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‘MINNESOTA HISTORICAL Daily Pioneer BEMIDJ1, MINNESOTA. TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1906. ¥ TEN CENTS PER WEEK lmn FIGHT ON IN 10 |POWIE WAL APEAL GASE| ADMITS TRIPLE MURDER ; ?T— .PARTICULARLV OBJECTS TO DE- The Bemidji VOLUME 4. NUMBER &88. TOGONTINUE AGITATION | o=v=cmve ox mwe stawo. | FUGITIVE BEHIND THE BARS EOBEIGNERS NEED PROTECTION. Swears to Breaking Open Coachman’s Trunk and Securing Letters. Consuls at Yekaterinoslav Appeal to : Their Governments. Yekaterinoslav, Russia, July 31.— FORMER MAYOR OF PATERSON, Pittsburg, July 31.—When the trial i N | SOCIAL DEMOCRATS WILL SUP.| A“gustfis o bt v Cbicin s e REPUBLICA ATE COMMITTEE [ /0 0\ THAT CHURCH O ATH | |There is very great agitation smong | NEGRO BOY CONFESSES TO KiLL- | PORT THE RUSSIAN REVOLU- [ divorce from Mrs. Mary Scott Hartje L Jy MEETS TO ARRANGE CONVEN- 18, THEASONABLE ;‘:5 ‘t’:;k‘::;ne :: ::fs'?::t:;w :‘:strlc:- ING PENNSYLVANIA WOMAN L ! TIONARY GROUPS. YT el e B Tl el TolGIVEHIMSELE Ve TION PRELIMINARIES. tully prevented a strike, urging the AND TWO CHILDREN. necessity for continuing work until the signal is given from Moscow and St. Petersburg. At Yuzovka and = Yekaterinodar, | JARROWLY ESCAPES MOBS' WRATM however, without waiting for the gen- eral signal, many factory and mine workers have struck. The' foreign consuls at Yekaterinos- | TWICE SAVED BY THE OFFICERS satite lav have made representations to their TER AND A BOLT IS AMONG 5 governments regarding the necessity WHO WERE TAKING HIM TO Dowle himself made the announce- | gor protecting foreign subjects, three THE POSSIBILITIES. ment that action toward an appeal | foreign mamim of mills ,f,m,,g been THE COUNTY JAIL. has been taken at a meeting at Shiloh | attacked during the last week. A ¢ House, Zion City, attended by nearly | German manager was shot with a re- 7 100 of his loyal supporters. Whether | volver and killed while leaving his “cg“s:i‘:"c‘:;t r‘;“""_"o:';i:"m}:f‘;“": the appeal will be taken to the United | factory, a Belgian manager escaped n mi ur- | giates supreme court or to the United | d¢ath through the intervention of a ing the morning to arrange the pre- States circult court of appeals-has not policeman, whom the workmen shot fiminaries for the state ;convention, been decided definitely. dead, and a French manager was com- which will be held here Wednesday. | [ nig address Dowle a ppeared to | Pelled to flee under menace of death. | Dineteen-year-old negré, who had been The counties in the state are entitled | he more concerned over Judge Landig’ |, The garrison here has been reln- | arrested for the murder of Mrs. Sam- to 1,640 delegates. About 200 seats | denunciation of the “restoration host | forced by a detachment of dragoons. |uel Pearce'and two children and the a private detective agency. The witness testified that he had |, visited Coachman Madine’s room twice Paterson, N. J., July 31.—Willlam B FAVOR GENERAL STRIKE AND UPRISING ' and. with John A. Anderson, another | 1. Belcher, former mayor of this city, detective, had broken open Madine's | yetimieq to Paterson early in the day trunk and rgmoved the famous love railroad and lotters. He identified the court ex-|OR @ tiain on the Erle ' CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY TO DE- | hibits as the missives taken. surrendered himselt to David Morris, | ppg) \NG APPARENTLY. VERY BIT- During Staubb’s testimony Mrs. | Bight warden of the county jail. CIDE ON FUTURE FORM OF | y1) 450 appeared uneasy and then| Belcher was forced by his poverty GOVERNMENT. angry, while her husband’s manner | to give himself up. He had been In was apparently one of cool indiffer- | New York for several days. He de- ence. Madine came into court while | clared he had no means with which to the witness was still on the stand and, | make restitution of the funds which St. Petersburg, July 31.—The cen- | after listening intently to the testi- | ye js alleged to have obtained before tral committee of the Social Demo- | Moy for a time, hurrledly left the | ne fied from the city and that he was erats has been hastily summoned here °°;::|3:’b‘]';vas siibeiten. o 8 ViEDGIS ,‘:;‘,f,“ to answer the charges against irom the provinces. It has been for- cross-examination and the relation of ‘Boldhier has: not [Been ‘auk: of tiio mally decided to support the action of the methods and code of signals Which | eountry, in spite of rumors that he the revolutionary groups last week in [he and his brother detective used in was in the Hawallan Islands and pushing the a general | procuring the letters caused much | china. Since his, disappearance he Chicago, July 31.—John Alexander Dowle will appeal from the decision of Judge Landis of'the federal court de- claring Zion City a trust estate and holding that the deposed first apostle has no individual proprietorship in the BOTH FACTIONS CLAIMING CONTROL Canonsburg, Pa., July 31.—Coroner W. H. Sipe and Constable John J. Mil- ser of Canonsburg drove Into town at ¥:30 a. m. with Elmer Dempster, a strike and uprising. Dem- | amusement. has wandered about the country, ob- | are contested. The control of the tem- | oath” as treasonable than any other | CANADA EATS GOOD MEAT. |®hooting of a third child. Dempster ocratic central committee in reso- Staubb was um\h_le to tell what taining employment where and when | porary organization of the convention | point in the opinion. He déclared that —a was taken to the Washington county lutions announced that the aim of the |other articles were in the trunk and | he ¢oylg and was finally forced by | will depend upon the action of the | the judge himself in his oath of office Official Tests Made of Beef, Some of | J2il at Washington, Pa. - revolution is to sceure a constituent | Several times became badly tangled | giregs of clrcumstances to return to | state committee regarding these con. | Was compelled to put God above man It From America. ‘While no bloodstains were found on assembly of the Russian peopls to de- | under the m-kj ult uu(‘sl];nnlst. tl:‘(:‘:(;:‘l“’g the city where he once had friends. | egtg, 3 and family ties. . Ottawa, Ont., July 31.—When Syd. | the Prisoner suspicion first rested on cide ou the tuture form of government. | SheIeGon Bos (Aon ST 0 3 C AT | | Belchor has been missing since AUS. | goyernor Cutgmins, who 15 a candi | Received No Money a Trustee. | ney. Fishen, winitor ot agriculture, | Bim when it Was learned that he was M. Alladin, who was leader of the | gudt b0 el B o T S e e catoron | date for renomypation, clatms to have | e regard to the trust estate fing. | 25ked his department to investigate | the last person seen about the house group of toil in the outlawed parlia- | e R to draw him out of financial. dificul- | Malority of te delegates. The ad- | ing, he declared that he had never | 31 Feport upon the sanitary condition | before the tragedy. Dempster was a - ment, has arrived here from London, Three Estates Destroyed. ties. ‘They did mot know at the time | herents of Georke D. Perkins, who is | received money as a trustee, but that | ©f the canned meat industry and |helper on the Pearce farm and after A where he went (o attend the confor-| Samara, Russia, July $1L—Three | ot A S0 B0 IO 8L U8 SO0 |aley candidate for governor, maintain | It was alwars simply o mattor of oo Slaughterhouses of Canada he at tho | the departure o Samuel Pearco with . ence of the Interparliamentary union, | 1arge estates in this vicinity were de-| 1,504 90,000 by fraudulent represen. | that there werejirrogularitios in quite | tract, evidenced 'in writing, showing 2’:"‘;,3;’: *:;:::i‘;fl “:;itg the mln:st?r his sister, Miss Fanny Pearce, for the but he is carefully concealing his| stroyed during the night. The peds| atjon gang tnat $5,000 was taken from'|a number of the county conventions | all payments to be debts, payable in de of oo | Laonsbure-ralifodd dtation Dempster vhereabouts ants are cutting the wood on the| ypo Manchester Bullding and Loan |gnd h Sated one year on call. made of canned goods as offered for | is said to have been at the scene of maerealolS, o crown and private forests. e h he th and have contégled and protested the It the eléctl dered ‘by Judge | 521¢ throughout the Dominion. The | the tragedy looking after the stock. y - L fihala W association, of which he was the pres- | gelegations seldited by the majority the election ordered "by Judge | 0. oe e B » Names and Divorces, ident. = Landis be carried out, he said, the | [°PO't Of the department of agricul- | He was taken from his bed at 2 An Australian divorce court judge ! e What Belcher did with the money in such conventions. If the state cen- eople of Zion will be viclating ‘e ture is not yet completed, but the an- | o’clock In the morning and put through thinks that there is a subile rounce- he obteined has never been told. . He | tral committee decides to take up the e tamtte, len very foun. | 217518 by the chief analyist, Thomas | a course of sweating which lasted un- tlon between high sounding feminine Member of Parliament Jailed, neither smoked nor drank,-was an | atter of contested seats and to pre-| gavion stone of the church. He em. | MacFarlane, is finished. MacFarlane, | til daylight, when, it is said, he made baptismal names and matrimonial un- o pare a prelimnjary roll of delegates In his report, says that 322 samples | a complete contession. s B e, an i 1.4 bhe | _ Breslau. July 31.—A dispatch to the | exemplary family man'and had never for the conventipn to take part in the phasized that the people had not called collected throughout Canada were an- 5 ““Pp"‘es_il h“‘ ‘-‘_j"‘_“’f'“‘“ than ‘l‘_“ Schleische Zeitung from Brest-Litovsk, | got into any difficulties. - 21| remporars orga‘a’izauan 1t Is assoriaq | Mim nor placed him as head of the alyzed. This included samples from Money and Revolver Missing. names which generally u:mu ‘\nule‘rv s | pussta, sz that a member of the —_— v | church, but that he, as God’s chosen > The only things missing from the Judicial cognizance are Gladys, Gwen- ! BY TRAMPS. by friends of Mr. Perkins that they. i : the United States as well as Canada y B! g ady:s Toutlawed parliament from Grodno, S. MURDERED e G & za. | ™2 had admitted each individual Pearce home are $12 and dolen, Rrmyntrude and the ke avd |p yeoiaiachit hag been arrested by o g il ontsol meépre"mmm OFBANI: | member into the church. He held fur- | Packed meats. In only four samplos d th o I . wlal_: antle: c)eanu that he seldom or never in his official i _* hombont 2 s k Braki Northern Pacific Shot | tion. : - out of the 322 were found any evi- | aM 2 Tevalyer Whicl rs. ! , @ detachment of troops. No reason | Brakeman on Northern Pacific N (I ther that Judge Landis erred in confin- % capacity hears of a Mary or a Bridget. | Was siven, : and Killed. Intend to Agsert Their Rights. ing the vote to those living In Zion | 61CES Of decomposition. The report | Pearce and her two children were mur. is, therefore, considered highly sat. | dered. - isfactory. Robert Pearce, nineteen years old, A e g the only survivor of the awful tragedy, GALLANTLY RESCUES TROOPER.| who was shot through the body, will Dickinson, N. D., July 31.—Brake- man O. S. Carr was shot and killed by hobos on a moving Northern Pacific The friends Governor Cummins, | City. These constitute only one-fourth insisting ‘that they have the majority, | of the entire church and thereby three- intend, {t1s saidj to assert their rights | fourths of the members are prevented % o ° freight train near Gladstone. Brake- | and tofake chdfge of the convention | from having-a voice as to thelr spirit- —_ be brought to the Canonsburg general B P n P t man Frank Stine received a slignt themw{efl‘ A ual leader. . John Jacob Astor Saves Member of | nospital in an effort to save his life. wound in the ankle from the same The: feeling on both sides is ap- His Regiment. According to the story told in his a gal S ln an S source, parently very bitter and if the state | NEED FOOD AND CLOTHING. | wiscor Bng, July $1—Second confession young Dempster attempted Four hobos were in a car when the | central committee makes up a pre- - S Lieutenant John Jacob Astor, son of | 8n assault on the four-year-old daugh- brakemen entered and were fired upon | liminary.roll Which gives the Perkins | Receiver of Zion City Appeals for Help | iy, ¥is 1070 S0608 gallantly res- | ter after the departure of Mr. Pearce, In order to close out the | with the above result, men cénfrol at'fhe start it is not un- for Dowle’s Followers, cued a trooper of his regiment, the | but was frustrated by the mother, Two tramps were caught and Sher- | ltkely that the proceedings of the con-| gzion City, 1lL, July 31.—John Hately,. | First Lite guards, from drowning in | Who went to a bureau to get a revolver balance of our stock of vention frem the beginning will be “characterized by -thre-liveliest kind of a verbal warfare and.a bolt is among iff Hartung has a posse scouring the country for the others. Carr was a single man, about thirty-five years. of age, and was reared in Mandan, where the remains were taken. receiver for the Zion City industries, the river Thames. Lieutenant Astor’s | to shoot him. The negro says he se- has issued an appeal to the few mon- troop was engaged in swimming prac- | Cured the gun first and after killing eyed followers of the Dowie doctrines | tice” when a trooper’s horse got into | the mother and shooting the children the possibilities. 2 to contribute for-the-relief of the des- | dificulties in midstream and kicked | 8et fire-to the-house to hide the crime. The committee is understood to |titute of the community. During the |his rider. The latter sank in deep | Feeling'against Dempster 15 running: stand seven “stand pat” and four “pro- | past year the .influx of contributfons | water and young Astor dived in and | high. gy 2 gressive,” the former being the war has waned sadly, Receiver Hately brought out the soldier in time to cry of the Perkins men and the latter | says. A large percentage of the popi- | enable the latter to be restored to the slogan of the Cummins followers. | Jation is underfed and insufficiently | life, Men’s pants we will make a great reduction in our prices. Look at our win- EIGHT PERSONS DROWNED. OFFICERS SAVE .Pllfisflfifi- dows and you will be con- Two Yachts Capsize Off the New Jer- declared that the matter was very rgent and the warden consented. 78%c; Sept., 74% @74%c. Corn—July, [were killed and more than twenty = — — Blc; Sept, 50%ec. Oats—July, 33c; | were injured by the explosion of a oth men responded promptly and Sept, 32%c. Pork—Sept., $16.05. Flax | boiler at the plant of the Vincennes |21 interviews. with Harry Thaw. at chine. Guns. before establishing the responsibility > —Nothing doing. Butter—Creameries, | Paper Mills company. The property 11 ; 16@20c; dairies, 16@17%¢c. Eges—12 |loss is $16,000. :‘,:: ‘:j',lm":""e Mra. Willlam Thavlatt i i e Feivo A e . * @15¢. Poultry—Turkeys, 12¢; chick- The boiler was hurled through the ‘When the elder Mrs. Thaw came St. Petersburg, July 31.—The for the accident and determining on ens, 11c; springs, 14@16c. root of the bollerhouse, over the main | gown to the warden's office there were | ©MCIal telograms from Poltava, where | the diaclplinary measures to be taken. wored crulser Dupetit Thouars while the crew of the latter were engaged in small arms practice. The author:- Russian Troops at Poltava Use Ma-|4io: nere are .p'.m“ faller ,:m i : sey Coast. The outcome is uncertain, since, |clothed and the land into which they Two Attempts Made by Mobs to Se- vinced that we mean what Anglesea, N. J, July 31—Two | With the contested delegations elim- |put thelr savings has little value un- cure Negro. yachts coming in from the fishing | Inated, the two factions will be about | der existing conditions. Prompt re- | TROOPS ASKED TO REVOLT. Washington, Pa, July 31.—Elmer we say. banks capsized on Hereford inlet bar | equally dlvide{l, the majority either |lief is needed and Mr. Hately hopes to . = Dempster was safely lodged in jail off here and eight persons lost thelr [ Way not exceeding perhaps twentyfive. |get it from the wealthy members of | APPeal of Russian Parliament to Army | here at 9 o'clock. The officers had-an B lives. — the community. and Navy. exciting trip from Canonsburg. ~ Two 3 - There were thirty-ltwo persons on | STOLYPIN NOT DISCOURAGED. Bee S i St. Petersburg, July 31.—Stirring | attempts were made to take the negro Gent's one yacht, of whom seven were lost, — LoLlhs DIVOR(iCAsE CALLED; appeals and unveiled threats are con- | from them. ishin: and twelve on the other, all of whom | Continues Negotiations to Reorganize tained in the address to the army and Shortly after leaving Canonsburg a Furnishings but one were saved, Cabinet. Work ot Selecting a Jury Now I | navy by the radical groups of the late | erowd of about twenty men boarded = 15¢ collars.. ... .......5c That not more fell victims to the | gt Potersburg, July 31.—Premler fograse: parliamont, issued last week and now | the car and with shouts of “lynch him, i rough sea was due to the heroism of | Stolypin has not abandoned hope of | Remo, Nev, July 31.—The air of | for the first time made publig. The |kill him,” dragged the prisoner and 3 25¢ suspenders, ... 18c Captain Henry 8. Ludlam of the Here- | inducing public men, outside of bu- | MYStery being thrown-over the Corey |address contains the following: . officers from the car. — B ford inlet lifesaving station and a . | divorce case by attorneys attracted “Firstly—To cease to obey the il-| A fierce struggle followed, but the . reaucratic spheres, to enter a reor- # Men’s 50¢ ties 38¢c crew of five men, ganized cabinet and carry out his pol- | the most interest when it was called | legal government and to actjvely op- | officers succeeded in keeping posses- rerrr _— « ” for trial in the Second district court | pose it in conjunction with us and the | sion of the negro and finally drove the fcy of “strong handed reform.’ = = H. H. Weakly, publisher of the of Nevada at Reno. Mrs. Corey, at- [ whole of the poor population. You|mob off at the points of their revol- @ Negotiations with M. Guchkoff, B N Dfai';on (?i)khvening Herald and one Prince Lvoff and Count Heyden are tended by her son, Allan Corey, and | have taken an oath to defend the | vers. of the well known newspaper men of her ‘sister-in:law, Miss Corey, ap-|Fatherland. Stand beside us for land | When Washington was reached Dry Goods Ohio, is dead, aged sixt . ) s y-nine. peared in court. William E. Corey, | and liberty. nearly 300 persons had gathered at the Look at 10¢ Embroid- John Holmes Goodenow, who for president of the United States Steel [ “Secondly—Any man who shoots at | courthouse, but the crowd was eluded ook at our llc Kmb many years rcpresented this country corporation, . defendant in the action, | the peovle is a criminal, a traitor and | by taking the prisoner through the " as secretary of legation and charge is not present. He is represented by | an enemy of the people. We inform | basement to the Jail ery counter. We have R & fo o ootantinopla, 1a dana ot T. L. Chadbourn of Pittsburg and Sar- | all such, In the name of their fathers some unheard of values. [§| Atlantic City, N. J. dis Sumerfield of Reno, formerly Unit- and brothers, that they will not be| TROOPS GUARDING NEGRO. i The Central Federated union of New ed States district attorney. allowed to_return to their homes and —_ — York city, after a long debate, has The plaintiff at once demanded a |that over their names will hang the | S8pecial Grand Jury Called in Case of decided to go into politics in accord- jury trial and the task of selecting a |leternal curse of the people. Kentucky Assaulter. » ance with the recommendation to the Jury is now in progress. Each juror “Thirdly—The government entered Mayfield, Ky., July $1.—Judge E. T. " MuSlln Underwear affiliated unions made by President s belng closely questioned in resad | into negotiations with the Austrian [ Bugg has empaneled a spocia) srand . ] Gompers of the Fedzration of Labor. o s scruples upon fhe matter of |and German emperors and: German | jury here in the case of Allen Mathias ] .y " _— : divorce and his knowledge of the pres- | troops are ready to invade our country | tpo alleged zssaflant of Miss McClain, - LadleS M“Slln Undel‘wea!’ at cost MARKET QUOTATIONS. i oaze. to defend the government which op- | anq an order was made by the court . — Mrs. Corey again flatly declined to | poses the people with the power of turn Minneapolis Wheat. make a statement. “You must excuse | foreign ai i irecting: Jafler - McCracken o B - — - = 3 3 gn arms. : Minneapolis, July 30.—Wheat—July, | me” she said, simply, when ques- }&?m‘;::.r e Sraves ointy oo L d- ’ G “ T4%c; Sept, T4%c; Dec., T6%c; May, oned e 1 have to say will be- | RESULTS IN SEVERAL DEATHS.| " jcting under the orders of Governor : 803%ec. On track—No. 1 hard, 77%e; S0me public when: I am:placed, on the Beckham Judge Bugg ordered Capt K a les 0 ars No. 1 Northern, 76%c; No. 2 North- wl;?ess sts:nd.; N e Panic Follows Firing of Revolver Out- Boswell mm}‘g:w Cm:pany |c.?£ . .« 9 ern, 76%c¢; No. 3 Northern, 73% @74c. one of the attorneys involve side Polish Church. armory in this city at 3 p, m., armed Some Good Values in Ladies’ Collars e '} yould make a statoment outlning the | tucesy: yuly 51— Wil the charch | aad squioped. Thars s Mhee Sowds Duluth Wheat and Flax. line of defense or prosecution. They of Wilanow, a suburb of Warsaw, was | in town and business is at a stand- at 150 and 350 Duluth, July 30.—Wheat—To arrive have declined to be interviewed by .04 with worshippers an unknown | still. ;:ID%EI%Norgl:r;;;l;%g‘: N]o-N 2 I;J:rth- Mawspaper, men, person outside began firlng rapidly | A mob entered the jail in this city = == E————em— e , C. —No. orthern, £ with a revolver. A panic followed, the | at an early hour in the morning, but . ey By 4 PREMIER STOLYPIN, " 3 ) 77%c; No. 2 Northern, 76%c; July, THAW'S RELATIVES AGITATED. church service was broken up and the | failed to find the negro. 77c; Sept., 75%¢. Flax—To arrive and | still in progress. The final refusal of T congregation, in a wild effort to es- ew be ts an urses §n mrack, §112%; July, §114; Sept, | men enfoying the full confidence of | Mother e e "™ ™ | cape, crowded on board a forryboat, | EXPRESSES DEEP REGRET. 1.12%. conservative public opinion to co-oper- i ng Son's bt which sadk, drowniug five persons. = ; . [ ) T PR ate with the premier would render his | New York, July 31.—During the day | The affuir indicates tho nervousness | French Government and Killing “of A Shlpment Of Ladles Belts- L00k . st s;' P]’"' ‘:"';: Stock Vards, task of even measurably pacitying the | while Mrs. William Thaw was still in of the people. Nc day passes without Lieutenant England. T h 0 B atu, Ju;; 0.—fi(;x:)tvtle—(}oml tfl‘ country almost hopeless, conference with her son Mrs. Harry | tragic occurrences. In the city park Parls, July 31.—The French em- - L em vver. f :’ ag ‘sogerg.fiz.»fi @5.50; common to TR T K. Thaw came hurrying to the war- |last Saturday evening a maa fired into bassy at Washington has been in- air, $4.00@4.560; good to choice cows ¥ e den's office from Thaw's cell. She | a crowd, killed one man and wounded ress grets and heifers, $3.50@4.50; veals, $4.00@ K was evidently greatly disturbed and | foy; Struciet o exp the; deepro 6.25. Hois—$6.00@6.45. Sheep—Weth- Y fremy . Litour. of the French government at the kill- » . 5'54 QAT o i ey IN BOILER EXPLOSION. ta!skerl th: wairdcn tol mnkz n:ll ex(;olr It 1s uflicially announced that the |jng of Lieutenant Clarence England, . . i 219 E sk on to the prison rules and allow ker |]gss resulting ficm the robbery of the navigating officer of the United m.im' Satlsfactlon Guaranteed or Your lambs, $6.00@/6.75. ‘Two Men Killed and More Than Twen. | to use the priscn telephone "0 call up | Warsaw-Vieuna train between Czen- mng“ :hnttanougn, who was mor- full f ded Chicago Grain and Provisions. ty Injured. c“"‘;&" XV-tH‘t‘i""‘"l'{‘” ";“a‘;’M‘ “““3:" tochowa and Herby July 28 amounts | tany wounded at Chetoo July 28 by a %y Molley Cheel‘ lll y Re unded. Chicago, July 30.—Wheat—July, | Vincennes, Ind., July 31.—Two men | 274 his detective, Rogel Al mne ito 326,000, rifie bullet fired from the Freach ar- ON MUTINOUS COMRADES. hremmrgr 7' building 100 feet distant, tore down a a serlous outbreak cccurred July 28 R A TR : Chicago Unlion Stock Yards. tree and badly damaged the Harrison trflf::dof m:l ons h:e;l dfa::t :nd ;':: in the First battallon of the Sevski Georgia Child Labor Bill. Chicago, July 30.—Cattle—Beeves, | mansion, which was the home of Will- ;::s Hn:f e s ke “m S regiment, say that order has been re- | Atlanta, Ga., July 31.—The Georgia ° $3.75@0.40; cows and heifers, $1.26@ jam Henry Harrison' when he was in tixe omZe“ D tored, but: the gifair is still shrouded | #enate has passed without a disseat- 5.30: stockers and feeders, $2.50@ |governor of the Northwest Territory. considerable ‘mystery. Neverthe- |ing vote the house child labor Wit 4.25; Texans, $4.00@5.00; calves, $5.00 | Mrs. Edward Shepard, wite of one of The younger Mrs. Thaw at first de- less, enough is known to establish the ‘ @7.00. Hogs—Mixed and butchers, |th proprietors of the Paper Mills | Sarcd that sho would remsln in the |0’ tay the loyal troops used ma- 5 $6.30@6.70; good heavy, $6.35@6.70; |company, who lives In the mansion, | or O hine guns against their mutinous b/ . e A = t the prison in order to see her % & rough heavy, $6.00@6.30; light, $6.35 | wag slightly injured. - Charles Con. | D2OUT B comrades, which alone is enough to @610; piss, $5.65GE60. Shoep, §2.90 | nors, one af the survivors, was blown | bioe oo Dot ARGV Jeft th iorents o doop impression tn the army ! @56.36, lambs, $4.76@17.76. fifty feet through the air. Ilm A9 S i e e e 4 S