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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1906)
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The national congress on uniform divorce laws held its second meeting in this citjr. The first meeting was held at Washington nine months ago , at which time -an ad journment was taken to permit a committee to draft a bill on uniform divorce laws , to be presented to the legislatures of all the states. The till drawn by the committee names eix causes for which divorces can he granted. They are infidelity , felony , bigamy , desertion , habitual drunken ness and intolerable cruelty. The committee recommends that the vari ous "legislatures be asked to agree on a period of residence before applica tion may be made for divorce. It is expected by the committee that this .recommendation , if adopted by all the states will decrease the number pf migratory divorces. Delegates from all sections cf the country attended the session. Four Shot by Enraged Man. Huntington , W. Va. , Nov. 14. West- ley Hardway , a gang boss , was in stantly killed and three negro work men badly wounded by Fred Adkins , on the Deepwater railroad , under con struction in Wyoming county. Adkins was passing the spot where a blast was set off and the fragments of stone from the blast showered about him , enraging him so that he emptied his revolver at the workmen , killing one and injuring three. He escaped. Wholesale Arrests at Pittsburg. Pittsburg , Nov. 14. The police ex press , confidence in having under ar rest the slayer of Harry P. Smith , who was killed in his home by a burg lar. Charles Buccini , the Italian ar rested with a wounded hand , had the bullet extracted. It is the size of the bullet fired from Smith's gun in the fight with the burglar. Many holdups were reported , the criminals in every instance escaping. Wholesale arrests are being made. W. E. Thomas Adjudged Insane. Leavenworth , Kan. . Nov. H. W. E. Thomas , interested with the late C. J. Devlin of Topeka in coal mines , and who attempted to commit suicide here shortly after the Devlin failure , was adjudged insane in the pr'ate court of Leavenworth county by a jury. Thomas lost $850,000 by the Devlin failure and has since been of unsound mind. Leaps From Third-Story Window. Belleville , 111. , Nov. 14. Grieving over the sudden death of her brother , Miss Petronella Romeiser , twenty- four years old , daughter of P. M. Romeiser , a prominent merchant here , | leaped from the third-story window of i her home , fracturing her skull and arm. The attending physician be- . lisvss stiQ cannot live. ' t vjafj. . . , . ! , -jsLjtj"v. . r. FEDERATION REFERS MATTER TO NEXT CONVENTION. GOMPERS'POCICY IS SANCTIONED Plan of Creating Political Power Out cf Union Labor Votes is Approved by Minneapolis Convention Tc Form Labor Press Association. Minneapolis , Nov. 14. The second day's session of the twenty-sixth an nual convention of the American Fed eration of Labor in this city was full of interest , the most important action being regarding the adoption of a uni versal label design , referring the mat ter to the convention of 1907. This action , however , was not taken until after a lively discussion. The cigar- makers , printers and hatters led the opposition in regard to adopting a general label , claiming they have spent much money in advertising their respective labels , and are deriving much benefit as a resv.lt , which would be lost were the federation to adopt a general label. President Gompers * pl n of creating a political power out of combined union strength was indorsed by the 'convention , when it approved the re port of Vice President James Duncan , in which he sanctioned the policy of Mr. Gompers. Mr. Duncan's report showed that the federation's campaign fund amounted to $8,056.89. One of the lively tilts of the day came when the committee on rules recommended that the convention ad journ at noon Saturday until Monday morning. Delegate D. D. Driscoll of Boston energetically started an oppo sition discussion. "We are here to transact business and not to attend football games , " said Mr. Driscoll. The recommendation to adjourn Sat urday noon was carried. A mass meeting was held at the Auditorium , at which addresses were made by Samuel Gompers. John Mitch ell , president of the mine workers , and John Duncan. While the convention is in session an effort will be maHe to form a na tional labor press association. EAST LOOKS JOR NO STRIKE No Trouble in Reaching Agreement With Railway Employes. New York , Nov. 14. There nc longer appears to be any danger of a strike of railroad employes in the east , as the situation with reference to the demands of members of certain organ izalions has considerably cleared The New Yorlc , New Haven and Hart ford and the New Yorlc Central rail roads came to an agreement with com mittees representing the firemen o ! the two roads affecting the status oi the men on the new electric locomo- ftives and the adjustment committee of the Erie locomotive engineers an nounced it had come to an agreement with the officials of that system. It was stated at the offices of the Erie system that there will be no trouble in reaching an agreement wj < h the firemen at the present time , as President Underwood's letter to Chie' Hanrahan was not a refusal to grant concessions to the dissatisfied men but simply a request to hold off unti settlements could be made with yard men. switchmen , brakemen and othe employes of the company. It was sair1 that when these adjustments shall have been made the demands of the firemen will be taken up and those considered reasonable be granted. FINE AND PRISON FOR BANKER Wooster Man Pleads Guilty to Con spiracy to Wreck Bank in Ohio. Cleveland , Nov. 14. J. R. Zimrner man pleaded guilty to the charge ol conspiring to wreck a national bank in the federal court here and was sen tenced to serve two years in the peni tentiary and to pay a fine of § 10.000 Zimmerman Avas the chairman of tlu board of directors of the Wooster Na tional bank , which faikJ | about two years ago. Thaw Trial in December. New York , Nov. 14. District Attor ney Jerome said that the trial of Harry Thaw , for the murder of Stan ford White , would be moved for the first we&k in December. He stated that the judge who would try the case had not been decided upon , but that it probably would be heard be fore Recorder Goff. Mr. Jerome said that hevouid conduct the prosecution and would be assisted by Assistant District Attorney Garvan. Conference With Moody. Washington , Nov. 14. Attorney General Moody held a final conference with Messrs. Morrison and Kellogg and Mr. Purdy. assistant to thf attor ney general on the Standard Oil mat ters. While all concerned are reticent as to the action to be taken , there is no longer any doubt that suit will be entered within a few days against the Standard Oil company of New Jersey under the Sherman anti-trust law. Contract Let for McKinley Tomb. Windsor , VtNov. . 14. A contract has just been placed with a local gran ite firm for furnishing the material for the sarcophagi in which the bodies o the late President McKinley and Mrs. McKinley will rest in the mauso leum at Canton , 0. The famous green granite quarried from Ascutney mountain will be the material used. . The Value a Soda Cracker You have heard that some foods furnish fat , other foods make muscle , and still others are tissue building and heat forming. You know that most foods have one or more of these elements , but do you know that no food contains them all in such properly balanced proportions as a good soda cracker ? The United States Government report shows that soda crackers contain less water , are richer in the muscle and fat elements , and have a much higher per cent of the tissue building and heat forming properties than any article of food made from flour. That is why U need a Biscuit should form an important part of every meal. They represent the superlative of the soda cracker , all their goodness and nourishment being brought from the oven to you in a package that is proof against air , moisture and dust the price being too small to mention. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY WRECK ON MISSOURI PACIFIC Many Passengers Slightly Hurt in Ac cident at Glencoe , Mo.t St. Louis , Nov. 14. A westbound Missouri Pacific passenger train , while running at full speed , was hurled from the track by spreading rails near Glencoe , twenty-seven miles west of here , and beyond cuts and bruises to many passengers all on board miraculously escaped. The en tire train plunged into an embank ment and the track bed was torn un for 200 feet. Mine Swindler Sentenced. Sacramento , Cal. , Nov. 14. William Whalen , an aged mining prospector of the state of Nevada , who was arrest ed here for swindling a number of citizens out of several thousand dollars lars by false representations.was sen tenced to ten years' imprisonment at San Quentin. An investigation of the Whalen mines showed that the ore was ' 'salted. " Ohio Village Wiped Out. , Martin's Ferry , O. , Nov. 14. Two lives were lost and the village of Rineland. near here , was practically wiped out by a fire caused by an ex plosion of gas. Two children of a foreign miner were burned to death. The village has no fire department. TELEGRAMSJERSELY TOLD The Midland National bank of New ton , Kan. , was held up by one man and robbed of about $1,000 in cur rency. Fire destroyed the two large stock houses of ihe Nazareth Portland Ce ment company at Nazareth Pa. Loss. $175,000. Myrtle , the seven-year-old daughter of William Neal , who resides near Co lumbus Ind. , was shot and instantly killed near her home by an unknown hunter. The war department mails are heavy with letters protesting against the discharge without honor of the three companies of the Twenty-fifth infantry , colored. Len Harris of Sturgeon. Mo. , was found dead from asphyxiation in a room at the Hoeffner hotel , St. Louis. The gas jets were open and the room was filled with gas. The twenty-fourth annual conven tion of the Ornothologists' union was held at Washington. All the officers were re-elected for next year and scientific papers were read. M. J. Phelan , an engineer on the Missouri Pacific railway , was nominat ed for mayor of Kansas City. Kan. , to succeed W. W. Rose , resigned , at a Democratic primary election. The pecan crop of Mexico has been almost a total failure. Last year over fifty carloads of the nuts were shipped to the United States and for the pres ent year there has been only one. Henry H. iShufeldt , seventy-two years old , a multi-millionaire of- Chicago cage , died at his country residence at Oconomowoc , Wis. Mr. Shufeldt was one of the best known and richest dis tillers in the country. Charles W. Zimmerman , a Missouri Pacific brakeman , and his wife were arrested and placed in jail at East St. Louis on the charge that they have been engaged , with others , in robbing freight trains on the IronMountain , , road. , * Dr. Franz George J. Specht , sev enty-five years old , widely known among the Germans of the southwest as a physician and later as the man ager of a St. Louis German daily news paper , was found dead in bed npy his daughter. Things You Ought to Ii.iioiv. That you are respected by your friends as your character merits ; That a man's true worth is not measured by the size of his clothes ; That the marriage relation was instituted of God under holy laws ; That the most profitable mining business is to mind your own business ; That your best friends are not always' those who pay you the highest compliments ; That a secret has become public property when confided in a friend , for he or she has confidents ; That married life is not all * honey-moon , for honey will soon sour and the moon will grow old ; That a minister makes no charge for performing the marriage cere mony , but expects the usual § 5.00 or more , That any minister authorized by the rules of the church is qualified to perform the marriage ceremony in Nebraska ; , That strangers judge the moral tone of a community largely by the appearance of the churches and schools ; That you should always think you had the best woman in the world for your wife , even if you know you haven't ; That you should never interfere in other people's domestic troub les , unless you are prepared to fight both sides of the house ; That a quiet little home wedding is always in better taste than the extravagance often indulged in by those who cau . ill afford it ; That the estimate which you place on your own importance is vastly different from that which your neighbors see in you : That you should always keep your window blinds raised on a stormy night , it may save the life of some one lost in the storm ; That your friends would ap preciate a few kind words from you during life , rather than flow ers upon their caskets when they are dead. The Ladies' Aid society of the M. E. church will serve a chicken pie dinner in Bethel hall "Wednes day , Nov. 21. The Chadron Journal says the C. & N. TV. will put on two new trains next week , and that oper ators' and dispatchers' salaries I have been raised § 10 per month. You can get a case of 2i bottles of Webb's soda for 75c , delivered to your house. Try a case. Tel ephone 117. 31 HOT WATER- within a good hot water bottle and apply it to the frigid section of the bed , down near the foot , and you will pass the i winter devoid of the terrors of cold feet. Hot Water Bottles are needed in every home I as a hot application in | case of sickness or at tacks o f neuralgia , toothache , etc. We have our fall stock. i These bags are made of finest rubber and are sold a t reasonable prices. JtlXi7TTfiT35ZBi VALENTINE. NEB LET US FIGURE ON YOUR LUMBER BILLS BISHOP' & YOUNG , Cody , Neb. THE NORTH-WESTERN LINE Only Double Track Itailroad between Jlixsowl Jtiver and Chicago. Direct line to Sf Paul-JIinne ip- olis. Direct line to Itlack. Jlills. Apply to neat'ftit agent for rates map * and time crertfs.