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NEED MONEY 0 TO MOVE CHOPS | ELECTIONS HELD Rerald-Review. [207s es,arnst | MARKS THE OF THE CRISIS Pawtucket line, at Providence, R. I. TWO CITIZENS AND TWO POLICE- MEN ARE SHOT AT LEXING- TON, KY. Sy tye WEEE The three-year-old granddaughter of John Beattie, an internal revenue offi- GRAND RAPIDS, - MINNESOTA | coy of Gladstone, Mich., fell in a tub of boiling water yesterday and died. NEWS OF THE WEEK IN EPITOME In a runaway accident down a steep | BUOYANCY OF STOCKS REFLECTS| Washington, Nov. 6.—Special efforts] GOVERNOR GUILD OF MASSACHU- _ Lexington, Ky., Nov. 7.—Following PROMISED, mountain grade near Salmon, Idaho, a directed by the treasury in getting out ‘ Concord coach-was overturned and) DECISION TO BACK TRUST | currency in response to the demands| | SETTS RE-ELECTED BY 100- | election day riot here yesterday three women and a man were serious- of the barks, and discussion of fi afternoon Clyde Campbell was killed, IMPORTANT. EVENTS 08 SOOME CeMEaNiEs. Z pangs ae 2 000 MAJORITY. Patrolman Michael Murphy probably ly injured. AND. ON “FOREIGN: SHORES: An explosion of natural gas wrecked BRIEFLY TOLD. the home of Mrs. William Eldridge in Kansas City, Kan., and perhaps fatal- ly injured the woman and her ten-year- old daughter. _ John C. Kruse, mining superintend- ent at Iron Mountain, Mich., was shot and killed by George Gibbons while the men were hunting together. He was mistaken for a bear. 1d bullion will be undertaken imme- sae ae fy bide rernels S epithe » ot ~ > . a y at the Tne eRe gess, were fatally injured in a runa- 1e isthmian canal commission has | \4y accident, and Dr. Williams’ daugh- made a careful investigation of the ter Mary, aged two years, was killed. criticisms of conditions on the isthmus 4 contained in the recent report of Miss|,_ 8am Whiteside and John Brooks, Gertrude Beeks to the National Civic boys, were victims of a peculiar acci- federation. The commission says con- ae at ee ara A ade ied ditions are good and steadily being Sin insisted Be ae popes tee improyveds . bullet first passed through Brooks’ leg The census bureau has made public} ang then entered Whiteside’s ‘heart, the result of the reports of its special killing him instantly. f ents on the quantity of poten of ip; eekunile- cianSeercofthe Hues year’s crop, which had been ? ip aned up to the 18th of the month, Laplace Dee Re eiig gh pa showing 4,089,338 bales, as compared | ¢ fy ve tel y being drags with 4,931,621 bales ginned to the|‘"0™ the pole he had climbed by a same time last year. passing train. He had climbed a pole 2 near the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Close to a million and a half immi-| tracks to make some repairs when a grants will have come into this coun- passing train caught the loose wire, try during the calendar year 1907, if] tearing hi the present rate is maintained. During iahtantiy: mi fromthe: pole; Eilling, him the nine months ending Sept. 30, 779,- 527 immigrants entered the country. In September alone the entries num- bered 98,694 and of these 17,206 came from Russia. cial questions as affecting the North- west particularly, at the White House and in the department were the fea- tures here yesterday of the situation growing out of the money tightness. The little talk was indulged in by fatally wounded and Patrolman Ma- rion “Smith and W. R. Campbell, Ciyde’s father, severely wounded. TOM L JOHNSON AGAIN WINS The elder Campbell, a Republican . candidate for councilman, was arrest- President Roosevelt and members of en abe ae sagas Ange 2 the cabinet, and was upon lines intend-| DEFEATS CONGRESSMAN BUR:/ 7 ie ecaken ena a ae De ee eee a sSoepth n{.. TON IN FIGHT FOR MAYOR OF |by' Murphy. W. R. Campbell then shot of congress was emphasized, and it was ; miarphy,, who returned the fire, se- CLEVELAND. verely wounding his man, although made clear that President Roosevelt hi If probably fatally hurt has not forestalled the money question eh es % Sarees th by any advance views to be incorpo- ji Neeapre fa Heht, who Sat em rated in his message regarding curren-| Elections held throughout the coun tragedy, said that in a large crowd at ,|a voting place he saw Policeman Mur- cy legislation. try yesterday passed off comparatively phy etrusulitie welthicW. FR. Gomigiell Western Needs Discussed. quiet. The returns from various se¢- | wy.) the struggle seemed nearly over The pressure for money in the West-| tions show the following results: and the polfceman’s antagonist seem- ern centers occupied much attention] Massachusetts re-elects the entire-red to be ceasing his resistance he saw yesterday. The appearance here of| Republican state ticket, headed by | Campbell, Jr., run up and strike Mur- United States Senator Knute Nelson] Goy. Curtis Guild, Jr. Henry M.|phy in the face. Murphy turned and and a company of bankers, including} whitney, the Citizens-Democratic .can-| kicked young Campbell in the stom- J. W. Lusk of St. Paul and Edward W.| didate for governor polled a much | ach. Decker and E. M. Harrington of Min-]| Jarger vote than Charles W. Bartlett,| A little later young Campbell came neapolis, brought forward a new issue] the anti-merger Democrat. running up with a revolver in his regarding monetary conditions in the} pennsylvania elécts John O. Sheatz|hand. Young Campbell demanded of Northwest. (Rep.), head of the ticket, for state |Murphy that he turn his father loose, Senator Nelson and the bankers,| treasurer, by a large majority. but Murphy refused. with Secretary Cortelyou, met in a] New York state elects Edward T.| Just then Patrolman Smith came conference with President Roosevelt} Bartlett and Willard Bartlett, joint |up and as young Campbell turned to at the White House at 9 o'clock last| candidates on the Republican and|see the officer Murphy struck him night to discuss ways and means for] Democratic tickets for justices of the | three times over the head: with his Additional relief in the sections where | court of appeals, over the candidates |club. Young Campbell dropped to his the crops have not yet been moved. of the Independence league (Hearst). | knees, and as he did so the elder _ Measures for the relief of the grain} New York city elects the Tammany | Campbell shot Murphy in the back. men of the Northwest were talked] candidates by considerable majorities | Smith’ then drew his revolver and over, and it swas authoritatively an-| over the Independence League-Repub- |the shooting became general. Smith nounced by Secretary Cortelyou last} lican fusion candidates. shot old man Campbell. Murphy stag- night that he had agreed to extend] In New Jersey the latest figures fa-| gered up against the side of the build- see ae to do aGcheed Sa vate yor the election of Katzenbach (Dem.) | ing and continued to fire, shooting sev- f ble to improve the situation with re-| as governor, but the lead is small over | eral times. He was still using his pis- ga a rate hitherto unknown |Tcvement of the stock market till|Spect to the movement of grain. Just| Fort (Rep.), less than 1,000 votes sep-|tol when he was struck by another mM near the close is believed to mark the | What he proposed to do he would not} arating them. bullet, apparently fired by young The horse which Gen. Weyler was turn of the crisis. The loss of $50,000,- | 82¥- The Maryland contest for the gov-|Campbell. Murphy had fallen, but he riding in the streets of Madrid became 000 in cash by the clearing house ernorship is in doubt, owing to the/got up and staggered to where frightened by a passing street car banks, according to their Saturday lateness of the returns. Chairman | young Campbell was struggling with and threw the general, who was showing in spite of the $30,000,000 that Vandiver of the Democratic state com- |some one who, had caught him. Mur- bruised, but not badly hurt. had been poured into their tills during mittee claims the state by 12,000, and | phy leaned over, placed the muzzle of Charles Henry Wilson, first Baron |the week from the treasury, was ex- conservative estimates, based on mea- | his pistol within afew inches of young Nunburnholme, is dead in London. |pected to have a disturbing effect. It ger returns, give Crothers (Dem.) for |Campbell’s body, took deliberate aim Before he was elevated to the peerage |was a worse showing than will be pos- governor a plurality of 6,000 to 8,000. | and fired. in 1905 he had represented Hull in.|siple again in the face of the heavy The Rhode Island elections indicate - St ee SE ee parliament for thirty-two years. arrivals of gold. the Twin City clearing houses and by| the re-election of Gov. James H. His-| tREASURE REACHES GOTHAM. Prof. F. Bordas announced before Engage $32,000,000 in Gold. Messrs, Harrington and Heffelfinger, ins (Dem.) over LAS els ae a ae the Academy of Science in Paris that Gold engagements since the begin- representing the grain men. ; son (Rep.) by a plurality inane at | Ship Brings $7,100,000 in Gold to Re he had discovered a method by which|ying of the present movement now| The president and secretary heard saute Le ao ae § és Hees lieve the Present Stringency. the coloors of precious stones can be|amount to $32,000,000, which would |the statements through and manifested | 4m ee i . a Li Beas cae New York, Nov. 7.—The arrival of changed by subjecting them to the more than bridge the loss in the sur- special interest in what was said. No Hae ca ion o z 7 prea FS seks the first treasure ship laden with gold action of radium. plus reserve last week. The disturb- | detailed statement is obtainable as the c gilts eee ee ees tas for the relief of the present stringen- The pope will «soon issue an an-|ances that are sweeping over the ex-|Tesult of the deliberations, but it is Reve, lace Bapoatcn, *» |cy was the feature of the financial sit- nouncement of the ecclesiastical pun-|rhange market and arousing concern safe to say that the Minnesota men “In Hesbocky Mie patria Jndioalé uation yesterday. The Kronprinzes- ishment inflicted upon Rev.’ Father |in foreign markets were indicated yes- | Were assured that the government will 3 : “* |sin Cecilie was reported off Fire Isl- T j extend some relief along the lines de-|the election of the entire Republican | nq gt 6 o'clock in the morning and yrell, the noted English Jesuit, |/terday by the rise of foreign exchange 2 tate ticket. headed’ by Wilson for . sired, all of which was very gratifying | State Ucket. head y 4+soon after 10 o’clock had docked and MORGAN'S INFLUENCE 1S. FELT Washington, President Roosevelt issued his Thanksgiving proclamation, through the secretary of state, naming the last Thursday in November, the 28th. Pursuant to directions from Wash- ington, the coinage of $15,000,000 of VAST ACCUMULATION OF _ EX- PORTS WAITING ON THE RAILROADS. New York, Nov. 5.—The buoyancy of the stock market yesterday reflected the ultimate decision of large bankers to support the two institutions — the Trust Company of America and the Lincoln Trust company—which have been subjected to the most severe runs during the last two weeks. The day was one of doubt and con- flicting rumors and the fact that it passed without a diverse development is evidence that the worst is probably over. At a late hour yesterday morn- Ing an agreement was. reached, largely through the influence of Mr. Morgan, by which the trust companies will co- operate in the future for their mutual protection, and the directors will lend the assistance of their personal for- tunes to meet immediate necessities. Stocks Go Up. The achievement of these results yesterday, with *the steady upward Frorg Other Shores. There is a tremendous financial and commercial crisis in progress in Chile. The gold premium has advanced to 70 People Talked About. John Barrett, news editor of the San Francisco Examiner, died of apo- plexy while walking on the street. Dr. Frederick Munz of Cincinnati was re-elected president of the Na- tional German Epworth league. The civil marriage of Leopold Woelfling, former Archduke Leopold of Austria, and Maria Magdalena Rit- ter was celebrated in the city hall at Zurich. 3 Denis J. Hogan, secretary of the Democratic state central committee of Illinois, died at his home in Gene- va, lll. The cause of his death was hemorrhage of the luggs. Outline the Situation. The situation in the Northwest with respect to the need for funds to get out the wheat crop hefore the close of nav- igation was fully presented to Presi- dent Roosevelt and Secretary Cortel- you at the conference by Senator Nel- son and Messrs. Lusk and Decker of Crimes and Criminals. Judge Wood of Boise, Idaho, set the Pettibone case for trial Nov. 21. He said that if the case was further de- layed he would continue it to the Jan-| whose books on religious subjects|in New York considerably above the overnor. The legislature will be uary term. have been condemned by the holy of-|point at which gold could profitably eis, delegation. Meee bya sate ranorty, eae Contant en neve ver ~ m w Ww s \ sentence of six months in the pen-| fice. , [be imported. . ‘ In Nebraska Me R. Reese Republic: | New York bank cs pao nae itentiary was imposed by Justice Dow-| The petition to the premier of Great | The fact that it is still iiend this SAVES MAN UP HIGHER. an candidate for the supreme court. |Gunard liner Lusitania will follow ling of New York upon Dr. Walter E.| Britain, praying for the abolition of |¥@Y indicates the determination of ‘ the most important state office voted | ciosely in her wake with $10,000,000, Cillette, former vice president of the| the office of the censor of plays has |New York bankers to strengthen their | New Yorker Who Registers Falsely Re-| on, is undoubtedly elected. and $14,000,000 will follow during Mutual Life Insurance company, who been issued. It bears seventy signa- position even at a loss. fuses to Incriminate Politician, * The mayoralty, contest in Cleveland |ine remainder of the week and early was convicted of perjury. tures, inscluding the names of prac- National Situation Sound. New York, Nov. 5.—Rather than re-| resulted in the election of Tom L. Pact ee a - C. H. Morris, the mine owner who| tically all the prominent authors and| The high rate for bills was caused veal the identity of the politician who| Johnson, present mayor, over Con-| ‘phe additional withdrawals of wag shot Oct. 16 by a bootlegger | dramatists. by the demand for exchange to cover | induced him to register falsely in two} gressman Burton, ‘| 750,000 from the Bank of England election districts, Joseph Healey yes- terday accepted a sentence of not less than four years and eleven months in prison. This is the maximum penalty for the crime. Healey was told by The American or anti-Mormon party yesterday for the United States and at Salt Lake City is estimated to have | ‘¢ 25,000 for Canada bring up the total the largest plurality ever given in that gold engagements on the present lees ee vor Whitlock and the [Movement to about $26,000,000. The Mayo: lock al " ane Judge Rosaisky several days ago that| entire independent ticket is elected. |rocverast Peale riba it he would reveal the man higher up| Cincinnati elects Col. Leopold Mark-|5n London was regarded here as an hewoula save gos ‘ breit, the Republican candidate for ayent of’ the first importance as indi- mayor. eating that French financiers were not Meager returns from San Francisco only able but willing to help London show Taylor, Democratic and Good |and thus indirectly to help America Government candidate for mayor, lead-|py relieving the strain on the Bank ing, with the Union Labor candidate | 5¢ England caused by the heavy Amer- showing unexpected strength. icand demands for gold. It is hoped a OEE STAT TT Sine this action of the Bank of France will deter the Bank of England from raising its discount rate to 7 per cent Former Italian Minister Before High |at the meeting of the directors on Court—Violence Is Feared. Thursday and the Imperial Bank of Rome, Nov. 7.—The trial of Signor |Germany from raising its rate from Nunzio Nasi, former minister of pub- Rene oe We eres the arrivals of gold. Reports from Washington indicate that the national banking situation throughout the country is sound and the efforts of the controller of the currency to get notes into circulation are meeting with considerable success. Enormous Exports Ready. It was stated yesterday that the ele- vators, boats and warehouses at Buffa- lo have 3,600,000 bushels of grain and 500 carloads of merchandise and man- ufactured goods, very largely for ex- port Since Severe Storm. port, against which drafts for gold St. John, N. F., Nov. 6.—It is feared could be drawn the moment the freight |'hat many lives were lost in the last é is loaded on vessels that are waiting|heavy gale. Three Newfoundland) 18 ON TRIAL BEFORE SENATE. at Atlantic ports for cargoes. The fishing schooners are missing and four magnitude of this accumulation of French vessels have not reported. American products is indicated by the | Wreckage washed ashore on the south- tact that the railways find themselves peas coast ee that tne pa mabl move it to the seaboard, in ion was lost. e carried a crew o! steamer Baltic, which arrived at New| Money value involved is estimated at nara aye cathe development of | eighteen men, all of whom are missing. That the corner in the recent mone- York from Liverpool, last week, leap-| $36,000,000. : traffic facilities within the last few SA RRS BS lic instruction, who is charged with 'tary difficulties has been turned was ed overboera Bee Saneey et and ea bebe should be ee 2s years. MITCHELL RECOVERING. pe aaa oie te documents per de- | evidenced yesterday when at a confer- was drowned. Parkin was on his way|the present program, private and pu a ‘rauding the state treasury out of sev-|ence of J. Pierpont Morgan, Levi H, to Kansas, where, it is said, he was] lic consistories will be held respec-|-FgoRCED TO LEAD IMMORAL LIFE. Out of Danger, Say Physicians, Unless | ©T@! million lire, began yesterday be-|Morton, George W. Perkins, together soon to have been married. tively on the 9th and 12th of Decem- Complications Reica + fore the senate, constituted as a high | with several other well known finan- The corpse of a woman was found] ber. Several Italian prelates will be} american Girls Stolen and Sent to Pan-| a Salle, Ill, Nov. 6.—John Mitchell, } COU't of Justice. Michael Lombardo, |oiat men, attention was chiefly direct- in a rooming house at Buffalo, N. Y.| given the red hat; but whether any ama for Immoral Purposes. president of the United Mine Workers who was under secretary of finance, |ed@ to the situation in other financial A small rope was twisted about her| foreigner will be so honored has not} Battle Creek, Mich., Nov. 6.—That | of ‘America, who has undergone sever-| ¥2® placed on trial with Nasi, charged centers throughout the country to as- neck. The woman, accompanied by a] been decided. No American is named |girls are being stolen from American |g) surgical operations, was reported with implication in the frauds. certain if the strain of the last two man, applied for a room and were] for the cardinalate. homes and sent to Panama for im-| yesterday to be gradually improving. Signor Nasi did not appear as a man weeks had disclosed any weak spots. stered as Mr. and Mrs. Miller. moral purposes was the statement accused; he filled the role of a power- | With the situation cleared here the : apap cians ah: te: hoepial aan Ena ful and fascinating orator. While the. bankers feel that they are now in a named Cain, whom he was trying to| King Alfonso has signed a bill for- expel from a mining camp, died at] bidding the sale of art works for re- Des Moines. Cain, who was arrested,| moval from the country, which it is is now being held on a charge of mur- understood is even more stringent der. than that in force in Italy. The bill in Charles Armstrong, a prominent anq | @ Short time will be placed before par- wealthy citizen of Osceola, Iowa, who | liament. attracted national attention two years} Andrew Carnegie and Lord Ave- o by fasting for thirty days, com-| bury, formerly Sir John Lubbock, tted suicide by drinking carbolic} have been nominated for the office of acid. Despondency over ill health was| lord rector of St. Andrews university, the cause. Scotland. An election will be held The Chicago Great Western Rail-] Nov. 1, provided neither candidate road company was indictead by the| Withdraws. grand jury at Marshalltown, Iowa, on All the contracts for armament and two counts for selling liqhor on trains} new construction for the German navy in Marshall county. Both indictments|for the current financial year have cited specified instances when the] been placed with private yards, as the sales were made, imperial yards are already fully occu- Herbert Parkin, a passenger on the| Pied with orders on hand. The total FEAR GALE TAKES LIVES. Many Fishing Schooners Fail to Re- When they did not appear at noon the Domestic. made at the National Purity congress} ynless unexpected complications arise i door was forced open. The man had]. The Pittsburg-Montana smelter ana|here yesterday by Rose Johnson, 4/ the patient is out of danger. accused was making an eloquent ‘position to render such aid as they disappeared. , mines resumed operations at Butte af- missionary who has_ spent several speech to the court many senators, in-|can to either point should it prove aa, Cae tae ra cluding Visconti Vonosta, left their necessary. years in Colon, where she established a board home for American boys. Miss Johnson told of a twelve-year-old girl she had attempted to rescue in Colon, who told her she had been-enticed from One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, New York, by a strange woman. Miss Johnson said she was attacked in her efforts to get the girl out of a den, and later received word that the child had been beaten to death. Miss Johnson has also done rescue work in Alexandria. She said she res- cued one girl who had been shipped as a white slave from Toronto to Chicago, then to New York, then to Paris and then to Egypt. She said that drinking and gambling conditions appeared to A man who registered at the Wal-jter a period of suspension of about dorf-Astoria in New York as‘H. B. Pot-|two months. Two hundred men are ter, Jr, of Philadelphia, was found] afforded employment. The company dead in his room later. On the body] is composed principally of Pittsburg were several wounds which the coro-| and New York stockholders. ner thought could not have been self-|: The condition of the wheat market inflicted. An autopsy will be held. It} at Winnipeg has been seriously com- is believed that the man had his in- plicated by the money market strin- es before he went to his room. He gency on the American side of the was about thirty years old. boundary, banks having refused to send money into the country for buy- ing at the elevators. In Winnipeg grain men cannot borrow money trom the banks to carry wheat across the lake from Fort William, and all wheat must be paid for when it goes into store at Fort William except to milling seats and drew near Signor Nasi’s chair in order to hear him better. He spoke for five hours and denied all the SHOT: SHAS Ea. HONE: accusations brought against him. He insisted that he be judged as a minister; that the duties and respon- sibilities inherent to that position be taken into consideration. He main- tain that what appeared to be pecula- tion was in reality money spent for certain purposes that he. would never reveal were it not necessary to do so for his own defense. The government has taken every precaution to preserve order, for it is certain that there will be serious demonstrations in favor of the accused | Gen. Booth Bids Farewell. New York, Nov. 6. — Gen. William Booth of the Salvation Army last night addressed an audience that filled Car- negie hall’~It was the formal farewell address of what will probably prove to be Gen. Booth’s last visit to Ameri- ca. Leslie M. Shaw, former secretary of the treasury, presided. Young Hunter Uses Gun to Pole Boat * Along. Redwood Falls, Minn., Nov. 7. — Clyde Duffield, nineteen years old, re- ceived a charge of heavy duckshot at ‘point blank range while hunting near Wabassa. He was using his gunstock to push his boat and had his hand over the muzzle of the gun. In some manner the gun was discharged, bad- ly shattering his hand and scattering shot in his arm and shoulder. It is thought that his injuries will not be fatal, but his hand will be more or less Negro Is Lynched. Cameron, Tex., Nov. 6. — Following his indictment yesterday on a charge of attempted criminal assault, Alex Johnson, a negro, was taken from the jail here by a mob of 500 men and hanged to a tree in the court house Casualty. Fragments of human bodies pepper- ed with particles of rock and earth fell in a shower over the little town of Gwendolen, Pa., when 500 pounds of dynamite exploded. Four men we torn to pieces and six others received] companies. Cash wheat could not be/her worse in Colon than Port Said. | yard. . man. maimed injuries. sold forthe last three days. : peer AS DAES i 5 The immense pavilion at Columbia] Attorney General Galen of Montana JAPS PAY TOP PRICE. Hoch Pardons Dalton, Noted Bandit. SUa eee Seer Find Missing Man Dead. Topeka, Kan., Nov. 6—Emmett Dal- ton, the noted former bandit, has been| Could Get No Work and Was Ashamed as McKay, pardoned by Gov. Hoch. Dalton was to Be Idle. d sentenced to the penitentiary for life] Oelwein, Iowa, Nov. 7. — Otto for taking part in the Somes te bank robbery in 1892, Gardens, Butte’s chief . pleasure a Browerville, Minn., Nov. 7.—Thom- grounds, the property of Former Sen- ator Clark, burned. The building con- tained a large dancing floor, safe and several valuable collections. Loss, $50,000. Sitting on a piece of timber on a thirty-foot trestle at Pittsburg, Tom Hughes. a carpenter for the Ameri- can Bridge company, sawed the board through and fell’ with the piece he had sawed off. He had been sitting on the wrong end of the board. His right thigh was broken and he sustained severe scalp wounds, « notified the state hoard of health that if proper evidence were submitted to him. he would bring actions against the railroads fur alleged failures to ob- serve rules of sanitation. The attorney general also ruled that because of the failure of ope man to qualify and the absence of another abroad that Helena had no board of health. ' Prof. W. W. Campbell, director of the Lick observatory, announces that Spare No Expense in Securing Rush Order for Steel Rails. New York, Nov. 6—AlIl records in the price for r: r export were broken when States Prod- ucts Export company closed a cable contract from the Japanese govern- ment calling: for 12,000 tons on a basis which will net just a shade below $30 aged sixty-two’years, was found dead in an outhouse last night. He had been missing since Monday Heinze, over fifty years old, commit: | ,, ‘h sod aillodes tt Js Supposed hy. poladn ds ca e cause of death was heart He was one of the men out on a strike on the Chicago Great Western rail- Veteran Kills Hi way. He had a wife and three chil-| Qwatonna, Minn. Atarcs cia Jack dren. He om tried to get work at two Shepard, an old soldier and pioneer, or three ot Pore but was refused committed suicide yesterday. It is on account o} age. He worried thought that he was unable to bear over:his troubles and said he was ashamed to le around idle. Sella of facing winter without ~ Coon Hunter Is Injured. New Ulm, Minn., Nov. 6.—While re- turning home from a raccoon hunt in a ton at the mills. This is nearly $2) the town of Lafayette, Albert Rauten- in excess of the existing price. This} berg yestérday received painful inju- prominent knots have been visible unprecedented figure is to he paid kat ries by the accidental discharge’of a ‘ately in Saturn's rings. ‘The knots ap. 88ure Prompt delivery. BLOOD FLOWS IN ELECTION ROT