The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, August 27, 1897, Image 4

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    HE HAS MANY LIVES
JOHN M'GIN N, THE GREATEST
OF TUMBLERS,
HI* Klar Performance AtranpUiM
Not Long Ago el NyraniM, A. I.—
NrvrrHiu (rrlnnily Hurt- Keeordof ■
Man Hull .lu on III* Mlulieaveo.
IIKRR Is a man In
Syracuse, N. Y.,
who. In an absent
minded, stub-toed
sort of fashion Is
fitting himself for
ti tank drama star.
This man of Syra
cuse fulls from the
uppermost peaks of
SAmi Uni- skyscrapers; not
with any malice
(forethought, not with any craving for
fame or the world's applause, hut Juat
because he has formed the habit and
?an‘t break himself.
ills name Is John McGinn. He be
gan his career as a human parachute
in a modest, unassuming sort of way
In Rochester, He fell from a scaffold,
hung from the third story of the Wild
er building. He was out Of a Job at
the time, and contrary to orders, sealed
the walls, and was hobnobbing on the
narrow ledge with a painter when he
stubbed hla toe over a pall of white
lend uud departed the scaffold with no
word of farewell. There was a large,
generous-bosomed sand pile waiting to
receive him. lie landed In the mldat
of It, and picked himself out as blithely
aa If he had Juat shot the chutes for
the first time.
That was the first demonstration
that there was some special providence
watching over McGinn and hla stutter
ing feet He retired for a time after
that, and did not appear aa a budding
tank-drama tragedian until nearly a
year later. Then he fell from an oil
derrick down In the lirudford fields.
That waa the only time when bis poor,
mlsmated feet could not legitimately
receive all the credit for the flight of
siwlw font
They picked bim up for dead, and
carried him to the pump station. In
Just half an hour he begged for anoth
er try at the ladder, and was hurt
when they told him to go home and
call it a day. The next morning he
climbed the ladder. McGinn's next
aerial dive was in Htiffalo, where he
had wandered from the oil fields and
found work on one of the new office
buildings going up there. His ponder
ous feet refused to track while their
owner was crossing a plank laid over
an alrshsft. The plank heaved anti
McGinn disappeared. His flight began
a*, the eighth story and continued to
the fourth, where the speed of his fall
was broken by two planks stretched
across the shaft in a manner similar
to the one he had left. The collision
swerved him from his course, and he
•truck the next landing on his feet
and rested. When they reached him
one ankle was sprained severely, his
hand waa bruised where be had fallen
on it, and his face was scratched; but
those were the only evidences of his
flight, and he recovered In time for an
other involuntary but brilliant exhl
bltton In Syracuse. There Is a new
steel skyscraper in course of construc
tion there, and after the Iron skeleton
bed reached the eighth floor McGinn
decided It was worthy of hts consider
ation. He ascended bright and early
one* morning, worked for half an hour
or more at bolting and riveting, and
then fell.
For eight stories he kept It up
bounding from one steel rib to an
other like a huge squash ball. He lia<:
missed his footing and gone down
feet hrst. The fifty or more workmen
bn the building saw bim going, and ail
held up their hands in horror as he
shot past. His body, buffeted from one
beam to another, still kept perpendicu
lar. and was swinging like a pendulum
when he shot past the last pillar down
Into the open space which divided the
basement from the first floor. The last
IIK 14 r*Ci) TO THI*
• J*»» <!>**» ft w IBiu k ft mofti* (•.)
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• ko «kk Ilia tail 4.utrte4 for m in
•tut **«u iktl ft* Ii4 «***» ii ii* | Imi
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a*kt Me* Ik #<wk Ml MM tkkk Ik
tun mi ik kiai «*»* t* ■'-»**•
MET AN AWFUL DEATH
A HuOaln Man frll Into • Niortft
Cooler.
John Griflln, 18 years old, a laborer
employed at the IlufTulo Cold Blorag*
Company's warehouse, was frosen ts
death by ammonia the other night
Ho low was the temperature that tbs
man's body was blistered, and he was
literally burned to death. Three other
men were Injured, but not seriously.
Griffin was engaged In plaelng a band
around the top of one of the eooUra,
and, loosing his balance, fell twenty
feet, breaking a glass gauge in his fall.
He made a cry as he fell, ami Herbert
Gut drier, a boy employed on the same
floor, hurried to his aid. He hud al
most rearhed the body when he was
driven hack by the fumes of the am
monia. He grabbed Griffin’s leg HFd
attempted to pull him out. but was un
able to do ho. and had to run to es
cape the fumca. He hurried to the
Opening which led to the engine room
and alarmed the engineer, David Clark,
and John Claeber, the fireman. The
latter waa the first to reach the floor
on which the Injured man waa lying,
and he had to give up after his throat
was badly blistered from the Inhalation
of the ammonia. He managed to crawl
out after almost reaching Griffin.
Clark, fearing that both of the men
had succumbed to the fumes, hoisted a
ladder to the aide windows and open
ed them to let the gas out. He entered
the building, and by keeping close to
the floor be found the lover of the
condenser and shut off the pressure,
When be reached the mini he found
him lying on his back, his bead and all
the upper part of his body so badly
frown that It seemed to have becu
burned. Clark took him on his shoul
der to the window and down the lad
c
t
t
c
I
I
r
a
c
a
a
c
t
I
y
JOHN GRIFFIN. t
,der lo the ground, where It was found ^
that life was not extinct, but he died ,
on the way to the hospital. An exam- <
Inatlon showed that both of his eyes ■
bad been burned out and all of the \
upper part of the body had been ter- t
rlbly eaten by the fumes. The doe- i
tors expressed the belief that he be- i
came unconscious within an instant i
after the fumes struck him. Gardner, i
Clarke and Claeber received Injuries
from Inhaling the fumes.
A COUNTESS CHALLENGED GOD
A Hi«llln| Furred Open Her Waned
Tomb.
"In the town of Hanover, Germany,"
Evangelist Moony writes In hi* Bible
Claea discourse In the Ladies' Home
Journal, "there Is buried a German
Countess who denied the existence of
God and ridiculed the Idea of the Res
urrection. To further show her con
tempt for Christianity she ordered
that on her death her grave should be
built up of solid masonry and covered
by large stones bound together by
iton clamps. On this tomb was en
graved her defiant challenge that
through eternity this tomb should
never be disturbed. But one day the
■iced from some tree, either blown by
the wind or tarried by a bird, became
lodged in a small crevice of the tomb,
where soon it sprouted and began to
grow. And then, as if Nature had
seemed to mock the haughty Infidel,
she quietly extended the delicate roots
of that seedling under the massive
blocks of stone and slowly raised them
from their place. And now. although
scarce four generations are passed
since that tomb was sealed, that most !
i nsigmflcant seedling has accomplished '
what God Himself was challenged to >
accomplish."
*uiltiet* *»4 O.ioplete I oocersloa.
Klve men formed themselves into a
lynching party and strung up a negro
who had stolen a horse. In their haste
they failed to tie his bauds and. hear*
mg a noise as of a party approaching
they decamped and left the negro
-winging That twinging mutton '
brought him in close prostmtty to the
tree, whtrh he encircled with h s arm#,
rlimbrd to the limb from which hr
was suspended cut himself down and
j »*•>< home to supper lie sutMe^u rntlv
< said to bis wife Mandy. white I wut
■ a tw agtn dar I saw beaten wide ..pen
w:d Metes ea dt prophets eo d* res I
; «r dens an’ n»a in game <>■ .B ,,,11 I
■•♦alia • n prea. h de gospel1 '
———~
Well !• «*t lltiMlWu
k huainca* man tn H> haute .t Va. ,
ha# attracted lo»ai ati.ai; -a to hut. *
hmt months after the death ..f hu wife
hy Marrying tha graaddaughter ut hie 1
brother dhe ta is and he fcj , gj
a friend that he waa lead) wtthwwt hu
Wils. whom he hrted but had a..
idra of Marry *ag *gs» no *»* as h*
d 4 •» rare 1 ■ sat iiwotp, 1
her memoir hat hu then* ,s dr#*
1 who ate ihtmttm a suu«*| hegsa
i ta make wfcJaetHma ta hte taking ]
! at her wife, and he Me* wade „r k .
a it to art M' am*
%•«*»» Sac ax ISM M>w
AHer ti ag o* sarx.uc H. a. !
) day* fy**m the efkst of a easy »< ay '
J Mhtad the ear Ham Va*d» %»>-.
j af Middle*.a a at dead lesc»..e t*
f-ited afdhawt immed.ai«i>
1
THE CREEDE SUICIDE
REMARKABLE FEATURES CAME
TO LIGHT.
Umviff* anil Kvwnlful I'arrar of th«
Wealthy Californian IfUlory of (hw
Man Who. I.lka llarury llarnata*.
Cauaril HU Own Cnit.
ICHOLA8 C.
Creede, the million
ulre mine owner
and founder of the
town of Creede,
Col., who commit
ted suicide at hi*
home In I/O* An
geles, Cal., recent
ly, It now appears,
by taking mor
phine, took his life
because his wife, from whom he had
leparated. Insisted on living with him.
’reede and his wife, on Jan. 4 last,
leclded to forever separate, but nel
her of them was In favor of commenc
ng divorce proceeding* at that time,
t was decided, however, that after the
leceMsary legal time had elapsed,
Creede should sue his wife for divorce
in the grounds of desertion. Mr.
Creede gave his wife $20,000, and she
ittrrendercd all claim on his estate and
eft his house. Mrs. Creede appeared
o be perfectly sutisfled with the ar
angement, and, taking her $20,000,
he went to the home of her parents. In
tlabama. Bhe grew tired of living In
be Booth, however, and yearned to be
nlted with her husband. Bhe returned
o I/O* Angeles nearly a month ago,
nd proposed to her husband that they
Ive together again. Mr. Creede was
ery much disturbed by the proposal,
nd rejected It. He also made elTorts
o avoid his wife, but was unsuccess
ul. This made him determined to
omratt suicide, and, as told In the
ews columns, he swallowed a large
owe of morphine and went to the gar
en. A servant discovered Mr. Creede
fter he had become unconscious. He
ran carried Into the house, and physl
lans were summoned. They were un
ble to save him, however. Mrs.
reeds was notified of her husband’s
ulclde, but refused to say anything
bout the matter. The couple had no
hfldren of their own, and a year ago
hey adopted a girl, who is now at
Iscondldo.
Mr. Creede was horn near Fort
Vayne, Ind.. In 1842, and his real name
tas William Harvey. Ills parents
loved to l<con, Iowa, and there, when
cry young, he fell In love with a
roman who preferred iyis brother. He
uit home In disgust, and changed his
lame, because he would not bear the
lame of his successful rival. He Join
'd the Union army In 1861, first In the
luartermaster's department and then
is a scout. As a scout he served with
he I’awnee Indians against the Sioux,
’umpalgnlng all over Nebraska and the
Mains of Wyoming, Dakota and Colo
rado. Major Frank North was his
•ommander. and he passed seven years
>f as hard campaigning us can be Iniag
nrd. Mr. Creede settled In Colorado
in lk7ft as a prospector. His failures
In this pursuit were due to his craving
ror wandering from place to place, not
staying long enough anywhere to make
a real "strike.” Although he was mod
est In locating claims, be once stated
that be had stakes all over Colorado
and part of New Mexico. His first
strike of any Importance was made In
187ft in a totally unknown district
north of Salida. which he named Mon
arch. There he remained for two years
after the boom struck it, and finally
sold out for $.',000. "Had 1 known ihen
what i know now about mining,” he
said afterward, "l would have made an
Independent fortune.” This money he
expended in studying mining and vis
iting other mining camps as a capital
ist. The next camp he started was
Bonanza, in Saguache county, Colora
do. It nourished until the fall in sil
v< r. when It was deaerted. There were
ten years of failures and discourage
ment between Monarch and Creede
camp. His wanderings far from the
routfs of the ordinary prospector led
him to the plaie where he struck It
i
J / •
rSb. nr.# of th« • tt4*#t r<«uioa m th*
H'x-hio* M<«**», »m '*t»*4
t Smith. * tiro##m tor to • hum
H* »ho0*4 Mu,.* no k from nt* n- *i
il*t* Tktt * m sotnl • now. •»
*t>) r- mat #*-i Is »« •!« kil l th* to a*
w** nam* I th- ilui) Miw*» (*•«*.!*
*m o*k*r * ttrf popular man with
ht> *•.» ■-.»!** Mi# #**l’h a** i«rt#
Whit, th* VKt'ihr#* mtn* tb t'otor#4o
»** ftojrtn* Ito.ww h# *nm—«t * *«#.
ikhttlilt forms# Is t**J h* »oM usi
hi# r«m*'>>>ht >*♦*'«•#» -a th* t'***4«
*m# to I* M H<>ffat as4 I. K t‘*in#
holt
I A# AMU <' *t+ t ill *« m»4 t rtt.lt A
4*Sth A A# Iht rAAtlll of a hit it . ifv
to*# *•».» Th* hr#### Hr* < **#1*
• tA# ##o#»1**or ut A AustSlAS A—1ST
IS IS - Mott* • l#r* i’r*#4» hmt #«o##s4
>A hi# tarti #«M*#*«iMkA 4a* * Aft##
'AlfthiS#" B A* i*4u«a4 h*r to #*r
k«#t«s4 «*• A <t»OH ##4 S*r|| AMh
H**uit# #*u*#4 it to h# th* ttot t-f
AM) #®u# IS«A*ltMSU I'***4# ASA A
• A** *•** #*4 Ah#A h* At. * At# >t«A
a imm# #rt*w* «oa»l* *4 i « ha
ought to have his biography wrlttet
Creede swallowed the bait, and th
printer lived with him for six month
on the pretense of collecting data
Then Creede threw him out, but th
poison was In the new millionaire'
veins, and he employed Cy Warmait t<
write his life. Warman did it up artls
tlrally, throwing In an occasional poen
of daredevil adventure built on a slen
dor basis, and generally lauding thi
scout of the plains. The book wai
named "The Prospector of SilYci
Creek.” Only a few copies were eeei
Issued. When the fame of his wealth go
abroad Creede was the mark of al
sorts of blackmailers, but when li
came to his pocket he was never weak
minded. A distant relative of his, t
mere boy, knowing that the celebrated
N. C. Creede was William Harvey, vis
ited him at Pueblo, and Indiscreetly
endeavored to use his knowledge as a
means for obtaining money. Creed*
kicked him out, and the boy started
back home, hut committed suicide near
Manhattan, Kan,, on the way. Creedo's
Iowa relatives are spoken of as peo
ple of the best class, a brother, John
W. Harvey, being circuit Judge of I)e
eatur county. Creede’s personal brav
ery whs never questioned. This story
of Ills prowess us a hunter Is narrated:
When prospecting In the Creede coun
try he suw a bear, and, dropping his
tools, rushed back to his cabin and got
his Winchester. Catching up with the
bear be wounded It, and bruin made a
dash at him. He kept on firing with
out moving, and the bear got within
ten feet of him before It dropped. At
thut moment Creede saw two mort
bears approaching, and, hastily reload
ing his rifle, he attacked them and
killed them also. His companions In
the cabin, hearing the continuous fir
ing, rushed out to help him, but ar
rived too late to share In the killing.
Creede's principal employment as scout
MRS. CREEDE
and lieutenant of the Pawnees was to
clear hostile Indians from the line of
the Union Pacific as It was building
westward. His work was thorough, for
he never quit the trail of Indians who
committed any depredations In his ter
ritory, following them with his Paw
nees until every one was killed. After
Creede became rich he took to drink,
and In 18&3 his friendg induced him to
try a cure for drunkenness. Morphine
was the principal Ingredient of this
cure, and when his appetite for liquor
vanished It was replaced by a fiercer
one foCthe drug. On several occasions
he nearly died from an overdose of
morphine, notably once at Galveston,
Texas, when he was unconscious for
two days from the effects of It. It is
learned that the fortune left by Mr.
Creede will go to the girl ward. He
left a will, and the half million he had
will go to little Dorothy Waters, whose
short life has been no less strange than
her benefactor’s. Dorothy’s mother
wan the daughter of the owner of one
of the Santa Barbara Islands. The
mother was brought up in absolute se
clusion until she was about 15 years
old. when she made her escape from
her home In an open boat, and against
the odds of wind and wave made her
way to the mainland. She met a young
man, and before she could be returned
to her father’s home plighted him her
love and insisted on marrying hirn.
Her family cast her off and her hus
band soon deserted her. leaving her
pennlleas with little Dorothy. The
poor woman Joined an opera company
but met with ill success, and soughi
shelter in the hospital. Her story was
published, and Mr. Creede went to set
her. extended her help and adopted hei
llttl" girl. The mother went away, ami
no one knows where she is. It is pos
sible that Mrs. Creede. who has nevet
been divorced, but only agreed td leaw
her husband, may contest the Inher
itance of little Dorothy, though It h
claimed that the dead man's will wai
drawn carefully so as to leave no roon
for a legal tight over his money.
ttrilllll *n » wniM I,
Nt'K month when the door* of ih<
•title pniton m Trenton, S'. J nwint
Ink for John Mrt'ann, he aril) not only
walk a free wall, lull, ronnaerlng whai
haa tx-en hi* nation itt life, a rh h one
III* wraith i awe unespeetetily *ml aa •
inault "f au •• t of brwmy on the pari
of the rottvut that he hatl long ago for
gotten Mit’ann I* a waterman awl li
known all along the I Maw are u I'gp
Mafanfc Ten year* ago be raw a <ar
nag* tttntalnspg two women hatk««i tg
to th* •!*»' t" a frigbiemml hor*a ,g
he tit I he only on* brat* »noitgb It
plnng* into »k* water ana *i she peri
of tt* own life *at* the liven of tht
I wo »t ■anger* One of th* women wn
«*() wealthy *a t ha* r*. *ntlt ,n»a
ghe M>ft tn h*r will a b**iM#n of file,a
to M <"*<**> H*r i *n . not kw>wn
!•"**» M*w* *1 • Meugteg
At | twf« Meet |t|* l*t». I
Martin** ha* *•**• k*a**4 The**
a mm p* *••*» n**w*ni ana ik« *.**,
*0 »»* **f leeOrtty A hrga* imM
pMty«4 OM I** Twl« aa th*
tell Mt»n#*t aaawwltna ana killed *
li itai «W gt*l ana ntttea h*« *****
‘ gnwntn *h***f»M u* »•«*-*
• •■* »*-•.« Mel Wtt* M~a.ee
Ann* l*g* «g*a It of S**ut
; i'll*, tM * tie vn'oJ ne«* 4wn t« tglt
i*« *»< >>f * Mawnoek **« will e»
.»* • *»' |« to tn
THU SUNDAY SCHOOL,
LE3SOB IX. AUC. 29—ACTS IO,
21 34.
Holden Tent Take Heed and ISeware oI
t'ovetooanraa l.uke *11:15 "here »t.
I’aul'* World Wide r»n> Beean HI,
Miracle*.
Time.—A D. 1,7. PlBse.-Bpheaii:’ Tl*
yltuatlon of thl* city, In the middle o
Iho Axlalh count of the Aegean Hca. and
at the converging point of the great »°“d“
from the Kart, made It of alngulur Im
portance It way the birthplace o
great painter* Apellaa and Farrhaylti*.
arid of the Fhlloaopher Heraelltu*. Here
I’aul remained longer than In any ol|''*
city, wrought tome of the mo*l Murprl g
miracle* „f the New Teylurnent. and ei
feeied Iht formal aaparatlon of ih* h™
Hun congt.gallon from the Jcwl*h *yoa
gogne. The Church thua formed and nur
tured became one of the inoyt prominent
of the Upoytollc ag”. and to It In after
year* Paul wrote an eplatle which yound*
the profoundeyt depth* of Ohrl«tian doe
l tine and real** the loflleat heigh I* uf
t'hilytlun experience. Over thl* emu. n
Timothy afterward t<re*lded. In l.pluyu*
81. John reylded In Id* old age. and to It
wa» addieared one of the epl*tle» to Hi
"yeveu churcliea of A*lu" The Temidt o
Diana way founded In XI. flnlahed In MU.
and burned by Krostrslus In 3.J1 »*• *
Thr second temple, alluded to In our les
son, whs built In the reign of Alexander
the Gr*nf at the expense of all the neigh
boring cities. It was for Its beauty reck
oned among the "seven wonders of th*
world. its walls, of the finest 1 arlun
marble, were Manked by one hundred ex
quisite Ionic columns, six feet in diam
eter and sixty feet high. The whom
structure measured three hundred and
forty-two feet in length and one hundred
and fifty-three u* gUJth, The sacred im
age of 1 liana, however, which the tempi*
enshrined, and which it was believed had
fallen fiorn Jupiter, was neither beautiful
nor larg*. but a rude wooden figure near
ly tb** shape of a mummy, and more like
a grotenq »*■ Hindu image than a grace
ful Greek statu* Two centuries aftei
Haul's time lilt Goths sacked Kphesus
and set lire to the temple. The Chris
tians rushed with axes and hummers and
helped to complete the ruin of u build
ing dedicated to a worship they hated.
Its ruin* were discovered In IkVl. Col
umns of jasper tak* n from It now adorn
Ht. Hophiu's in < Turistisnlinople. The The
ater stood on the western slope of Mount
t'orossus It was about five hundred feet
in diameter ami had twenty-live thou
sand or thirty thousand seats. From the
upper part of the auditorium there is now
an open view of the sea. Ancient th«
illl-ru upra tail I nil IA 1 I hr, til loots, bav
ing a level space of oval shape at the
bottom for the performances, und w
In tier:' for the ape* tutors. The Tumult
*t Ephesus "closely resembles that at
Philippi. both arose not from the Jews,
but from the Gentiles; all other perselu
tions recorded in the Acts were Insti
gated by Jews, both originated from sol *
did motives, hi Philippi, the masters of
the bythonk; slave, in Ephesus, Ueme
trlus and bis craftsmen, feared that they
would lose their unhallowed gains.
Gioag.
I.yrron He view Paul's visit to Corlnlp
lirdshed his second mb denary Journey,
excepting that on n 1*-. way lack to Pal
estine he called at Ephesus, where be left
Priscilla and Aquila, promising to return.
He then went on to Jerusalem by way of
Caesarea and Antioch. Starting on his
third Journey, he visited old friends in
Galatia and Phrygia, and eventually
reached Ephesus again. In his labors
there he wmh aided by Timothy, Titus,
Apollos, Aquila, Erast us, Epaphras,
Gaeus, a:id Aristarchus. Ho successful
was his ministry in Ephesus that the lu
crative tiau* of those who made silver
shrines of the popuiai goddess If.ana was
injured. Home of the consequences our
lesson tells.
We find In this lesson a sinking and
suggestive name used to designate the
Church of Christ it.* Way. Verse 22.
Several time* it is «mployeu in the book
of Acts (it. 2. 22 (). It stems to have been
a current designation for the body of
Christians, just as w« would say, "the
movement," to# <aus*." It suggests the
match ol Christianity. What traits of
"The Way" do wi find in this lesson and
this chapter'/ i Nolle* the scope and aim
uf this way. Verses 21, 22. This was a
byway, or lane, or nanow street. It em
braced a vast held. Ephesus, Macedonia,
Antioch,Jerusalem, Hum* true was Paul'*
programme. There were Human loads
uniting all the cities of the empire and
binding them to Home, but "this way *
stretched farther, ami embraced plans
beyond them, it took the whole world
into its scope. Alexander nought the con
quest of the East, Napoleon the mastery
of the West; the Gospel aims to conquer
the globe. II. It is a way that makes *
stir in the world. Verse ‘22. If an army
should march acioss the continent,
threatening to destroy our cities, ii would
awaken a mighty interest The Gospel
way lias moused men everywhere; in Je
rusalem. In Antioch, in Tnessalonlca, in
Ephesus. How prominent u part in the
world's history has Christianity held!
Take the church out ol America, take the
ilible out of literature, and what a blank
would be created! Notice in this chapter
tlie stir that tills Way made in Ephesus,
III the synagogue (verses h, H;; among the
sick and sunning (Verses 11, \2), anieng
the demuologists and excorlsi* (\*rse* lj
ifib; among tin idoi-maaers (verses ij-z7)
111 il i* a « uiiqucrmg way Verse 28. Ks«j
kiei raw a xtbuni pouring out of the ui
lar, (lowing arrows the t*ui|le, and grow
ing into a river .E**k 47. 1-12,. gucll has
Ueu the ptogie*« of the Gospel it con
quered the temple of Ulaii* In Ephesus
U oven*u the entire Homan .i,
uu» uiuoiui U.i- world IV 1, „
an .nlmbi.iilim • •> \ir*i» » n u u
in* l»tli to ini. knowiwt*. oi.u Hi.Uoir.
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ONE NEW WOMAN.
j ll„ Clertrod. M All*.- of Ueneer. Id
Charged with Many Crime*.
Miss Gertrude Allen, who has been
I Indicted at Denver for making false
•eturns while acting as a judge of elec
I [on In one of the preclncto of that city,
I is the kind of woman who gives the
whole class a bad name. She Is well
>ducated and has been very prominent
n Republican politics In Denver. Now
hat she has been indicted Ihe story of
her life is coming out. It is told In a
press dispatch from Lansing, Mich.,
where she used to live, and as pub
lished, without apparent fear of con
tradiction, Includes such trifles as ne
gotiating forged notes, deserting her
husband to live with another man, and
of robbery of an employer. She cam*
of good family, arid was married at
an early age to a man named Whitta
ker, who subsequently obtained a di
vorce, after sh< ran away from him.
as above noted. On the grant ing of the
divorce she resumed her maiden nam*
This was about seven years ago. Sh»
went to Colorado, where the custom
of making women political officers gave
her opportunity for pushing herself In
to prominence. She become ordlnanc*
clerk In the city clerk's office and an
active politician. As such she was mad*
one of the judges of elections, ami
still In the same character—she Is sup
posed to have helped falsify the l*
turns. Her own story is that she m« r*
ly recorded votes as called off by oth
ers. and is not responsible If too man.,
were called.
The grand Jury declines to accept
this explanation and has found a tru*
bill against her apparently on two
counts, although the language of th*
dispatch Is not perfectly clear on this
point.—From th* Hartford Times.
Wluat Caused Her Heath. ^
Boston is In a ferment over the p*~
* uliar death ot a beautiful young wom
an In that Ity a few days ago. Three
o'clock lost Saturday afternoon light
ning struck til*- office In which Mis.
Alice M. Barrett was employed as a
stenographer. A lew minutes later
the young woman's dead body wa>
found and It was supposed that th*
electrical shock had killed her. It wa»
afterward found that a bullet In he:
left side had ended her life.
Then wild speculations began and
41
MISS ALICE M BARRETT. ^
the conflict is still being fiercely waged
between the fe.'Mori declaring murder
and the other claiming suicide. With
the pistol on th< office floor was a
letter from the gitl to her mother in
which much regret was expressed that
1800 which she had loaned to a friend
was now a dead loss. Still, up to the
time ot her death Miss Barrett was al
ways considered a cheerful young
woman. The police insist that the girl
took her own life, but her family and
friends look upon it as a case of mur
der. A brotl er recalls a case a .itt'e
over a year ago. when an Italian fruit
peddler at coopted to rob the girl as
she was counting the c impany's
money. He now contends that a simi
lar attempt at robbery may have re
sulted in the tragedy.
A Largo Footed Woman.
The largest pair of shoes ever made
in tills town will be finished tomorrow
and put on exhibition iu tlie show win
dow of a loial shoe merchant, where
they will remain until no woman for
whom they ,.ie being not tails for
tb*m. The woman is Mrs. ( < teflehey,
who lives on a farm about two miles
from this place, and who lu • without
doubt the It rgost feel of nu> woruuu
in Pennsylvania. Alter visiting all the
*uix' wit in uiv.it unit Huy mm week ?
uml falling to ttnd even u pa r of men a
ahoea that aht c iuli| get her feet Into,
ahe left her measure with u ahcttnwk*
er for a pair The shoeing krt had some
dlfficiilly In ttudiug a pair of laid* large
enough In meu1* inemnirem. ni the
ahitea are No. Ili. 8 wide. The wontau'a
feet tneuaiire, eleven lu.he* at the hall,
aieveu and one-half at the maitit un.l
fourteen at the heel. Theta are a mutt
her of men In thia town *-ho wear No
II shoe*. tw(> thr*# who wear Nr.
!.• and one who wear* No 1.1, hut not
ona who w.«r» an M wide Writ New
'** <•*» I ('urr*»|ton>feitee
4*** "IteeiHM" aw.
The diainntra from Lnrw.| to ‘rh
Ion la Jol Mile* ||H |)|B
ret I road a. f*, g* »h. „* ,g„ ,wfc
the Marl beautiful and g,.wt rpletdid
*¥ euliivaied farm- row it ihenueito*
Mol not .Me foot vl the land ha'unga
to >hoa* who hatre 'hue hroegh’ It to
>.**» beauty attd gwrlttatm*. ft »n
l» *** Mat. a ho owe ,t to«g>ta» ^
the. ha-new to to the uid,,* M.M ...
*h*ti tat k*r*
toaha «*«.«.« |a *,«*. g
l« the Market* of »»g,it , ^ ^
2! “M •*‘‘w * nt e «
.**• tot. to dlfa* (*.• I, ... eo.
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•to at night totna ..»h*m.« **#*»«
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