LARGEST SWORN CIRCULATION IN NORTHERN INDIANA.
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AVERAGE DAILY NEWS-TIMES CIRCULATION FOR JUNE WAS 16,722.
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READ THE 'WANTS'
ii Show. r tonight t ur.-
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VOL. XXX., NO. 210.
SOUTH BEND, INDIANA, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1913.
PPJCE TWO CENTS
SOUTH
BEND
T Ml
GOV. FERRIS IS
NOTTD WITHDRAW
STATE iLITIft
Will Keep Men at Calumet as
Long as Trouble is Imminent
But Will Take No Action
Settling Affair.
STRIKERS WANT THE
TROOPS TO KEEP PEACE
Trouble Was Expected and
Sixty Candle Power Lamps
Were Strung Around Plant
at Six Feet Intervals.
CALUMET. Mich.. July C. Re
ports that Gov. V, N". Ferris would
come to Houghton Friday night to
help arrange a settlement of the
Etrikr of IS. 00-0 copper mine em
ployes brought out an unnflloial state
tnent from the mine managers that
they would welcome the governor's
presence.
All plans for arbitration under the
direction of the governor were soon
dispelled however by the announce
ment that Mr. Ferris had no present
intentions of coming to the copper
country, or of withdrawing the
militia, which Is protecting the mines
against any further outbreak of the
Mrikers.
The following telegram was pent
to the governor's otlice in Lansing
Thursday afternoon by C. F. Ma
lioney, vice president of the Western
Federation of Miners:
"We respectfully request that you
come here and investigate the indus
trial dispute in the copper mining,
district and use your good offices to
ffeet a settlement and to direct that
the troops be used to preserve peace
instead of to operate the mines as
teems to be the present intent."
Disorders occurred spasmodically
in the outlying districts of the mining
country Friday, but in no case did the
union manifestnnts quell the mob
Fpirlt which appeared in the attack
upon Calumet and Hecla property
Thursday.
A call for troops came from the
pouth range when union sympathizers
drove awaj the sheriff's deputies at
the Faltic, Try Mountain and other
mines, but an investigation by militia
command'-s convinced them that the
situation was not serious enough to
require the presence of state soldiers.
It was the consensus among the
officers of the three companies al
ready here that the storm center
wmld remain in and about Calumet.
Accordingly, rather unusual precau
tions were taken to guard the shops
emd shaft of the Calumet & Hecla
Friday night. Company electricians
strung wires all about the plant with
f0 candle power lamps suspendid
therefrom every six feet. A small
imitation of a "great white way" re
sulted, and while it served to draw
n. big crowd of curiosity seekers early
in the evening, the militia command
ers were convinced that the illumi
nation would prevent any possibility
f "'planting" of explosives about the
armory or mine buildings at night.
The union officials held a confer
ence Friday afternoon and Friday
night Issued a statement supplement
ing that given out earlier in the day.
Friday night's statement was as
follows:
"Tlie strike was not called tintil
peaceable means had failed. We
could not compel a conference; we
could only request It. The secretary
of the copper district union of the
Western Federation of Miners mailed
.a letter to the operating companies of
the district on July 14 requesting a.
conference not later than the 21st for
the consideration anil adjustment of
grievances relative to the hours.
Mages and the conditions of labor.
Not even the courtesy of a reply was
extended.
"A strike or silent submission was
the only alternative presented to the
n'iers of the district. The latter
naturally suggests itself to those who
derive profit from the miners' labor.
3t is so easy to bear the troubles of
ethers.
"The or.'.y .statement that we have
f-.-eu from the companies' standpoint,
v to the fTect that thev have never
tr
ated with the Western Federation
Miners and did not feel that it was
t
eotssary to do now. The worker
ha.
at bast as large a stake in the
ianag nn nt of the industry in which
e is employed as he has in the con
1
duct of 'o eminent, local or national.
citizenship giver him a voice in
go -eminent : his employment should
give him a v oj.ee as to hours, wages
and the conditions obtaining in the
industry in which he is employed.
That is what is meant by 'recognition
4 i
he union' and constitutes the long-
et
step jet taken toward the estab-
1
hment of justice and industrial
peace.
"Why have n"t the employes of the
raining companies as go d a right to
choose a spokesman as the stockhold-
ers.
ictir.g through their directors.
1
ie to choose a manager. Is riot the
We
ire of the K.ooo mine, mill and
smelter workers and the families en
titled to as much consideration as the
dividends of th- stockholders. Men
who are good enough to pile up mil
lions in dividends for their employers
are good enough to meet them In con
ference. "The wages of the underground
workers, throughout the copper mines
:" the country, with the exception of
Miehi-tfw:. would average $3.50 per
drtv
for
It would take several Increases
them to reach that figure here."
M'AV YOKK. Toh! hy Anne Ncr-
rciin he had the same chance to
marry as the celebrated snowball. I'd
ward Minasias, of Detroit, attempted
suicide. He blew off hi great toe.
TO ANNOUNCE Ii
CAUDATE TODAY
Republicans Meet Friday Night
But Refuse to State Who Will
Head Their City Ticket.
"There will be a man named Sat
urday to head the republican ticket,"
was the statement made Friday night
after a meeting of republicans at W.
X. Bergan's office in the Jefferson
building. The members of the com
mittee refused to divulge the name
of their leader.
According to the members, the sit
uation was gone over and it was
agreed that the republican party will
be represented in the coming fall
election despite the fact that some
of the members of the central com
mittee have bolted and the previous
meeting had decided to switch their
efforts towards the citizens' move
ment. Democrats in the fourth ward met
at the Hlver Park school house and
organized another I. A. Joyce club.
John Ii. Witwer was elected president.
Talks were made by Arthur Mosen,
Judge G. A. Farabaugh, John 13. Wit
wer, John 13. Stoll. P. A. Joyce, "Win.
Schermann. Gustav Stueckle and Al
bert Archambault.
The weekly meeting of the Second
Ward Joyce club was held at the
Linden school. Otis llomine, a can
didate for city judge, explained the
laws governing the primary. The
next meeting will be held at Kaz
merski hall on Aug. 4.
CHINESE REBELS ARE
WILLING TO QUIT
Revolutionary Cause Seems to be
Waning and First Offer for
Peace is Made.
SHANGHAI, July 26. The revolu
tionary cause here appears to be wan
ing. Despite the large number of
rebel reinforcements, the attacks on
the arsenal by the southerners Thurs
day night and Friday failed com
pletely and Dr. Wu Ting Fang, for
mer Chinese minister to the United
States; Gen. Wen-Tsung-Yao and oth
er prominent rebels, after a confer
ence Friday telegraphed Pres. Yuan
Shi Kai proposing a basis for peace
negotiations.
It is now known that So-Chow-Fu
In the province of King-Su is in pos
session of the northerners. Themili
tary governor of the province of Hu
Nan. one of the chief tea producing
sections of the empire, has proclaim
ed the neutrality of his district, and
the military governor of Che-Kians
province is firmly suppressing all pro
posals against Yuan Shi Kai.
The city presents an extra ordinary
appearance. Fires are blazing en the
outskirts of the native city sLftd thou
sand of homeless Chlnesa refugees are
camping in the streets.
DEATHS MAY KESULT
IN SOME FORMAL ACTION
y
Supreme Council of Ivoyal Order cjf
Mooe to Take Vp Klec
troeutions. CINCINNATI, July 2 6. The deaths
of Donald Kennejr and Christopher
Gustin, during an initiation into the
Loyal Order of Moose in Hirmingham,
Ala., last night trill probably result
in formal actios being taken against
the lodge during the meeting of the
supreme counell in Cincinnati next
week.
The two men, candidates for mem
bership in the order, were being Initia
ted. Part of the initiation consisted,
according to the report, of giving the
men an electric shock. In some man
ner the men were both given too
severe a shock and they became un
conscious and died shortly afterwards.
Members of the supreme council
who are in Cincinnati making prepa
rations for their jubilee convention
discussed the matter Friday and an
nounced that they wouid make a thor
ough inquiry during the convention.
MUST HAVEG00D HEALTH
Rill Requiring Certificate He fore
Marriage is Paed.
MADISON. Wis.. July 2fi. The
Wisconsin legislature Friday passed a
bill requiring a certificate of health
from both parties to a nuptial agree
ment as a preliminary to the granting
of a marriage license. Examinations
by physicians are required. Loth
houses also passed a bill for the ster
ilization of the feeble minded, epilep
tic and criminal insane in state and
county institutions.
PAY THE CANAL RENTAL
WASHINGTON, July 2h The first
pavment of $250,000 to Panama for
the annual rental of the canal zone
was made Friday. The payments are
in addition to $10,000,000 paid in
cash to Panama nine years ago. To
day's installment was actually due
last February, though it was deferred
until today for determination wheth
er it should go to Panama or the
parent state. Colombia.
HONOR ASTOR.
P.KPLIN. July 26. The memory of
John Jacob Astor, founder of the
great Astor fortune. Is being honored
in Waldorf, near Heidleberg. The lit
tle town is en fete as he was born
there.
XI-: W YORK. William J. Edward-,
a contractor from South Carolina put
on false whiskers to search for an
absconding employe. A stranger
noted the dishgulse and had him arrested.
HEW TRUST BUSIER
NAMED BY WILSOII
George Carroll Todd of Virginia
to See That the Sherman:
Anti-Trust Lav; is Not Vio
lated. WASHINGTON. July 26. Georgo
Carroll Todd of Virginia was nomin
ated by Pres. Wilson Friday to be as
sistant to Atty. Gen. McKeynolds and
"trust buster" of the administration to
succeed James A. Powler of Knoxville,
Tenn., who will retire on Aug. 1.
Mr. Todd, now a special assistant
to the attorney general, has had ex
tensive experience In anti-trust work.
He entered the department of Justice
1.1 years ago and was associated with
William A. Day, assistant to Atty.
Gen. Knox and the government's
"first trust buster."
At that time he participated in the
government's dissoluton case against
the Northern Securities Co. in which
the supreme court rendered the first
of its sweeping decisions under the
Sherman law. He later entered pri
vate practice and then became assist
ant counsel for the government in
the prosecution of the "hard roa.1
trust" which was in charge of Atty.
Gen. McKeynolds when he was a spe
cial assistant to Atty. Gen. Wicker
sham. In the house money trust in
vestigation Mr. Todd was associate
counsel with Samuel Untermeyer for
the Pujo committee. He is a native
of Smithfield, Va.
Mr. Fowler will return to the prac
tice of law in Knoxville. He was ap
pointed "trust buster" by former Pres.
Taft in May, 1911, and during his
two years' term has broken the rec
ord of all his predecessors in a vig
orous enforcement of the Sherman
law, having directed and supervised
the filing of 67 civil and criminal
anti-trust suits including some of the
most important ever undertaken by
the government.
EARLY HISTORY
IS A MYSTERY
Administrator Can Learn Notions of
IJarly Life of 3Ian Who Leaves
$1100,000 Ustate.
CHICAGO, July 26. Further ef
forts Friday to learn the ancestry of
William Henry Lee, head of a pub
lishing company, who died several
weeks ago leaving an estate of $200,
000 but no will, brought only baf
Uing mystery.
Whence came Lee, who were his
relatives and what was his life secret
that caused him to discard those
friends who sought -to learn some
thing of his past, are some of the
details the public administrator de
sires to know.
Unless an heir appears within 20
years the estate will go to the state
of Illinois. Hopeless of learning any
thing of Lee's antecedents, the public
administrator Friday advertised for
bids for the sale of the property.
Various stories told the administra
tor were that Lee was born in Phila
delphia in 1847, that he was a valet
for a general in the civil war, that
later he. became a waiter in a St.
Louis restaurant,' that he started as
a salesman in Chicago and finally
went into the publishing business. One
person related a story that Lee when
a young salesman sold rugs to Mrs.
Abraham Lincoln.
From being a waiter and a sales
man, Lee turned his attention to com
piling dictionaries. The compiling of
one particular dictionary he consid
ered his life work. The belief was
general that Lee "was not the name
given him by his parents, but that he
adopted it.
Even to Mrs. Barbara Clough of
Sherburne, Minn., who for years lived
at the same boarding house with him,
the publisher never revealed much
about his life.
"He did tell me he was born in
Philadelphia," said Mrs. Clough. "He
also aid his first job was in a res
taurant and there was where he began
his business career, but he never was
reminiscent."
WOMEN SURE TO GET
BALLOT SAYS DANIELS
SAN FRANCISCO. July .Secre
tary of 'the Navy Joseph..--- Daniels
told the women of the San Francisco
Civic league Friday night that what
ever the opinion of individuals about
the wisdom of women suffrage, "we
may as well get ready for the inevita
ble, for women are going to vote.
"Only last month." he continued,
"Illinois gave them the ballot for all
except constitutional offices, and the
present generation will witness com-
plete woman sun rage in every state
in the union. And when that comes,
the constitution will not be broken
and the home will not be destroyed."
BULL MOOSE PROFESSOR
FOR MAYOR OF CLEVELAND
CLEVEIAND. O., July 26. A. II.;
Hatton. professor of economy at;
Western Reserve university and a j
member of the charter commission j
which framed Cleveland's progressive i
new code, accepted the invitation of;
Cleveland bull moose Saturday to bo!
their candidate for mayor. Hatton
Is the first candidate in the field
against Mayor Baker.
ixrek;xers ix daxger.
HANKOW, July 26. Appeals
for protection of nearlv 3.000 for
eigners most of them women and
children in Ku-Ling, were made
to the government authorities here
Saturday. The southern rebels,
retreating before the northern sol
diers are reported to be committing
depredations.
BOYS NIGHT MING
AT SPMNGBRd
Big Special Program for Boys
Announced for Wednesday
Use the Penny Trail.
A day specially for the boys will be
next Wednesday at Sprlngbrook park
with Manager E. P. Dalley as master
of ceremonies.
From the time the band starts the
parade around the lagoon until the
last penny is picked up from the
copper trail the excitement will be
high. The boys have been invited to
make-up as various characters with
prizes for the best. A greased pole
will be placed across the lagoon at a
shallow point and a prize ottered the
boy who will cross it In the shortest
time. The big fun will come on the
copper trail. Pennies, real money,
will be scattered along the gravel
walks and every boy will have a
chance to scramble for It.
Sunday afternoon Prof. Denier will
make an ascension in his balloon
and will drop back to earth by the
aid of his parachute. Prof. Smith
and his Sprlngbrook band will play
two concerts, afternoon and evening.
The concerts will be featured by Billy
Wilson, a singer of reputation, who
will render popular songs. Several
pieces will be given. Manager Dailey
has engaged Cap. Hlnman and his
famous life-saving dogs for next
week.
Following is the progra mfor Sun
day concerts:
March, "Chicago Handicap" .. .Willis
Selection "The Isle of Champaigne". .
.Theo Moses
Overture "From Dawn to Twilight"..
C. W. Rennett.
March Song "My Boy" (bv request) . .
Arr. by Alford & Colby
Mr. Billy Wilson. Baritone.
Waltz "Silver Threads Among the
Gold" H. P. Danks.
"The Forge" McFall
Selection from the "WhirM-Gig" . . .
J. Strcmberg
Waltezes "Autumn Revere" .. W.Itolfe
March Song "When I Get You Alone
To-Night" ..Arr. by A. S. Anus.
C. II. Smith, Conductor.
LAPORTE PLANS
WARM WELCOME
Banquet. Auto Trip, YNlbs to Lakes
and Iiion on Program for
Northern Indiana Editors.
LA PORTE, Ind., July 26. This
city, which made a state reputation
three years ago by its entertainment
of the Democratic Editorial associa
tion, promises to eclipse that record
at the 44th annual meeting of the
Northern Indiana Editorial associa
tion Sept. 4 and 5 here.
The'program is now being outlined
by J. A. Beane, of Goshen, president,
and Harry B. Darling, of La Porte,
secretary, in conjunction with the
chamber of commerce. The particu
lar feature will be the banquet at the
magnificent new $200,000 Rumley ho
tel. The program or after the ban
quet talks, while no complete is ex
pected to include addresses by Gov.
Ralston, Col. Buckingham, of Chi
cago. George Ade. noted playrlght.
Sen. Kern, Rep. Barnhart, John B.
Stoll, and others.
The program will also provide an
automobile ride about the city, a trip
to the lakes and a special excursion
to Michigan City, where Warden Fo
garty will show the editors the prison,
with its more than 1,200' population.
SIX-YEAR-OLD BOY
STABS PLAYMATE
Six-year-old Mikey Barratt, 417 W.
South st., will be taken before W. E.
Miller, juvenile olficer, for stabbing
Louis Brownstein, his 11-year-old
companion.
Thursday afternoon, while the. lads
were playing in the rear of the house
at 417 W. South st., whre both of
them live, the Barratt boy stabbed
young Brownstein in the left eye. He
will be blinded in that eye for life.
According to Brownstein, he stoop
ed over to tie the laces of his shoe
and as he was bending over, his com
panion jabbed the knife into his eye.
The God of Battles
Another striking Robert W.
Chambers story is announced fcr
tomorrow's paper. These great
summer tlction stories by Cham
bers. O. Henry and Gouverneur
Morris have made a big hit with
discriminating readers of the best
things in modern literature. Sun
day after next it's O. Henry's turn
and one of the canniest storb-s
he ever wrote. You'll have to get
the Sunday News-Times to get
these stories of course. They are
printed nowhere else.
Other features for tomorrow's
big paper are:
South Bend's hospitals and
some personal experiences.
The story of the News-Times
first big garden show with some
interesting pictures.
What is a Chautauqua and
why.
The school news corners.
The usual number of unusual
New York stories by Man Boyle
O'Reilly and by Norman.
Another striking detective story
by Frank Parker Stockbridge
the story of Pearl Bryan.
At the New York theaters il
lustrated. On the Aisle.
The Loafer.
And others.
T CLOTHES
BEFOfjMING
Right Way to Put Pretty
Clothes in trunk for Vaca
tion Trip.
If you are going on your vacation
in the next month or so you will want
to know just how to pack your pretty
clothes.
In the first place, when packing be
perfectly sure that the trunk is clean.
Dusting it out will not be enough.
Wipe the bottom and sides of the box
with a damp cloth. Now the trunk
Is ready to receive its contents.
Before packing anything sort out
all your clothes. Place your lingerie
in one heap, -shoes in another, stock
ings, waists, linen skirts and toilet
articles all In separate piles of their
own. Then from each heap select
what you will use while on your
journey. This will include. If the
journey to the spot selected for your
holiday takes overnight, a clean waist,
dressing gown toothbrush, cold
cream and powder, hairpins, handker
chiefs and various) other accessories.
With all the preliminaries over,
you are now quite ready to begin
packing. First, place in the bottom
of the trunk shoes, low and high, and
any slippers you may wish to take
with you on your vacation. But be
fore packing your footgear either fill
each shoe with tr-os or stuff out the
toes with tissue oaper, filling the
other spaces with any small bottles
that you may possess, containing cold
cream, tooth pasp slaves or lotions.
Belt buckles may be packed in the
same watv. All of the bottles must be
carefully corked and rolled in paper,
so as to prevent their breaikng in
the shoes.
Having placed the shoes in the bot
tom of the trunk, fill the crevices
around them with corsets, rubbers,
sweatres anything and everything
you own that is heavy or bulky. Fill
the spaces snugly, for tight packing
is the secret of success.
Over all of these things place a
piece of heavy unbleached linen, only
a little larger. This should be tacekd
firmly to the trunk. In this way the
heavy, bulky things are held in place,
making it impossible for thim to
crush the lighter things on top.
Now, take three sets of tape on
either side of the trunk a short wa.v
above the linen. Commence to pack
your dresses, packing the heavier
ones first, the lighter ones on top. It
is a good idea to tack strip? of linen
at either end of the trunk, and either
to pin or tack with stickers your
gowns to these strips cf linen. In
this way it Is impossible for them to
become mussed. The tapes tied
across the gowns help to hold them
in place.
The bottom of the trunk is now
filled except perhaps for the corners.
Roll underwear tightly and pack in
any spare space that may remain to
be filled. This does not apply to pet
ticoats, which should be folded over
once and reserved for the tray.
This holds shirtwaists well filled
with tissue paper, petticoats, neck
wear, gloves and other furbelows of
the feminine ward-robe. If there is
sufficient space ycur waists will look
Infinitely better when they arrive at
the end of their journey If you pack
them in flat boxes. This should be
placed in the tray.
TO HAVE HEADS FOR
ALL THE DIVISIONS
New System to he Introduced Wlicn
Howard Elliott Takes Charge
of X. Y., X'. H. & II.
NEW YORK, July 26. Howard
Elliott, president of the Northern Pa
cific, was elected president and di
rector of the New York, New Haven
& Hartford railroad at a meeting of
its directors Friday, and a new plan
adopted for the administration and
operation of the entire New Haven
system.
This provides that as soon as the
by-laws of the road can be changed,
the new president shall become chair
man of the board of directors, and
that each division of the system, tho
New York, New Haven and Hartford
proper, the Boston and Maine, the
New England Navigation Co.. and the
network of trolley lines shall each
have an operating executive, a presi
dent "with defined duties", who will
be subordinate to tlie chairman. Mr.
Elliott is to become chairman also of
the board of directors of each of
these divisions.
Mr. Elliott will assume his duties
as president Sept. 1.
fPHOID EPIDEMIC
GRIPS EVAWSVILLE
EVANS VI LLE. Ind.. July 26.
With 130 cases of typhoid fever in the
city Saturday, and a score of new
cases heard from every 2 4 hours, the
health authorities were waiting for
the epidemic to reach its worst, hop-
ing that the prerautlonary measure-?
! already instituted will eventually stop
it.
Th most serious problem Saturday
was a lack of trained nurses. Dangei
of fatalities among the typhoid pa
tients is increase 1 by the absence of
expert attention.
S Th exact cau.'e of the epidemic i?
'. still to be learned. The city waU r
! supply was found to be free from
j typhoid germs. Dairymen in the sur
I rounding country" underwent thorough
iexaminatlons and no typhoid was un-
covered. Over half of the cases re
ported are in tie fashionable rei
" dence section of the city.
Kyser Issues Statement
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nelson
WE ARE ALL A
LITTLE CRAZY
Colorado Doctor Says IMncrin: Your
Buttons and the Like i Si-n of
Unbalance! Mind.
GREELEY, Col.. July 2 0. Are you
crazy?
Probably you are slightly or not
normal and don't know it. Every
body is more or le.-s off" at times,
according to Dr. Lightner Winner, an
expert on mental diseases.
Playing with a pencil while you
talk, pulling a lock of hair while at
work, fingering a dress ornammt or
button all these, are unmistakuble
signs of temporary insanity, says Dr.
Witmer, whose specialty is the study
of defective school children.
"It is more important for children
to learn to use tlie toothbrush than
the pen," he said. "Sane minds are
found in sane bodies. The line of de
marcation between the san and the
insane is like a hair, and once or a
dozen times a day the hand on the
mental indicator swings over just a
trifle.
"Do you play with a pencil? Do
you toy with your watch charm or
chain? Do you pick up tritles and
twist and turn your lingers about
them? Do you drum your lingers on
your desk or your table?
All Unbalanced.
"Of course you do. We all do. and
we are all just a trille unbalanced
when we do it. These little, common
every-day acts prove mental lapses.
You may call it nervousness; you may
call it 'just fooling'; you may call it
anything you choose. Rut the .tijh
born fact remains that the pac of
today is telling on the nerve centers
of the brain.
"Relaxation is as necessary as work.
Don't forget that.
"We want schools to h eonie social
centers, dance halls, if need be, for
young folks must have pleasure. It
is their herita'-'- and their due. This
is a great and serious problem the
backward child. He nresents an un
developed braiii, but with special tact
------ ' I - ' ' - -
and witn proper training he can and o; t :;rj :.:i.r w .-s p....;.
he will be made a useful meaiber of i
society. To puni.-h a child becau.-ej sliooTs
he is not able t.o b-arn his b.-.-ons is i ; p ' i : d D. M t b-.,m y une. r.gro
the height of folly. Sympathy and a! 11'. and Ko'.rt L.nn. 1 1, n -n p '.ay
true understanding of his mental ( 'n-:.-.s Indian w .th several other h..v.,
dition is the solution, in Part, for tii-' i irr !!! a-.' S ee.. j.., ?.,r,.,i V.'.
. - :
cnuu wno is caned a dunaru.
SAYS WIFE LEFT HIM
FOR AH EX-CONVICT
Alleged Mi'onduct C;iiimi IlokIng
of parole of Man in the Cac
Husband Want.s l)iw)ni'.
Claiming that his wife. Arvilh-. h. s
been living with ill: im iiarri.-. an
ex-convict, William
mney
- I hi
tiled for tlivorce. They v..:--
married in April, l'.ea;;. and hod t-.-gether
until June l::, this year.
Harris, who is r.anod as the -,,.
respondent, was sentenced to Jeffer- i
j-onvilb by Judi;e Funk, in April, j
1'JlO, for oik to eight ytars for s;ea;. !
ing chickens. He was f-ranti d a pa-
role in ATril. !
OMicials of the prison wer-7 notit.e 1 .
of his alleged misconduct in this cav
and
was taken back .Saturday
morning.
r
t ,
r
: ' v..
ii. kvsi:k.
MEMBERS OF SUNDAY
SCHOOL ENJOY PICNIC
Contois and Basket Dinner Pea in re
Annual Exont .f st. Paul's
Memorial Church.
St. r.'. M- t hod is: Mcmori.il Sun
day .eho.d held it annual p:r;n, at
Dcrrien St, rings Friday. Resides th
big picnie dinn r. contests in which
old and or,r.g took part, leaiur- d tb
program. The party h it the city :1
tho U o'clock car over the Southern
Michigan intcrurban line, arriving at
the j.ark at lo o'clock. Tbo program
did not ;:in until the afternoon al
though two ball games were played.
ioor.i- Sv. ilitv. jr.. Clareiwe K"oal
r'i:ir.:ii' Se gniaelli r. (leortre Swim.
and Clem i Smit.h won in the arbms
races h Id, while Mrs. Carrie liraiih
waite -n in th- shtput contest for
v.-emeri. Mrs. Charles L. Sheddrik
W' :i in the n'edie threading contest.
Neil I). roth won the honors in th
junior boys' ,road jnmj. and Mrs.
Stephen keisier won in tlie nail driv
ing content jnf women.
ARTIE NEHF'S CONTRACT
WITH KC. CONFIRMED
"Ar:i." X'tif. the former Central
bar: lie 'i'eiri.r. is i.ow ;t f(,r sure
rfiemi'er of tlie Lan.-.is City club of
the Am. ricin. In the li-t of ccij-
tra' ts, ri 1 is. .- ... ",isjM nsiotis jut
is-ind hy ir..-. chivin-ton of the
-American aoi-iation. hf is named
as having . i-ne,l a contract with the
Ka w s.
The form r Terrier has ben uith
the Kansas City b.ii;ch for several
w ek., .and rej.r.rts sav that he is
'o;:(i: alor.g t:ic. -y. .ehf i r-itr 1-
, r.
JL V
c i "f ' i
" STATE m :
rritii; i im: i.os i
AVl'XS ' I LLK. A frei-ht train n
th. K.-:
. f the l:-.
son w 1 :
ilb- and Mi. 'at 1 ! rai; h
Fo'ir Wa.s V.T' r'Kc at Johll-
f v. o ) rrel tank- ca r
elb-.d with t ; 3 r i nt::i , hurst. Xo ri.?
. iiU'a.S Ci.IM JJU
i - - .... - ' i 1
wo-iiu t: 1 :,,. He wer.t ho;ne and
- o his latior's lo-t.je. shot --jn. He
"ir-i! at I.nn. w Mo was 4 r-t away
': n . 1 the !:' V.a- .-.rio.:-!v w.. .:ide.! in
tile
ace
and ft
de tM- asl
-attered.
W OMAN is I.MVVI :k.
: X'I Ll.i:.- The :,ri Hr.r
!.b- 1 b a w o::.a:i hi v. y,-r in the circuit
curt !; r- w: 1 -?. -rd : Mi-.
Annie J :!... y, r '..:'.; a !;r.;ttc,! to
1
I;.'!;, e. It V. as all .1' ! - di tT e
n - a a
r
. . . v i . k . 1 1 a ,
-ait:-t Lat;.rh t '1 on-l
1 I.C ! J I ! is.'.s.
v. h o
t'
' . a ' a . s -
. 1 ;
1 . i i . I -.' ,
.i't:i" n e
d- ad
i ity.
at
is 1
ti;
M ls i;n;r.
.NI)i:i;'".'.-Mr-. la'.ir i WhUo'
. v. i! i pr 1 1 d v d -e : r . : ' i ri
.-'ii
i i
a run ?!. r c
lar: was 'ir--.
ia-r - .'.o dd r and
an 1
: r : - '.a
I
!'KNM0HT. K !. iWalaiiug br
t:v.:rd i a:- !
ICo.-rs' ..J ar
;n r-.r:-ki- . , tv
litnan. a ski A to ' . ;rrest. d. lb sa:J
Koors' nb st made him Canx'ca