probably fatal results and then killed himself. The couple had separated. He was 26 years and she 20, and they had been married four months. Ebben L. Risk, 28 years old, of Cin­ cinnati, committed suicide by swal­ lowing carbolic acid in Riverside Park at Anderson, Ind., because Fran- cett Girard, an actress of Indianapolis, refused to marry him. He had busi­ ness property at Hamilton, Ohio, and rich relatives at Cincinnati and St Louis. The first report of the royal commis­ sion on the effects of martial law in South Africa recommends the imme­ diate release of 113 prisoners. Superintendent Mike Millar of the Ashland and Sysktwitt railroad was found murdered at Nash, Wis., and two women have been arrested for the crime^ Jealousy is supposed to have beern.he motive for the tragedy. A new journal, the Rand Daily Mail, appeared in Johannesburg for the first time and announced that a loan of $100,000,000, irrespective of the war debt of $500,000,000, will be raised for public works and become an im­ mediate charge on the revenues of Great Britain's new South African colonies. Mrs. Nancy Webb of Canton, Ohio, choked by a crumb of bread, fell and broke her neck. Grace Mackey, aged 22, a school teacher of Newark, Ohio, committed suicide by taking carbolio acid while temporarily Insane. Z. Hudgens, aged 70, died at Marion, I1L, from the effects of injuries re­ ceived from a passenger train on the Illinois Central. George Jones, cashier for a Clinton, Iowa, clothing company, committed suicide because he was accused of rob­ bing his employers of $10,000, and died protesting his innocence. The business portion of Taylor's Falls, Minn., has been practically wiped out by fire, seventeen struc­ tures being destroyed. The loss is about $25,000, and it is doubtful if the city will be rebuilt. A. system of gravel roads twenty-two miles, costing $90,000, was voted for by a big majority in Vincennes townr- •hip, Knox county. EL C. Little of Abiline, Kan., has no­ tified the secretary of state that he declines to be a candidate for attorney general on the allied Populist ticket. His reason is that he is not in sym­ pathy with the movement. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen at Chattanooga, Tenn., ap­ propriated $1,000 to aid the anthracite miners and an official telegram was Bent to President Mitchell announcing the lact. Wm. C. Hilland Olive Gale of Wash­ ington, D. C. were mafried at St. George's church, Hanover square, London. Mr. Hill went to London some weeks ago, but tae wedding was postponed on account of the Illness of Miss Gale. A new 5 per cent government gold loan is announced by Russia, the nom­ inal issue to be $21,200,000. The officials of the Russian ministry of railroads are considering a project for reducing rates so as to enable Siberian butter to be exported from Pacific ports to the United States by way of Vladivostock. William Redmond, the Irish nation­ alist member of parliament, who re­ cently made an incendiary speech at Wexford, has been summoned to give recognizance for hip future good be­ havior. General! Botha, Delarey and De Wet arrived at Antwerp and were re­ ceived with great enthusiasm by crowds of people estimated to have numbered 300.000. The demonstra­ tion was not marred by a single anti- British cry. Commander William S. Cowles, as­ sistant chief of the bureau of naviga­ tion and aid to President Roosevelt, was examined at Washington for pro­ motion to the grade of captain in anticipation of a vacancy in that grade. Commander Cowles stands at the head of his grade and will be en­ titled to promotion on the first va­ cancy. John Rutherford, aged 5; his broth­ er Harry, aged 7, and Byron Moore, aged 5, were killed by the caving in of a sand bank near Williams Sta­ tion, Mich. Rev. T. J. Basset of Thorntown, Ind., a well known Indiana educator and Methodist minister, has been elected president of Upper Iowa University at Fayette. Iowa. Officials of the Imperial Tobacco company of London declare they have not heard of any proposition to com­ bine with the American Tobacco com­ pany. in an audience at Constantinople the sultan formally assured the Russian ambassador, Mr. Zinovieff, that the question of permitting four armed Russian torpedo boats to traverse the Dardanelles under Russia's commer­ cial fiag would be settled to Russia's satisfaction. Richard Roberts of Portage* Wis., a freight conductor on the St. Paul road committed suicide at Columbus, Wis., by .taking carbolic acid and chloroform. He was recently laid off and this is supposed to be the cause of his act. An investigation is alleged to have revealed that George J. Barrett, who committed suicide at Springtleld, 111., was a defaulter for over $10,000. An important change In the Peru­ vian ministry is said to be imminent and will probably terminate the politi­ cal excitement at Lima. Mrs. Minnie A. Baker, a widow of St. L,oui8, has sued the city and health officials for $16,000 damages, alleg­ ing that two of her children died of tetanus resulting from the use of im­ pure antitoxin furnished from the city, and that another child became ill. Mrs. Charles Gate of Grass Creek, Ind., while gathering vegetables in her garden, pricked her thumb with a sand burr, which has caused her death from blood poisoning. The duchess of Marlborough sailed from New York for England on the steamship Teutonic. W. S, Stratton Leaves Bulk Of His Fortune for Great Sanitarium. IS MONUMENT TO HIS FATHER MM Whs Made HI, Million, by Lucky Mining 8trlke Names True- tee# to Carry Out His Wishes Re­ garding Humanitarian Institution. I HIS DAUGHTER King QuaHlls With Princess Stephanie Beside Dead V Queen's Coffin. SEES BODY AFTER SHE LEAVES Disagreement la Due to the Fact That She Married Count Lonyay Against Her Parents' Wishes, Incurring Lasting Hatred of Her Father. The millions of dollars that Win field Scott Stratton, when poverty stricken and in poor health, found in his famous Independence mine at Cripple Creek he has returned to the poor end the sick. The will of the miner who made the greatest strike In Colorado, which was filed for probate at Colorado Springs, gives $1,000,000 to build the Myron Stratton home for aick persons in that city, and practically all the rest of his vast?estate, valued at nearly $20,000,- 000, is set aside to maintain the homo. Stration'8 son, Harry Stratton of Toulon, 111, is given $50,000 on condi­ tion that he does not contest the wllL Stratton was divorced fram his wife when the boy was born. Home for Consumptives. Tho Myron Stratton home is called In honor of the memory of Stratton's father, an Indianian who taught his son the trade of carpenter. In it the consumptives of Colorado, the poor, the disabled and the aged may find a home. Years ago, when Stratton, fever stricken and without money, came to Colorado and was cared for by Tabor, then a millionaire, the idea of such home came to him. w Three years ago, while in Europe, Stratton, made a multi-millionaire by the gold ledge he discovered in 1891, became serious­ ly ill and for three months was in a hospital. Then he planned to estab­ lish a home in Colorado Springs and worked out the details of his plans, which he embodied in his will. Money to Revert to 8tate. The will appoints Carl S. Chamber­ lain of Brooklyn, D. H. Rice of Colo­ rado Springs and Tyson S. Dynes as executors, and the instrument is dated Aug.-5, 1902. The executors are or­ dered to dispose of all his holdings, properties, moneys, and credits, with a few exceptions, and from the money realized to set aside $1,000,000 for the erection of the buildings. The will states that in case any portion of the will is invalidated by any contest that may be brought, Buch part of the estate that la affect­ ed Is to be given to the state of Colo­ rado for the maintenance of its pub­ lic charitable institutions. Safeguards Institution. The objects of the Myron Stratton home are specified to be "the erec­ tion of the home for persons physi­ cally unable to earn their livelihood, whether tnrough advanced age, physi­ cal debility or otherwise are handi­ capped." The will expressly shuts out all those who by reason of disease, in­ decency or insanity would imperil the health and happiness of other in­ mates. The inmates are to be select­ ed by the board of trustees from resi­ dents of El Paso county, in which Col­ orado Springs is located, after which residents of the state may be re­ ceived. The will further provides that the active management be left to a board of trustees and that proper Inspec­ tion of the institute be made under the law. The accounts of the home shall be supervised by the district court or a board of inspectors, to be provided for in the laws of the Insti­ tution. In oder to insure the maintenance of the Myron Stratton home Mr. Strat­ ton instructed that the balance of the estate, not utilized in the establish­ ment of the institution, be reinvested in good interest paying securities, the Income of which is to be turned over to the trustees to be used according to their discretion in keeping up the home. Other Bequests. The will of Mr. Stratton gives the family homestead to Carl S. Chamber- fitin of Brooklyn, N. Y. The will gives E. W. Hamlin of Jeffersonville, Ind., $50,000; to a nephew, Harry B. Ham­ lin, $50,000; to Mrs. Jennie Cobb Stratton of San Jose, Cal., $50,000; to Mary Cobb Smith, a niece, $50,000; to Mrs. Lillian Skelton of St. Louis, $50,- 000; to Elma P. Chamberlain, Brook­ lyn, N. Y., $50,000; to Mrs. Clair Marie Baldack, $50,0*00; to C. S. Cham­ berlain, Brooklyn, N. Y., $50,000. The will further provides that $10,- 000 be left to B. C. Logan of Indian­ apolis, Ind., and to the trustees of the Colorado school for the deaf and blind in Colorado Springs $25,000 is given, to be expended in bettering the condition of the present school build­ ings. Spa, Belgium, cable: King Leo- pold, who was in France when his wife died, arrived here and found his daughter, the Princess Stephanie, at the royal palace, where she had ar­ rived to attend the funeral of her mother, Marie Henrietta, queen of the Belgians, who died on Friday. The king not only refused to speak to his daughter, but ordered her to leave the paiace. The princess consequently left Spa suddenly. She rode to the station in a hired carriage and amid demonstra­ tions of sympathy from the people, took a train for Brussels. Refuses to Meet Daughter. There are various versions of the quarrel at Spa between King Leopold and Princess Stephanie, the most reli­ able of which was to the effect that the princess was in the death cham­ ber when his majesty arrived at the palace. He refused to enter until she had left the room. Princess Clemen­ tine, the king's third daughter, came and took Princess Stephanie away. King Leopold tnen entered the death chamber and prayed before the coffin for twenty-five minutes. The news of the quarrel between the king and the princess spread rapidly. Opposes Her Marriage. Princess Stephanie is the second daughter of the late Queen Marie Hen­ rietta and King Leopold. She mar­ ried the only son of the emperor of Austria in 1881 and was left a widow in 1889. She was married the second time in 1900 to Elmer, count of Ldta- yay. This latter marrikge was against the wishes of x.ing Leopold, who re­ fused to permit it to be legalized. He has been bitter against his daughter, and courts friendly to that of Belgium have declinea to recteive the princess. The body of the queen was placed in a coffin, and the king arrived too late to see It. .The sarvices to-day were imposing. Afterwarus the body was immediately taken to Laeken, ac­ companied by the king, Princess Clem­ entine and Prince Albert, the heir pre­ sumptive. The official funeral services will probably be held at Brussels on September 27. WILL FIGHT THE SUGAR TRUST Spreckies-Kern Combination to Erect a Big Factory. Yonkers. N. Y., special: That the Spreckels-Kern sugar combination, or the Federal Sugar Refining com­ pany, is in deadly earnest,in its fight against the sugar trust is evidenced by its latest move in buying 400 feet of dock frontage on the Hudson river adjoining its present holdings on the north and running to within 200 feet of the refinery of the National com­ pany. On this plot it will erect an­ other structure nine times the size of its present building, with a ca­ pacity of 3,600 barrels of sugar per day. This will give an output of 4,000 barrel* a day, almost double the capacity of the trust's Yonkers factory near by. WHITE GIRLS KISS NEGRE3SE8 Work of Women'a Mission. KeoKuk, la., special: At the Iowa conference of the Methodist Episcopal church the anniversary of the Wom­ en's Foreign Missionary society was the chief feature. The society raised $4,800 of its apportionment of $6,000. Prairie Fire. Huron, S. D., dispatch: The most destructive prairie fire in the history of Beadle county is reported from the northwest. Not a grain or hay stack is left standing in an area twelve miles long by five wide. ^ . . . Senator Bard May Recover. Los Angeles, Cal., special: Sena­ tor Bard is still in grave danger, but his physician says that if a sudden breaking down of his heart can be prevented he will possibly eventually recover. Heart Failure Kills Banker. Worcester, Mass., dispatch: Albert P. Waite, president of the First Na­ tional bank, died suddenly in his doc­ tor's office, where he was being treat­ ed for heart trouble. Parents Resent Methods Employed by Ohio School Principal. Beilaire, O., special: This^city is indignant over the actions of J. D. Defenbaugh, principal of the Fifth Ward school, in forcing white pupils to kiss negro pupils. There had been differences between eighteen of the girl pupils, nine of them colored, and the trouble culminated in an open fight. The principal gave his ulti­ matum to the effect that the white girls must all kiss the negro girls or take a whipping. Frightened, they complied. The parents of the white girls are terribly wrought up over the affair and the school board will call an extra session to investigate the matter at once. EXPLOSION FOLLOW8 A FIRE Peculiar Accident in Mills at Joliet Causes Serious Loss. Joliet, 111., special: In the mills of the Great Western Cereal company a rail in one of the grinders started a blaze. The fire found its way up the chutes to the upper rooms, where a terrific explosion occurred. Portions ot the roof were blown 100 feet and rhe windows and doors demolished. No ope was injured. An automatic fire apparatus flooded the building and the fire was extinguished. The loss, it is estimated, will approximate $5,000. Machias On Way Home. Washington dispatch: The navy de­ partment has received a dispatch that the gunboat Machias, which has been stationed at Cape Hatien for some time, has been relieved by the Cincin­ nati and is now en route to Boston. Seven May Be Dead. Geneva cable: Two French tour­ ists, two guides and three porters who were making an ascent of Mont Blanc have fallen over a precipice and it is feared that they were all killed. Train Kills Woman. Vandalia, 111., dispatch: Mrs. Cap. tolia Austin was struck by an east- bound fast freight train on the Van­ dalia line and instantly killed. She, with her little daughter, Ellen, at­ tempted to cross the track. Salisbury Has the Gout. Lucerne, Switzerland, cablegram: Lord Salisbury's physician says the pa­ tient has a slight gputy affection from which he is suffering, but which gives no ground for anxiety. AMERICA'S NOTE Plan to Arrange an Identical ••Reply to Representation Regarding Jews, LITTLE CHANCE OF AGREEMENT Doubt la expressed as to Ability of Governments to Get Together and Form a Joint Answer That Will Be Satisfactory to All. Vienna cablegram: The powers slgt natory of the Berlin treaty are en­ deavoring to arrange an Identical re- pl/ to the note of Secretary of State Hay concerning the treatment of Jews In Roumanla. Austria, which has ex­ cellent relations with Roumanla, is especially energetic in this direction. According to the present arrange­ ments, the Vienna and Berlin Cab­ inets have decided to decline the American proposition. Although their answers will be couched in very courteous terms, the United States will be given to understand that only the signatories of the treaty have the right to give decisions or take action on the question of the treatment .of foreigners in Roumanla. Doubt Ability to Agree. It is doubtful in initiated circles whether a joint answer can be arrived at, although Germany, Russia and Austria desire it. Neither Austria nor Russia is will­ ing to support the appeal made by the United States in behalf of the Jews of Roumania. It is admitted that the treatment of the Roumanian Jews in­ fringes the treaty of Berlin of 1878, but It Is only one of numerous cases in which this treaty has been vio­ lated without the signatories protest­ ing. Press Is Hostile. The conservative and clerical press of Berlin is hostile in its attitude to the American note concerning the Jews in Roumania, but the indications are that the government will not com­ mit Itself to a course of action cal­ culated to frustrate the objects of the American Initiative. The Cologne Ga­ zette prints an Inspired Berlin com­ munication, in which it is observed that the Roumanians have not got a good case. It admits that the object of the Roumanians is to get rid of their Jews, but is convinced that this object will not be achieved by a pol­ icy of chicanery such as the American circular criticises. Put Clamps on Money. Other European states are sb averse as is America to the Immigration o? destitute aliens. The various chari­ table funds at the disposal of Jewish communities cannot undertake to cope with a social problem of such magni­ tude. Thus the friends of the Jews find themselves reduced to the neces­ sity of putting pressure on the Rou­ manian government by the influence they are able to exert on the money markets of the world, on the good will of which Roumania is peculiar­ ly dependent in view of the position of her finances. The dispatch con­ cludes by strongly urging the Rou­ manians to deal with the Jewish problem so as to remove the present grievances of the Jews and obviate the recurrence of unwelcome inci­ dents such as the American circular. PLAN FOR NEW ILLINOI8 ROAD Projected Line Will Extend From Peoria to Murphysboro. Carlyle, 111., special: The citizens of Carlyle are manifesting much in­ terest in a meeting to be held here Wednesday next for the purpose of considering a proposition to build a north and south railroad. The pro­ moters, accompanied by C. W. Bliss and Edward A. Cross, representative citizens of Hillsboro, will attend the meeting. The northern terminal of the pro­ posed line will be Peoria, 111. The road will pass ihrough Springfield, Pawnee, Sunobia, Harvel, Hillsboro, Greenville, Carlyle, Nashville and Plnckneyville, the southern terminus being Murphysboro. This road, If built, will traverse rich coal fields and a fertile farming country. FINED $1,500 BV TRADE UNION Heavy Penalty on Former Officer Who Refused to Strike. Kansas City, Mo., special: James McCarrlck, former president of the Boilermakers' union of Kansas City, Kan., has been fined $1,500 by his for­ mer coworker^ for refusing to walk out when the order came for the strike of the Union Pacific employes. It is said to be the largest fine ever imposed on a recalcitrant by a labor organization. McCarrick has been in the employ of the Union Pacific com­ pany for thirty years. Recently the local union tried the former members who did not strike and, besides Mc­ Carrick, others were fined sums aver­ aging $200 each. Elevator Burns. Homer, 111., dispatch: The el jva- tor owned by J. F. Current burned to the ground. Nine thousand bushels of oats and an equal amount of corn were consumed. The loss is $16,- 000, partlally^covered by insurance. Ex-Governor Hoadley's Will. New York city special: The will of George W. Iloadley, former governor of Ohio, who died at Watkin's Gleo N. Y., on Aug. 25, was filed here. He leaves all his estate, valued at $215,< 000, to his wife, Mrs. Mary Hoadley. Buggy Company Assigns. Marshalltown, Iowa, special: The Rhoades Carmean Buggy company, one of the largest carriage concerns in the West, has made an assignment. The assets are $206,567 and the lia­ bilities $212,262. Refuse Library Site. Eau Claire, Wis., special: The city council has refused to accept the deed ot tho Carnegie library site selected oy the library board and ordered the deed returned to the grantor. ADMITS GUILT / -• > vA* Grandson of Brlgham Young rAids Murderer to v of Woman's Body. TRIED TO DISMEMBER CORPSE Nerve Failed' Him and He Removed Remains In a Trunk, Sending Them to Chicago, Where Accomplice Was to Claiqnthe Baggage. William Hooper Young confessed to the murder of Mrs. Annie Pulitzer at New York after having been abso­ lutely identified in Bert Edwards, who was arrested in Derby, Conn. The pblice of Derby officially announce that Young admitted his identity and in addition to his confession, the de­ tails of which they withhold, the auth­ orities possess a mass of circumstan­ tial evidence. This is Young's confession In sub- stance: "I am William Hooper Young. "In justice to myself I want to make this confession of the part I played In the killing of Mrs. Pulitzer, of which 1 am aocused. J did not commit the crime alone. If I am guilty at all, it is only in part, and that not the great­ er part. I had an accomplice. Woman Was Dead. "The woman was dead when I found her. That is all I can say here. She was dead when I found her. I in­ flicted the wound in the abdomen, but she was dead before I did it It was I also who put the body in the closet. And it was I who disposed of the body. "But with all my connection with the crime I solemnly protest that the woman was dead before I laid hands on her. "Afterward we went away together. Thursday we spent in Brewster, hav lng walked there. I do not care to say what we did after that, but I think my accomplice is in Bridgeport now. Accuses Another. In his confession Young claims that another accomplice actually commit­ ted the murder. Young is reported le have stated that he and Charles Simpson Eiling of Bridgeport, Conn., lured the woman to Young's fiat, where Young left them for a while On his return Young says that Eiling, who immediately fied, told him that he had killed the woman by giving her a dose of chloral hydrate in a glass of beer. Tried to 8ave Friend. Anxious to save his friend, Young SSid that ±16 attcuiptSd tO diSHiSmbSr the body, but that 'his nerve failed him and he subsequently removed it in a trunk. No such man as Eiling is known in Bridgeport and the police regard the confession as an effort on the part of Young to shield himself. Eiling is the name to which Young addressed the trunk to Chicago. Young says that he expected Eiling to go to Chicago and claim the trunk. Is Terror-Stricken. Young, ever since his arrest In the guise of a tramp, had shown signs of nervousness, but these developed Into the extreme of terror when several of his former friends entered the cell and swore to his identity as the grandson of Bringham . Young, the Mormon leader. Since that time his condition has grown worse, his whole body twitching spasmodically, while at fre­ quent. Intervals he is seized with an ague fit of violent trembling. He per­ spires unduly and water literally dropped from his finger tips while he was under examination. SAFE BLOWERS LOSE THE BOOTY Drop Money They Had Taken From Car Company at Janesvllle. Janesvllle, Wis., special: The safe in the office of the Janesvllle Street Railway company was blown open with nitroglycerin by three masked men, who overpowered the watchman and bound him. The safe was blown to atoms. The watchman freed him­ self an hour later and gave the alarm. The thieves were in the Janesvllle pearl button factory at the time pre­ paring to blow the safe and fled at the alarm, leaving behind them the mjohe^ they had taken from the street car safe. FIRE THREATENS A BIG LINER Attorney General Knox Aids in Keep­ ing Women in Ignorance. New York special: The American liner St. Pau lhad a fierce fight with frames in midocean, but the peril was kept from all the women. Attorney General Knox, who was on board, was one of the men who was Intrusted with the secret by Capt. John C. Jam. ison, and he aided the officers in keep­ ing the passengers below decks. Ex cellent discipline prevailed and there was not a sign of panic. The fire started in the clothes room and blazed for twelve hours. The origin is un­ known. TO ANSWER NOTE :i " Immediate Reply Is Looked for to Charge of Cruelty^" to the Jews, . 5 GERMANY WITH UNITEDSfATES Kaiser's Government Is Likely to Take 'Action In Sympathy Wltlr*' That of America, Following the Stand Taken by Great Britain. Engine Breaks Man's Neek. Hebron, Ind., dispatch: Paul Do- menito was Instantly killed here. While standing close to the railroad track with a crowbar on his shoulder hn engine struck the end of the bar with such force as to break his neck. Dynamite a Postoffice. .Teffersou, OMo, dispatch: Tiree masked robbers dynamited the post- office safe here, securing $250 In cash and $800 in stamps, and escaped by train. Night Watchman Jones was bound and gagged. Lord Salisbury Is III. Lucerne, Switzerlaa^«<ntbTegram: Lord Salisbury, the former British premier, is confined to his room here, owing to a chill and a severe attack of gout. The symptoms are not yet considered "exceptionally grave." Offers Burns Manuscripts. Liverpool cablegram: J. pferpont Morgan has offered several thousand original Burns manuscripts which are now in Edinburgh to the Athenaeum library in that city. The Roumanian government, with­ out waiting for the result of pending diplomatic action, will reply at onca to the charges made against it ln| the note addressed to the powers bfl the United States protesting against the treatment of tho Roumanian Jews, j Germany Sympathizes. Though the attitude of the German government has not yet been defined, it la probable that it will be one at sympathy with the American action, particularly as It is assumed in Berlin that Secretary Hay received ao* surance3 before moving that he would be supported by the British cabinet. The powers are now exchanging views on the American note. The comment of the Berlin press on Secretary's Hay note shows how ) deeply the action of the United States has impressed political and diplomatic circles here. Europe Should Remove Wrongs. "The American note to the Berlin signatories," says the Vossische Zel* tung, "represents one of the most in­ teresting documents in contemporary* hlBtory and is one of the most re­ markable political acts of the present day, for it is the first time that the diplomacy of the United States draws into its sphere of activity occurrences i within a European commonwealth. Under any circumstances, the United States has the sympathies of the civ­ ilized world, and it would be highly shameful to the governments of Eu­ rope that the wrongs should be re* moved by the action of America." Out of Line. There are discordant notes. The Lokalanzeiger says: "The note is quite characteristic at > the American style of thinking. It is peculiar that the United States, so jealous of the Monroe doctrine, should concern itself with a matter which is strictly European, and more par­ ticularly the internal business of an 1 independent kingdom." SHOT DEAD BY POLICE OFFICER and Peace Guardian Is Stabbed Forced to Defend Himself. Areola, Illinois, special: Policeman Walter Craft shot and killed William W. Gamble on the main street of Ar­ eola. Craft now lies in a critical con­ dition from injuries received in the battle with Gamble, his brother Wal­ ter and Winnie Whitley, a broomcorn cutter. William Gamble and Whitely had been drinking and when Craft tried to quiet them a fight ensued. One of the trio stabbed the officer In the neck. Craft then drew his revol­ ver and shot William Gamble. The coroner's jury exonerated Craft The decedent was 21 years old and mar­ ried. THE LATEST MARKET REPORTS, Wheat. New York--No. 2 red, 75c. Chicago--No. 2 fed, 72%@7Sc, St. Louis--No. 2 red, 65%c. Kansas City--No. 2 hard, 66%c. Duluth--No. 1 hard, 70%c. Toledo--73 %c. Milwaukee--No. 1 northern 73 %c. Minneapolis--No. 1 northern, 68^ Corn. New York--No. 2, 78c. Chicago--No. 2, 58 *4 @58 He. St. Louis--No. 2, 62c. Kansas City--No. 2 mixed, 68)£c. Peoria--No. 8, yellow, 57c. Toledo--61 %c. Oats. New York--No. 2, 32 %c. Chicago--Standard, 34@36c. St. Louis--No. 2, 29c. Kansas City--No. 2 white, S4& Milwaukee--Standard, 32%@34c. Peoria--No. 3 white 31® 32c. Cattle. Chicago--$2.75@8.65. Kansas City--$1.50@8.00. St Louis-^.75@7.75. Buffalo--$1.50@8.00. Omaha--$2.70® 8.25. Hogs. Chicago--$5.60® 7.90. Kansas City--$6 @7.56. , St. Louis--$7.25@7.95. Buffalo--$5.5 0 @ 8 00. Omaha--$6 @7.5 5. 8heep and Lambs. Chicago--$2 @5.25. Kansas City--$2@4.30. St. Louis--$1.50@5.40. Omaha--$2.00@5.00. Buffalo--$1.75 @6.65. ( Laying Pacific Cable. Victoria, B. C., special: The cable steamer Colonla has landetl the land end of the Pacific cable at Bamfield creek and has started on its long trip to Fanning island, paying out the cable as it proceeded. Attempts Suicide in Jail. Des Moines, Iowa, special: Mrs. James Gaullagher, who was arrested for alleged complicity with James Hol- ada in the murder of her hus&and, tried to kill herself while in j*n, I* Accused of Arson. v Charleston, W. Va., special: Four- teen strikers were arrested and are now in jail at Fayetteville, charged with setting fire to the power house of the Victoria Coal company at Caperton. Kaiser Wants Criticisms. Birmingham cablegram: It is paid the Kaiser has asked Earl Roberts and Maj. Gen. Corbin to Bend him re» ports of their opinions of the recept German maneuvers. mailto:2.75@8.65 mailto:1.50@8.00 mailto:75@7.75 mailto:1.50@8.00 mailto:7.25@7.95 mailto:2@4.30 mailto:1.50@5.40 mailto:2.00@5.00

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