Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, August 3, 1907, Page 2

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ee en ae Herald-Review _ | ceeded im producing beer in the form By C. E. KILEY. GRAND RAPIDS, + MINNESOTA. NEWS OF THE WEEK IN EPITOME DIGEST OF THE NEWS WORTH TELLING CONDENSED FOR BUSY READERS, People Talked About. Maj. Gen. George W. Mindel, who earned the rank of colonel of New Jersey regiments during the Civil war, died of heart disease at his home in New York. After a brief illness, due to exces- sive heat, Capt. Bart E. Linehan of Dubuque, Iowa, died at Memphis. Mr. Linehan was president of the Dubuque Light and Gas company. James F. English, pair clerk of the Democratic caucus of the house of rep- resentatives, died in Washington of liver complications. He has been con- nected with the house for twenty-five years. Mrs. Emma Marius, aged sixty- three, of Winsted, Conn., and Corne- lius Andrius, aged thirty-six, employed as a hired man by Mrs. Marius, have surprised their friends by getting married. Francis Patrick Clements, brother of the earl of Letrim, who recently crossed the ocean serving as a stoker, is on his way to Denver to become a real cowboy. He writes that he wants no tomfoolery, but expects to begin at the bottom and learn the business. While the majority of the world has been snarling, scratching and getting things tangled in the divorce courts, Mr. and Mrs, Daniel H. Pick of Den- ver have been living in beautiful peace. For sixty years not a word of contention has passed between them. Crimes and Criminals. Andrew Trice, a negro, accused of the murder of his mistress, was lynch- ed at Olive Branch, Miss., by thirty members of his own race. The partially decomposed body of Charles Huskey was found in a corn- crib at his home, two miles south of West Side, Iowa. ‘It is thought that he committed suicide by taking poison. Sitting on the edge of the bed at the home of her parents at Burlington, va, Carrie Dobbleman fired two bul- in her head, dying instantly. The unfaithfulness of a lover is said to have been the cause of the deed. Margaret J. King, thirty-one s of age, a well known Pittsburg an, committed suicide by cut- ting her throat after playing Tschai- kowsky’s Sixth Symphony on the no. Mrs. King had been despond- it for a long time. Accused of tearing down a United States flag and then trampling on it, James Grant was tried and convicted in justice court at Birch, Mich., and was sentenced to serve thirty days in jail, in addition to which he was fined $10. He is a subject of King Edward. Three masked men entered a noodle parlor located on Twenty-sixth street south, at Billings, Mont., and at the point of six-shooters compelled the proprietor, Wing Wong Chung, and a number of other Orientals in the place to face the wall with their hands up while they rifled the cash register and took all the cash in sight. Grief stricken by the receipt of a no- tification that her services would not be required after the end of this month, Mrs. Nielsen, a housekeeper; for a land owner named Ulljaer of Jut- and, Denmark, hanged three of her smployers children as well as three of her own and killed herself by hanging. Foreign. it is reported that King Victor Em. manuel intends to visit England, ac companied by an Italian fleet. Fifty workmen are reported to have been suffocated as the result of a fire in a sulphur mine in Girgenti, Sicily. The governor general of Moscow has fined eight Liberal newspapers $500 each. The Liberal press in the province is almost extinct. There was a fatal explosion in a colliery at Toyooka, in Bunge prov. ince, Japan. It is reported that nearly all of the 470 miners in the pit at the time were killed. Yaqui Indians raided the tamp of the Richfield*Copper Mining company, just north of Querobabi, Mex., and stripped it clean of everything of value, but the Indians refrained from murder. A military dirigible balloon made a most successful flight over Berlin. The trip lasted for three hours, and this length of time in the air hés been at tained only once, by the Lebaudys in France. The water has been entirely pump- ed out of the steamer Kaiser Wilhelm Il, that listed Saturday at Bremer- haven. The steamer sustained no in. juries and will be ready for service in five days, Advices from the Congo state that an officer and nine native militiamen have been killed by the natives, and that in French Congo a missionary nad been slain in the interior, where the native soldiers are rising against the whites. A dispatch to the London Globe from Brussels brings a report that ne. gotiations are in progress between the Netherlands and Japan looking to the purchase by the latter of an island in the Dutch East Indies for a coaling Station. The island is said to be close to the Philippines. issued a Danish civil engineer has suc- of tablets. These are dissolved in hot water, supplying, when cooled, beer of excellent quality and flavor. Twenty independent cigar manufac- turers of Havana, though not the most important ones, have decided to raise the price of cigars, charging American money instead of Spanish gold. This step is likely soon to be followed by all. The pope has decreed canonization of Joseph Oriola, a pious priest who lived his life in Barcelona. He also sanctioned miracles attributed to Marie Madeleine Postel, the founder of a religious order for women, who recently was canonized. The passing of Crosby Hall, a well known lunching place in London, brought a lucky incident for Miss Sage, a waitress. A number of city men whom she has regularly attended at luncheon subscribed a purse of $500 which they presented to the waitress. Casualty. ‘In a head-on collision between two traction cars at Elyria, Ohio, three persons were seriously injured. Muriel Hall of Coggon, Iowa, was killed in an explosion of an acetylene gas plant. Her sster was frightfully burned trying to save her. Hudson Maxim, Re inventor, of Brooklyn, plunged into Lake Hopati- long at Morristown, N. J., and brought two drowning young women ashore. The Hagenbeck-Wallace circus train was ditched near Twin Lakes, Mich., by a broken flange. No one was in- jured, but ten horses and one camel were killed. Mrs. Herbert Stranahan is dead and her mother-in-law, Mra Charles Stranahan is fatally injured by jump- ing from the carriage when the horses ran away at Romeo, Mich. A brick building, one of a row of six-story structures that are being torn down in New York, collapsed, burying twenty workmen. Two men were seriously injured. Eugene Howe, aged twenty-eight, of New York announced to his wife that he was going to fly out ig the night air like a bird. Clad if. his night shirt, he leaped from a <nird-story window and was killed. As the result of an insigniticant in- jury to a finger, Miss Evelyn Bengry, one of the most popular young women of Marquette, Mich., is dead at her home. Blood poisoning caused her de- mise at the age of twenty years. A burning cigarette stump tossed out of a window on the second story and accidentally lighting on the hat of Miss Grace Endon of Fort Dodge, re- sulted in injuries to her from burns | which may prove fatal. A bullet from a gun in the hands of Private Gillette, a soldier, intended for a deserter who was escaping at Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., instantly killed Miss Elizabeth Cadenhead of Ferguson, Ont. Officials are investi- gating. ; Eric Peterson, a young man, was drowned in Portage lake, near the ship canal at Hotghton, Mich. He, with three companions, was in a small boat which capsized, Peterson losing his life. The other three were rescued. The party was all intoxicated at the time. While prospecting near Clear creek, in Montana, John Ducie fell and rolled down the mountain side, sustaining serious injuries. Ducie broke one arm and dislocated his shoulder blade. Ducie ‘managed to crawl home, four miles away, the painful journey occu- pying six hours. He is in a critical condition, but it is hoped that he will survive. : Allen Wilson, twenty-two years of} age, widely known as “Tug” Wilson | football circles, was crushed to death | under an electric car at Oberlin, Ohio. He was famous as a_ quarterback. Wilson played for two years on the Oberlin college team. He had been a student at Williams college for a year and would have been eligible to the team this fall. General News Items. Gov. Comer of Alabama has signed ‘the anti-shipping bill, which prevents shipments of liquor into prohibition territory. ‘ Former Chief Sanitary Inspector Perry L. Hedrick was found not guilty of accepting bribes while in office in a Chicago court. Peter Sullivan, the Fall River light- weight got the decision over Cyclone Thompson of Sycamore, Ill., in twenty rounds at Ogden, Utah. With tbe strongest directorate of any financial institution in the South, the Merchants’ Bank and Trust com- pany was formally organized at Knox- ville, Tenn., with a paid-in capital of $500,000. Magistrate Walsh, in the Harlem court in New York, has laid down the dictum that a man and his wife have a constitutional right to fight in their own home, provided they do not dis- turg their neighbors. Reports that the American Thread company intend to advance the retail price of thread to 10 cents a spool were denied by an official offthe com- pany in New York. tee Fire, attributed to a . carelessly thrown cigarette stump, destroyed stable DD and partially destroyed sta- ble E at Grosse Point race track, near Detroit. The loss is about $1,000. After selling his wife to Jesus As- tura for $15, Juan Aguilar, a Mexican of Pueblo, Colo., has returned $14 of the money on the ground that Astura had got the worst of the bargain. FORTH A FREE MAN IS ACQUITTED OF THE MURDER OF FORMER GOVERNOR STEU- - NENBERG. WILL PROSECUTE THE OTHERS STATE ANNOUNCES THAT CASES OF MOYER AND PETTIBONE WILL BE PUSHED. Boise, Idaho, July 30. — Into the bright sunlight of a beautiful Sabbath morning, in the ‘stillness of a city drowsy with the lazy slumbers of a summer Sunday, William D. Haywood, defendant in one of the most noted trials involving conspiracy and mur- der that the country has ever known, walked yesterday a free man, acquit- ted of the murder of Former Governor Frank Steunenberg. The probability of a verdict of ac- quittal in the case of the secretary- treasurer and acknowledged leader of the Western Federation of Miners had been Freely Predicted since Saturday, when Judge Fremont Wood read his charge, which was re- garded as strongly favoring the de- fense in its interpretation of the law of conspiracy, circumstantial evidence and the corroboration of an accom- plice who confesses, * It was also freely predicted that in the event of Haywood’s ag¢quittal the state would abandon the prosecution of his associates, Charles H. Moyer, the president of the federation, and George A. Pettibone of Denver. State- ments from counsel and from Gov. Gooding issued yesterday dispel this view of the situation. “Jury at Last Agrees. It was after being out for twenty- one hours that the jury, which first had been divided at ten to two, finally came to an agreement. Events moved rapidly enough after this, and when at last the principal actors in the trial had been gathered into the court room at a few moments before 8 o’clock the white envelope handed by the foreman to the judge was torn open and the verdict read. Haywood’s attorneys were fairly lift- ed from their seats, and Judge Wood made no effort to restrain them as they surrounded Haywood to shout aloud their congratulations. First Thought of Mother. Haywood’s first thought after his re- lease was of his aged mother, who Saturday had suffered a’ complete nervous breakdown after the jury had retired. Haywood walked to St. Luke’s hospital and unannounced rushed into his mother’s room. So great was the effect of the news upon the elderly lady that last night she wa sup and about and happy. Next Haywood went to the little cot- tage where his wife and daughters have been stopping. Once home, Hay- wood said: “I want to thank the people of Boise for their kindness to my wife, my mother, my family and my friends.” Will Prosecute Others. Senator Borah said: “I have no comment to make other than that twelve good men and true men of the State of Idaho have passed upon the case, and that disposes Qf it so far as the State of idalié and Hay- wood are concerned. The prosecution of the other men indictetd will be pushed vigorously and without any reference to the Haywood, trial.” .E. F. Richardson, one of Haywood’s leading counsel, said: “We have had a fair trial. We have had. an impartial trial and conscien- tious jury and an impartial judge.” nena SENATOR PETTUS DEAD. Oldest Man in Public Life at Wash- ington Passes Away. Hot Springs, N. C., July 30—Senator Edmund W. Pettus of Alabama died here last night at 10 o'clock. He was eighty-six years old July 6. Senator Pettus was not only the old- est member of the senate, but also the oldest man in public life in the United States, The senator, without apparently be- ing seriously, succumbed to old age. He lapsed into unconsciousness while at breakfast yesterday morning. Senator Morgan, three years Pettus’ junior, but his senior in service in the senate, died two months ago. Birmingham, Ala., July 29.—The suc- cessor to Senator E. W. Pettus will be Former Governor Joseph F. Johnson of Birmingham. Stella (Wash.) Burned. Stella, Wash., July 30.—This town |* was practically destroyed by fire. Among the buildings burned were two hotels, two saloons, wharves, mils, warehouses and hospitals. The loss is estimated at $200,000. ; Launches Burned, Houghton, Mich., July 30.—Leaking gasoline in a boathouse of James Pry- or & Sons here caused the destruction by fire of two gasoline launches and two boathouses. The loss is about! $5,000. V% ASE OF MOYER ON BAIL CO-DEFENDANT WITH HAYWOOD TO GIVE BOND IN THE SUM OF $25,000. Boise, Idaho, July 31. — Charles H. Moyer, president of the Western Fed. eration of Miners, and co-defendant with William D. Haywood, acquitted of the murder of Former Governor Steu- nenberg, was ordered released on $25,- 000 bail yesterday by Judge -Wood, who presided at the Haywood trial. The attorneys for the federation ex- pected to have the bond ready last night, but the arrangements had not been completed at a late hour. Moyer will probably be released to-day and will leave at onee for Denver, his home. Date for Pettibone’s Trial. No application for bail was made in the case of George A. Pettibone, the third of the alleged conspirators, but the motion was made for a speedy trial, and his case was set down for Tuesday, Oct. 1. Counsel intimated yesterday that they might apply for a bond for Pettibone later, but it is not believed that the state’s attorneys will consent. It has been generally claimed that the state has more incriminating evidence against Pettibone than against any of the others, while it has been generally conceded that the case against Moyer is the weakest. Haywood Congratulated. Haywood yesterday continued to re- ceive congratulatory telegrams from all sections of the country. They came from officials of labor unions, from lo- cal unions of the Western Federation and socialists’ organizations. The messages nearly all expressed the sentiment that “labor has triumph- ed over the oppressive measures of capital.” Haywood spent the day at the cot- tage occupied by his family and re- ceived many callers. He expects to leave for Denver Thursday. Home-coming for Haywood. ki Denver, June 30.— Secretary-Treas- urer Haywood’s return to Denver will be made the occasion of a great dem- onstration in the city by the Western Federation of Miners and other labor organizations. FIRE HITS NEW YORK HARD. Twenty-Four Hours’ Record Is Eigh- teen Deaths and $1,000,000 Loss. New York, July 3k—Shocking loss of human life and destruction of prop- erty estimated at more than $1,000,000 were caused by fires in New York and its vicinity in the twenty-four hours ending at 8 o’clock yesterday morn- ing. MB gfiteen persons are dead and at least fifteen are seriously injured as the result of a fire early yesterday in a tenement in a house on Christie street. All of the occupants of the house were Italians. There is no clue to the origin of the blaze. It was at first reported that the fire was proba- bly the result of a bomb exploded-in a grocery store in the basement of the buoldings, but the police after a care- ful investigation said that there was no evidence to sustain this theory or to show that the fire was of incendiary origin. The fire wave first struck Coney Island, and before it subsided Steeple- chase Park, a score of hotels and many amusement attractions were in ruins and many persons were home- less. The next fire was the steamship fire. Then came the Christie street tenement disaster, and next the Long Branch hotel was destroyed. . The 800 guests were all in their beds when the flames were discovered, but all left the building in safety. The hotel burned like tinder and within a short time was a smoldering mass of ruins. It was three stories high and nearly 600 feet in length, and when filled to its capacity housed 1,100 persons. The Joss is about $200,000. i “BLACK HAND” OUTRAGE, Man Found Shockingly Mutilated — Suspect Arrested. Detroit, July 31. — Ton Leto, aged thirty-five, was found last night lying helpless in front of his home, shock- ingly mutilated and with stab. wounds in his abdomen, chest and thigh and behind his ear. The police arrested a young Italian whose hands were cov- ered with blood when he was appre- hended, and are holding him on sus- picion, Letogrefuses to name his as- sailant, and there are rumors that the affair was a “Black Hand” outrage. FULFILLS HER THREAT. Actress, Despondent Over Love Affair, Kills Self, Colorado Springs, Colo., July 31. — The body of Miss Laura Matthews, nineteen years old, an actress of Kan- sas City and New York, was found ly- ing in a lane near Ivy Wilde early yes- terday with a bullet hole in her head. It is said she had been engaged to a wealthy Chicagoan and was de- spondent because of his failure to ful- fill his promise of marriage. Threats of suicide are said to have been made by yer. *DRESS ABLAZE; GIRL RUNS. * Fatal Burns Are Inflicted by Oil Pour- ed Into Stove. Oakland, Iowa, July 31.—With her clothing ablaze and leaving a trai) of fire behind her, Lily Lees ran scream- ing across lots to the house of a neigh- bor. The neighboring woman wrapped the girl in a blanket and extinguished the flames, but not. until the young woman had been so badly burned that it is believed she cannot survive. She had attempted to hasten the kitchen “fire by pouring kerosene upon it, OF DYING FATHER TRAGEDY AT HOME OF HUNTING- TON FAMILY AT VERSAILLES, FRANCE. ATTEMPTS 10 KILL - SELF FATHER DIES, IGNORANT OF THE TRAGEDY — BROTHER AND SISTER MAY DIE. Versailles, July 31—The death of the aged American soldier himself and an attempt at self-destruction on the part of his son Henry, who shot his sisters and brothers. Sunday, in the last hours of his dying father, impart- ed additional sadness to the shocking tragedy in the home of Maj. Henry A. Huntington, which has caused a sensa- tion in the American colony and in di- plomatic circles in France. Father Spared Anguish. Maj. Huntington died last evening shortly after the news was given out of his son Henry’s unsuccessful at- tempt at suicide, but the father was spared the anguish of knowing of this incident and of the terrible crime which shattered his household, as he was unconscious to the end. According to the police, Henry at- tempted suicide in his cell with a silk handkerchief, which he tied around his neck and fastened to the bars, seeking to strangle himself slowly by means of a tourniquet: Henry Irresponsible. Though plunged in grief at the death of the head of the household, the mother and children have had time to interpret Henry’s effort at self-de- struction as additional evidence of the mental irresponsibility, which they say he has long manifested in certain di- rections, His wife, however, declares that it was the natural result of remorse at the dreadful acts which he committed in a sudden outburst of uncontrollable fury at the interference of his brothers when he hurried to the bedside of his dying father to beg fgrgiveness. Brother May Die. The condition of Alonzo, who was shot in the head, and Elizabeth, who was shot in the region of the heart, was serious yesterday. Alonzo, it is believed, will die. . Huntington’s wife has made public an account of the things she says her husband told her before he was locked up, in which ‘he declared he had lost his head. during words with his brothers and fired wildly and reckless- ly. Young Mrs. Huntington asserts that there was a complete rupture be- tween Henry and his family on ac- count of the treatment of her by his sisters, and that Henry smarted under the refusal of his family to receive her in their home. : Squabble Over Will. It is stated b¥ certain acquaintances of Maj. Huntington that after his quar- rel with Henry, some months ago, he had drawn up a will leaving all his property to his wife and the four oth- er children, but that in view of his re- conciliation with Henry on Sunday he tore up this will and made a new one, in which Henry was given an equal share with the others. It was the protests of the family against this which led Henry, accord- ing to the statement, to use his re- volver. GHASTLY WORK OF ANGRY MOB, Lynched Negroe’s Body Dug Up, Rid- died With Bullets and Burned. Crisfield, Md., July 31.—Their pas- sion unsated by the kicking and beat- ing to death of the negro Reed, who on Saturday evening, without. provoca- tion, shot and killed Policeman Daugh- erty, who had Reed's associate Willim Hildred, under arrest, a mob at an early hour yesterday morning dug Reed's mutilated remains from the rude grave in a swamp near town in which.they had been thrown, riddled them with bullets and.then, lighting a bonfire, tossed them into the flames and stood about, watching until they were reduced to ashes. Lemuel Showers, the keeper of the billiard room frequented by negroes, whe loane@ Reed the revolver with which he shot Daugherty, was captur- ed yesterday and lodged in the county jail at Princess Anne. Every train ar- riving at Crisfield was searched in the hope that Showers would be found on board Had he been he would almost certainly have been lynched, for there has been much trouble with lawless negroes, and the feeling against such very high. Hildred, whose arrest pre- cipitated the trouble, has not yet been captured. There has been no adverse criticism of the treatment given Reed. Mob Leaders Held for Murder. Pawhuska, Okla., July 31. — Mike White and Shorty Green, alleged lead- ers of the mob that lynched the negro Frank Bailey at Osage, were held last night to the federal grand jury for murder in the first degree. More Insanity in Wisconsin. Madison, Wis., July 31. — Insanity cases have increased in Wisconsin the last year from 5,836 to $5,968, 60 per cent women. The average ratio of in- sanity is one to about every 382 peo- ple. ee SHOOTS KI ATBED a INQUIRY SPA AIM IS TO DISCOVER GOVERN. MENT EMPLOYES’ INTEREST IN INVENTIONS. Washington, July 30.—Simultaneous- ly with the filing of the suit by the United States against the powder trust an investigation was started yesterday under government authority~ which promises to produce an interesting de- velopment. Public officials and even departmen- tal clerks in all branches of the public service here were yesterday served with notice by the bureau of corpora- tions that specific answers are wanted to the queries whether any official or employe of the government is either directly or indirectly interested in any patents or patented articles. * The inquiry is a surprise to the offl- cials, for the reason that it is difficult to understand what business it is of the federal government whether an of- ficial or employe is interested in a pat- ent. The inquiry is proceeding under a joint resolution passed by congress, directing the bureau of corporations to investigate the subject of the inter- est of government officials and em- ployes in any patent which covers an article in which the government is in- terested, and whether such patented article, by reason of the patent grant- ed, costs the government more money. AVERTS TRAIN WRECK. Engineer Stops Passenger Just as It 4 Hits Obstruction. Phillipsburg, N. J., July 30.—An at- tempt was made last night to wreck the Pocono special on the Pennsylva- nia railroad at a lonely point seven miles north of here. While traveling at a high rate of speed the engineer saw on a sharp curve a _ lot of ties across the tracks. He applied the brakes and the train was stopped just as it struck the obstruction. It is be- lieved that robbery was the motive. ARMENIAN PRIEST JAILED. Arrest Follows Investigation of Mur- der of Rug Merchant. New York, July 30—Father Beport Martoogesian, the Armenian priest whose name has been associated with the Hunchaist society, was arrested last night on charges of extortion and blackmail. His arrest followed the investigation the police have been ‘| making into the assassination of Ho- vannes Tavshanjian, a wealthy Armen- ian rug merchant, several days ago. DYNAMITE IN TRUNK. oa Explodes in St. Louis Union Station and Hurts Two Men. St. Louis, July 30. — A quantity of dynamite in a miner’s trunk exploded while the trunk was being handled at the union station yesterday, seriously injuring two men, slightly wounding six others and creating a noise that al- most started a panic. Baggageman Warner Sparks and Hugh Gavin were seriously injured. THE MARKETS. MELE ihe Latest Quotations From Grain ands Live Stock Centers. St. Paul, July 30. — Wheat — No.1 Northern, 98 1-2@98 3-4c; No. 2 North- ern, 95 1-2@96e; No. 3, 922@94e. Corn —No. 3 yellow, 501-4c. Oats—No. 2 white, 40 7-8e. Minneapolis, July 30.— Wheat—No. 1 hard, 991-2@993-4c; No. 1 North- ern, 98 1-2@98 3-4c; No. 2 Northern, 951-2@96c; durum, 603-4c. Oats— No. 2 white. 40 7-8c. Corn—No. 3 yel- low, 50 1-4e. Duluth, July 30. — Wheat — No. 1 hard, $1.00 5-8; No. 1 Northern, 99 5-8c; No. 2 Northern, 981-8c. Oats —No. 2 white, 38c, Chicago, July 30. — Wheat — No. 2 red, 90@91c; No. 2 hard, 90@91c; No. 3 spring, 96@99c; No. 1 North- ern, nothing doing. Oats—No. 2 white, 431-4c. Corm—No. 2, 53 1-2c. Milwaukee, July 30.—Wheat—No. 1 Northern, $1.01@1.02; No. 2 Northern, 97c@$1. Rye—No. 1, 87@871-2c. Bar- ley—No. 2. 70 1-2c. Chicago, July 30.—Cattle — Beeves, $4.70@7.35; stockers and _ feeders, $2.90@5.30; calves, $5@7. Hogs ~ Mixed and” butchers, $5.80@6.22 1-2; bulk, $5.70@5.95. Sheep — $4@6; lambs, $5.50@7.75. Sioux City, Iowa, July 30.—Cattle— Beeves, $4.75@6.85; cows, bulis an@ mixed, $3@5.25; stockers and feeders, $3.75@4.75; calves and yearlings, $3@ 4.25. Hogs—$5.55@5.60. South St. Paul, July 30.—Cattle — Good to choice steers, $5.50@6; good to choice cows and heifers, $3.50@5. Hogs—Price range, $5.70@5.90; bulk, $5.80@5.90. Sheep—Wethers, $5.50@ 6; good to choice ewes, $5.55@6; good to choice lambs, $7.25@8; fair, $5.50@7.25. Killed by Car. Eau Claire, July 30.—Alfred Chris- tianson, twenty-one, stepping from an interurban electric car last night, fell under the wheels of a flat car which was attached as a trailer. He died at 9 o'clock. Bull Charges Farmer. Atwater, Minn., July 30.—Louis Nor- din was seriously injured by the at- tack of a vicious bull. Nordin was out in the pasture when the bull suddenly attacked him. The man was knocked down and five of his ribs broken. Prfhce Hit by Stick. Paris, July 30.—Prince Alexis Orloff of Russia was badly wounded in the face yesterday while driving in his au- tomobile to Paris by a broomstick The thrown by an “anti-autoist.” prince’s assailant was arrested. armeenninsiahe

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