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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (April 4, 1907)
ROOSEVELT SAYS RAILROAD POLICY NEED NO EXCUSE Decides to Address the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association --Nothing to Explain. PROTECTION OF LINES President in a Letter Reiterates That They Must Be Shielded From the Clamor of the Public. Washington, D. C., April 3.—Presi dent Roosevelt today declined the re quest of the Illinois Manufacturers’ as sociation to make an address in Spring field on the railroad and financial situ ation. In a letter to C. H. Smith, the president, he explains that such an ad dress from him at this time would be useless, as his position is well under stood. It is reiterated that the president has not the slightest intention of tak ing any action which would invalidate railroad securities. He holds that every executive action of his administration regarding the roads has furnished its own ample jus tification. Neither has the president, it is pointed out, made any reference to the physical valuation of the railroads, holding that they are capable of work ing out that problem for themselves. Attention Is called to the fact that the Northern Pacific and Great North ern have already submitted figures re garding such valuation. It is also un derstood that the Dresident will again ask congress for power to deal with the over-capitalization question, which re quest was denied at the last session. The president’s letter outlines his position on the railroad and financial questions, by means of copious extracts from the speeches he delivered in Ra leigh. N. C., October 19. 1905, and in Washington, November 14, same year, as well as from one of his recent mes sages to congress. Needs No Amplification. His position, he declares, has been amply justified by the course of events. Its wisdom is obvious, he adds, and there is no occasion for its amplifica tion now. Quoting from his Raleigh address, the president calls attention to his be lief that the government should own nothing which can properly be left in private hands, but that such regula tions should be exercised against the railroads as will insure their operation in a spirit of fairness. The railroads, he declares, must be protected from any public clamor, no matter how vio lent, when they are in the right. Re ferring to the Washington address, the president says the railroad rates are not as a whole too high, but that the evils that exist are due to unjust discrimination and this should be pre vented by law. CATCHES COLD IN SLEEP, SNEEZES AND IS STRICKEN BLIND Doctors Decide Nightmare Causes Woman to Have Hemorrhage of the Eyes. Trenton, N. J., April 3.—Mrs. Joseph Jack in the course of a terrifying night mare moved her right foot from under the covers and allowed it to hang over the edge of the bed so that she con tracted a cold and sneezed long and violently. When she awoke in the morning she . found herself to be blind. The doctors decided that hemorrhage of the eyes had been caused during the sneezing fit. DOG THAT INSULTS AMBASSADORS, OUSTED FROM WHITE HOUSE Rollo, Scaring Jusserand and Von Sternberg, No Longer in Roosevelt’s Good Graces. Washington, D. C., April 3.—Rollo, a big St. Bernard pup has been ban ished from the White House. When the French ambasador, M. Jusserand and Baron Spec von Stern berg, the German ambassador, came to the White House Rollo evinced a disposition to make them climb trees and jump fences. FIGHT FIRE IN SILK HATS AND DRESS SUITS Philadelphia, Apirl 1.—White shirt fronts and patent leathers were no draw back to the efficiency of the Sheltenham Hook and Ladder company when they were called from a banquet in their club house to a fire. With swallowtails flying in the wind and silk hats crushed down over their ears, they joined the bucket brigade, threw water on the flames, and after four hours’ fighting, returned to the banquet board early yesterday morning famous. Their guests, including a number of women, accompanied them to the fire and gave encouragement. POSTAL ALStf RAISES ITS TELEGRAPH RATES Now York, April 3.—Charles P. Bruch, assistant general manager of the Postal Telegraph company, today said the company had raised its rates to practically the same basis as recent ly announced by the Western Union. Bruch said the increase is caused en tirely by the increased co3t of main tenance. BOY, AS THIEF, SCARES MOTHER; SHE MAY DIE | Philadelphia, April 3.—As the re sult of a “practical joke” played upon her by her 12-year-old son, Fred, Mrs. Annie Williams, is writhing in convul sions in the Presbyterian hospital, where physicians fear she will die. Mrs. Williams retired early in the evening, and her son. Fred, wishing to scare her, crept quietly up to her bed room door, gave it a kick and said in a gruff voice: “Open this door, or I’ll break it down!” He was more successful than he had wished, for his command was answered by shrieks from his mother, who be lieved a burglar was attempting to gain entrance to her room. Frightened by the child’s cries, neigh bors rushed in. forced the lock of the door and found Mrs. Williams lying in a swoon. AGAIN THEY ROLL EGGS ON WHITE HOUSE LAWN Washington, D. C., April 3,—Juvenile Washington in big numoers attended by parents, friends and nurses, in dulged in the annual egg rolling festi val on the White House lawn. Mrs. Roosevelt from the south windows was an interested observer. Des Moines, la., April 3.—Ten thous and children took in the first Iowa annual egg rolling contest on the grounds of the eapitol this afternoon. The contest was patterned after the egg rolling contest in Washington. Governor Cummins was official starter, firing a pistol which sent thou sands of children over the turf, roll ing eggs before them. Hhis Man Has a Hremendous Hash. T. J. GRIER. ' Mr. Grier has the great task of di recting one small army of men fighting the stubborn fire in the Homestake mine of Lead, S. D., and keeping an other small army at work in other parts of the property getting out ore. SITUATION AT MINE. FIRE IS IMPROVED Lead, S. D., April 3.—A1 night men were brought out of tne Homestake mine overcome by gas. Today forces are able to work at the fiOO and 1,100 foot levels and gases were disappearing at 11 o'clock to day. The mills have shut down for the monthly clean up. The situation, which yas bad last ni£ht, looks better to day. CHILD IS KILLED BY GUN AT FATHER’S SIDE Custer, S. D., April 3.—Whiel driving with his father, little Harry Lucas, 13 years old, was accidentally killed by the discharge of the gun which he was carrying. The wagon ran into a deep rut, and in some way the gun was dis charged. The boy died within a few minutes. • 44444444444444444444444444 4 4 4 SO HUNGRY HE 4 4 NEARLY “BREAKS” THE 4 4 CHILDREN’S SOCIETY 4 4 4 4 New York, April 3.—The hun- 4 4 griest lad they ever nad in the 4 4 children's court is Jonas Frank- 4 4 el, who attributes all his woes 4 4 to his stomach. He said he 4 4 came from Kansas City to vis- 4 4 it his aunt in New Milford, N. 4 4 J. He had such an appetite he 4 4 almost ate her out of house and 4 4 home. The aunt stood him for 4 4 a week, he said, then told him 4 4 to be on his way. 4 4 Then Jonas got in a huff and 4 4 came to New York. The pangs 4 4 of hunger were too much for 4 4 him, so he dropped into the 4 4 Children's society and asked for 4 4 food. He devoured imore than 4 4 any three boys in the place 4 4 could get away with, and when 4 4 he was told after he had his 4 4 fill that he was in custody he 4 4 started up a howl. 4 4 In children's court. Justice 4 4 Mayo remanded him back to 4 4 the society until his father is 4 4 heard from. 4 *444444444444444444444444} 4 4 4 CONVICT OPIUM 4 4 FIENDS PAY $200 4 ♦ FOR EACH OUNCE. 4 4 4 4 Columbus, O., April 3.—Edward 4 4 Fisher, a foreman in the bolt 4 4 works at the penitentiary, was 4 4 arrested smuggling gum opium 4 4 into the institution. Several pris- 4 4 oners confessed that con- 4 4 victs addicted to the drug have 4 4 paid as hign as $200 an ounce for 4 4 .the drug, and it has been 4 4 smuggled into the institution in 4 4 large quantities. 4 "*44444444444444444+4444444 NON-UNION BILLS ADVERTISE GOMPERS Ann Arbor, Mich., April 3.—Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, is billed to speak on the students lecture course of the University of Michigan this week, but because the bills advertising the lec ture were printed in a non-union shop, he may refuse to appear. Local print ers notified him of the situation and I he may not come to Ann Arbor. OIL TRUST ASKS JUDGE ! TO SAY NOT GUILTY Standard's Request Opens One of Greatest Battles in Federal Court Records. TARIFF NOT GOVERNING Octopus Claims That the Levy Was Never Intended to Control the Shipments of 0.1. Chicago, April 3.—This morning the attorneys for Standard Oil presented a motion to Judge Landis in United States district court that the entire case in which the trust is charged with accepting less than tariff rates from the Chicago and Alton be taken from the jury and an instruction given for a verdict of "not guilty." This motion provokes one of the greatest legal battles ever known in the history of the federal courts. Even Judge Cline, personal attorney for John D. Rockefeller, will take a hand. The government closed its case against the trust several days ago. When the prosecution announced it was ready to rest, the trial had left be hind this summary of its work: Number of days in fight . 23 Number of words of testimony tak en .1,000,000 Number of exhibits introduced— 0,000 Number of book entries Introduced 0,000 Cost to government . $140,000 Cost of Standard Oil . 250,000 Number of objections overruled by court . 7,000 Federal Showing. The government has shown these things: That the Chicago and Alton had a rate of 18 cents for the public. That the Chicago and Alton trans ported oil for the trust at 6 cents. That the tariff rate of 18 cents was filed with the Interstate Commerce commission. That the agents of the road had signs displayed at their stations notifying the public that all tariffs could be had upon application. That each of the 1,903 cars charged to have been shipped from Whiting to East St, Louis and St. Louis were ac tually shipped. That the Standard Oil company paid for the shipments at the end of every two weeks at the rate of 6 cents per 100 pounds. The big legal contest that began to day Involves all the leading objections the trust made, and can make to the form of the indictment, the character of the evidence and the many angles that present themselves to expert law yers. It will be sought to be shown that the , tariff that is relied upon by the govern ment never did govern and was not in tended to govern the shipment of oil. and that oil and Its products were left from the tariff for express purpose of permitting the railroad to make a spe cial commodity rate for its transporta tion. _ _ OIL KING SPURNS USE OF HAIR OIL, HE WILL NOT PAY DUTY Box of Lozenges For Indiges tion Will Also Be Sold by the Government. New York, April 3.—A bottle of hair oil which a celebrated pharmacist in Berlin sent to John D. Rockefeller is to be sold by the government in the seizure room of the appraiser’s store, because the oil king failed to pay the customs due on the package. John D„ at the time the precious preparation reached tne city, had al ready given up hope of growing his own hair on his own head, and had purchased a wig. A box of lozenges which a Scotch man forwarded to Mr. Rockefeller from Edinburgh, for the cure of his indiges tion, is also to be sold for nonpayment of duty. FISH ADMITS RAINEY WILL WED DAUGHTER Newport, R. I., April 3.—The definite announcement is made that the wed ding of Miss Marian Fish, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish, to Paul J. Rainey, the New York and Cleveland multimillionaire, is to take place in September in Trinity church. When the engagement of the young couple was first announced last July, Mrs. Fish formally denied that there was any truth in it. A month later j Miss Marian also contributed not a little to the mystification of society by notifying Mr. Rainey to remain away from the Crossways. She said that the rumors of an engagement made her ' stay in Newport wretched. TIED, DRAGGED OVER SALOON, DIES, ARRESTS! Siuit Ste Marie, Mich., April 3.- The coroner’s jury In the case of Thomas Boucher, who was found dead recently in Cassidy's saloon, closed a nine days’ investigation today and gave a verdict that he came to his death from intoxi cation and abuse. Five of the persons arrested earlier in the week, T. J. Cassidy, Bert Him elspach. John Duetsehner, James Rus sell and Mrs. Lottie Thomas, were held to answer to the charge of involuntary manslaughter, and the evidence shows that while drunk, Boucher was tied with ropes and dragged around the sa loon iloor, burled under a pile of fur niture and afterwards thrown into a room, where he died alone. The body had been in the room sev eral hours before found. MRS. SAGE BEATS CARNEGIE AT TAXES New York, April 3.—Mrs. Russell Rage failed to avail herself of the op portunity to swear off her personal tax assessment within the limits of the period fixed by law, which has expired. I In consequence she becomes the largest I taxpayer on the city’s books. This is | r. distinction which Andrew Carnegie I has had for several years and for which I there has been no marked competition ; among local millionaires. Carnegie will pay taxes this year on ! a total assessment of $7,300,000. HUSBAND 2 TELLS HUSBAND 3 ABOUT HUSBAND NO. i 3eautiful Pauline Getreu’s Hus band Charges Her With a Trio of Marriages. New York, April 2.—Pauline Get reu, a beautiful young woman of Brook lyn, is charged by her husband, Abra ham Getreu, with having been so care less about her matrimonial affairs that she has acquired three husbands since 1901 without the formality of being legally separated from any. Getreu learned of h!a wife's former marriage through husband No. 2. While riding with her on a Brooklyn "I," train he noticed a strange man rnlse his hat rather stiffly and saw glances between the two that he thought called for an explanation. Mrs. Getreu de clined to explain. Later Getreu chanced to meet the stranger ulone and de manded to know who he was and why . he eyed Mrs. Getreu so strangely. ‘‘My name Is Burnknap and the wom an Is my wife," replied the stranger. Words led to an understanding and Burnknap proved his story by taking Getreu to the rabbi who had performed the ceremony in February, 1904. Husband No. 2 let Getreu In on an other secret that he professed to have discovered, that Mrs. Getreu, born Glaser, had eloped in December, 1901, with a man named Morek, from whom she had never been divorced. All three marriages had taken place In Brooklyn, It is alleged, but the records fall to show that the courts were a^ealed to in an effort to untie the knots. RED PEPPER IN HIS BEARD; INVOKES LAW Camden Man Gets Warrant foi Boys to Save Whiskers From Insult. Philadelphia, April 2.—Isaac Harris, o». Tenth street and Kaighn avenue, Camden, has whiskers a quarter of a yard long. He is proud of them, and so Is his family. This luxuriant growth of beard has caus ed him heaps of trouble at the hands of the small boys of the neighborhood. The whiskers and the boys are now about to figure In court. The boys have pulled Harris’ whiskers and run. So he told Justice Weaver yes terday. But for the fact that his family objected, he would have shaved them off. Then the boys tried a new plan. They threw red pepper into Harris’ whiskers. He got the name of one of his tormen tors, and wont before Justice Weaver, who issued a warrant for the arrest of John Fellskl. FIFTY-CENT SALARY, PLEDGES CANDIDATE Would-Be Alderman of Mason City, III., Will Accept Only a Quarter. Mason City, 111., April 2.—John A. McGreery, secretary ot the Illinois Farmers’ and Grain Dealers’ associa tion and anti-license candidate for mayor, pledges himself to accept only 50 cents a year in salary, if elected. The aldermen on the ticket have agreed to accept only 25 cents. TWO SUBMARINE BOATS LAUNCHED Quincy, Mass., April 2.—The sub marine boats, Viper and Tarantula, built for the United States navy, wore launched to<Jay at the yards of the Fore River Shipbuilding company. The boats are 80 feet in length, 13-foot beam. ONE GOES MAD, 40 ARE BANKRUPTED WHEN DAM BURSTl Decorah, la., April 2.—Forty citizens are bankrupt, one Is going Insane and the run on the Citizens’ Savings bank was barely averted today as the result of tho destruction of the Decorah power dam early in the week. The plant, which was built at the cost of several millions, contained the savings of a life time of many people of tills city and Waukon. The weak foundation un dermined the dam which was swept away Into the r-ver. The leading promoter is slowly losing his mind. A small run on the bank was started, but the rushing of $100,<XX> from Cedar Rapids stopped the trouble. The bank is heavily involved in the lnterpriso which may be rebuilt. Tr 4 4 4 BLOW STOPS 4 4 LOUD PRAYER. 4 4 4 4 Kansas City. Mo., April 2.— 4 4 Samuel Greenman filed suit in 4 4 the circuit court against Max 4 4 Lieberinan, rabbi of Keneseth 4 4 Israel temple. In his petition 4 4 Greenman, who is 60, says the 4 4 rabbi assaulted him September 4 4 25, 1905, and asks $6,000 dam- 4 4 ages. The assault, he says, took 4 4 place while he was attending the 4 (4 celebration of a Jewish holiday 4 4 in the synagogue. Greenman 4 4 says the rabbi approached him 4 4 while he was praying in a loud 4 4 voice and struck him, saying he 4 4 was praying too loud and seek- 4 4 ing to disturb the holiday cele- 4 4 bration. Lieberinan has been ♦ 4 rabbi of Keneseth Israel temple 4 4 for years. 4 4 4 REMARRIES THE MAN WHO WOUNDED HER I Newkirk, Okla., April 2.—Although she had once divorced him and al though Carl Matthews shot her and himself when she refused to remarry him because she had not suitable clothes, Mrs. Matthews, who accident ally met him again here, has yielded. There will be no prosecution, follow ing the shooting, but a second wed ding instead MAGNATE HILL’S COMPROMISE REJECTED St. Paul, Minn., April 3.—The offer of a compromise by the railroads on pend ing rate legislation was submitted to the joint legislative committee Monday night and rejected. The committee quickly agreed to recommend to the legislature the enactment of a 2-cent a mile passenger rate law and no com promise on the freight rate reductions ordered last December by the state railroad and warehouse commission. The offer of the railroads consisted of a 2Vj-cent passenger fare on the basis of that put in force in Wisconsin, with mileage books on practically no more advantageous terms than they are at present issued; reduction in freight rates on lumber amounting to (50 per cent, of the schedule of the railroad and warehouse commission; reduction in the local rate of about 50 per cent, of the same schedule, and a reduction of from 10 to 11 per cent, of the com mission rates on grain. VIRTUE BANQUET PUTS PITTSBURGERS IN WORRY FRENZY Iowa Quotation on Sodom Causes Anxiety Among a Lot of Rich Men. Pittsburg, Pa., April 3.*—"And the Lord said: 'If I lind In Sodom, fifty righteous within the city, then I will spare all the places for their sake.'” Every prominent and wealthy man tn Pittsburg Is going around with a wor ried look for .fear his name will not appear In the list of the “righteous" selected by the Pittsburg Chamber of Commerce for Its "Virtue Banquet,” Thursday night. Some time ago a newspaper pub lished in a little town out in Iowa de clared in an editorial that if Pitts burg had been In existence in the days of Sodom and Gomorrah, the city would have been destroyed long before those ancient cities. MUSCLE DANGERS FORGED TO LEAVE BY INDIANAPOLIS Judge Rings Curfew For "Girl In Blue Who Pays Fine and Departs." Indianapolis, Ind., April 3.—When Mile. DeLeon paid a fine of $5 and costa ($15 in all) to the city clerk from a large purse she said she not only had enough of the Indianapolis police court, but of Indianapolis Itself. The woman Is a dancer who was tried for "dancing" with her muscles what was alleged to he the 'hoochie-coochle.” She used her feet In getting out of the clerk's office and to the union sta tion, where she took a trftln for Cin cinnati. The decision Tn the case was announced today by Judge Whallon. He said it did not make much differ ence whether the woman was dancing thr hoochie-coochle, the Turkish dance, the Egyptian dance or any other muscle dance, that her performance was un doubtedly offensive. She was not In the theater as a physiological study of muscular control, he said. She was there to attract a crowd, he said. WOMAN THRIVING ON DISEASE GERMS, HELD BY HEALTH BOARD Mary llverson, Who Is a Human Culture Tube, Grows Rosier Every Day. New York, April 3.—Leaving In many homes a trail of fatalities which likened her progress to the baleful movements of the mysterious stranger in Poe’s “Mask of Red Death,” Mary llverson, a human culture tube In whom is con stantly developed millions of germs of typhoid fever—though she herseli has never had the disease and is seemingly immune—has fallen into the hands of the health authorities. She is now under observation in Wil lard Parker hospital and the case is without parallel In medical records. She is a veritable germ factory. Typhoid germs, It seems, thrive mer rily In Mary llverson and she is grow ing rosier and healthier every day. GIRL’S RESCUER SLAIN RY MAN WHO ASSAULTER HER Commercial Traveler Shot in the Heart After Altercation in Alley. St. Joseph, Mo., April 3.—Charles E. Stanley, a commercial traveler, was killed last night by Wesley Christopher, j Christopher assaulted a young woman in an alley and when Stanley heard her screams he ran to her rescue and was shot in the heart. Christopher was arrested. HENRY M STANLEY ADOPTED A BOY Paris, 111., April 3.—Henry M. Stan ley, tlie explorer, whose widow has just remarried, made a provision for the perpetuation of his name adopted in the last year of his life. A boy who is now 8 years old, is known as Denzil Stanley, and is being edueated in England under Sir Henry's ample provision for his future. HUSBANDS BLOOD I SAVES THE WIF A Husband Placed on Operatin<M» Table Beside His Spouse gjjjpp and Artery Opened. HE WILL ALSO RECOV£fA|| Weeps for Joy Upon Coming Oul^mH From Under Ether's Influence on Finding Remarkable Ex- pppr periment a Success. f|99| Philadelphia, Pa., April J.-DylngBjS from anaemia, the life of Mrs. PeterHQp Anderson has been saved by a remark-HH£| ahie operation in which her busbar.I’sHpR blood was pumped direct from his tcrles into hers. The woman who was In a state offlOs coma at the time Is now on the roadHpit to recovery, and her husband, thoughBjoS weak from the loss of blood will boBS restored to his normal condition. Anderson and wife were placed onKEf the operating table together and th«B| man put under an anaesthetic. An ar-H|3| tery hi his left arm was punctured and ■j’-J; through a tube blood was pumped into Bm an artery in his wife's arm. BE Anderson wept with Joy when he came from under the influence of the ■■■ ether and sa w his wife restored to eon aclousness. DIVORCE EVERY THREE ML MINUTES IN THE U. S.IH Washington, D. <April 2.—During H|j| working hours of court officials there is a divorce suit filed every two min up's and a divorce granted every three Hjp minutes In the United States according BU to figures compiled by the census bur- HR eau. jD| This has been the average for the B last twenty years, and census officials H|Sg say the average is Increasing at an alarming rate. For the twenty-year period from 1867 to 1887, there were only 328,000 divorce suits filed In the country. For the H||| twenty-year period, from 1887 to 1907, ■j||| the number aggregates 1,400,000, or four ^^3 times the number of the first period. HuB However, the population also Increased somewhat. Hffl Experts figure that for the twenty- HhI year period prior to 1887 there were thirty-three divorces for every 100,000; Inhabitants, while for the twenty-year perlor, from 1887 to 1907, there were Bggff seventy divorces for every 100,000 pop- Hgp ulatlon. Decrees are issued in about BJSg two-thirds of the suits filed. gJSSf FOUR MEET DEATH jl AT A CROSSING ■ Kansas City, Mo., April 2.—-Four ■|§8 persons in a buggy—two men and two Bfl women—were instantly killed at the HS1 Fifteenth street crossing of the Chicago Bn and Alton railroad, two miles east of B% this city, by the Alton's Red Flyer,, HSI westbound from tit. Louis. The bod-i-.Bip les were horrlblv mutilated. The dead:; Utd GEORGE HENRY, aged 33, and his Bag wife, aged 30. MB 1). H. MONNER, aged 30, and hi*; H wife, uged 40. BH Tho men were salesmen for a local! Bfl mercantile house. MB Trainmen say that the carriage! drove directly in front of the engine,, BBS although the electric bell at the cross-! lng had been ringing several minutes, Hs Two of the bodies, a man and a worn- HB an, were picked up by the cowcatcher, EpSl of the locomotive and carried some dis-j tance. The other two were thrown clear of the track. The horses and! carriage escaped Injury. The four! H| people were returning from an Easter KSf picnic in the country, H IURY J0LTSJUDGE I AND CAR COMPANY ■ __ ' ■ Newark, N. J., April 2.—The1 Egj North Jersey Street Railway company, I||| which operates a large system of street Ijgj railways in this city, was Indicted by 1® the grand jury today for maintaining Bag dirty and unsanitary ears, providing, Up useless fenders, and allowing its cars! H to be overcrowded by passengers. ^B The Indictment was returned to Chief H| Justice Gummere, who a few days ngoi ^B warned the jury not to bo influenced: by public clamor against the com-; Igl pany. In its indictment the jury declared |M thiit the "Indignation and protests for H| a long suffering public which have ||| been interpreted by the court as 'pub- K lie clamor’ have not influenced the nfs grand jury in its consideration of this 'H question." fl The Justice dismissed the jury with- S out thanking them. B • • > ■ DIS DE BAR IN A NEW ROLE NOW Detroit, April 1.—“Mother Elinor,” sometimes known as Mrs. Elinor L. Ma son, late “queen of the House of Israel,” ;j of Windsor and Detroit, now a wanderer on the face of the earth, her whereabouts being a mystery even to the closest of ? her local associates, is proven beyond all doubt to be none other than the notorious “Editha Loleta Jackson,” alias Laura Horas, a much-wanted person in London, England, and a woman with a police rec ord reaching over two continents and era- j bracing many crimes. As Anne O’Delia Dis De Bar she Is well | knowm to the New York police. A crimi nal record from Scotland yard is in the j possession of certain Detroit persons in terested in the doing of Mother Elincr. This record is a lengthy one, containing a list of the woman’s offenses under her several aliases. Attached to it is re markable likeness of the revered Mother j Elinor. I ‘NO WOMAN IN CASE”— EMMA EAMES’ HUSBAND Philadelphia, Pa., April 2.—“Incom patibility of temper. That is all there Is to it.” That is the whole trouble between Julian Story and his beautiful wife, Madame Emma Eames, according to j Mr. Story’s own statement. i | Her charge that he has been unfaith ful to his marriage vows and the gossip nf his attachment for other women that i is going the rounds are, he says, "posi tively ridiculous and untrue.” . ..