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Pierre weekly free press. (Pierre, S.D.) 1889-19??, April 20, 1905, Image 2

Image and text provided by South Dakota State Historical Society – State Archives

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn98062890/1905-04-20/ed-1/seq-2/

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Cktfm ftress
BY S. 0. 3EWELL
PIERRE, SOUTH DAKOTA.
The spit oall ancl the high ball will
be rivals in the pubjic jrind this sum
mer. 'fj''
Build your own monument. Do not
striv* to compel your fellow-citizens
to build it for you. •zv^y-.x-
A saline solution may bring the
dead to life, but has no effect on
those politically dead.
King Edward is no longer able to
set the pace, but he lias a store of in
teresting recollections.
If, as Mark Twain 'contends, clothes
are royalty, it is easy to see why
some women are queens.
Whbn lovely woman wields the ham
mer, she sometimes hits the nail on
the bead—the thumb nail.
ijS'n Andrew Carnegie now says he has
no intention of dying poor. Has the
needle's eye lost its terrors?
There may be 73,000 germs in a dol
lar bill, but we prefer to count the
bills and estimate the germs.
If a man can't get enough trouble to
suit him any other way, he can always
try to raise a vegetable garden.
r* ~It
would be a decided relief to,find
some man cleaning up $1.80 in a stock
deal instead of making $1,000,000.
A California professor has found an
ichthyosourus. Why didn't he get on
the water wagon as it was driven by?
A Baltimore scientist has discover
ed that Adam had thirteen ribs. No
wonder he was willing to part with
one.
It's a mighty poor sort of man who
hasn't a cure for grip but under some
circumstances it is well to encourage
poverty.
As soon als the jury learned that
Cassle was to write a book it hesitated
no ldnger and fixed the sentence at
ten years.
At last the real yellow peril has
been discovered. An English doctor
has found that the grip germ comes
from China.'
The Philadelphia Ledger says that
fame awaits the man who will give us
a national song. What's the matter
with Hiawatha?
Cassie Chadwiclt says that the loan
sharks made all the trouble. In the
words of the transpontine melodrama,
"Alone they done it!"
In New York a mother and her
daughter have hypnotized each other
speechless. That beats all records in
mutual admiration societies. siS
Mr. Carnegie says wealth is not so
much after all. However, it may be
easier for a man In Carnegie's position
to take this philosophical view.
A recently invented machine, it is
said, will turn out 10,000,000 matches
a day but nobody will ever be able
to find a match when he wants it, all
the 6ame.
wmm
,_„J\
The human heart is said to beat
92,100 times a day. Hard to believe
that there's any such activity in the
immediate vicinity of Russell Sage's
ossification. •v,
A Pennsylvania city council will
from now on open Its meetings with
prayer. It will no doubt continue to
open the town treasury in the old
fashioned way.
If the existing portraits and statues
of Mother Eve may be regarded ia.s
even approximately accurate the poor
woman's waist must have' been fright
fully out of fashion.
•ft
^sff
Four cents twas recently added to
the United States conscience fund.
One cent mo're, and the aforesaid sum
'would doubtless have gone to swell
some brewer's bankroll.
The Duke of Manchester was lost for
ten days in Mexico. A strange feature
of the case was that people thought
seriously of forming searching parties
IbrXthe purpose of going out and find
ing him
Prof. Samuel Williston. says the
•earth 8,000,000 years hence will be
Riven over entirely to birds. Hence
the antl-Audobon milliners are seen
to be only taking their revenge for
tion beforehand.
One 6r the medical papers has a long
article on the subject, "How Colds Are
Caught," but it doesn't fill the long
telt want. It's easy enough to catch
colds. What people want to know is
bow to get jrid of them.
p^lt^is a remarkable fact that when
childien are born oarailway trains it
is almost invariably a case of twins.
Let jfhe scientists, turntheir attention
from the spots on the sun, for awhile.
Jersey justice of the peace
j£3$
»i?vA*»
In the Capital.
It is announced that Presidente
Roosevelt will arrive at Oyster Bay,
N. Y., about June 25 and will remain
until October.
Senator Bacon is forced to forego
his trip to the Philippines with Secre
tary Taft on account of illness. He
is ordered by his physician to take a
complete rest.
Secretary Taft has been advised
that Great Britain and Germany will
each designate an engineer to act as
a member of the advisory board of en
gineers to the isthmian canal commis
sion.
Secretary Hay is living a quiet life
at Nervi, Italy. He drives out daily,
the weather being fine. Tourists
coming from Genoa have made many
requests for interviews, all of which
Mr. Hay has refused.
The Haytlen minister, Mr. Leger,
has stated to Secretary Taft that the
report of Amercan Minister Powell re
cently to the effect that serious
trouble was expected at Port Au
Prince has seriously embarrassed the
Haytien officials in the negotiations of
a loan.
The United States cruiser Chatta
nooga has arrived at San Domingo,
with Jacob H. Hollander on board.
Mr. Hollander is chared to make an
investigation into and report on the
financial condition of Santo Domingo.
The new American consul general
to London, Robert J. Wynne, has as
sumed the duties of that office.
List of Casualties.
Five persons were badly injured in
a head-on collision between a passen
ger train and a freight train on the
Delaware & Hudson River railway
near Rutland, Vt.
Fire at Knightstown, Tnd., destroyed
the Wiiiiams & Co. dry goods store
and the wholesale grocery establish
ment of O. A. Morris, adjoining. The
loss is estimated at $93,000.
A boiler of the Union Ice works at
Los Angeles blew up, seriously injur
ing two employes and setting fire to
the plant, which was destroyed. The
fire caused demage estimated at $100,
000.
Two woodsmen died from excessive
drinking and one fell into a creek and
was drowned, at Escanaba, Mich. All
three came down from the woods last
week and proceeded to spend their
earnings.
Baptiste Filion and Joseph Beasu
broke from the insane ward at Bidde
ford, Me., and made a dash for a small
pond, secured a rowboat and pushed
out, but the boat capsized and Filion
was drowned. Beasu clung to the craft
and was saved.
The home of George T. Mauli at
Clarksburg, W. Va., was entirely de
stroyed by fire and four of his chil
dren were burned to death. The pa
rents with a fifth child had barely time
to escape from the burning building.
The charred bodies of the four chil
dren have been recovered.
Afire started by lightning strlklnk
the Lade Bros.' large warehouse at
Huntington, W. Va., caused damage
estimated at $200,000. Before the fire
men were on the ground the adjoining
warehouse of the United States Sto
gie company was in flames. Three oth
er buildings were also consumed.
Maj. William G. Jewell, one of the
most widely known G. A. R. men of
Ohio, was instantly killed by a Penn
sylvania train at Marietta, Ohio. With
Cecil Gardner he was in an automobile
which had crossed just ahead of an in
coming train, when Maj. Jewell be
came much excited, jumped and fell
under the train.
While Ebenezer Runyan was being
Initiated by the local lodge of Knights
of Pythias at Felsenthal, Ark., he was
shot and instantly killed. Charles
Filler, an officer of the lodge, was offi
ciating at the initiation, and, it is said,
used a revolver which in some way
had been loaded, although it was sup
posed to contain blank cartridges.
ri
SjlMf ^Uled that a woman's
tOftgue^fi a]«oncealed weapon, .within
•he meaning ofltjie lay, was promptly
irergttled ^by- a higher court. Of tried at Clayton, N. M., on a charge of
•:Tb'
H, Crimes and Criminals.®5
Mrs. Dora Jackson, formerly one of
the belles of Los Angeles, committed
suicide because her weight had in
creased in six months from 170 to 270
pounds.
The coroner's jury at* L^sa Mass.,
found that David" K. Phillips, the
•wealthy banker of Swampscott, who
was found on the beach, came to his
death by suicide by drowning.
A. D. Piersou, a wholesale merchant
of Scranton, Pa., In Jail awaiting trial
on charges preferred by young girls,
•while in his cell shot himself. Little
hope is entertained for his recovery.
Martin Ebelt, who murdered his
young wife at Mount Vernon, paid the
penalty for his crime in the Electric
chair in. Sing Sing prison. Ebelt
strangled his wife to death July 24,
1903.
After a hunt fcovetflng 'a period of
six years, Ed Franks, alias Bob Mc
Manus, said to be the last surviving
member of Black Jack Ketchum'a no
torious band of train robbers that ter
rorized New Mexico and southern
Colorado for many years, was arrested
thirty miles south of Trinidad by dep
uty sheriffs. Franks lived (done in a
desolate cabin difficult of approach,
•nd was taken by surprise. He will be
ije ought robbery, which capital of-
Ammam
"J
v-.X-'W tt
CIK news 01 the Week
'-mj-
•p
Foreign.
A Greek band attacked and burned,
an Albanian village near Kllissura,
killing thirty and wounding and cap
turing many more.
Premier Bostrom of Sweden has re
signed, owing to expressions used by
the prince regent in his recent state
ment on the subject of the dual gov
ernment.
The news that Secretary Taft pro
poses a decrease in railway rates is
received with satisfaction at Panama
The isthmus will benefit greatly by
ihe reduction.
The pope has sent autograph letters
to several members of the Roman no
bility, reproving them for the bad ex
ample they set by attending theaters,
balls and banquets during Lent:
The newspaper reporters of Rome
are on a strike because the govern
ment forbade them to talk to deputies
in chamber. Soldiers are posted in
the chamber and lobbies to enforce
the rule.
The German government continues
to lay before the sultan of Morocco
the advantages of requesting the pow
ers to agree among themselves by an
international conference the things
they would like'him to do.
Lord Stheliers, who, as Sir Francis
Jeune, was president of the probate,
divorce and admiralty division of the
high court from 1891 to Jan. 30, 1905,
and Lord Chelmsford, lord high chan
cellor in 1858-59, are dead in London.
A bomb exploded in the episcopal
palace in Conversano province, Bari,
Italy. The bishop's palace was blown
to pieces. The bishop was absent. It
is believed to be the work of a secret
society that the bishop recently at
tacked.
President Diaz of Mexico has issued
a decree regulating the designs of the
new coifis of the republic. Provision
is made for the ne wgold coins of $10
and $5 each, and for new silver dol
lars differing but slightly from the
present coins.
Dispatches from Crete indicate that
the trouble there has reached a crisis.
It is stated that a conflict is near in
Canea between the insurgents and
Europeans, who have declared their
intention to take a hand in preserv
ing order on the island.
Privy Councillor Pasche, vice presi
dent of the German reichstag, pub
lishes an essay or. '-"American Peril,"
which is much discussed in Germany.
Pasche contends that no such peril
exists that the supjiosed danger to
European industry is a myth.
It is reported that a German mis
sion, headed by Coun£ von Tattenbach
Ashold, former minister of Germany
to Morocco, will shortly proceed to
Fez and arrange a special German
Moroccan commercial treaty, the pro
posed terms of which are already on
their way to Fez.
The investigations of
(the
-4 r^
Paris po­
lice have not determined whether the
arms and iftiiforms recently seized in
the suburbs of Paris were intended for
a chimerical African expedition or a
seditious movement against the gov
ernment. Statements made by Deputy
Rabier tend to show the existence of a
plot.
Domestic.
Benjamin F. Ferguson, a pioneer
lumber dealer of Chicago and the
Northwest, is dead.
Jesse Knight, chief justice of the
supreme court of Wyoming, is dead at
his home in Cheyenne.
Artemus Pitcairn, aged 56, vice
president and controller of the Pitts
burg Plate Glass company, is dead.
Washington Dessau, a Macon, Ga.,
lawyer, dropped dead in Atlanta while
arguing a case in the supreme court.
Bloomfield J. Miller, actuary and
vice president of the Mutual Life In
surance company, is dead at Newark,
N. J.
Statistician Heinzer, using the gov
ernment basis, estimates that the win
ter wheat crop will be 479,787,000
bushels.
President W. R. Harper of the Uni
versity of Chicago has taken up his
university work again and was given a
hearty greeting by the students.
Several hundred employers of print
ers in the states west of the Missis
sippi gathered at Kansas City to take
steps to fight, the eight-hour day.
It has been determined that the
stock of the New York Edison com
pany consists of $45,500,000 of water
against $19,000,000 of actual value.
Steel-cars will soon be running on
some of the surface lines in New York.
The first lot of a large number or
dered has been received and will be
put into service at once.
Chicago Baptists have decided to
raise $100,000 to be used in the erec
tion of a building for the education
and training of women missionaries
for work in foreign fields.
H. G. Hetzler, superintendent of tb6
terminals of the Chicago, Burlington
& Quincy railroad, has accepted the
presidency of the Metropolitan West
Side Elevated railroad in Chicago.
Chicago cabmen have raised the
price of carriage hire to the students
of Chicago university to $6 an .even
ing, because the students use the cabs
all night when they use them at all.
The appellate division of the New
York supreme court has sustained the
judgment in favor of James G. Blaine
against Edward^R. Thomas & Co., to
recover for unauthorised sale of Pe&u<
^lvente rtUpj stock
NAVAL BATTLE
IS IMPENDING
ROJESTVENSKY GETS RID OF
SICK IN EXPECTATION OF
FIGHT.
YOUNG OFFICER'S BAD BREAK
WASHINGTON EXCITED OVER
PUBLICATION OF OFFICIAL
DISPATCH.
FLEET GOES TO VLADIVOSTOK
LONDON HEARS THAT THAT
IS ROJESTV EN SKY'S DESTI­
NATION.
Washington, April 16. Admiral
Train, commander-in-chief of the Asi
atic station, reported to the navy de
partment yesterday that the Russian
hospital ship Orel had put into Saigon,
Cochin-China, with all ihe sick of Ad
miral Rojestvensky'S fleet, whicli he
took to be an indication that the Rus
sian admiral is expecting a battle in
the near future. The substance of the
message was made public early in the
day. Later every possible effort was
made to create the impression that
no such information had been re
ceived at the department.
A later unofficial dispatch said that
the Orel had sailed. She remained in
port thirty-six hours and took aboard
900 tons of coal, as well as supplies of
provisions and medicines.
Error of Judgment.
The publication of the official dis
patch was an error of judgment oil the
part of a young officer. When his su
periors arrived they immediately took
steps to assure themselves that noth
ing further should reach the public.
Russia would have a right to regard
the publication of such official reports
as an unfriendly act on the part of the
United States. Furnishing copies of
such messages to the Japanese lega
tion could hardly be considered any
more reprehensible.
Gets to Togo.
There is no doubt but that the Jap
anese legation has already sent, the
substance of the message to To'vio,
whence it will be sent to Admiral
Togo It may not be news to him,
but then again it might. In the event
it was, it would doubtless be welcome.
The unofficial reports saying that
the Orel landed wounded Russians is
not believed here. The impression is
that Rojestvensky is merely ridding
his fleet of the care of the sick, so
that all his surgeons and hospital fa
cilities may be had for service in at
tending the men wounded during the
impending battle. Rojestvensky has
been in the tropics so long that his
sick list is probably large.
Going t« Vladivostok.
London, April 16.—No news throw
ing light on the movements of the
fleets of Vice Admiral Rojestvensky
and Admiral Togo have been received
here, but according to a statement
made by oi}e of the doctors on board
the Russian hospital ship Orel at Sai
gon, the ships of the Baltic squadron
were going to Vladivostok.
Tuesday being the iast day the Rus
sian vessels were sighted, it is the
general opinion in London that Rojest
vensky has changed his course, pos
sibly to the eastward, as otherwise
it is considered certain the fleet would
have again been sighted by passing
steamers.
The correspondent at Hongkong of
the Daily Mail telegraphs a report
made by a steamer on April 11 that
the Russian warships presented a
serviceable and business like appear
ance.
Submarines at Vladivostok.
The Daily Telegraph's Tokio corres
pondent says:
"Owing to military necessities the
residents of Vladivostok are suffering
privations. Five submarine boats
have arrived at Vladivostok from
America. The .cruisers Gromoboi and
Rossia are kept in constant readiness
to leave port."
JAPS GET NEW FOOTHOLD.
Defeat Russ Detachment and Occupy
Tsangshih.
Tokio, April 16.—The following offi
cial announcement was made yester
day:
Our force advancing eastward via
the Fushun and Hailung road encoun
tered and defeated the enemy on the
morning of the 12th at Erhhoulu, sev
en miles east of Yingpan. The ene
my's strength was one regiment of in
fantry, six squadrons of cavalry r.nd
four guns. Our force then occupied
Tsanghih, about nineteen miles east
of Yingpan. The enemy in retreating
toward Hailung, fought every step.
The enemy on the Kirin road has
gradually retreated since the 11th, a
portion of this force still remaining to
bar the "passage of tht Yushu river.
No change has occurred in the
Changtu or Fahkmen districts, except
occasional cavalry skirmisbfes.
PROMISES FOR THE MASSES.
,.
Fixing Up
Russian Commission Is
,v? Grievances.
St Petersburg, April 16.—In receiv
J(ng a delegation of workingmen from
Moscow yesterday Finance Minister
Kokovasoff gave notice to the work
ingmen of Russia that a government
commission is now formulating legis
lation to remedy the greater part of
their grievances, including state insur
ance against sickness, accident and
age and for shortening the hours of
labor, abolishing the prohibition of
unions and criminal punishment for
strikes, and for the establishment of
an international court in which em
ployers and employed shall be repre
sented.
MONEY TO RUN STATE.
Omnibus Appropriation Bill Provides
for a Grand Total of $4,135,369.
St. Paul. April 16.—A total appro
priation of $4,135,369 is made by the
cmnibus appropriation bill, introduced
in the senate yesterday by Senator R.
%. Brower of St. Cloud, and in the
house by Representative W. P. Rob
erts of Minneapolis, chairman of the
committee in charge of the subject.
The appropriations are distributed
over the fiscal years ending July 3i,
1905, 1906 and 1907, as follows: 1905,
$350,769 1906, $1,964,500 1907, $1,
820,100. The state revenue bill, which
has been prepared tut has not yet
been introduced, provides for raising
$1,200,000 for the general revenue
fund in 1906 and of $1,000,000 in 1907,
instead of fixing a special state tax
rate as was done two years ago. To
raise the required amount in 1906 on
the present valuation of taxable prop
erty will require that the present
state tax levy of 1 mill be increased to
approximately 1.4 mills.
INDIAN GIRL MURDERED.
Body Found After a Search Lasting
Three Weeks.
Marshalltown, Iowa, April 16.—The
body of the young Indian girl, Mash
ache, who disappeared from the reser
vation March 4, was found near Mon
tour yesterday In a ravine, where ev
idently it had been concealed. The
body was almost nude, the clothes be
ing torn from the bodv. Her wounds
showed she had been murdered. The
Indians have been searching for three
weeks. She was the granddaughter of
a chief, and was last seen with an
Indian named George Soldier, who
was formerly the girl's husband. The
Indians are greatly excited.
LAY ALL TO CRAWFORD.
Palmer Is Said to Purpose the Making
of His Comrade a Scapegoat.
Elk River, Minn,, April 16.—Seven
teen witnesses were examined yester
day in the Palmer trial, all testifying
substantially as in the Crawford case,
and it does not look bright for the de
fendant. The state hopes to rest to
night, but lengthy cross-examinations
may drag its case into next week. The
defense has several witnesses to intro
duce. Crawford is said to be one of
them. Indications now point to mak
ing Crawford a scapegoat as a line of
defense.
CHANCE FOR MINNESOTANS.
Examination for Panama Employes to
Be Held in This State.
Washington, April 16. It was an
nounced by the civil service commis
sion that examinations will be held at
St. Paul, Mankato and Duluth on May
1 for the positions of steam shovel en
gineers, steam shovel crane men,
steam shovel firemen and steam shovel
pitmen, in connection with the con
struction of the Panama canal. These
positions pay from $75 to $190 per
month, with an additional bonus for
extra work performed.
GUILTY OF MURDER.
Iowa Physician Caused Death of Maud
Stone, Says Jury.
Osceola, Iowa, April 16. Dr. Crof
ford of the Lamoni sanitarium, was
yesterday found guilty of the murder
of Maud Stone, a Leon girl who died
in Crofford's hospital, after a criminal
operation, four years ago. Crofford
was tried and convicted once before
and sentenced to thirteen years for
second degree murder.
MONEY READY FOR INDIANS.
Cheyennes in South Dakota Will Be
Paid for Lands May 1.
Washington, April 16.—Indian Com
missioner I.eupp has issued instruc
tions to the Indian agent at Cheyenne,
S. D., to have the pay rolls of the In
dians in readiness so that the $100,000
provided for in the act passed at the
last session of congress for the
purchase of certain lands from Chey
enne Indians can be paid them May 1.
LEAPED TO DEATH.
Chicago Man Commits Suicide V?
Presence'of Wife and Children.
Chicago, April 16.—Frank Litzeo, a
thirty years old, kissed his wife and
two children good-bye and then leaped
to death from the fourth floor of an
apartment "house on St. Lawrence ave
nue. Despondency over financial
troubles is thought to have caused
the act. Clark was a restaurant wait
er, but, Beveral .days ago lost his posi
tion.
S£ik
Miss Roosevelt Coming West.
Cnicago, April 16. Miss Alice
Roosevelt, according- to a report, will
arrive in Chicago next Monday with
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. McCormick, whose
guest she will be here. Mr. and Mrs
McCormick now are in New York on
their return from ,a trip to Central
America. J*
ft
CLOSE CALL LOR
PRESIDED!!
BUT FOR GOOD LUCK NATIONI
MIGHT HAVE LOST CHIEF
EXECUTIVE.
ESCAPED BY TWO MINUTES
RUNAWAY TRAIN DASHES]
ACROSS TRACK AFTER SPECIAL
CROSSES SWITCH.
MORE DANGER IS IN SIGHT!
BREAKNECK MOUNTED CHASE
OF GRIZZLIES IN COLORADO
PLANNED.
Denver, April 16.—President Roose
velt is speeding toward his hunting
ground at the Penny ranch, twenty
five miles from Newcastle, Colo., after
a day of hearty welcomings and im
pending danger that but for good luck
might have deprived the nation of a
chief executive. Shortly after the
president's 'rain had crossed into Col
orado and while running at a high
rate near Walsenberg, the special
passed a switch at a crossing. Just
two minutes later a runaway train of
gondola cars, loaded with blocks of
stone, sped at the rate of seventy
jniles an hour across the track. The
president was not notified of the inci
dent until he reached Pueblo.
The Roosevelt special was met at
9 a. m. on the state line by Gov. Mc
Donald, who presented the president
with a special carte blanche hunting
license. At Trinidad, when engines
were changcd, the president spoke to
12,000 people about Irrigation plans
for the aried plains and his favorite
subject of children.
Whistles Drown Out Voice.
At Pueblo, where he could not be
heard a dozen feet for the continuous
blowing of the big steel works and
smelter whistles, he talked to 20,000
people.
The next stop was at Colorado
Springs, where he was taken to the
residence of P. B. Stewart, one of his
comrades on the coming hunt. Here
the president was measured and se
lected from a pile of hunting suits the
garb ie will v^sar during his chase
for bear and mountain lions.
Promptly at 9:30 last night the pres
ident's special left over the Colorado
Midland for Newcastle, where the
party will take the saddle.
Snow May Delay Hunt.
Newcastle, April 16. With the
snow two feet deep in every direction
from the camp and from three" to five
feet deep in the hills, with the snow
storm still continuing, it is possible
that President Roosevelt will be com
pelled to delay his hunt here or con
tent himself with smaller game than,
the grizzlies he has planned to kilL
For a week now the snow has fallen
day after day. Not twenty-four hours
have passed without a storm.
P. B. Wells, a Meeker hunter, who
is otie of the party, has just arrived
here. It took him nearly five hours to
make the twenty-mile ride from Camp
Roosevelt, and his horse was worn to
exhaustion when he reached here.
Sport Is Dangerous.
According to Wells, the camp is
now in perfect shape. It has been
practically decided to track the game
with dogs and to follow with horses.
This is considered one of the most
dangerous sports, and the bad condi
tion of the ground makes it doubly
dangerous now.
A full-gromn grizzly can easily "ace
away from a horse, and the dogs can
almost equal the speed. Hunters
here point out that to hunt from
horses at all, a dead gallop must be
kept up all of the time to close in with
the quarry, and that this speed must
be maintained over gulches, around
rocks, over broken logs, through
thickets and hruch and up and down
mountain sides, and, they pessimis
tically add, some one is sure to be
hurt.
CASSIE SAYS NOT GUILTY.
Mrs. Chadwick Pleads to Charge of
Abetting Cashier Spear.
Cleveland, Ohio, April 16. Mrs.
Chadwick, when arraigned In the
United States district court yesterday
pleaded not guilty to the new indict
ment recently returned against her by
the grand jury, charging her with aid
ing and abetting Cashier A. B. Spear
of the Oberlin bank In making false
entries in the bank's books and in
making untrue statements to the con
troller of the currency. Spear was
also arraigned and pleaded not guilty
to the joint indictment. The court in
creased Mrs. Chadwick's bail from
$20,000 to $27,000. -ir
MADE BRIGADIER GENERAL.
Col. J. A. Buchanan of Fort Harrisori
Gets Berth Permanently.
Washington, April 16.—The vacancy
in the list of brigadier generals of
the army caused by the retirement of
Brig. Gen. Francis Moore and the"
subsequent promotion and retirement*
successively of eight other •flfoers,^
was filled permanently yesfcer4ay by*, ,*
the appointment of Col. Janes A. Bu-\
chanan, commanding Twsarty-^
fourth infantry at Fort HMtoon/
Mont.
^tppr
S
YANKT
Social Wa
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The Yai:
reservatio:
ire in a
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if those
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he has
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been she
and are,
as the "J
tion.
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with th
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mine
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going
real thi
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society
The
low
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attend
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lisle, 1
guishe
there
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depart
them
But
mate
no su
over
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to Wt
of Mr
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order
fused
the
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in lb
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of til
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face
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fren:
acqu
the
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thej
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had
low
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tru
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ato
to
its

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