Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, November 3, 1906, Page 2

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Running at a speed estimated fifty miles an hour, the fast 1 known as the “Cleveland fi, t side-swiped by the caboose of a freight ‘Berald-Review. By C. E. KILEY. injured. Seized with an epileptic fit while he was stooping to feed his hogs, EJmer Ti. 4 Ebberly, a farmer near Sioux / City, NEWS OF WEEK SUMMARIZED Iowa, fell face downward in. ‘a half- foot of mud in the pig peri ,add was smothered to. death. A - An engine on an extra freight train’ of the Chicago, Milwanikee & St. Paul, AND ON FOREIGN SHORES east-bound, explodéd near Morton BRIEFLY TOLD. Grove, Ill, killing Fireman J. Dough- \ erty and injurjig Engineer T. Klumb From the Capital. and Brake! W. L. Grass. Gen. Elliott, commander of the ma- By an £=plosion in the mine of the rine hase says an immediate increase Cambria,’Steel company at Son EC, in the corps is necessary to sustain Pa. ge men are dead and two pain- the efficiency of the service. fully/burned. The explosion is thought The: supreme” court ohaheen nited 'to Mave been caused by the ignition of ttf “blast. States to-day refused to assume juris- nes i. ene st et aes Beaay diction in the contempt case of Mayox'|, Ina freight wreck a are Rose of Kansas City, Kan., leaving the ins men were killed and two seriously —— MINNESOTA. ! GRAND RAPIDS, - IMPORTANT .EVENTS AT _ HOME ; hurt. A fast freight drawn by two en- rue otek h hea gines crashed into a cut of cars stand- It _was announced at the sta ing on the main track. The engine and partment,‘that Herbert G. Squires of | 21y ears were wrecked and hun- dreds of sheep were killed. New York had been selected ‘to be) American minister at Panavaa to suc- ceed Charles E. Magoon. j ” Fort Omaha, Neb., is t be the scene of many interesting balloon lp ments during thé next few months. ¥ : French manufacturers have shipped to ae arte Se ee te nee the signal corps Of the army a new andria, La. by the ju which tried spherical silk be@lloon, which will be bing ie) jury thoroughly tested at the Nebraska post. Criminal, A verdict imposing the death pen- alty on Thomas Brady, a white man, William Dutton, a widely known cir- bi cus rider, was assaulted at Cincinnaii Statistics: prepared by the geograph-| 444 probably fatally injured. His’ as- ical survey of the natural gas industry sailants, who apparently sought to rob show that in the calendar year 1905 him, have not been captured. Dutton the value of natural gas Dronnen ans mrad weeot ihe: firet ‘American iders sold exceeded that of any previous year by $3,066,099. The total value to exhibit before the khedive of Egypt and the czar of Russia, of the gas produced and sold was $11,- Peis ee eae oe ovayi a 662,85 in as an honorary member of the Asso- suicidal intent, but will probably -re- ciate member of the Associate Socie-| (over she eh te Govern Ashe ty of Farnsworth post, G. A. R., of i, married another woman, and this Mount Vernon, N. Y. The ceremony ‘ ; 2 Cone no ty is said to be the third time she has took place in the cabinet’ room of the attempted to kill herself. executive offices and was conducted by Gen. Horace Porter. President Roosevelt has deter- mined to prevent the further employ- ment in governmental service of hus- band and wife belonging to one family. Either one may remain, but the other must retire. The president has re- quested the c ivil service commission days to furnish him a list of all the cases . 3 in which both husband and wife are| J. 8. Espy, D. E. Horrigan, William employed in any of the executive de- Herb, T. T. Kirk, Addison Boren, W. A. Merritt, Henry Nichols and Edward Kerr, officers and directors of the de- Pires funct State Bank of Pittsburg, were ef found guilty of irregularities in con- Charles Day, an old settler of Troy,|nection with the failure of the bank Wis., died, aged seventy-six years. by a jury in the criminal court. The Maj. Gen. James W. Forsyth, retired,| charge was receiving deposits, know- who served in the Civil war with dis-|ing the bank was insolvent. tinction, was stricken with apoplexy and died at Columbus, Ohio. Martin L. Newell, formerly state senator and once assistant attorney|town of Arzilla, twenty-five miles eeneral of Illinois, died at Springfield,|south of Tangier, and assumed the Ill, of paralysis, sixty-eight years old. | governorship. Sdward James Saunderson, Union-} Reports issued by the government ist member of parliament for Armagh | show that the damages sustained by north, who had been critically ill of] the crops from the recent cyclones in pneumonia at Castle Saunderson; died | Cuba are not as great as has been sup- at Armagr, Ireland. He was fifty-nine | posed. sha iar Another circular from the so-called Mrs. Catherine Troutman Maynard revolutionary committee is being cir- died at Seattle, Wash. She was the} Qylated in Mexico City. It bears a oldest pioneer of that city, had lived| ew Orleans date, but was mailed in in the state fifty-six years, was married | yopije, Ala. It c@eclares that Presi- seventy-four years ago and was past ninety years of age. i Casualty List. The freighter Hastings burned off South Norwalk, Conn. The crew was saved. Mrs. Guadalupe Vigily Bares and her two children were drowned in the Rio Grande river’near Santa Fe dur- ing the recent blizzard. Two men were killed five miles east of Anaconda, Mont., by a runaway car of ore. They are Rosario Lavucci and Basil Hoyt. Lavucci was torn to pieces. . “The Pittsburg Special” jumped the tracks near Allegheny, Pa. The en- gine slipped down to the Ohio river. At least four persons, all trainmen, were seriously injured. Carbolie acid, taken in mistake for cough medicine, is responsible for the death of Haze! King, the seventeen- year-old daughter of Charles L. King ss Tndepentenne: hel is " to the army signal corps a new spheri- A pall, -ferryboet plying betweea | 6a) silk balloon, which will be thor- Beaufort and Ladies’ Island, S. C., oughly tested at Fort Omaha, Neb. A swamped during a storm with six men hydrogen plant will be built there. and fovr women, all negroes, on board. Maj. E. F. Taggart of divorce ponte Three women' wane AroWnaty illea who is now serving in the Philippines, Three or ar i persons were kille is critically ill at a military hospital and a dozen injured nee La noes there. He is suffering with dysentery, passenger train collided with an out- his r caged doubt. bound car on the Toledo & Indiana ay is recoremde paid to We iraction line at Toledo, Ohio. ‘An heroic statue of Gen. William An excursion train returning from Henry Gibson, famous colons of the Cleveland to Columbus collided, head- Forty-ninth Ohio hethead kina, and whos on, with a freight train, The engineer! ), ynown as a Republican campaign and fireman on the passenger train] (ator was unveiled at Tiffin, Ohio, by were killed. None of the passengers] ;, grandsons. i! if were hurt. . i The Dunbar Furnace com] , the Eight Employes were injured, one) semat-Solyay Coke works ert the of them perhaps fatally, when a trac- New Haven & Dunbar railway at tion car left the rails on a.steep grade! Gonnelsyille, Pa., announce an in- near Chagrin Falls, Ohio, at a curve.) crease in wages of 10 cents a day for, The motorman could not control the all laborers, affecting 1,000 men. ie speed of the ear. Mrs, Fannie Eberson, wife of A. A. Clifford Belden of Dubuque was] Eberson, testified in Judge Withrow’s killed, and Herman Weicker of Mil-| court in St. Louis that her husband \Wwaukee fatally injured at Spechts Fer- | had a playful habit of pelting her with ry, Iowa. They were employed by the sa and $100 oe phichne rolled i ‘Milwaukee railroad and went to sleep compact wad ped Re MIE: under a box car, which was moved by Pe oa ee lated tee happy an engine. Belden’s legs were severed eet ec dten 3 rson filed ae > ae are reported on the TRS A Oe an | SONY, Ww lected Rev. Dr. Edwai 1 Mexican Central railroad below Lare- ie ed Syerett ae its president, to succeed the late | do, Mex., and several people were Stephen Salisbury of Worcester. A churt. A passenger and freight train| trinute was paid by Dr. Hale to Capt. ‘were both wrecked by bulls getting on Roald Amundsen, who rediscovered ithe track. Traffic was delayed for sev- : west ‘eral hours. Mee the: osm The body of a man tied in a cotton sack was found in the river at. Paw- paw, I. T. The sack was bound with wire, to which had been fastened a piece of railroad iron, evidently in- tended for a sinker. The back of the man’s head had been crushed in, and he apparently had been dead several partments here. From Other Shores. Baniaros tribesmen have seized the marked man and will shortly be assas- j sinated. Diies se i Russian wooden foundered on Oct. 20. 180 persons were drowned. Another the Warjagin, only one being saved. . A special from Tucson, Ariz., says that a well known citizen of that place. whose name is withheld, has returned from Nogales, where he was authorita- tively informed that Salcide and all the other revolutionists recently de- ported from Arizona were taken to Hermosillo and summarily executed, notwithstanding official statements to the contrary. Otherwise. French manufacturers have shipped train at Pittsburg. Five trainmen were | © opposition of the family. sums of money from women, the po- lice say, but denied that his scheme |“S0oners” Get Most Valuable Claims was a swindle. is now placed at fifty-three. thetic incident. derricks succeeded in bringing one of the two submerged cars to the surface and divers, working in relays, brought | of yesterday’s developments in the su- up bodies until their task was com-|perior court District Attorney W. H. pleted and they reported that no more; Langdon has dead remained either inside the ser-/|nized as the incumbent of the office to ond car or anywhere in the vicinity. the coroner’s jury, made a careful inspection of the scene of the wreck and the drawbridge at which the train left the rails. decided to hold the first session of tue; inquiry on Thursday. i the narrow waterway into which the electric train fell had been relieved of all its dead, the divers continued their | j work late into the night and maintain-| Mill City May Not Get Methodist ed a diligent search. crew was also kept busy preparing for the hoisting of the second car, and it {8 lacking in hotel accommodations, is expected that this will be raised according to the judgment of a com- before morning. A dispatch received in London from | vet mask and an amber hair comb, a Vladivostok by Lloyds agency says the |young woman was coasting steamer | demonstrations Warjagin struck a floating mine and | Sunday at the residence of Drs. C. M. Some of hez}and Walter M. Fitch before a group passengers and crew were saved, but of doctors. message received ‘by a news agency | three policemen entered and took the says 200 passengers perished on board | girl and Dr. Walter Fitch to the police station. and will give a more extended ac- the police court. Youngs of Port Huron, his wife and three sons, comprising the crew of the schooner West Side of Cleveland, were picked up in a small boat on Lake Huron yesterday by the steamer Frank Peavey. dered off Thunder Bay island in Sat- urday night’s story, and the crew had a perilous experience until : ma [ SWINDLED)scons®=” GET MOST VALUABLE s i CLAIMS ON WALKER LAKE RESERVATION. AGGREGATION OF CHARGES ARE PILED UP AGAINST CHICAGO MAN. - Thorne, Nev., Oct. 31—With the firing of a mighty blast of dynamite from the top of Grant Peak, the high- est point in the adjacent mountains, the Walker Lake Indian reservation was opened at noon yesterday. At the HUNDRED THOUSAND IN ALL given signal hundreds of searchers for gold hurried helter-skelter over the c boundary lines, and a spectacular race of automobiles, race horses and vehi- ‘'eles was on. So great was the rush across the desert. from the line near- est Hawthorne that a number of per- sons narrowly escaped being trampled over, and in numerous instances in- juries were reported. Those who had waited for the sig- Chicago, Oct. 31—Wealthy widows | Bal from the top of Mount Grant be- have been swindled out of more than ;fore rushing into the reservation $100,000, the police say, by S. Rosen- found that all the most valuable field, who was arrested yesterday. | Claims had been taken up by men who ONE ST. LOUIS.WIDOW SAID TO HAVE BEEN FLEECED OF $50,000. Detectives met Considerable difficulty |had rushed in the night before, contra- in making the arrest, owing to the ry to law. Rosenfield admitted getting large WILD SCRAMBLE FOR LAND. on Walker Lake Reservation. According to the police, Rosenfield} Findlay, Ohio, Oct. 31.—In probate posed as a wealthy broker and real court here yesterday, Judge Banker estate man, and had little difficulty in overruled the motion filed by the at- inducing persons of means to invest |torneys of the Standard Oil company ! in his schemes. It is said more than .for a new trial and imposed a fine of $20,000 was obtained from one woman {$5,000 and costs of the prosecution in in Cincinnati in a “book venture.” The |the recent suit against the Standard police were told that a woman in St. held here. Louis intrusted $50,000 to Rosenfield the court ordered that the defendant On motion of the defense company be allowed forty days in which t> prepare and file its bill of exceptions in the case, and on motion WRECK VICTIMS NUMBER 53. |o: the Standard’s attorneys the sentenced imposed was ordered Bodies All Recovered From Wrecked suspended for sixty days for the pur- Cars at Atlantic City. pose of filing a petition on error ip Atlantic City, N. J., Oct. 81—The to-}this case. It was also ordered that tal number of dead in the appalling the criminal information pending wreck of the electric train which 0 |against John D. Rockefeller, the Buck- Sunday afternoon, loaded with passen-|eyve Pije Lin? “ompany and the Man- gers, plunged into the waterway sep-|hattan O11 company be contined until arating this city from the mainland, the next term of court. less than three months ago. GRAFT PROSECUTOR WINS. The day has been one of unceasin: activity, of gruesome scenes and pa- Wrecking crews witli| District Attorney Will Push Prosecu- tion at San Francisco. ‘ San Francisco, Oct. 31.—As a resul been judicially recog- which Abraham Ruef was last week appointed. Two*members of the grand jury chosen last week were discharged be- cause of failure to qualify. Seven oth- ers are to be examined to-day to deter- mine whether or not they are qualified to sit in judgment upon the charges of malfeasance and corruption in office to be submitted by the district attor- ney Coroner’s Jury Investigates. Interest now centers in the work of who yesterday On their return to this city the jury Although reasonably certain that MINNEAPOLIS LACKS HOTELS. Quadrennial. The wrecking 31.—Minneapolis Minneapolis, Oct. mittee that is now inspecting the Mill City to determine its fitness as a meet- Ing place for the general quadrennial conference of the Methodist Episco- pal church, to be held in May, 1908. WORE A MASK AND A COMB. dent Cabrera of Guatemala is | Girl Performs Before Group of Doctors Except in the matter of hotels the vis- to Show Physical Development. {tin mmittee appeared favorabl, Chicago, Oct. 31—Clad in a red vel jnrroes ke 4 impressed with Minneapolis, but it is feared that on that one point the re- port will be unfavorable. giving scientific in physical culture DESERT WITH MAIL POUCH. Twce of Brooklyn Crew Run Away With Money Letters. Havana, Oct. 31.—Capt. Arthur P. Nazro of the American cruiser Brook- lyn has requested the police to arrest two deserters, Charles N. Fernald, yeoman, of Atlantic, N. J., and David A. Harman, yeoman, of Hazelton, Pa. These men left the Brooklyn in charge of a mail pouch in which there was registered letters containing $1,800 for While the exhibition was in progress They were released on bond count of the demonstration later in PICKED UP IN SMALL BOAT. Crew of Wrecked Schooner Has Peril- |{ransmission to the United States. ous Experience on Lake Huron. Port Huron, Mich., Oct. 31.—Capt. ROOT’S CABLEGRAM CALMS. Has a Quieting Effect on the People of Japan. . Washington, Oct. 31.—Secretary Root bas received the following cable gram from Ambassador Wright, dated Tokio yesterday: “Substance of your telegram of 23d, given to the press by the Japanese government, has been received with satisfaction by the Japanese people, and has had a very quieting effect.” The West Side foun- sighted yesterday by the Peavey. TROOPS READY FOR BATTLE. Soldiers Approaching Renegade Utes From Five Points. Sheridan, Wyo., Oct. 31.—Soldiers} state Veterinarians Purposes to Check are now approaching the band of rene- Hog Cholera. gade Utes from five different points.| jexandria, Minn., Oct. 31.—Hog and it is only a question of time unt‘l| -jolera is epidemic in the southern the redskins are either forced to sur- part of. Hudson township. More than render or are annihilated. 200 hogs have died since last July, and The Utes are traveling northwest,!.. many more are suffering from the and according to a report yesterday] gicease. have not yet passed the Big Powder-| state Veterinarian Ward wa# sum- The band is making direct for the} moned and yesterday quarantined Cheyenne agency across the river. eleven farms. QUARANTINES ELEVEN FARMS FALL INTO SHERIFF’S HANDS. FIND MISSING MAN’S BODY. Two Men Charged With Stealing) yas Four Bullet Holes in It and Ar- Teams in North Dakota. rests Are Made. ‘ Minot, N. D., Oct. 31—Frank Scales} elena, Mont., Oct. 31—The mys- and John Gordon were brought to Mi-| (ery surrounding the disappearance not by Sheriff Lee on the charge of|royr months ago of O. D. Clearwater stealing two teams at Glenburn. The} pas peen partially cleared up by the men were arrested at Lytleton, Can. finding of bis dead body under some After disposing of one team, it is al-}prush with four bullet holes in it. leged, they returned to North Dakota|Nejs Hall is under arrest, and five and disappeared with another. They others, some of whom also are arrest- had just closed a deal for the transfer} .q are suspected of being implicated of the second team when Sheriff Lee in what appears to have been a delib- Tn SCRIBIE FOR UNDICI)BAN REBELS i ‘REDS’ SHOUT “KILL THE POLICE” EMMA GOLDMAN AND NINE OTHER ANARCHISTS ARE ARRESTED IN NEW YORK. TAKE THE FIELD THREATEN UPRISING BUT ARE IN- DUCED TO DISBAND BY AMER- ICANS. *» New York, Oct. 31—Emma Goldman and nine other persons were arrested at an anarchistic meeting last night The police pushed their way through the crowd toward the speaker’s stand and arrested Julius Edelson, who was speaking. As they did so there were shouts of “Down with the police!” “Kill the police! They are worse thaw the Russian police.” The other arrests followed quickly. Edelson was charged with inciting to riot and the others with disorderly conduct.” According to the police, Edelson, in his speech, declared among other things: “No matter how much Czo! gosz has been damned for his good work, we know that he was a great man. He was a true hero. American laws are all: made for bluffing. The people of America are worse bluffed. than those of Russia.” MAGOON SAVES $100,000A YEAR GOVERNOR DISMISSES UNNECES- e SARY EMPLOYES OF HOUSES OF CONGRESS. Havana, Oct. 31.—Maj. Theodore P. Kane, commander of the marines sta- tioned at Cienfuegos. has sent in a re- port to the effect that on Oct. 27 he was informed that a serious uprising was on foot. He at once posted strong guards at. the entrances to the city, with orders not to permit armed per- scns to pass in or out. He then went reconnoitering, and in the town of FARMER FIGHTS BIG LYNX. Kills First Such Animal Seen in Fill- . jore County in Years. Caunac he found Col. Toledo at the recto Minn: Fk ae Git Skruk- head of a mounted body of 100 ex-in-[.nq of Holt township yesterday surgents. Toledc said he had ergan- ized for the purpose of~ resisting a threaten&d attack by the Moderates. Band Is Dispersed. Maj. Kane explained that these fears were not well founded and advised Col. Toledo to disband his men and send them back to their homes. This ad- vice was followed. A similar gathering near Sancti Spiritus also was dispersed. From Matanzas come further complaints of the threatening attitude of bands of armed negroes in that vicinity, but no overt acts have been committed. Gov. Magoon has issued a decree which discharges al] employes of the senate and house of representatives, with the exception of ten men for each house. This nove will effect a saving of $100,- 000 a year. brought to Preston the skin of a Cana- dian lynx which he caught in a trap set for 2 fox. Skrukrud tried to kill the animal with a club and ended by hay- ing to fight for his own safety. He succeeded in getting his gun, and one shot between the eyes settled the fray. The animal was as large as a sbepherd dog, aud the first one seen in Fiilmore county in twenty-five years. m ANGRY FARMERS DITCH ENGINES. Object to Railroad Crossing Country Poad. Medina, Ohio, Oct. —Angered by the action of the officials of the Balti- more & Ohio railroad, who built across. y road near Lodi against their wishes, nearly a Lun-ired Mcdina coun- ty farmers took their teams terday afternoon and tipped three “dinky” en- gines and fire cars into the ditch. Last night twenty-five men, heavily armed, stood guard over the crossing and threatened death to any employe of the road who attempted to replace the tracks. JAP FUSS AS CAUSE OF WAR. British Statesman Wants to Know About Alliance. London, Oct, 31.--Replying to a question in the house of commons by C. W. Bellairs, Liberal, as to whether there was any provision in the Anglo- Japanese treaty safeguarding his maj- esty’s dominions from becoming in- volved in a war with America on be- half of Japan, Earl Grey, the foreign secretary, wrote a reply, in which he referred the questioner to the text of the agreement. “The foreign secretary added: “This agreement is of a general character, and there is no indication that jt is likely to lead to war with any power.” POLICE SUPPRESS RIOT. ~ Personal Quarrel Develops Into Free- for-all Fight. New York, Cct. 31.—The police were called upon late last night to suppress a riot among forty laborers employed in Lock No. 3 of the East river tunnel. ch the scene one y injured and more than a dozen others suffered injuries in a free-for-all fight. The fignt started between two labor- ers over a p mal matter and the others took. side BABY WORTH FIVE MILLIONS, Birth of Child Saves Estate From Go- ing to Milwaukee Hospital. ilwaukee. Wis., Oct. 31—By the birth of a male heir in the Plankinton family yesterday, Passavant hospital here loses $5,000,000 from the estate ot William Plankinton, who died recently. The baby is the son of William Wood Plankinton and grandson of the tes- tator INTERVIEWS MRS. EDDY. Reporter Sees Aged Christian Scientist at Her Country Home. Concord, N. H., Oct. 31.—A_ repre- sentative of the Associated Press went to Pleasant View, Mrs. Baker’s home, yesterday, and w anted an inter- view. Although Mrs. Eddy shows her advanced age in some respects, her voice was clear and strong, and she gave no evidence of decrepitude or of any weakness, not to be expected of a woman in her eighty-sixth year. Blacks Begin War. Brook Haven, Mass., Oct. 31.—As a result of the production of “The Clans- man” and threats that a Kuklux Klan was beirg organized to drive negroes from the community, the blacks have formed themselves into a band of white caps and already have started a series of depredations against the whites. MAIL ROBBER IS YOUNG BOY. For Months, It Is Alleged, He Has Been Rifling Mail Boxes. Houghton, Mich.. Oct. 381.—Ralph Haas, fourteen years old, was arrested yesterday on a charge of robbing mails and cashing checks extracted from let- ters. For months past business men have complained that valuable letters were being taken from their leek boxes. Big Silver Find Stirs Up Port Arthur. Port Arthur, Ont., Oct. 31.—Great excitement was created yesterday by the arrival of Manager Hanson from the west end of Silver mountain, with samples of ore taken from the mine, some being nuggets of pure silver, and one weighing 100 pounds. It is the richest strike ever made in this dis- trict. Closes the City’s Schcols. Black River Falls, Wis., Oct. 31— The health officer ordered the city schools all closed here until further notice, owing to diphtheria. There have been four cases among the pupil» lately, three of which proved fatal. Two Treated to “Drops.” Devils Lake, N. D., Oct. 31.—A man who was a passenger ona Great Northern train was taken into custody when he reached here on a charge of having administered “knockout drops” to two passengers. Bishop Galloway Seriously III. Nashvil's, Oct. 31.—Private advices from Jackson, Miss., state that Bishop C. M. Galloway of the Methodist Epis- coral church souch, was stricken with congestion of the brain at his homé there yesterday and that his condition is precarious. Kaiser Has Caught Cold. Berlin, Oct. 31—Emperor William is obliged to remain indoors for the pres- ent, following the advice of his physi- cians. His majesty is suffering from a simple cold, contracted while out hunting last week. Probe Peonage Charges. Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 31—The federal grand jury is investigating charges of peonage brought against a number of citizens of this state, as a result of an investigation by Assistant Attorney General Charles W. Russell. Known Dead Numbers Fifty-eight. Atlantic City, N. J., Oct. 31—The bodies of three more victims of the electric train wreck were recovered yesterday from under the third car. This makes the certain number of dead fifty-eight. Whites Seek Protection. Nashville, Tenn., Oct. 31.—White men of Fayette county, Tennessee, met last night at Somerville to organ- ize a “White Men’s league” for protec- tion against a rumored uprising of ne- groes. PI Hanged by Suspenders. Eagle River, Wis., Oct. 31.—Frank Matteson committed suicide in the county jail by hanging himself with his suspenders. He was confined on a charge that he had attempted to mur- der his wife. Suicide Ends Noted Life. Brooklyn, Oct. 31.—Broken in health and pride, William C. Barney, fifty-two years old, the last of an illustrious family of naval heroes, committed sui- cide in a squalid garret room yester- Feud Factions Are Arming. Hayking, Ky., Oct. 31—The Brown feud factions are arming themselves and another outbreak is expected at any moment. The feud was started a week ago, when members of the band clashed in battle. To Try Forty Negroes. Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 31—A_ special term of court has been ordered to be- gin to-day for the trial of the forty ne- groes charged with the murder of a ‘oll during the Sept " tot q *

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