Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, August 26, 1909, Image 6
ii _ - - - r - - The Valentine Democrat , ; i I I t VALENTINE , NEB. i 1 , ! I F , n I ' a : . M. RICE , - - - - Publisher ' 'I M MEETS ! WITH MISHAT It , J j I , " ( . tfELLMAN'S - SECOND POLAR TRIP 11 COMES TO NAUGHT. 't.- _ I . ' : . . . . ' iii I. ; . I " ' , " , , , " ! & .irship's Guide Rope Breaks-All Are f ! # t ' ! ! Taken Aboard the Steamer Fram > z , I ' ' . , I Safely When a Sudden Gust of # I ' ! , w I f Wind Cuts Away Gas Bag. , r , . n : f I - J U ' 1 _ ' / Camp Wellman , Spitzenbergen : Wal 1\1- \ f ter Wellman's second attempt to sail I 11 pver the north pole in a balloon has , i ' Resulted in failure. The giant dirigi- I , I jble balloon America , in which Mr. : e if ' ' JWellman and his party of three set I : . - but upon their perilous flight , met with fj T , 4 a mishap after it had proceeded about , thirty-two miles from the starting I , 4 point. Mr. : Wellman and his party suc- J t , ceeded in making a safe landing and returned to this point on board the i I steamer Fram , which also towed in the ' 1i" I Disabled balloon. ' I I , It was 10 o'clock in the morning ! when the great airship was brought put of its shed and the daring explor- ; , ers took their places in the car. When ' \ the anchors were cast loose the air- : ! I . ' hip ascended beautifully , the engines I" - were set in motion and everything . .a " seemed to work to perfection. The r t. + big aircraft was maneuvered for some , T , - ; ; time and answered the helm perfect- I , : , Iy. Then its head was turned to the ' . northward and it set out at a speed I of twenty-five miles an hour. ' ! ' Suddenly , after having covered some . . I thirty-two miles and when everything , r ; seemed to be going splendidly , the leather guide rope , to which was at ; , ; J - . . . tached 1,000 pounds of provisions and ? : ' : stores , broke away. The accident oc- , : ; . burred just as the airship was nearing the pack ice of North Spitzenbergen. i i Released from this great weight , the jairship shot upwards at a terrific pace Until it was at a great height above I I ; I I the clouds. The pilots succeeded , how- : ever , in bringing her about and set put to fight their way southward iagainst a strong wind. The airship , proceeded slowly southward to the edge of the pack ice , where the steam- er Fram was anchored. I , I After much difficulty a tow rope : , was gotten aboard the Fram , which : ' : t ptarted immediately to tow the airship ! 'i to Spitzenbergen. The strain was so i , r great , however , that it threatened to I : ; , ; jtear the car to which the rope was at- ' I tached to pieces and Mr. Wellman . I finally decided to bring the airship down to the surface of the water. This Iwas / effected without mishap and the I t j f car rested on the surface of the water N 1' a : until all the members of the crew , the I r ; , . dogs and the scientific instruments ' ) ' : - could be transferred aboard the Fram. I , ' jA ! fresh start was then planned and 'A 4 the America was towed back to the I landing [ stage and within a short dis tance of where the start was made. . . [ But the ill luck of the expedition [ was not yet at an end. Just as the airship had reached the landing stage and everything looked favorable for jits rescue without serious damage , a sodden gust of wind caught the big 1 Inflated bag broadside and snatched it - ' , away from its tow lines. It was car- , ried over rough ice hummocks for , ; some distance and then it exploded. . : i All ! the scattered parts of the airship ' : , were ) subsequently recovered , but the ' , , ' damage was so great as to preclude any further attempt to fly over the oole this year. MISSOURI TRAIN WRECK. , ullman Rolls Down an Enbankment Near Clearwater. Poplar Bluffs , Mo. : Eleven persons , Dccupying a Pullman car attached to j the Iron Mountain train No. 3 were a injured when the train was wrecked near Clearwater Saturday afternoon. i ' . The Pullman rolled down a 30-foot em- f' bankment. I The tender jumped . the track , but 'j the baggage , mail , express , smoker , day and chair cars remained on the , . trarlc. The Pullman got off the rails , i ' , and after being dragged several hun- . flred feet broke loose from the diner J and turned over. Among the injured .t. : . ate : r Mrs. M. - B. Poore , Davenport , cuts ' ; . , j on the side of the head. , it- ' . : ' . The injured were attended by phyI I . sicians from Piedmont after other ; w passengers rescued them from the : J f'1 overturned car. - / J Tolstoi's Secretary Exiled. , . Tula , Russia : M. \ Guseff , private secretary to Count Leo Tolstoi , has been ' exiled to the province of Perm I for a period of two years after having been found guilty of circulating Tol j stoi's pamphlet entitled "Thou Shalt : . Do No Murder , " which is a plea c against the infliction of the death penI I alty -s , ' , . * , Farmers to Be Road's Guests. I Guthrie , Okla. : President of the farmers' unions of four states have accepted the invitation of President JXoakum , of the Frisco railroad , to tour the east as his guests. . . Anarchists Are Arrested. : ' Budapest : The police of the city J . . , ave taken into custody twenty-six C , anarchists , -who recently arrived here I , t , . , ! to attend the forthcoming anarchist ; : , : ongress. . . . . . ' , ' " - . - f ; ' ' : t' r < r . - ' ' . , : ' : : . : . : : k . ' . . - ; , - . ' _ _ : . " . ; : > " " ' { i - : r " , , . ' , ' , ' - . . ' " " , . . . . - ' ' . , . , ' . . ; ; " 'v * [ t' ; : * . ' , ; ? ' : X " - , , . . V. ; - , ' ' ' ' - - - - : - ! t ! V : ' * : - ' ' ' - -f - " fi.t..i . , . ' ' 'Y' ' ' ' 1.11. ; . . . . .o . j'Uit _ . . . , . " , , . . _ 1f lTI . . ? ' -t - . I ! . ; - < " ' . - " I - - - - - - - , - - _ " . - _ ----r-- 7V . VESSEL FRED SWAIN BURNS. Consumed to Water's Edge in the illi- nois River. Peoda , Ill. : The steamer Fred Swain , Capt. Verne Swain in com - mand , of the Peoria and La Salle Packet company : , leaving the port of Peoria for La Salle at 3 o'clock Fri- day afternoon with twenty-five pas- sengers and a crew of fifteen aboard caught fire off the Avery Manufactur ing company plant in Averyville and was burned to the water's edge after being piloted into four feet of water amidst a growth of _ small willow trees opposite the Peoria Strawboard plant about 600 yards above where the fire originated. No lives were lost and but two peo ple wese injured , one seriously. The 'loss is estimated at $35,000 , $30,000 of which is on the vessel. Sev- eral of the passengers lost all of their personal belongings. MILK FAMINE BROKEN. Dealers Who Boycotted Lorain , 0. , Take Acticn to Save Infants. Lorain , 0. : For the purpose of al- laying any suffering and to save in fants whose lives may be dependent upon fresh milk , the milk famine par- tially was broken here Saturday by the milk dealers. Perhaps 50 per cent of the usual supply was delivered. Mayor King declared that he would arrest any dealers who delivered milk without a license. To obtain a li- cense it was necessary for the dealers to obtain their milk from dairymen whose cows had passed the tuberculo- sis test. This the milkmen refused to do and when it was insisted upon the dealers decided to boycott the city. As a result this city was without milk. ARMY AUTO STARTS WEST. Leaves New York on 3,600-Mile Jour- ney to Frisco. New York : A military automobile , with Malcolm E. Parrott , of the Na- tional Guard of New York , at the whdel , left New York for San Francis- co Saturday , bearing dispatches from Maj. Gen. Wood , commanding the de- . partment of the east , to Gen. Weston , I commanding the department of the west. The trip will cover 3,693 miles. On its success , it is said , will largely depend the establishment of a regular automobile service for the army. Gets Black Hand Letter. Wichita , Kan. : W. G. Bennett , a I I . contractor of this city , received a "black hand" letter ordering him to leave $1,000 in a bucket near a tree close to the business district of the city. His 16-year-old son was threat- end with death if the money was not left.- The detectives watched a dum- my package left by the tree through- out the night , but no one came for it. Idle Plant to Be Opened. Columbus , 0. : Orders have been issued by the Carnegie Steel company to place its plant at Columbus in op- eration as soon as possible. It ' will re- quire some time to get the plant in operating condition and it is not like- ly that any steel will be made before September 1. The Columbus plant has been idle for about two years. Two Killed in Storm. Alexandria , La. : The heat wave , accompanied by temperatures ranging from 95 to 110 degrees , was suddenly broken Friday by the most severe elec- trical storm ever experienced in cen- tral Louisiana. Two people were killed , one was parlyzed and two were ren- dered unconscious by lightning. Texas Indian Fighter Dead. Chicago : Judge John M. Dean , a pioneer of west Texas , and former district attorney of El Paso , died Fri- day at the Congress hotel , Chicago. Judge Dean was one of the best known Indian fighters of the pioneer days. Knights of Equity Choose Head. Detroit , Mich. : The convention of the National Assembly , of the Knights of Equity closed here Saturday : with the election of Supreme President Charles F. Reardon , of Boston. The next convention will be held at Cleve- land , O. Will of Christian Scientist. Chicago : In the will of the late Ed- ward A. Kimball , filled in the probate I court Saturday , provision is made for , the creation of a fund to aid in keep- ing in perpetual repair Pleasant View , I the homestead of Mary Baker G. Eddy. Taft's Son Gets a Ducking. Salem , Mass. : It became known Saturday that Charley Taft , the presiI I dent's son , and an engineer from the president's yacht , Sylph , were upset ] in the lad's dory off Salem Friday af- ternoon and received a ducking. Work for Taxidermist. Washington , D. C. : George B. Tur- ner , chief taxidermist of the Smith sonian institution , has been recalled from [ his vacation in order that prompt : attention : may be given to the 82 skins ( of African animals that have been ( sent to this city by the Roosevelt t party. ] Rail Disaster in Chile. Santiago Chile : A terrible railway disaster occurred Saturday when two t trains : came together in a collision t , thirty : miles north of Santiago. Many n persons were killed or injured. The monetary loss will reach $150,000. . Tokio : Mayor Ozaki of Tokio , has offered 20,000 cherry trees as a gift to President Taft , to plant in the new ' \ ' park on the banks of the Potomac river , Washington. D C. I . , ' - " . . I - . ' - - : ; / / - : , : ' J'I. : - : - - . , : ' - I. . - : . - . ' . . - - - - - - - - , ; . . - - : - - - - - - - - _ - = . . _ r _ \ . . . . . _ . _ . . . . _ . - - - - - - - - - - -.r w. , , - - h. " " . .t. . _ _ _ . _ . - . _ _ _ _ _ - _ - . . . . . - OIL SOAKED FAGOTS FOUND. Alleged Arson Attempt at Steel Car Plant. Pittsburg , Pa. : . An alleged attempt to set fire to the plant of the Pressed Steel Car company at McKees Rocks early Saturday , followed by much dis- order when the striking employes of the car company fired several shots at over 100 new men who were being I taken into the works about noon , com- pelled the state constabulary and dep- uty sheriffs to be on the alert for twelve hours. * . * The women strike : sympathizers be- came excited during the afternoon , and the Amazons numbering about 500 , gathered at the gate of the car plant and threw heavy paving stones over the stoc1 ( de. A detail of state troopers disbanded the yelling fe males. Late Saturday a bricV with a note attached was found outside of the car plant stockade. The note read in part : "We want to get out of here. Can't you help us ? " The note was turned over to the . sheriff. ' ' I i Bundles of fagots soaked in oil were , found lighted near the paint house of the car plant. The alleged attempt to burn the plant will be the subject of a rigid examination. DROPPED BY PISTOL BULLET. ! Officer Lcocens Hold of Robber on Window Ledge. Pittsburg , Pa. : Discovered perched on the second story of a window ledge of the banking house of Louis Moeser & Co. , Smithfield street , Saturday night , a man giving his name to the police as Charles Mell , and his occu pation as a waiter at the fashionable Union club , was shot down by Special Officer Moreno , and after a sensation- al ' chase through the downtown streets was brought to bay in an al- ley. According to the police Mell was caught in the act ofx forcing an en- trance to the banking house and had already taken out several bars cover- . ing a rear window. The first shot fired by the officer struck Mell in the forearm , and , loosening his hold upon the window ledge , Mell tumbled into a court , but before the officer could scale the intervening fence the sup posed burglar had darted through an alley. _ For a mile Mell ran through down town streets , the officer following , fir- ing his revolver at intervals. When on the water front Mell suddenly turn. ed into an alley and after a sharp struggle with his pursuer was cap tured. . , ! " - = * J 1 -t- - * " " AMERICAN EMBASSY BLAZE. Flames Are Extinguished Before Ar- ' rival of Paris Firemen. Paris : Fire broke out Friday after- noon in the American embassy in the Avenue Clerber , but the flames were extinguished before the arrival of the firemen. The only loss was some burned curtains. Ambassador White was at his resi- dence at the time , but Second Secre tary Bally-Blanchard and Third Sec retary ] Pierrepont , with the embassy clerks , carried water in pails and the excitement was soon over. The flames starteti in some loose papers in a store room. State Sues for $65,000,000. Little Rock , Ark. : Prosecutor Jef- - frey , of the Third judicial circuit , Sat urday filed suit in the Jackson county circuit court at Newport , Ark. , against sixty-five insurance companies doing business in Arkansas , asking penalties amounting to $65,000,000 for alleged violation of the Arkansas anti-trust ' laws. Skilled Machinists Laid Off. Seattle , Wash. : Four hundred skilled machinists at the Puget Sound navy yard were discharged Wednes I day , and 500 more were laid off Satur day night. The repairs on the Pa I cific fleet's first squadron having been completed , there was no work for the men. German Railway Extensions. Berlin : Over the , signatures of Em peror William and all the state min j isters , the Official Gazette publishes an enactment autnorizing an outlay of 224,914,000 marks ( about $56,000- 000) ) for the extension of the Prussian state railroads and the construction - of proposed secondary lines. Wanderer , Called Dead , Back. Neosho , Mo. : W. H. Wright , for- merly a merchant of Neosho , Mo. , who disappeared from the hospital at Ne . vada , Mo. , where he was a patient nearly eight years ago and who since has been legally declared dead , has ] voluntarily returned to the institu tion. Buys an Ocean Going Tug. Washington , D. C. : The isthmian commission has purchased an ocean qoing tug for use for towing purposes * on : the Atlantic side of the canal. The commission is in the market for an- c o other similar vessel for work on the C * 1 Pacific side. "Joints" to Be Closed. Wichita , Kan. : After allowing the town to be wide open for four days , - "i commissioners passed an ordi"i a nance Saturday to go into effect Monf day , which will again close the joints j. and stop , the liquor selling. t Dog Fancier Is Train Victim. Houston , Tex. : An aged man , who was run over Tuesday by a train has r just been identified as Doc Shueltz , 80 t years old , an eccentric dog fancier , - ' -c J _ . . ' . . . , , _ ; J'-f ; ' , ; ' 1 ; " : . ' : 3 : : . . , ' - , ; . ' > : : : - , - - - ' , - , - - - - - . - . . . . - - - - - _ " " ' - ' . - - " " , . . : = - . : : : - - : : : : : - : ; : : : . ' - ; ; ; ; : -7- = - ' ; - = -r : : * . If. . F i' I > ! - it ' : "a + + + ' ' + IMY ' r ! ' + 3 + ' : - : - + rt. , ) + . : . . .MtI"Z.rHl o ! ' ' " . + " . . . r4t' J I NEBRASKA STATE NEWS Mo. I Ii I > . - - . . . . . , , . , . . . . , . . . . . . i lYt + .f t" : 41.2..t + .fakt , o1-r1 - < o1. ,4' : # : - : .1 - , - aMIf 'Ho1o : : - . . : : - * + : + H.4 < " ale at ' , - - - - - - - THOUGHT CATTJDE WERE STRAYS. Will Edwards in Jail at Broken Bow for Rustling. Will Edwards , charged with stealing a bunch of cattle belonging to A. C. Vistrop and selling them to B. J. Tier- ney , of Ansley , who has been in hiding for a week , was arrested by Sheriff Kennedy , thirty miles southeast of Broken Bow , and brought to jail. Ed- wards had hired himself out as a la- borer and was busily working when arrested. The prisoner says he was not aware , at the time that the cattle belonged to anyone in particular ; he thought they were stray and might just as well bring him in a few dollars as the next fellow. Edwards resides about six miles from Broken Bow and , it is said , has about $1,200 worth of crops and grain on his place. The sheriff took eight head of horses from the place which are mortgaged to a Broken Bow bank. , FARM : IIAXD KUJ ED. Alleged to Have Been Beaten to Death by His Employer. I Joseph E. Richardson , of Hastings , a farm hand , aged between 50 and 60 , is dead as the result of a chastisement : alleged to have been administered by ! his employer , Ernest E. Stout , aged i . 28. Stout does not deny the killing : , but says Richardson brought on a , fight after he had been reprimanded. There were no witnesses to the tragec dy , but other workmen say they heard Stout administering blows and ran to the scene , only to find the farm hand dead. Stout made no attempt to es- cape , and was arrested by the sheriff. Richardson's body was badly cut and bruised. LIQUOR JOINTS RAIDED. I Dray Load of "Refreshments" : Taken from Pcndcr Dealers. The business places of William C. Meyer and John W. Breneman at Pen- der were raided under search warrants and a dray load of liquors taken from each place. Drunken men have been numerous on the streets lately , al- though the saloons were closed last spring , and suspicion pointed strongly to these parties. Last week two detec- tives came to Pender and soon cleared the 1 matter up , one of them even tend- ing bar for Breneman one day. Both parties furnished bail for their ap- pearance and were released. Amateur Aeronaut Hurt. Frederick Scott , an amateur aero- naut of Lincoln , received injuries which physicians fear will result fa tally. He had made an ascent of about 500 feet when the balloon began to collapse. Scott waited until he was ' within 200 feet of the grpund , when he cut loose. The parachute did not have time to open and he fell heavily , breaking his shoulder , one leg , and re- ceiving internal injuries. Father Causes Son's Arrest. C. G. Livengood , a young man liV- ing near Wymore , was arrested and , lodged in jail on a complaint sworn out by his father , G. W. Livengood. I : The elder Livengood charged his son with carrying : a revolver for the pur- pose of doing him bodily harm. The defendant was arraigned , but no one appeared to prosecute him , and he was placed under $500 bond. Aeroplane Flies at Harvard. A short but successful flight was made recently by an aeroplane made 4 by the Herzog brothers , of Harvard. The machine carried no passenger on this trial flight , but was weighted. J The success of this flight will probably , . induce one of the brothers to occupy : the seat in the car at the next flight. I , I Depot for Central City. ] I The Union Pacific has mapped out the site of a new $25,000 depot at Cen tral City , work on which will shortly begin. It will be 125 feet in length and constructed of pressed brick , with stone facings , and will be completed by November 1 , according to present plans. Enthusistically Welcomed. Upon information from the sheriff of Box Butte county , Marshal Towsley , of Broken Bow. enthusiastically wel- comed John McDow ( colored ) just as he stepped from a freight Sunday night. McDow is charged with steal- b ing $300 worth of furniture at Alli- ance. Laid the First . Bricks. : The first brick for Douglas county's new $1,000,000 court house was laid Wednesday at Omaha. The services of all four members of the board of county commissioners were required and not one but four bricks were laid simultaneously. Minden Girl Burned. Miss Hannah Munson , of Minden , was ; fatally burned by the explosion of L can of kerosene at Omaha and died four hours later at Clarkson Memorial hospital , where she was taken for treatment. Nominations in Madison. C. S. Smith , of Madison , was nomi nated for sheriff on the republican of ticket and John F. Flynn of Norfolk onthe democratic. . ' f : _ ! ; : , , , - . . , ' : --i. , : " ' ) " . - ' , . r-- - . . - - I , . . . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - RUX INTO BY AX AUTO. , Farmer Near Hastings Sustains Seven Injuries. While returning to his farm two miles north of Hastings , H. H. Stina collided with an auto driven by Henry Schultz and sustained a severe con- cussion of the spine. ' Besides Shultz , Walker Slueman. and two young ladies were occupants of the car. Shultz did not see the ve hicle until he was within ten feet of it and the collision was of such \ o- * lence that Stine was hurled from the seat , lighting upon his back on the back of the horse. His 10-year-old daughter who was on the seat beside thefarmer was tossed over the horse and lit in the road beside the auto , sustaining no injury , however , beyond a severe jarring up. The horse was wedged into the auto and had to be unhitched before he could be released. The animal also was injured. The car was not injured beyond bending a fender and breaking the lights. Stino , is expected to recover. MISSIXG : BABY FOUND. Search of People Near Humboldt Finally Rewarded. The 3-year-old daughter of Gus Boeck , reported lost , was found by a searching party lying in the shelter of a hedge row something over two miles from the home she had left some thir- , ty hours before. The child was ac- ; , companied by the faithful family dog1 ! ; which flew at the rescuers in an at = tempt to ward off any danger threat- ' ened its charge. ; Circumstances surrounding the case and the attitude of the father , who , ' it is charged , failed to take any inter- , est in the search and had not a word" , ' of thanks for the rescuers of the child , caused the neighbors to remove the children from the 'home and steps will be taken to insure them better care , I food and schooling in the future. LINCOLN MAN BADLY HURT. Breaks Through Glass Roof of Omahh Train Shed. George Little , of Lincoln , while standing on the Tenth street viaduct , ' at the west end of the Burlington de - - pot in Omaha , noticed a pocketbook lying on the glass roof of the train shed. He climbed over and down on the roof. The glass broke beneath , his weight , and he fell to the brick pavement twenty feet below. An ar- tery in his right wrist and forearm * was cut , and he nearly bled to death- before a doctor could be summoned. After the flow of blood was stopped , Little was taken to St. Joseph's hos- pital. NEBRASKA PRIMARIES. Returns Indicate Choice of SedgwicL and Barnes for Justices. Sufficient returns from Tuesday's state wide primary have been received to indicate quite accurately the nomi- nation of Samuel H. Sedgwick and John B. Barnes for justices of the su - preme court at the hands of , the re- I publicans. The third nominee is in doubt , but according to the vote it seems to rest between Jacob Fawcett , F. G. Hamer and J. F. Cobbey. There were eight republican candidates and the contest was limited to the court I justiceships among the republican as- pirants. The democrats had only , : : three candidates. i ii i Fremont Auto Club Run. . I The Fremont Auto club made ar ] J endurance run to Tekamah. They left Fremont at 8 a. m. and arrived in Te kamah about 11 , they being thirty minutes ahead of schedule all the I I wayThey came by way of Uehling and Craig. There were twelve ma- chines in the race and the company , was made up of Fremont business men and contained sixty. - - Suit for a Small Sum. One Tecumseh business man sued another for a balanco en account of SI.35 ; and secured a ; ; incnt for that amount. The case was taken into the li county court , a jury secured and an entire day consumed in its trial. The defendant had to pay the costs , which amounted to $16.05 in addition to hij attorney's fee. New : Woodmen Lodge. . Twelve automobiles decorated with r. flags and bunting and iJ carrying mem- ) ers of the Woodmen of the World of : ; ; Fullerton went to Belgrade and or- 3- ganized a lodge of that order in that I st town , returning in their cars before I the morning hours. l ; " L - - r Girl Fatally Shot by Boy. a Enraged because he had been jilted , a Harry Bliss , 18 years old , of Ports n mouth , shot and fatally woundedMiss Minnie Clarke , aged 17 years. j" I y . .1 , Bound Over. r ' Chas. Knapp , of Madison , charged a with shooting his wife with intent to A kill and who was bound over until the h fall term of the district court in the ir sum of $2,000 bail which was given te by his brothers , Jake and John Knapp. ki Girl" Killed by Horse. 1 Etta Johnson , the little daughter ol 01 Mrs. , W. J. Johnson , living northeas f Beatrice , died from injuries re rjw ceived by being crushed against th ? w manger by a horse. . _ - - . I to , , h , - " ' . , . : , " " , . ; ' = : > : : . ) H ' ' . . " : , ' ' ' . , : ; < . . - - - 0. : . . - - , . . , . , , . . , . . _ -"iK ' ' ' ' ' < - : a : - . ' . - . = _ - - - - - - - = - - - - - - - : : . - - . . : " ' " - . - - = - . . . . ; . . . . . . . , . . - ' - - " J INTER-STATE FAIR FOR 19091 \ I I ! - ' ' IOWA DURING i j iT SIOUX CITY , , I I WEEK : OF BEIT. 20TH. , , This Ycar--Blg- : : - .XcFeaturcs , _ Jinny JfcW , Exhibit by U. S. Government , - Anv Igorrotc Village - All Objectionablo Features Banished. The Seventh Annual Fair to be giv- ; en by the Interstate Live Stock Fair Association , of Sioux City , Iowa , will ! be held the week of September 20 , at Riverside , which has- Woodland Park , ; been called the most beautiful natural- fair grounds in the" United States. ; The officers and directors of the In In-I terstate Live Stock Fair Association are men of high standing In the . bust- ' ness world , and It Is because of the association of men of such character ] ) in this enterprise that they have been/ / able to make of It the largest and best ! independent fair in the country. The week of September 20 Is thej \ T week following the South Dakota statej ; fair at Huron , S. D. By changing its ' ! dates so as not to conflict with the ? South Dakota state fair , the Inter- j : state Association made a move , the1 popularity of which can hardly be es - : timated. For instance , the South Da- ' fcota newspapers , so long as the Inter- state Fair Association persisted In ; clinging to the dates which rightly be- longed to the South Dakota fair , were , either actually antagonistic or at least unfriendly. This year , with the Inter- state people doing the right thing , the press of South Dakota is more thai generous In Its : attitude towards the : big fair at Woodland. They are sim- . ' ply glad that the Interstate Live Stocki Fair Association realized that It was an the wrong and got in the right path. ' They are boosting the Interstate fair and , while loyally urging their citizens to see their own fair first , they say then the "next best" fair to see is that of the Interstate Live Stock Fair As- sociation at Sioux City. 1 The program of the seventh annual' fair is the best in the hjstory of the as- sociation. It Is a well balanced pro- gram , one in which every person may find something to enjoy. The program indicates management will fulfill the , ' title Interstate Live Stock Fair-for' the exhibit of live stock includes the , blue bloods from the breeding farms : of half a dozen commonwealths. While { live stock and agriculture are /first In importance , the racing and ! ' amusement features have been givent a great deal : of attention. The exhibit ; ; . of farm machinery will be the largest ever seen at any fair in the west out- side of the world's expositions. Flow- 'ers and fruits will have a large depart- ment of their own. The Fine Arts and ; ; Household Departments , the Pantry : and Kitchen Department , the Child - : ren's Department and the Department of Dairy Products will be unusually attractive. The International Bee Keepers' As- sociation will hold Its annual conven- tion at the fair grounds during the fair ' .JO f and this fact was largely instrumental In causing the troard of directors of / the Fair Association to erect an ' apiary building this year. Because of the convention , there will be exhibits this year from Canada , Japan and Australia. The United States government will have an Important exhibit at the fair. It will be made by the department of agriculture , and will consist of patho- logical specimens showing diseases and infections of live stock. Diseased : glands , diseased tissues , diseased I blood , and , In short , specimens of ev ery disease with which domestic anI- mals are afflicted , will be exhibited In hermetically sealed containers. The causes of these various diseases will be explained in the talks which will oe , made by experts of the depart- ment's bureau of animal Industry. The Iowa State Agricultural college will " have an exhibit in charge of Prof. P. G. Holden. At a great expense I and . only after numerous delays in the negotiations , Mr. Morton has finally secured the Bontoc Igorrote Village for the fair. Sixty : ; Indians from the wilds of Lu- , . . . . - con : , in the Philippine archipelago , .a live in this village , which was brought to this country for exhibition at the St. ; Louis world's fair. For the last two years the village has been at Dreamland Park , Coney , Island , and next month it will be transplanted to the Seattle exposition , from which place the villages will be deported , never again to be allowed to exhibit in the United States. On their way to ' Seattle : the villagers will be exhibited at only two places-the Minnesota state fair and the Interstate Fair. The leading band at the fair will he the world famous organization of Liberati. ! However , Reed's Fourth Regiment band will play ] every day and no doubt there will be some old admirers who will prefer the popular music of this well . kn wn local band. . For those \ \vho attend the fair chief- . to sec the races , the Interstate Fair .his year will be a most inviting place. The purses are so large that they have attracted owners from everywhere. Already more stalls are engaged than have ever been before. The star rac- ing event will be on Tuesday , Sep- mber : 21 , between Dan Patch , 1:55 , " ' king of pacers , and Minor Heir ; \ 1:59 : % , one mile for the world's rec ord. ord.All All railroads have granted reduced rates to Sioux City for the entire week and special trains will be put oa I accommodate the rush of people , ' . . . . w - - r : ' . . - " . - , , : - , _ = : : ' " ' : ( _ : " .i. , . . " , ' : 'r ; : ; ; ' i ; ' : : . : _ ; " : . - ' . - - , 3K . + * - f 4 I _