Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
erald-Review. By C. E. KILEY. GRAND RAPIDS, - MINNESOTA, NEWS OF THE WEEK IN EPITOME IMPORTANT EVENTS AT HOME AND ON FOREIGN SHORES BRIEFLY TOLD. Washington. A new rural mail route out of Frankford, Sping county, S. D., is or- dered to begin Dec. 16, to serve eigh- ty-five families; out of Ross, Ward county, N. D., to serve 106 families; out of Wheelock, Williams county, to | serve 107 families. Confounded with a statement by Henry A. Castle, former auditor of the postoffice department, that the govern- ment for a long time had lost an av- erage of $1,000 daily through error and fraud in the money order system, the congressional commission which is inquiring into postal methods, has gone far enough to decide that impor- tant reforms are necessary in the con- duct of the service. Application for a writ of mandamus was made to the supreme court of the United States directing the court to issue a writ of error in the case of Thomas B. Clement of Faribault, Minn., who has been convicted and sentenced to eight years’ imprison- ment at Stillwater for misappropra- tion of bank funds. Application for a writ of certiorari in this case had previously been denied. People Talked About. Campbell Slemp, member of con- gress from the Ninth district of Vir- ginia, died at Big Stone Gap, Va., of angina pectoris. Rey. Ephraim Hall Emery Jameson, for sixteen years district secretary of the American Baptist Missionary so- ciety for Michigan and Ohio, died at his home in Detroit, aged seventy-two years. Henri Rochefort, the well known French journalist, at the age of seven- ty-seven, severed his connection with the Intransiegant, which he founded in 1880, and assumed the editorship of the Patrie. Rey. Edward Everett Hale has re- tired as president of the American An- tiquarian society, and Waldo Lincoln of Worcester, Mass., was elected, to the office. Dr. Hale has completed sixty years membership in the society. From Other Shores. The slump in the price of copper has closed a large number of mines in the southern portion of the republic of Mexico. ’ Mail advices from Batavia report the ambuscade and the massacre of two companies of Dutch troops by na- tives in Celebes. Not one escaped. The priests of the department of F stere, France, having generally re- fused to quit their presbyteries, which reverted to the communes under the church and state separation law, are now being expelled by the aid of the gendermes, The imperial Chinese troops detach- ed from the Yangste Kiang valley can- tonments since the anti-missionary outbreaks at Nan Kang Sian, have driven the so-called Boxers into the mountains on the borders of Kwang Tung. In an engagement at Chung Yi the troops killed seventy insurgents. A correspondent of the Tagsblatt at Emden telegraphs that, according to a dispatch received from Borkun, a spying yacht with English naval offi- cers on board has been captured by two Wilhelmhaven torpedo boats. The officers are suspected of having taken soundings and made photographs in forbidden waters, Although the general strike has been officially called off at Milan, the labor situation in other parts of Italy is disquieting. It is understood that the decision taken by the leaders at Milan was the result of a promise on the part of Signor Gioletti, the pre- mier and minister of the interior, that the government would punish the car- bineers who fired on the strikers, if the investigation being made proves that they were not justified in shoot- ing into the mob. Casualty. * Five men were drowned by the over- turning of a scow in the Illinois andj Michigan canal near Joliet, Il. Francis Hays, three years old, fell into a water tank on the farm of his grandmother near Waterloo, Iowa, and was drowned. . One man was killed and three oth- ers fatally injured in a boiler explo- sion at the sawmill of Jacob’ Markle, near Puxsutawney, Pa. Matthew Glovoski, five years old, and his sister Lucy, eleven years old, were run over and killed by a Lake Shore train at Loraine, Ohio. While trying to cross the Cumber- tork, one of the tines penetrating his Intestines, Six people were killed and fifteen injured in a collision between a north- bound Southern railwa ypassenger train and a freight train at Budd, N. C., near Greensboro. y Ernst Néidert, nineteen, son of Chris Neidert, a wealthy retired farm- er of State Center, lowa, was instant- ly killed by being struck by a@ North-Western fast passenger train. Fifteen or more persons were in- jured, several of them seriously, when on a south side elevated train which crashed into the rear of a South side elevated train at State and Van Buren streets, Chicago. Arthur Onweller was killed in an automobile accident at Morenci, Mich. Mr. Onweller had purchased a new automobile and was taking his first ride in it. His wife and two children were in the machine with him. While saving a trunk from the sec- ond story of his burning dwelling H. Medd, a Watertown, Iowa, laborer, was badly burned about the hands, arms and face. Mr. Medd risked his life to save his valuables. The magazine of the Petroles Tor- pedo company, near Petrolea, Ont., ex- ploded with terrific force. Residences within a radius of a mile of the maga- zine were more or less damaged. No one was in the building at the time. One man was killed, six persons were dangerously and probably twen- ty-five others slightly hurt when an Elberon avenue car jumped the track and went over a twenty-five-foot em- bankment at Mount Hope, in the west- ern end of Cincinnati. Twenty-five persons, the majority of them seriously, but none, it is be- lieved, fatally, were injured in a trol- ley collision on the Buffalo & Lake Erie Traction company line at Erie, Pa. All the passengers had miracu- lous escape'from death. Crimes and Criminals. Mrs. Bertha Lund, who strangled her three children three weeks ago at Buffalo, N. Y., has been committed to the hospital for the insane. Four men and three women, one of the former a government mail carrier, were ambushed and Killed east of Her- mosillo, in the lower Sonora country, by Yaqui Indians. The Bank of Wharton, Ohio, was looted by cracksmen who, it is said, secured a large sum of money. Sev- eral stores were also robbed. Blood- hounds are on the trail of the robbers. Matt Gandy, a young white farmer, is dead, and his brother, O. D. Grady, is seriously wounded as a result of a shooting affray which occurred in front of their home at Hall’s creek, Ala. The trial of William Stout of Vin- ton, Iowa, on the charge of murder in the first degree had a sudden termina- tion, when by mutual consent the charge was made manslaughter and the prisoner pleaded guilty. During a pistol duel at Peoria, Ill, with a burglar who had robbed a res- idence of several thousand dollars’ worth of diamonds, Ed Barrett, a po liceman, was shot and killed. The man who fired the shot escaped. A man giving the names of Ford and Wilson has been arrested at Miles City on suspicion of being the person wanted at Belle Fourche, S. D., for the forging of a $250 check. Jacob Dittinger, aged fifty-nine years, of New York, committed suicide in an unusual manner. Placing a stick of dynamite in his mouth and holding it in his right hand, Dettinger exploded the dynamite, blowing his head off and shattering t hehand that held the explosive. Dollar Bay, four miles north of Houghton, was the scene of a volume of housebreaking one night last week. The Donlan hotel, the leading one of the town, and four private residences were broken into, but so far as can be ascertained no plunder was secured in any case. At one house the burg- lar took off two storm windows before he could effect an entrance to the house, only to be discovered by the inmates. Domestic. Equal suffrageists of Iowa will soon ally themselves with the Labor party and do their best to further its cause. This was the sentiment prevalent at the state convention of suffragists held at Des Moines last week. The installation of a regular trans- Atlantic wireless service was accom. plished by William Marconi and his assistants at Glace Bay, N. F., last week. Mr. Marconi stated that more than 5,000 words had been transmit. ted between the station and Port Morien and the Irish station. The first railroad ever built in Low- er California will be in operation in a few days, and will come under the jurisdiction of E. E. Calvin, general manager of the Southern Pacific. This line was built by E. H. Harriman, and is known as the Inter-California rail- way, and runs southward from Calex- land river a short distance below Nashville, Tenn., in a skiff T. J. War- mack and his two sons were drowned. Assistant Secretary of State Robert ico as far as Paradones, 371-2 miles. Miss Helen Gould formally opened the new railroad brach of the Young Men’s Christian association at Eu. L. Bacon figured in a heroic rescue on genie and Tom streets, St. Louis, in the Charles river, when he jumped] the name of her father, ay Gould. The from the Harvard launch Veritas and fact that she declared it opened in her swam to the rescue of two boys who dead father’s name came as a grea‘ had capsized in a canoe. He saved surprise to those present. Miss Gould the life of ae ae rari in aa was the guest of honor at a banquet. rescued by J. S. Reed, a student o Dispatches from the center and Harvard, who followed Bacon into the South of France confirm the worst re water. ports of destruction caused by thr One man was killed and the steel foods. . Great distress has resulted steamer John W. Moore was sunk in a! Railroad traffic is disorganized. For collision between the Moore and tunately the:storm center is now go Queen City in the Detroit river, just seaward , above the Lime Kilns crossing. , Sout NMNEFFECTIVE PAGE VAULTS OF BIG NEW YORK BANK EMPTIED — BROKERS FAIL FOR $6,000,000. ASK CORTELYOU FOR HELP NEW YORK BANKERS UNABLE TO STEM THE RISING TIDE OF DISTRUST. New York, Oct. 24.—Credit, the un- der-the-surface foundation of all busi- ness, trembled for a time yesterday, and before confidence could be re stored New York’s’ second largest financial institution had emptied its cash vaults under pressure of the big- gest run experienced here in a gen- eration, a stock exchange firm had failed for $6,000,000, Wall street's: principal securities had settled from $25 to $8 a share, call money had risen to 70 per cent, and local bank- ers, unable to stem the tide.of distrust, had been forced to appeal for relief to the secretary of the tréasury at Wash- ington. Assurances Ignored. All this was in the face of reassur- ing statements by the acting state su- perintendent of banks that the sus- pected bank was solvent; declarations by prominent bankers that there was no true basis for alarm, and assur- ances from Washington that Secre- tary Cortelyou would not hesitate to act promptly in any situation where legitimate business was threatened. Now that the first scare is over and the worst of the future discounted, it is believed the local banking firms will soon readjust themselves. Secretary of the Treasury George B. Cortelyou reached New York from Washington at 9:30 o’clock last night. He was met at Jersey City by Hamil- ton Fish, assistant United States treasurer, and the two were in earnest conversation during the ferry trip to New York. Upon reaching this city they went at once to the Hotel Man- hattan, where several bankers later presented to the secretary the various phases of the local financial condi- tions. Before leaving Washington late yes- terday Mr. Cortelyou directed that $6; 000,000 be deposited with New York banks as soon as the necessary col- lateral had been furnished. Secretary Will Act. The secretary issued this state- ment: “The secretary of the treasury is keeping in touch with the business conditions throughout the country. In the matter of public deposits he will at all times consult the needs of legiti- mate business interests and will not hesitate to deal promptly and ade quately with any situation that may arise.” © Mr. Cortelyou’s statement when re- ceived here did much to put a better face on things, and it was predicted that the secretary’s visit would result in further deposits of $15,000,000. Pays $44,444 a Minute. The Knickerbocker Trust company, the storm center yesterday, paid out cash to depositors at the rate of $44,- 444 a minute for three hours yesterday and then closed its doors. The direct- ors had, as they thought, fully pre- pared for a run, and caused to be an- nounced in yesterday’s papers that $8,000,000 in cash was on hand to meet all eventualities. The $8,000,000 lasted until 1:30, when Vice President Brown announced that the bank had no more cash available, and payments were suspended. Mr/ Brown said that the bank would open to-day and pay- ments be resumed at 10:30 o’clock. The Knickerbocker, it was announced, had ample securities to meet all de- mands, was perfectly solvent, and it was only a question of raising the cash, when all depositors who wished to withdraw could do so. Hopelessly Insolvent. Subsequently it was learned that the position of the Knickerbocker Trust company was regarded by those at the conference as hopelessly insol- vent, and that no aid was to be ex- tended to that institution. Statement by Corteiyou. Secretary Cortelyou made the fol- lowing statement shortly before 1 o'clock this morning: “T repeat what I stated before leav- ing Washington this afternoon, if for no other reason than to emphasize the attitude of the treasury department. It will use its facilities to assist in every proper way legitimate business interests and its actions will be prompt and thorough. “The national banks of New York city are in an exceptionally strong condition. The general situation here seems to be well in hand and is being looked after by many strong and in- fluential men.” ~ James Lloyd Jones Dead. Dodgeville ,Wis., Oct. 23.—James Lloyd Jones, a member of the board of regents of the state university and a brother of Rev. Jenkin Lloyd Jones, the Chicago divine, died at his home at Wyoming, this county, yesterday. Robber Suspects Arrested. Black River Falls, Wis., Oct. 24. — Three strangers, supposed to be the parties who burglarized the store of Groff & Dickens and the postoffice at Merrillan, were arrested and lodged in the county jail. a (BESET SIRE Ar Sy LSE SRE co eg ESRI AP lo A. SR RR OSS AE NB a A TES rc Onion ss ie en One teL Se eno eo ee tear We rele «Shon ERR RE cme NATIONAL CIVIC FEDERATION CONFERENCE BEGINS IN : . CHIGAGO. Chicago, Oct. 24—The trust confer- ence of the National Civic Federation, which is to continue for four days, opened here yesterday. About 400 del- egates were present, representing forty-two states and approximately 2ighty different organizations of a mer- eantile, civic and municipal character, President Nicholas Murray Butler of Columbia university, the president of the federation, occupied the chair. Wade H. Ellis, attorney general of Ohio, spoke on “Present Principles Enunciated by the New Organization of Attorneys General.” He said ‘in part: “f “Let us be done with all rivalry be- tween state and federal jurisdiction. Let us indulge no timid fears about the perpetuity of our dual form of gov- ernment, and revive no bugaboos of a past generation to fright the souls of the unwary. “The trust question cannot be fenced in by state lines. Whether we will it or not, it has become a na- tional cause, and it will have to be de- cided in a national forum. The effort should be rather to seek one effectual remedy than to emphasize a conflict between many.” é A. P. Ankeny ‘of Minneapolis spoke on “Does the Power to Regulate Rates in Transportation of Commerce Rest With Congress or the States?” OVER $1,108,000 ASTRAY. Vice President and Treasurer of Capu- secya Concern Arrested. Washington, Oct. 24.—Eugene Davis and Edward C. Bryan, vice president and treasurer, respectively, of the Ca- pusecya Mining company, were yester- day indicted by the grand jury on charges of false pretenses, embezzle- ment and conspiracy. United States Attorney Baker at once filed a bill to annul the charter and for a receiver. Justice Gould appointed Attorney John E. Laskey receiver. It is stated in the bill that Davis and Bryan have sold the stock of the min- ing company, for which they have re- ceived more than $1,000,000, and have also negotiated a loan for $108,000 for the company, but that none of the money from the sale of the stock or the loan has reached the treasury of the company. INJURED BY CELLMATE. Millionaire Murderer Receives Broken Leg in Fight. Chicago, Oct. 24. — Amassa Camp- bell, the millionaire lumberman from Antigo, Wis., slayer of Dr. Harris, is in the hospital at the county jail with a broken leg. Campbell received his injuries in a fight with his cellmate in murderers’ row. According to a story told by attor- ney, Campbell, who is a most exem- plary prisoner, was attacked by his eellmate because of some slight af- front. KILLED BY FATHER’S GIFT. Cleveland Lad Loses Life in Auto Ac- cident. Chicago, Oct. 24.—While racing an automobile on Michigan boulevard early yesterday, Adrian Sibson, twenty years old, son of a prominent attorney of Cleveland, was killed and five com- panions were bruised. Sibson’s auto- mobile skidded, struck the curbstone and was smashed. The automobile was presented to young Sibson by his fa ther. 4 TAFT HAS A BUSY DAY. Confers With President of Philippine Assembly. Manila, Oct. 24. — Secretary Taft ended a day of hard work in the transaction of official business with an important conference with President Osmena of the Philippine assembly. They discussed the attitude of the as- sembly, which the secretary said was satisfactory, expressing his gratifica- tion that its tendency is not radical. LUMBER MILL BURNS. Loss to Company at Garth Covered by $40,000 Insurance. Gladstone, Mich., Oct. 24. — The Garth Lumber and Shingle company’s mill at Garth, Mich., was burned last evening. The company’s store and a portion of the lumber were saved. The mill was insured for $40,000 with various companies, NEGRO HELD AS SLAYER. Row Following Poker Game at Finley, N. D., Ends in Murder. Grand Forks, N. D., Oct, 24.—Fred Hamlin, an engineer, was shot and in- stantly killed at Finley, N. D., yester- day morning, following trouble over a poker game. The act is laid to Carl McRae, colored. The negro fled, but was captured at Tolna by Sheriff Sandlie of Nelson county, after an ex- citing chase. : BOTH PASS CENTURY LINE. Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., Oct. 24. — Death has claimed Ferdinando Caleri- nello, 103 years old; the cause, old age. His wife died last spring, aged 102, said to have been the oldest wom- an in the United States. Cowboy Role Is Costly. Granada, Minn., Det. 24——-Two sons of C. R. Hill lassoed a steer and in some manner Jay, the younger boy, was thrown to the ground and his collarbone was broken. P THETST PROBEW/ EASTER FEELING IN WALL STREET IN -BANKING RECENT TENSION CIRCLES IS CONSIDERABLY RELIEVED. PRICES ADVANCE STEADILY RALLY OF PRONOUNCED PROPOR: TIONS ON THE STOCK EX- CHANGE. New York, Oct. 23.—The recent ten- sion of the banking community was yesterday considerably relieved and the day passed with no adverse de- velopments of a serious character, but with much that was reassuring. At the same time there was evidence that some of the banks most affected by re- cent events were still in need \of as- sistance, but the promptness with which the clearing house . accorded it did much to allay further alarm. The general improvement was re- flected in the buoyancy of the stock market and the steady advance in prices from previous low levels. Situation Still Serious. The clearing house was called upon to meet debit balances of the Mercan- tile and the New Amsterdam banks to the extent of upward of $2,000,000. The fact that the clearing house committee regard the situation as still serious was shown by the remark of a member of the committee that the Mercantile bank’s debit balance was “unexpectedly large and disconcert- ing.” William Sherer, manager of the clearing house, stated that the situa- tion was under control; that some of the more awkward features had been eliminated, and that from this time there would begin a new era in New York banking. On the stock exchange the improv- ed banking conditions resulted in a rally of pronounced proportions. One development yesterday which did not tend to ease the prevailing conditions was the application for a receiver for the firm of Otto Heinze & Co., the brokers, who were suspended from the New York stock exchange last week after a disagreement between that firm and Cross & Kleeberg over the acceptance of a block of stock of United Copper. HARRIMAN NEEDS VOTES. Agrees to Postpone Meeting Until In- junction Is Decided by Court. Chicago, Oct. 22.—Stuyvesant Fish early yesterday secured postponement of the Illinois Central stockholders’ meeting until Dec. 18. The Harriman people agreed to the adjournment, al- though they had previously been anx- ious to push matters as rapidly as possible. The decision to adjourn the meet- ing was the result of a conference be- tween William Nelson Cromwell, for Mr. Harriman, and Judge E, H. Far- rar, for Mr, Fish. The overtures came from Mr. Cromwell, who sought out the Fish people and declared that he wished to comg to,some sort of an agreement. He was informed by Judge Farrar that the only agree- ment that could be recahed was to ac- cept the terms of Mr. Fish, which would be the adjournment utnil Dec. 18, and a decision of court, if the Harriman people so desired, to deter- mine the right to vote the 286,731 shares of stock, against which a tem- porary injunction was issued by Judge Ball one week ago. After an extended conference Mr. Cromwell assented. ATTEMPTS SUICIDE! IN COURT. Youth Places Revolver to Forehead in Juvenile Court Room. Minneapolis, Oct. 23.—Arthur Wil- liams, a fifteen-year-old boy, rather than go to the state training school at Red Wing yesterday attempted to shoot himself through the head with a .32-caliber revolver in the juvenile eourt in the presence of Judge John Day Smith, who had just finished his examination of the lad. The prompt acuon of George A. Copeland, proba- tion officer, in knocking the weapon upwards, alone prevented a tragedy. The boy was arrested on a charge of committing many petty thefts. QUAKE IN INDIAN OCEAN. Intense Disturbance Indicated by ; Record at Washington. Washington, Oct. 23——The weather bureau announced that its instru- ments recorded an earthquake at 11 o’clock yesterday morning, and that its origin may have been at a point west of Australia, in the South Indian ocean. It is believed to have been of considerable intensity: GUN SLIPS AND KILLS. Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 23.—Jalmar Nygaard died yesterday at Orr, N. D., as a result of a wound received while returning from a hunting trip Sunday evening. With three companions Ny- gaard was riding in a buggy and a gun shipped through a hole in the bettom of the buggy. The hammer caught against the side of the hole in the buggy and the gun was discharged. The charge entered Nygaard’s breast | just above the heart. TRIAL SULTANS IN BATTLE SULTAN OF THE SOUTH WINS FIRST BATTLE FOR MOROC- CAN THRONE. Tangier, Oct. 23.—The first conflict between the forces of the rival sul tans, Abdel-Aziz and Mulai Hafig, took place Oct. 17 near Settat. be- tween Shawta and Mequinez, with the result that a detachment of troops fighting with Mulai Hafig( the sultan of the south, and consisting of eight regiments under Mulai Rachid, and known as the first division, defeated the forces of Abl-el-Aziz, the sultan of the north, and captured Caid Bushta Bagdani, the commander-in-chief oll Abd-el-Aziz’s forces in the field, who had with him eight pieces of modern fiela artillery. The favorable effect of this victory to the cause of Mulai Hafig is incaicu- lable, Some of Raisuli’s followers have de- serted him and come to Tangier. The native report of the occurrence gives as a reason for the desertions that Raisuli, in retaliation for French in- terference in the steps taken to se- cure the release of Caid Sir Harry MacLean, intends to “kill MacLean by inches.” The ambushing of a French recon- noitering party while proceeding yes- terday from Casablanca in the direc- tion of Tandert, resulting in the kill- ing of Capt. Jandey and a private of the Chasseurs d’Afrique and the wounding of six men, will result in the resumption of hostilities on the part of the French troops commanded by Gen. Drude. STRONG FOR DETP WATERWAYS. President, in Next Message, Will Urge Channel From Lakes to Gulf. Vicksburg, Oct. 23.—After a fort- night spent in the canebrakes and looking bronzed and vigorous, Presi- dent Roosevelt paid a flying visit to Vicksburg yesterday afternoon. After a drive through the city and the na- tional cemetery, the president was conducted to a stand in the court house square. He was introduced to the large audience by John Sharp Wil- liams. The president received an en- thusiastic reception. The streets were packed with people and the chief ex- ecutive was cheered at every oppor- tunity. When Congressman Williams said that Theodore Roosevelt was president of the whole country, Dixie Land and Yankee Land alike, the dem- onstration was notable. The president said in part: “T shall go back to Washington with the set purpose to do everything that in me lies to see that the United States does its full share in making the Mississippi river practically a part of the sea coast, in making it a deep channel to the Great Lakes from the gulf. In my next message to congress I shall advocate as heartily as I know how that the congress now elected shal] take the first steps to bring about that deep channel way and the attendant high and broad levee system which will make of these alluvial bot- toms the richest and most populous and most prosperous agricultural land not only in this nation but on the face of the globe.” After closing his address the presi- dent and party were driven to the station and left at 5:30 for Memphis, where they will be transferred to the Louisville & Nashville railway and the trip to Nashville will be begun. CONFESSES TO FREE BROTHER. Joel Van Winkle Admits Doing the Stabbing. St. Paul, Oct. 23.—The pardon board yesterday granted a pardon to John Van Winkle, sentenced from Traverse county Dec. 1, 1906, to the state pris- on for four years and nine months on a charge of assault in the third de- gree. Since his conviction and sen- tence his brother Joel has also been convicted on the same charge and is serving a term in the state prison. The assault was the result of a saloon row in Wheaton, in which Edward Raymond was stabbed with a knife. The evidence presented to the par- don board included that of Raymond and the statement of the attorney that Joel admitted his guilt, is willing to take his punishment and do what he can to secure the release of his broth- er, who had been sent to imprison- ment for the same offense. MOTHER IS THE WORKER. La Crosse, Wis., Oct. 23.—Because, it is alleged, he spent all the money he could earn for liquor and let his one-armed wife support a family of six children by taking in washing, Ole Semm, said to be the most expert bricklayer ip the city, is in custody awaiting trial. % TWO FATAL ACCIDENTS. Madison, Wis., Oct. 23. — Albert Schultz, a teamster, was thrown from his wagon here yesterday and instant- ly killed. Martin Oran died as a result of being struck by a North-Western freight. The accident occurred be- tween here and Waunakee. Leg Broken at Football. Bagley, Minn., Oct. 23. — During a football game here between the Foss- ton and Bagley teams, Anton Alm, son of Rev. Alm of Fosston, had his leg broken. Fell Dead During Game. Marquette, Mich., @ct. 23—Engaged in a fistic encounter with a playmate aged fourteen, Edmund Leroux, seven- teen years old, suddenly fell to the ground and expired. The quarrel orig- inated in a dispute at a football game, An inquest will be held. + -_s s Ms