Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, December 1, 1906, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

pe GRAND RAPIDS, - MINNESOTA. WEEK'S HISTORY IN EPITOME ALL THE NEWS THAT IS WORTH TELLING CONDENSED FOR BUSY READERS. Washington, Fort Washetkie, Wyo., is to be abandoned because of the bad condi tion of the fort. The United States secret service an- junces the discovery in Chicago of a} counterfeit $5 silver certificate of 1899, Lyons register, Treat Alan Johnstone, the present ter for Great Britain to Den- k, is being discussed in Washing: a possible successor to Sir Hen- rtimer Durand. ry Mc Personal. k R. Stockton, widow of died at her home in G. Lorillard-Spencer of. New brother of Princess Cenci-Bo- , is dead in Paris. % O'Brien of Lima, Ohio, general r of the Ohio Oil company, a nt Standard Oil concern, died Ik, ‘ i Oliver, a prominent lawyer. om, Wis., died suddenly of He was a graduate of the y of Wisconsin. z cy Glover, eighty years old of the best’ known pioneer of Kenosha, is dead as the. re- f burns received last ‘Thursday. orgia Cayvan, for years one most popular actresses, died in nitarium at Flushing, L. L, where has been a patient about seven John H. Bryant of Washington d New York, and having extensive s interests in many parts of the , died at Washington after an illness of three days. Ge From Other Shores. Gen. Golochtkapoff, ex-governor of Relisabethpol, ws mortally wounded at Tiflis. The assassin escaped. French senate by 144 to 96 decided in favor-of transferring es of Emile Zola to’ the’ Pan- the theon. The sale of all French newspapers containing lottery advertisements has been prohibited in Belgium under the antijottery law. ., “By a viva voce vote and ‘without a word of debate the French chamber uties voted to increase thie depu- salaries from $1,800 to $3,000 a year. te 4 On Jams1 a branch of, the Deutsch- 3} Sud-Amerikanische of Berlin will be establistfed in Mexico City. The bank 4 will have a paid-up capital of 10,000,000 5 i pesc Louise Moncheur, the fourteen-year- old daughter of Baron Moncheur, the Be n minister, and Baroness Mon- cheur, died of pneumonia and typhoid fever. i f » The presence in Rome of Don Car- los, the Spanish pretender, is declared to be connected with the present situ- ation in Spain and the revival of the Carlist movement. The Berlin press announces that the emperor has tendered the portfolio of minister of agriculture to Von Arnim- Criewer, who is at present president of the German Agricultural society. Marshal law has been proclaimed in the province of Kuban, in the Cauca- sus, by an imperial ukase. This step is taken in consequence of the agita- tion among the Cossacks in this prov- Ince. Criminal, Ian Zandberg, a revolutionist for whom the police have long been searching, was arrested at Riga. Louis Busse, the Butler county wife murderer, must hang Dec. 14. The su: preme court has affirmed the decision of the lower court. John E. Taylor was convicted in the district court of Cascade county, Mon- tana of manslaughter for killing an as- sociate. The jury was out twenty-six hours. Mrs. Abbie Ross of Kokomo, Ind., confessed to burning her house for the insurance and was sentenced to prison for two years. She is a widow with six children. ‘ Jacob Schutz, former supervisor of South Milwaukee, pleaded guilty to bribery in connection with a contract for electrical work in the court house in 1899. He was fined $200. Chief Engineer Berdt of the Trans: caucasian railroad was shot and seri; ously wounded at Tiflis by two un- known men, who attacked him in the street. Berdt, although shot in the chest, drew his revolver and killed one “of his assailants. Mrs. Wilhemina Eckhardt, a German midwife, sixty years of age, was ar- rested at her home in New York and after, arraignment locked up without bail on a charge of malpractice: The supreme court of Missouri sen- tenced W. F. Church, convicted of hav- ing killed his foster parents near War- rensburg three years ago, to be hang- ed Jan. 10, 1907. Andreas Dippel, grand opera tenor, has reported to the New York police that jewelry valued at from $1,000 to $2,000 was stolen from his apartments during his absence. There is no clue to the thief. ME home in Holloway, Mich., by Joseph Ehlichs, a rejected suitor, who cut her throat with a pair of scissors and then drove the scissors into her heart. C. S. Cameron, president of the Tube City railroad, and William A. Martin, a member of commén councils, were arrested at Pittsburg on a charge of conspiracy to defraud the Tube City railroad of about $70,000. Casualty. A child of George Stager was burn- ed to death in a fire which destroyed his restaurant at Dows, Iowa. John F.. Martin, a prominent attor- ney of Birmingham, Ala., was instant- ly killed by’ the overturning of an au- tomobile. * Two foreigners are dead and thirty- six are violently ill, several of whom will die, at Millsboro, Pa., from eating wild parsnips. A four-story building in Chicago burned, causing a loss of $250,000. The fire was caused: by:an explosion in the basement. ; i Fire that broke out in the Nooksack hotel. at ‘Nooksack, 'City,:‘Wash., de stroyed the hotel and seven business buildirigs. Léss estithated at $100,000 The Pittsburg flyer, on the: Buffalo Rochester & Pittsburg railroad, was wrecked near Golden, N. Y. About fifteén persons were injured. No one was killed. * ON Baas Fire at San Francisco ‘destroyed the plants of the Whittier Coburn Oil com- pany and Barber Asphalt Paving ‘¢om- pany. ' The loss is estimated at-half a million rollars. Will Scott, a.trainman, and John Drumweight, a passenger,’ were killed and three persons were injured in a rear-end collision on the Illinois Cen. tral near Ripley, Tenn. Helen Lambert, the.actress who was injured in the automobile ¢ollision in Central Park, New York, in which Tom Cooper lost his life, died in Roosévelt hospital of her injuries. W. E. Millington, foreman of the Ma- son City Clay works, was struck by a Great Western train’at Mason City, Iowa, and fatally injured, his spine be- ing hurt and shoulder crushed. He was thrown twenty feet. * A fatal accident. occurred at Hast- man Kodak works at Rochester, N. Y. in which three workmen were killed, eight seriously injured and six slightly hurt. The men were at work on a scaffold near the top of a two-story building when the top floor gave way. : 7 Otherwise. . BY & mixup, jp. the new Mississippi oe ‘the aiate “will Have “to’ beet two Thanksgiving days this year. Two new cases of yellow fever, de veloped in Havana, which makes sev- en cases now in*the cjt¥*arid three in the interior’of the island. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway has, granted :an increase in wages of 4 cents an hour to switchmen and yardmen on the entire system. ’ The manufacturers’ committee’ at Fall River, Mass., has granted an in- crease of 5 per cent in wages to the cotton mill operatives of this city. The Norfolk & Western railway beginning. Dec. 1, will grant an in- crease of 10 per cent in wages to all employes now receiving less than $200]: per month. From Norway to Minneapolis with- out friends or a guardian was the task accomplished by Oscar William Ander- son, a lad of nine years, who will live with his aunt. : The New York Bowling association has formally withdrawn from the American Bowling congress and de cided to join the newly organized Na- tional Bowling association. The will of Mrs. Varina Jefferson Davis, wife of the president of the Confederate states, leaves to Mrs. Da- vis’ daughter, Mrs. Margaret Howell Davis Hayes, practically all of the es- tate. The Hawaiian Planters’ association is planning to manufacture denatured alcohol from the 14,000,000 gallons of molasses produced annually, and for this purpose will erect a distillery at Pearl Harbor. United States District Attorney Sims of Chicago announced that the failure of the Chicago National bank which occurred last year, will be in- vestigated by a special federal grand jury which will be called early next month. Nearly all the large coal companies in the Wyoming region have issued or- ders that hereafter all the collieries are to be operated six days a week. It is believed that this means steady work for the miners until the latter part of next March. Justice Stafford of Washington made the formal order of nolle prosse qui in the case of Former State Senator George F. Green of Binghamton, N. Y., charged with bribery and corspira- cy in connection with the postoffice irregularities of 1903. An international concert of action for the suppression of anarchists has been suggested again as a.result of the explosion of bombs in the church of St. Peter’s and the palace of the king of Italy in Rome. The constitutional convention of the new state of Oklahoma was petitioned by the annual convention of the Anti Saloon League of America to insert a prohibition plank in the constitution. The Kentucky state Democratic ex ecutive committee canvassed the re turns of the state. primary election| and declared Gov. J. C. W. Beckham nominee for United State senator. ‘ATOIAL L0ss ED BY FIRE IN HARBOR AT TOULON. 500 MEN -HAVE CLOSE CALL ALL ESCAPE FROM BURNING SHIP EXCEPT THREE WHO BURN- ED TO DEATH. Toulon, France, Noy. 27.—The tor- pedo schoolship Algeciras, stationed in this harbor, was totally destroyed by fire at a late hour “last evening. There were 500 men on board when the fire broke out, but all were saved with the exception of three. 3 AS. soon ‘as,thé men ‘had ‘been taken off the flaming vessel: the efforts of the authorities were directed to:safeguard- ing‘the" other ships ‘an¢hored‘in the vicinity of the Algeciras, including the new battleship Patrie and the torpedo gunboat La Hire, These two warships were towed to places of safety. Discipline Is Perfect. F autheritiessgame rafidl, the ofl Beton,'4 hat Ge "ieee ® ‘was doomed, and she was left to vin her- seffmut. 29%; “He ‘Phe distifine maintained of board the ‘Algeciras’ was excellent, The small béats ‘of the Algeciras were launched, filled with men and: rowed away, while those who could, not leave in ‘this manner awaited ‘the arrival of their rescuers. A few,of the men, how- ever, were forced py ,the flames to amp + overboard. Six “torpedoes on voard’;thé:schoolship exploded while the men -were leaving the,vessel, It is not known whether the fire orig- inated from an explosion of powler or broke out athorig the stores‘on. board. LONE ‘BANDIT ‘HOLDS’ UP “TRAIN. Robs Fifteen Passengers, but Js Arrest: ed Before He Could Leave Train. Kahsas City, Mo., Nov. 27.—A lone robber, masked and armed; robbed fif- teen. passengers gn, a Chigago & Alton passenger train near Glasgow, Mo., after midnight this morning." He was arrested before he, could leave the train “and was taken to Glasgow anc plac&d in jail. ‘ Sathicg At Slater the robber,’.wearing «8 mask over his eyes, boarded the rear car as the train was pulling out. After the train had gained speed, the man, ‘rébolverijn hand, ‘entéid the” cap arid began a systematic robbery of the pas- sengers. Fifteen of them were made to disgorge. As the J frain'. Spassed through Glasgow, at which ‘point it does not stop, the man was ‘seen at workaby the station ag ent, 'who wired the chief dispatcher ot the fact. Arm. strong, the next station east of Glas gow, was notified, and officers were at the station there to meet the train when it: pulled in. Whén-the train stopped at Armstrong on orders and the officers boarded it they caught the robber red-handed. PATRICK WINS PRIZE OF LIFE. Murderer’s Sentence Will Be Commut- ed to Life Imprisonment. New York, Nov. 27.—Lawyer Albert T. Patrick has won his fight for life. His end will not be in the electric chair. Before Gov. Higgins gives up his office as chief executive of the state he will sign a commutation of the death sentence. , Life imprisonment will be Patrick’s fate. Patrick, in his cell in the death house, heard the tidings without emo- tion. His faithful wife was non-com- mittal. The action of the governor does not pull down the curtain in this most celebrated case. Patrick will insist that the fight for his freedom be con- tinued. There was great rejoicing among the cellmates of Patrick when a guard togd of Patrick’s good luck. PEARY’S CREW IS STUBBORN. Explorer Will Have to Get New Crew to Bring Roosevelt to New York. Sydney, N. S., Nov. 27.—At the last moment Commander Peary was unable to leave for New York. He will be de- tained until Monday. The crew insists that the Roosevelt is in no condition to be taken to New York and demands that the ship. be docked. There is no dock here large enough to accommo- date the Rooosevelt. Commander Peary got a diver to examine her bot- tom. Commander Bartlett has had much trouble with the crew and said yseter- day that it must leave the Roosevelt. He has sent to his home for a new crew to man the vessel. The men in the forecastle are posi- tively filthy. They have no idea of cleanliness. They are not even good sailors. The commander undoubtedly had great trouble with them. _ Ten Barges Are Sunk. Steubenville, Ohio, Nov. 27.—The towboats Raymond Horner and G. W. Thomas ran into the piers of the Pan- handle railroad bridge during a dense fog here, sinking ten barges.containin; 125,000 bushels of coal. , Crushed by Thresher. Willmar, Minn., Nov. 27. — Verno Lester, ten years of age, son of Au- gust Broman, a farmer, was crushed to death*beneath a threshing machine which was being moved to his father’s TORPEDO SCHOOLSHIP DESTROY: |: “ STRI VIOLENCE. Hamilton, Ont., Nov. 27. —-Never in Hamilton’s history were such scenes of: disorder ‘and lawlessness seen as were enacted in the principal streets of the city Saturday night. Scores of rioters, sympathizers wiih the striking street car men, felt the weight of policemen’s night sticks and the keen edge of the soldiers’ swords in conflicts. Attacks on streets cars began as early as 7 o’clock. The police wielded their clubs freely, but the situation grew too serious for them to handle. Sheriff Middleton was notified and read the riot act, which makes every able-bodied citizen amenable to police duty. He also notified Capt. Ogilvie that the aid of troops had become nec- essary to maintain order. Charge Is Remorseless. At 8 o’clock a concerted effort was made by the police and soldiers to clear the streets. The police charged this crowd first. The officers were met with jeers and insults. » Smashing right and left with their heavy night sticks, the police waded into.the crowd. Men and women suf- fered alike and soon the pavement was marked by many unconscious forms. The mob, realizing that the police meant business this, time, began to re- taliate with stones and ‘other missiles. Cavalry Disperses Mob. At this point::the-clatter of horses’ hoofs on the pavement announced the approach of the cavalry, and the crowd, attacked'from both sides, broke and fled’ dowh side streets and through tlleyways. The streets are strewn with debri$ and-many plate. glass’ win- dows in stores were broken by flying missiles. r, i Nearly one hundred people were treated at the hospitals for slight in- juries. ‘ Sunday was marked by unusual quiet yn the streets. The officials of the rail- way campany,do-not believe, the trou- ble is at an 6nd, however. ~ OMINOUS IN MOROCCO. Powers Should Use Strong Hand From F the Start. London, Nov. 27. — Commenting on the situation in Morocco, the Tangier | correspondent of thé Times says that |: hithough thére is no imminent danger of a native rising the time has arrived when an end must be put to the out- rages and insults to which European yesidents have too long been exposed, and if armed intervention is forced “upon the powers by Raisuli’s hostility or the hopeless inefficiency of the gov- ‘erning board, they must be prepared ko take it, seriously. . i SHAKEUP IN THE SENATE. Davis of Arkansas Will Start Some- SB iosy thing. : Brook Haven, Miss., » Noy. ,27. — “There will be something doihg'in the old town of Washington when I get to the United States senate,” said Gov. Jefferson Davis of Arkansas, address- ing a big audience of farmers here. “What is needed in that body is an old-fashioned row and,a shaking up of the fossils. With gentle, kind-spirited Bob Taylor.of Tennessee and “Pitch: fork” Tillman of South .Carolina, the fearless Vardaman of Mississippi, there will be a first-class sensation,” said the governor. VATICAN DISPLEASED. Because King cf Greece Has. Not Call- ed on the Pope. Rome, Nov. 27..— It would appear that King George 6: Greece has aban- doned the idea ot visiting the pope during his present sojourn in Rome, alleging he 7ay still decide to do so to-day. The feelings of the Vatican author!- ties will be hurt if the Grecian king does not call upon the pontiff, and they are chagrined that he did not announce in the beginning whether or not he in- tended to do so. VOLIVA WANTS LIFE JOB. Unless Recognized as Overseer for Life He Will Reorganize Church. Chicago, Nov, 27.—Wilbur Glenn Vo- liva, successor to John Alexander Dowie as overseer of the Christian Catholic church, declared at the con- clusion of an exciting meeting at Zion City last night that unless he was rec ognized as general overseer of the church he would abandon his present following to their fate and reorganize the church. a CREW HELD FOR DISASTER. Trainmen Branded Gullty of Woodville Wreck by Coroner’s Jury. Valparaiso, Ind., Nov. 27,—Sixty-one persons perished in the Woodville (Ind.) wreck on the Baltimore & Ohio railroad Nov. 12, according to the offi- cial finding of the coroner’s jury. En- gineer Galanuer, Conductor Moste and Brakeman Woodward were held re- sponsible for the disaster. The men are already under arrest. Eugene Higgins Calve’s Fiance. Paris, Nov. 27.—The Petit Parisien says that Emma Calve, the singer, has arrived at Marseilles, where the steam yacht Varuna, which is owned by Eu- gene Higgins of the New York Yacht club, is lying, ready to sail. The Petit Parisien says it is believed that Mr. Higgins is Miss Calve’s fiance. ‘Washingten, Nov. 27.—At a campfire by the John Jacob Astor camp of Span- ish war veterans the action of the pres- dent in dismissing a battalion of ne gro troop? was indorsed. ~ AT WHITE HOUSE VOICES THOROUGH ENJOYMENT OF HIS MOST REMARKABLE VOYAGE. CONDUCTOR NABS TRAIN ROBBER BOLD BANDIT HOLDS UP PASSEN- GERS ON A TRAIN IN MIS- SOURI. Washington, Noy. 28.—Completing a remarkable trip to Panama, during which he traveled several thousand miles by sea and visited not only the isthmus, but Porto Rico as well, and voicing his thorough enjoyment uf the entire voyage, President Roosevelt re turned to Washington at 10:42 o’clocir last night. , The trip up the Potomac on the, con verted yacht Mayflower, to which he and his party were transferred from the Louisiana at Piney Point. yester, day afternoon, was made without spe cial incident. riiehiue ai The president landed.-within ten minutes after the arrival of the May-, flower. mh: Pleased With Everything. To those who met him he stated he had had Jightful trip.and was fee: ing finely?" The® pvesidnt’ ana®Mrs. Roosevelt jmmediatgly.. proceeded to the Whte House eh te Speaking of his trip, the president said: = ‘ “We had a very pleasant—very. en- joyable—time, and I am deeply im pressed with the United States havy, with Panama and with Porto Rico.” The Panama canal, it was stated by the president, will be the subject of a special] message, and consequently: on that subject, he will say nothing at this time. ENGAGES IN FIERCE BATTLE. Conductor Beats Robber Into: Submis- Sion After Desperate. Battle. Marshall, Mo., Noy. 28.—The bandit who held up the Chicago & Alton train Sunday night between Glasgow and Slater, Mo., and who was brought to the county jail here, was captured solely through the bravery: and quick ness of the action of Conductor Hey wood, who says that the robber, snap-, ped:his revolver at him and that prob ably the only thing that saved his life was that the hammer descended on tis thumb. Surrendering his revojyer t& the ecnductor,.the robber made a -break for liberty.” Heywood followed closély after! firing gne shot, and grabbed him by the coat collar as thé robbér was trying to jump from the car. Battle in Great Peril. -~ After he had been dragged into the vestibule again the robber continued to fight desperately, and Heywood was compelled to pound him over the’ head with the captured revolver until he was senseless. Immediately:upon his arrival here the prisoner offered to make a full ‘confession if the charge against him was made burglary. Ii Missouri the extreme penalty for train robbery is death; the minimum ten years’ imprisonment. ° Tells About Robbery. The prosecutor refused any conces- sions. The bandit then volunteered a statement, in which he described how he boarded the train and how he sub- sequently was beaten into submission by the conductor and train crew. He got $1,500 and a number of watches. ONE AGAINST CONVICTION, lowa Minister Is Tried on Charge of Extortion. Des Moines, Nov. 28.—Judge Smith McPherson, in the United States court. yesterday discharged the jury whicn had been hearing the case against Rev. John H. Swift,, the Winterset minister accused of attempting to ex- tort money from W. J. Cornell, a bank- er, by threatening to spread a story of hig attentions to a pretty choir girl. The jury stood eleven to one for con- viction. Rev. Swift will be tried again at the next term of court. SUES FOR VALUE OF HORSE. Winona Equine Tangle Gets Into Court Again, Winona, Minn., Nov. 28. — David Goldstein, who was in the county jail the greater part of the summer on the charge of stealing a horse from Harry Lewis, but against whom the grand jury found no indictment, has brought an action for damages in the sum ot $100 against Lewis, on the ground that the horse belonged to Goldstein and that he was wrongully deprived of it by Lewis, who sold it. Bride Bound and Robbed. New York, Nov. 28. — Mrs. Nellie Munson, a bride of three months, was chloroformed and bound hand and foot In her home early yesterday by a burglar. amount of money and some jewelry and fied. Kills Children and Self. Providence, R. I., Nov. 28. — Mrs. Charles G. Checkley and her two chil- dren were found dead in their home| Je last night. The woman had turned on the gas, and taking her two children in her arms lay down with them. The thief secured a small} oe ge "SECRETARY SHAW LOSES PA TIENCE IN ROW OVER PITTS- BURG SITE. Pittsburg, Nov. 28.—Charges of gratt in connection with the site for the pro- posed new postoffice building were in- dignantly denied by Secretary Shaw here yesterday. The secretary came to Pittsburg to make a personal in- Spection of the various site offered, and while conferring with representa- tives of various commercial organiza- tions declared he would give $1,000. for the name of the man who made the charges. Mr. Shaw said he was unable to select a location that would please everybody, but denied having any per- sonal feeling-in the matter. During the proceedings Mr: Shaw snapped. his fingers in the face of H_D. W. English, chairman of the chamber of commerce, who thereupon left in disgust, declar- ing the hearing was a farce. 3 The charges of graft grew out of the recent visit of Pittsburg real estate men to Washington. FOR SALE—ONE §TRONG MAN. Kentucky ,Sheriff Will “Farm Out” a Fellow Who Shuns Work, Elizabethtown, Ky.,) Nov. 28. — The sheriff of thrs county, this week will offer to the highest bidder au able- bodied white man, Doc Auberry, whom a jury has de@lared to be without means of support and able. to work, but with a mastering inclination not to do so. For nine months the stdte will turn Auberry over to the buyer to per: form manualdabor. The action in the Auberry case is perfectly regular and under a state law, though one, not calk ed into use often. NAME OF, CITY ON POSTAGE. Next Year's’ Stamps Will Bear the Name of ‘the Issuing Postoffice. Washington, Nov. 28. — Postage stamps of the issue of 1907,' put on sale at the 6,000 presidential postof- fices, will bear on their face the name of the state and city in which the post- office is situated. . : The chief reason for this innovation is said at the postoffice departmerit to be the belief that it will help to do away with the big postoffice robberies and make it much easier to trace crim- inals. ¢ we QUEEN MAUD HONORED. All Vessels in Mobile Harbor Deco- rated for Norse Royalty. , , Mobile, Ala., Nov. 28.—Al]l vessels were decorated yesterday in honor ot the birthday ‘of Queen Maud of Nor: way. The masters of the Norwegian vessels.in the port of Mobjle received the following ‘telegram from the queen’s mother at Sandringham: ~ “The queen sends her heartiest ks for congratulations. *,—“Krag, Private Secretary.” rt = lene FROM SINKING SHIP.4, Message From Man in Collision Two Years Ago Found in Bottle. St. Ignace, Mich., Nov. 28—Thomas Farlong has picked up on the beach a bottle containing a piece of paper epon which had been penciled these words: “Lake Michigan: Steamer John Duncan. We are sinking; struck by Wisconsin in fog. Good-by to all —“John McLush..’ The Duncan was sunk in a collision near St. Ignace about two years ago. IS HURLED ABOUT SHAFT. Man Is Bumped Against Ceiling and Is “Badly Hurt. Waterloo, Iowa, Nov. 28. — Roy Campbell, engineer at the candy fac- tory, received seriows injuries and had a most miraculous escape from death while at work yesterday. . In some manner his arm caught in a belt and he was Carried around a rapidly whirling shaft, each revolution of which banged him heavily against the beams of the ceiling, only eighteen inches above. BURNING MINE BLOWS UP. Six Men Miraculously Escape—Others May Be Killed. Wilburton, I. T., Nov. 28—With a record of nineteen violent deaths dur- ing the past year, the Degnan & Mc- Connell coal mine at Wilburton blew up with frightful force last evening. Six men in the shaft miraculously es caped. The mine had been on fire sev- eral days. It cannot be determined whether any lives were lost. BITES MAN; IS FINED $250. Combatant Who Uses His Teeth Is Convicted of Maiming. Sioux Falls, S. D., Nov. 28.—It cost Charles Jones, a resident of Spink county, the sum of $250 for making use of his teeth during a physical en- counter with a young man named Lake. A jury found Jones guilty of the crime of maiming and a fine o! $250 was imposed. “ Writ of Error for Glover. Pierre, S. D., Nov. 28—The supreme court granted a writ of er- te of possible cause State vs. Rome Glover, the penitentiary from the charge of horse ificate suspends sen hearing. ber Hand Killed. Mich., Nov. 28. — silled while oiling a under the machine ted and he was torn

Other pages from this issue: