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THE PAPER THAT BOOSTS KEOKUK ALL THE TIME VOL. 113. NO. 109. BALLOT BUTTLE HEXnUEM ,1 Signs for 1912 Wilt be Watched for In the Results From the Vari ous States This Week. Fight for Governorship Between Foss and the Lieutenant Governor Who Is a Repub lican. WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—Tuesday's elections although an off year and one of limited number, will be watch ed with Intense Interest by national political leaders. Results will be anallzed "for signs of 1912.'* These may be seen in the outcome of sound the party principles on the stage and stump. These principles have been of national import, main ly tariff and'on the republican side, the campaign has all the ardor and hard work that marks a battle for the presidency. Foss has been in the front of the democrats and has emphasized his record as governor aB the maid is sue. His friends declare that he will repeat his majority of 30,000 laBt year, and hall it as a Bign that Mass ftchusets will be democratic In 1912. Republicans Beem to be equally con fident that Frothlngham will win. A governor and other state execu tives and members of the legislature are to be elected in Kentucky. A seat in the United States senate hinges on the legislative contest and for that honor Representative Ollie James ha- received endorsemnt at a state democratic state primary. In Maryland there is a hot cam paign for governor between Arthur P. Gorman, democrat, son of Arthur P. Gorman, who has long been a leader of the democrats in the United States senate, and Phillip L. Goldsbor ough, republican. Woodrow Wilson has exercised the practice that served him so well in his last campaign for governor, and is forcing reluctant legislators to vote for his reform measures by stumping the whole state of New Jersey, where a legislature will be chosen. He is zealous in the work of procuring the election of a legislature frlindly to big policies. Little outside attention has been attracted to the contest for the gov ernorship in Rhode Island. and choosing two members of the United Staes senate. It will bo a dull affair, Senators Martin and Swahsen having been endorsed for reelection by a democratic State primary. Second to Massachusetts ln rela tion to the presidential contest this week will be the election of six mem1 bora to fill vacancies in congress. The ASK UNCLE SI TO STEP IN a terrific campaign for the governorship of Massachusetts and elections in half a dozen districts to fill vacancies in the house of representatives. A spirited contest in New Jersey will exoite national attention because of the story the result will tell as to the extent of Woodrow Wilson's hold on that state. State elections will be held in Ken tucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mis sissippi, New Jersey, Rhode Island and Virginia. In point of widespread interest and importance Massachusetts stands far in the lead. A flght for the governorship between Governor Foss, democrat, and Lieutenant Gov ernor Prothingham, republican, led to a turbulent campaign that made every inch of the state a battle ground. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge came full armored from his retreat at Na pant to lead the republican forces to 0 A New new statesmen will hail from Jersey, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and intervention by the United Nebraska. It reads as follows: who is one of the few city bosses whoBe machines have survived the re- forming influences that have swept Turkish Government Wants America Five Persons Who Were Hopeless In to Put a Stop to the Butchery Which Italians are Car rying On. MASSACHUSETTS LEADS NO CIVILIZED WARFARE BEFORE BIG AUDIENCE United 8tat6s Implored to Intervene and Put an End to the Inhuman Procedinga In Tripoli. AoMn„ Seeretarv Adeo promised to Acting Secretary Adeo promised submit the protest to Secretary Knox who is absent. the following is a copy: Your excellncy has heard the newB unfortunately confirmed. of wholesale executions of a gTeat numb habitants of Tripoli, perpetrated daily, by the Italian inilitary authorltie^ his invaded home la undeniable. It, confers on the said citizens the Char-j acter of belligerents and obliges enemy to respect the lines of those:CONCRETE nocent women and children on mere, These acts are, moreover, contrary to the engagements pledged by Italy' the laws and customs of war which: science. Virginia will elect a legislature and thoritles at Tripoli and Benghazi have, id wi.l have the rare privilege of not ceased lives and property of the Italians. "Please read the present dispatch to the minister of foreign affairs, leav-1 "MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS eVery I t0 over the country in the past few -. ]na)Bt upon the necsslty for prompt and efficacious Intervention, in order to put an end immediately to these inhuman proceedings." years. Other large cities are in the throes of bitter contests, but the is sues are of local importance. Taft Will Vote 8tral0hfc CINCINNATI, O., Nov. 6—The Cin cinnati Times-Star printed a letter from President Taft, dated Pittsburg, October 31, but not given out for pub lication until Sunday, addressed to Julius Fleischman, in which President Taft said L. the republican municipal ticket cause I believe the candidates there on to be competent and worthy. I (Continued on page 6.) vailds Were Cured by the Laying on of Hands. Many Skeptics Present and Saw a Blind Woman Read and a Lame One Walk Cor rectly. WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—The so- WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—A demon- MEXICO CITY, Nov. 6.—-With all called Italian barbarities in Tripoli stratlon of curing by laying on of the pomp and ceremony, the glint of 'arms and the blare of trumpets, so beloved by the Latin races, Frances co I. Madero, the second president who has occupied the seat of power in Mexico for the past thirty-five years was today inaugurated president of the republic of Mexico amid the cheers of thousands who lined the streets. have been brought officially to the hands was given here by Bishop Oliv attention of the American government in a a a of the position of the state depart ment in the matter is expected. The subject was broached in the course of a verbal statement by the Turkish ambassador in a conversation with the assistant secretary, and la ter in the shape of a letter. In each case the ambassador, who declared he was acting under cabled Instructions from his government, de er scribed in detail the acts attributed scesses in her eyes, and her husband to the Italian troops and protested in substantiated the statement that she the name of humanity against the al- had lost the use of her right eye nine leged barbarities upon helpless women |weeks and children and non-combatants by Pronounced her cured she could read the Italian soldiery. without difficulty By order of hiB government the Sabin, founder of the Evangelicaf Christian church. Before an audi ence of 200 he labored until exhaust ed, and five persons pronounced themselves cured. In the audience were skeptics, who, with the newspaper men present, made such inquiry as was possible to ascertain the authenticity of the cures reported. Mrs. J. M. Maney, who was present with lier huspand, claimed to be suffering with ab- aS°- After and at the second conference of The bridge at the time of the disaster, it I fair. Hague In the convention relating to Is wm B1»h°P Sabi", ha* A_ ma" w'th a Turkish ambassador appealed to the claims to have been rigid for ten United States to exert itself to put ye«« because of paraljs and who a stop to practices that, he declared, were in Plain violation of the rules sources of the medical profession in of warfare, and In contravention of ^rch of a cure came from Bishop the Hague convention to which the Sabin's hands cured. United States and Italy are parties. An ®*If£ neck, which he verted he had exhausted the re- elderU woman,' using ca e, nrnmioori tn who -s&id she hftd suffered with neu* 0f The ambassador note was based ... ,_ h, T,,rw,h 1 meat. A man with rheumatism in his upon a cabiegra® frogthe Turk sh, minister of foreign stairs, of which rheumatUm lnformed the audI. ence that she had recovered the use her limbs as the result of the treat- no The right of all able-bodied men! to flflght for the supreme defense & woman wbo sald ahe had hea(Jache ieted ement the fall into their the llst of the are genuine" and says "there Is faking about them no fraud what- lUB About twenty.flve persons in the wer0 eagerly clamoring to be cured when hfi ended with the an. that he was exhausted, I TJ-RTnftTi! JjttlDUJi, mM among them who hands. But the Italians are violating not'Atrial Had Not Hardened and Sev only the sacred principis of modern'' SPAN COLLAPSED era| law of nations, but the most element- Lives. Workmen Lost Their wreckag0 0f v, ary rules of civilization and humani- For Keokuk ty, in shooting down natives whOj AUBURN, Cal., Nov. 6.—Three bod- and somewhat cooler tonight have properly enlisted, and tho in-1 les jjave been recovered from the suspicion, not to mention those de-1 company's bridge across the Ameri- cooler tonight. Tuesday generally ported by the thousands. can la,)sed be discovered. places "the population and the bellig-! The victims of the accident were erents under the safeguard and the wori{ing protection of the laws of humanity building caissons. The concrete pll and exigencies of the public con-,lars gave I therefore beg to protest to t.lie ^or the winter rains, tho concrete government to which you are accrcdit-' n0(. man AS&IM." sway for an instant, and, as the sup Supplementing this cable came an-! porting concrete pillars sagged and other for the Turkish foreign office, gave way, the great arch above came which is regarded as of great impor- tance, because it formally demands Up to President Taft. expressed fear that the concrete to display to guard the pinars, which had not settled yet, WOuld The crashtng m0va. Anothfer uprising is In progress In "The Italian atrocities ln Tripoli, be-. boulders and eddies of the 'Dubuque .... 18 Cincinnati against George B. Cox, jng confirmed officially and from midstream. They fought their way: reiterate the representations pre-, brig 8Crn,ed In my pressing telegram to KEOKUK, IOWA, MONDAY, NOV. 6, 1911 ERO JAKES Is Inaugurated Chief Exec a of the Republic of Mexico Today Amid I* Pomp./ there were thirty men on the cooler tonight. Tuesday generally Relieved that still more casualties For MiBBOurl: Generally fair under the superstructure way on account of having being firmly set. ed for such crimes against humanity The men caught under the sinking committed by the Italians, the sad arcij spectacle of wheh offers a striking escaped were at work above. vance of the area of low pressure has contrast with the efforts that our au- The river is swollen and the fore- been attended by rising temperature, down before a man could States.) two of the workmen were swept 'into the river and out among the,^ quarter, I beg your excellency across. Eight were caught in the de-. Qajiand 1 n«n. J...M ntnif TA na river Noon i-v 3 'M* THREE MONTHS PEACE England Has Little Confidence in New Ruler and Will See That Her People Are Well Armed. The inauguration ceremony itself was one of the most impressive ever seen in this city. Surrounded by thousands of troops whose uniforms showed only too plainly the effect of their long campaigning against the Chiapas Indians in the south and the Zapatistas in the north, Madero, ac companied by his brother Gustavo and several members of his cabinet, the party drove down gaily dec orated streets beneath the trHiippbal arches to the chamber of deputies where, at noon, took place thfe night and Tuesday. and not withstand the strain. I swaying of a lantern throwing a shadow tng at the same time a copy of same, ^e men below the first warning of! extreme northwest. danger. pjajns to 0n the weather attends out across the torrent gave BUre except They saw the superstructure. Conditions indicate cloudy cooler rUBhlng \. Others found their way to the bank over the ruined span, Five Names Presented. HOT SPRINGS, Va., Nov. C.—Presi dent Taft let It be known that some five names have been pre sented to him In connection with the supreme court vacancy. He expects WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—The ques tion of Intervention by the United that fully as many more will enter staten at Tripoli to stop the barabar-1 the field before the appointment Is Itles practiced by Italian soldiers was made. put up to President Taft today follow- demonstration to hear all claims pre lng the appeal of Turkey for aid. It sented before making selection. la believed that this country will be! "I expect to be ln Cincinnati on, owing to the hesitation of: Ex-Convict Captured. election day, and unless my reglstra-j department to interfere in 1 ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 6—111 a fierce tlon 1b defective, to cast my vote for situation until after the battle in the swamps of Burk County, powers nmre directly interested have taken some action. —Road The Daily Gate City. The president expected Bill Minor, notorious train robber was captured after his companion, Tom Moore, was shot and killed by a sheriff's posee. Both were ex-etfnvicts. 1 'real In the course of his speech he prom ised that peace would reign for at least three months. Alarmed at the reports of violence attending thfe Zapatista revolution and the fear that the rebels might capture And loot ^je. city, the British government through its consul here, today Instructed all English residents to demand arms from the Madero gov ernment for their own protection. The instructions further state that if the jtrms are not forthcoming England will provide them through the local consulate. to- Cooler tonight. Weather Conditions. The field of Jiigh pressure, which moved across the country last week, been rushed on the bridge to prepare fias passed out on the northeastern coast, and the low area from the northwest, has moved southeastward, Its center being in the upper Missis- were entombed. The men who! gjppj valley this morning. The ad weather for this section tonight, and generally fair weather Tuesday. Daily River Bulletin. gt pau) 1.1 4.5 8.9 8.1 4.5 S.l 12.8 Davenport 15 Keokuk St. Louis IB 30 OLD. MAN SHOT •-yxfhi-fi general rains from the western jat home by neighbors. Mis. Foggy Cldy River Forecast. The Vlver will continue to fall from Davenport to Keokuk during the next' twenty-four hours, and a Blight rise will follow. Local Observation*. a No" Bar.Ther.Wind. Weather. 5 7 p.m. .. 29.93 41 SE Lt Rain 6 a.m. .. 29.64 47 SW Foggy Rainfall for past 24 hours 79 hun dredths. Mean temperature, Nov. 5, 41. P® Highest temperature, 4C. Lowest temperature, 50. Lowest temperature last night, 41. 1 FRIED Z. GOSEWTSCH, Observer. E l« Charged With Poisoning Nine Per sons in Order to Collect Their Life Insurance Money. COURT AT HER BEDSIDE New Evidence Is Given Against Her By Woman Who Was a Former Lodger at Her House. CHICAGO, Nov. 6—Her house of mystery transformed temporarily in to a court of Justice by the attendance of Judge Waker, States Attorney Way nian and a guard of policemen, Mrs. Louise Vermilya was today tormally arraigned on the charge of murder by poisoning of young Arthur Blssonette, one of nine persons whose intimacy with the woman resulted In mysterious deaths. Weak from the dose of arsenic which she took last Saturday—by mistake she declared—the woman lay propped up in bed with an attor ney at her side. Owing to her con dition no testimony was taken and no plea entered. The hearing was continued until November 28. New evidence which the police think reveals Mrs. Vermilya as the great est poisoner since the days of the Medici, developed here today when Mrs. Elizabeth Nolan, a former con- ceremony of inauguration, following fldant of the Vermilya woman and at which Madero delivered his Inaugural address to a crowd of 20,000 persons. I one time engaged to Frank Brlnkamp, her 8tepson, told a remarkable story of her life as a lodger with Mrs. Ver milya. Mrs. Nolan told Coroner Hoffman and his detectives under oath: That Frank Brlnkamp was original ly taken ill at Richmond, Va., and pronounced convalescent prior to his removal to Mrs. Vermilya's home in Chicago. That a few days after his arrival here he grew steadily worse. That just before his death he ex hibited symptoms which the coroner says are identical with arsenical poisoning. That Frank told her he had never believed that his father, ThlB action does not meet with fa- Brlnkamp, Mrs. Vermilya's huB vor on the part of the Maderists who bant claim that it shows a lack of friend ship for the new president and im plies that he is not able to maintain order. THE WEATHER. day river, the east span of which col- fair. and vicinity: londy Tuos- generally fair. the Mountain Quarries For Illinois: Cloudy, unsettled and Five workmen were injured, For Iowa: Cloudy and somewhat died from natural when causes. That pranjj Brlnkamp lay dying be fore his stepmother and Mrs. Nolan, apparently he recognized his own symptoms aB Identical with his fath er's last illness and declared: "I'm going the Bame way father died.' That when Mrs. Vermilya gave Frank some water a short time before he died, the patient took a swallow and then spat it out, saying: "That water does not taste right." That Mrs. Vermilya Bent the undertaker who officiated, to Europe. That. Mrs. Ver milya had Brinkamp's life insured in her favor for $2,000, herself paying the dues. WIFE AND HIMSELF -t'Jk? the central valleys. Clirlstofferson was sho four times pacific slope generally fair lie h®ad.anJ her recovery Ib a field of high pres- "er husband had two bullet wounds, there has been rain in ,ols° ln h,s doubtful. °ea(1, but "tB 1 sa 0 Ber oon(lu,on 18 ous* The shooting grew out of a quarrel following the wife's refusal to sign a deed. In his cell Mr. Chrlstofferson confessed to the attempted murder or his wife and the later attempt on 11 ,v. his own life. He declared that he Stage.Height.Change.Wea r. 1 tired and that he wanted to end It all. He 1b not ln a serious con dition. Mrs. Chrlstofferson Is stfll alive. .. v. -0.G -0.5 -1.1 -0.9 -0.3 -0.5 -0.1 Cro8Be" 12 Cldy Rain Rain Kain Romans Are Alarmed. Rodgers Ends His Trans-Continental Flight From Ocean to Ocean In An Aero* plane. He will fly the remaining twenty miles today, lauding at the edge of the Pacific ocean. Official figures of Rodgers' flight given by his manager total the dis tance of 4,231 miles find tho flying time at 4,924 minutes, or eighty-two hours in the air. He Btarted from New York September 17. Rodgers appeared on tho eastern sky line shortly after three o'clock. He was sighted by telescopes from the solar observatory on Mount Wil son, and word flashed down the moun tain by telephone brought 20,000 per sons to Tournament Park. Rodgers hovered over Pasadena a few minutes, then circled in a wide spiral and alighted on the greensward. His landing was a signal for a rush and Rodgers was mobbed. The avia tor says his ribs will surely manifest black and blue markB. Rodgers started on the last dash of his flight from Banning, Calif., a little town out in the desert, where liia ar rival had interrupted the only diver sion of the year, the funeral dance of the Mojave Indians. Taking the air at noon, Rodgers as cended in the face of a twenty-mile wind until he had reached 400 feot. Then he set his course west and sparked his motor up to a thirty-mile gait. Rodgers' wife and mother, who have been following him on a special train from New York, left Banning Immediately afterward. The flyer arrived at Colton at 1:37 p. m. with his altitude increased to 1, 000 feet, and he kept this height un til ho neared Pomona, twenty-one miles from Pasadena. He remained there until after three o'clock, renew ing his gasoline and refilling the tank of the leaky radiator that brought him near disaster Sa^njday. After leaving Pomona Rodgers kept his biplane pointing upward until he had climbed dver the fleecy sheets of vapor floating near the tops of the highest peaks of the Slerre Madre Mountains. As he sped on to the finish in Tour nament Park he was on a level with the Mount Wilson observatory and Woman Would Not Sign a Deed and I flying close to the ragged rocks of Six Shots Wera the mountain. Fired. if.,. conscious and their clothes stained with blood, Mf. and Mrs. J. P. Christ offerson, both 70 years ol-d, were found His machine seemed to hesitate an instant as the aviator careened It ln- ATLANTIC, Iowa, Nov. 6.—Half to perlllous though spectacular spiral glide. At this time he was directly over the park but as lie came down his filer described ever widening curves, until he was within a few hun dred feet of the ground. Then Rodgers performed one of the dips Arch Hox sey was performing when he was kill ed at Domingues Field, within sight of Mount WilBon, last December. GALESBURG MAN WOULD BE GOVERNOR Charles F. Hurburgh, State Senator, ,!SlS Has Announced Hlmself as. Candidate. jfe1 .v CHICAGO, Nov. 6.—Charles F. Hurburgh, state senator from GaleB burg, is to be a candidate for govern or of Illinois, ROME, Nov. 6.—The serious news of the conditions at Tripoli have alarmed the people. The peor „on...om, commencing to urge that the govern- Is expected to annouce his ca da ment carry the war Into the enemy's formally within the next few days. sea or the Dardanelles. There is great indignation in official circles because of the reports of Italian atrocities up on Turks and Arabs. These are de nied. Pultlzer's Sons to Manage.'-' NEW YORK, Nov. 6—At a meeting of the board of trustees of the Press Publishing Company, publishers of the New York World, Ralph Pulitzer, Bon of the late Joseph Pulitzer, was elected president. J. Angus Shaw was named treasurer, and Joseph Pulitzer Jr., secretary. This announcement was made last The people are night by hiB friends. Mr. Hurburgh I *t _»V nfU iln Vl A *».' home country, either through the Red Senator Hurburgh, while he will base his candidacy upon progressive principles, will not be allied with either the La Follette brand of insur gency nor tho organization which for years has been in control of the par ty machinery ir. this state. Another Hunter Killed. ARBOR VITAE, Wis. Nov. 6— Clark Sayner, aged 13. of Sayner, son of the founder of the town, while hunt ing near his homo shot himself ln the arm. Before medical aid could be summoned he had lost so much blood that he died. THE WEATHER Cooler Tonight—Fair To morrow. STARTED SEPTEMBER 17 HANG CHOW HAS FALLEN Landed In Tournament Park, Paaa dena on Sunday With But Twen ty Miles Yet to Travel. PASADENA, Calif., Nov. 6.—Avia tor Calbralth P. Rodgers, approaching a successful completion of his forty nine day ocean-to-ocean "jaunt" across the American continent, soar ed into Pasadena Sunday at a mile-a minute clip on the spurt of thirty miles from Pomona and dropped from an altitude of several thousand feet to a graceful landing in Tournament Park. EIGHT PAGES. COMPLETELY UP Five Thousand Persona Killed by Bullet*, Fire and Sword Dur ing Destruction of the City. Admiral Ping Only Haa Four Ship* Left and Has Hard Tim* Keep ing Them From tfcs Rebels. SHANGHAI, Nov. 6.—Hankow haa been completely destroyed by Are. More than 5,000 persons have been killed by bullets, fire and the sword. The Imperialists are shelling Wu Chang and Hang Chow has fallen. The foreign volunteers and municipal police have withdrawn from the rail way station here, which Is now occu pied by the revolutlonistB. A topic of interest here had been .. the breach of neutrality committed by occupation of the station by foreign volunteers and the municipal police, as the station is outside the settle ment limits. Instructions have been sent to the British consul at the In stigation of the mortgagers of the British Chinese corporation venturing the opinion that the neutrality viola tion would probably Involve serious consequences and endanger the lives of foreigners outside tire porta. Admiral Sah Chen Ping, with four ahlpB, has arrived at Woo Sung ln a pitiable condition. The other ships were lost enroute. Li Ping Hu is the responsible head of the native city and suburbs, and Is now engaged in completing his organi sation. lie Informed the correspond ent that he recognized only the Re public of Han, and would guarantee order. The only disorderly elements, he said, now in China, are the former officials, theft* supporters and tho Manchu troops, who Would nerer again be permitted to control. There IB reason to believe tho revo lutionary sentiment throughout the south strongly favors the uncondition al abdication of the emperor and the establishment of an entirely new re gime. Yuan Shi Kai will be repudiat ed if he adheres to the Manchus. He might become head of the government and receive universal support If he separated himself from his former al liances. There 1b, however, a grow ing suspicion and distrust of Yuan Shi Kai. The present plans for a republic In clude complete oontrol of tho Yang Tse Klang. The revoluflffnary lead ers are determined to avoid blood shed and secure the peaceful capitu lation of the Manchu troops in the various southern towns. Huang Sing, the revolutionary leader in the Yang Tso delta, arrived ln the native city of Shanghai yesterday, by motor car. Today he was engaged with other chiefs in a conference. The revolutionists maintain that no concession on the part of the throne will avail while the Maachus remain in power. A meeting of the Klang Su, Che Klirog and Fukien gentry today stigmatized the National Assembly as not representing the country. The revolutionary proclamations abolish the liken and land taxes, the mari time customs only being retained. Soochow, In the province of Klang Su, on the Grand Canal, htf# gone over to the rebelB, the governor and all tho officials together with the soldiers, having acquiesced peacefully in the rising, while Kashing and Ning Po also have fallen. Reports are numerous of the defec tion or the capture of various other Chinese cities, these Including Wu Hu and Foo Chow, The Imperial tele graph operators have gone on strike. They demand throe month"B pay In advance. It is reported that Yuan Shi Kai Is at Hankow negotiating With Oon. Li, leader of the rebels, who is ln a posi tion to dictate terms. It is believed that the south will demand the retire ment of the Manchu royalty, with a pension, and will not be satisfied with less. The revolutionary leaders at Shang hai expressed no fear that the imepr lalists would attempt to recipture the city. They said the nffw government was hilly competent to control the sit uation and protect foreign Interests. Three Gunboats Surrender. SHANGHAI Nov. 0.—Dr. Wu King Saug, formerly Chinese minister to the United States, has accepted the post of secretary of foreign affairs under the provisional government of which LI Yung Huang Is the head. Wuen Tsung Yno. one Of the most prominent men In the empire has been offered a place as Wu's assistant. (Continued on page ?.)