Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, November 03, 1910, Image 2

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; Valentine Democrat
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I : VALENTINE , NEB.
t
. ; . . Publisher.
I. M. RICE , - - .
. ' -
[ I i I i + . I : FOUR DIE IN WRECK
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_ 6TOCKMEN LOSE THEIR LIVES IN
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COLLISION AT MONTEVIDEO ,
r. MINN.
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MEN ASLEEP IN CAR AT TIME
; ,
. Cattle Train Coming East from Mon-
tana About to Enter Siding When
Hit by Engine-Fire Follows and
Bodies Arc Burned to a Crisp.
B
{ ° Montevideo , Minn. - Four - stockmen
/rom / Montana and South Dakota were
.
killed , two injured so seriously that
.1 there is slight chance for their re
J. covery : , and an engineer and fireman
I badly crippled when section 4 of the
- 'I Chicago , Milwaukee and St. Paul east-
bound passenger . 6 ( j from Butte ,
; ' f Mont , crashed into the rear end of the
, l stock train as it was endeavoring to
t , back on a : siding to let the passenger
, I-I by a mile west of this place. The dead :
! i William B. Hill , Miles City , Mont. ;
} . Thomas Hill , Miles City ; George Lep
.1 er , Hosmer , S. D. , and J. D. Dechter ,
' . 1 ( Greenway , S. D.
! Engineer Parker and Fireman Stick-
, I ler , of the passenger , saw the tail
' ] lights of the stock caboose and jumped
' in time to their lives.
' : save Both were
injured.
1
Six stockmen coming east with the
I train load of cattle were asleep in the
caboose when the passenger bore down
1
j upon it and four were killed outright.
1 Two , George Rahsoldt and William
Downing , managed to crawl through
1
the mass of flaming , twisted steel and
iron , more dead than alive , and were
\1 \
; frightfully burned and injured. They
I are not expected to live. The force of
. the impact shattered the cabbose , de
. . ' railed the two cars of cattle ahead of
, it and toppled the engine of the pas-
\ senger over Sideways across the track
.I .
on top of the wreckage.
. Fire started , and before rescuers
could get at the bodies of the four
i men buried beneath Ih'e mass of flames
they were burned to a crisp. Two cars
of cattle were also burned before the
. I fire department from the city got to
the scene.
NEBRASKA CUTTING AFFRAY.
. -
Robert McGeer , a Valentine Saloon
Man , Stabbed in Abdomen.
Valentine , Neb.-Robert McGeer , a
saloon man of this city was stabbed
in the abdomen Saturday night on
. r : Main Street. A man by the name of
Bill Johnson had been in McGeer's sa
. . . . loon in the afternoon accompanied by :
I i a small boy , and McGeer had askrd
him to take the boy out , as they did
not allow children In the place. John.
son refused and made a great deal of
trouble until he and the boy were put
: out. He then laid for McGeer , and
when the latter came up the street
i about 11 o'clock he stepped out in
, -f front of him and stabbed him in the
. lower part of the abdomen with a
! ; jackknife , inflicting a very bad wound
i and one that caused some trouble in
stopping the flow of blood.
I
i Monon Manager Resigns.
! Chicago. B. E. Taylor , general man
- ager of the Monon ( Chicago , Indian
: apolis and Louisville ) railroad , has re
i signed. His position has been filled by
; A. H. Westphal , who was general su
i perintendent of the Chicago and Alton
i i : I : > ad. .
i Draft Horses Burned.
I Chicago. - One hundred expensive
' I draft horses were killed , a number of
I workmen had narrow escapes and con
, siderable property damage resulted
I when a large steam pipe burst in s !
barn at the Union Stock yards.
+ Lives of Three Ended.
New York. - Af ter making a last plea
+
f to her husband to return , Mrs. Annie
I Davis , of Brooklyn , committed suicide
i , I with her two children , Ellis , 5 years .
- I I old , and Elsie , 3 years old. All were .
: 1 found asphyxiated with gas. -
-I
I Japanese Fishermen Drown.
+ : Victoria , B. C . - One hundred and
; s ! I eleven Japanese fishermen were
; frowned off western Japan October
! 11 , when a storm destroyed a large
; i I fleet of fishering boats.
! !
11 ' ° Fire In Elms Hotel.
J i Kansas CIty.-It is reported that fire
1 i early Sunday destroyed the large Elms
1 ! hotel at Excelsior Springs , Md. No
j : I one was injured , it is said.
I j
. .1 Sioux City Live Stock Market.
M ! Sioux City , Io.-Saturday's quota
, . ! tions on the local live stock market
I follow : Top beeves , $5.50. Top hogs ,
I ' $8.50.
) l - Murderer Gets Life Term.
. I Pawnee , Okla.-Roy Buchanan , a
I
, : barber , who killed J. M. Robinson last
! February because Robinson had kissed
I I Buchanan's sweetheart , was , convicted
i Saturday of murder in the first degree
! and sentenced to a life term In state
t prison.
Robbers Blow a Safe.
Lafayette , Ind. - Robbers broke into
the Wolcott State bank at Wolcott ,
White county , early Friday morning
and blew open the safe , getting . $700
. in silver , and escaped.
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UPRISINGINGREECE
'UNCONFIRMED REPORTS DE.
CLARE REVOLUTION HAS
BROKEN OUT IN EMPIRE.
- -
CABINET STRIFE IS CRISIS
,
Capital , Said to Be Seat of War , Fails
. - to Respond to Inquiries Made From
Paris-Rumor King George Flees
Been' Brewing for More Than Y'-ar. :
,
ParIs.-Unconfirmed advices stated
that a revolution , sweeping the entire
empire , broke out at Athens Thurs
day and that King George and , the
royal family fled for safety.
Efforts to get into telegraphic com
o munication with Athens failed.
The revolution , if it has started , is
an echo of the internal troubles with
the military league one year ago.
There has been much ill feeling at
Athens recently against the national
assembly , culminating in the dissolu
tion of that body last Tuesday. The
assembly was especially elected for
the purpose of undertaking a revision
of the constitution. ,
At the request of King George , M. :
Venezelos , the Cretan leader , formed
a cabinet October 18. The ministry
was not received in a friendly spirit
by the chamber , the members of
which repeatedly absented themselves
when Premier Venezelos attempted to
secure a vote of confidence.
The' premier , discouraged , an-
nounced the resignation of the cab-
inet October 23. King George , how-
ever , refused to accept the resigna-
tion , and Monday the chamber adopt-
ed a vote of confidence in the premier
by a ballot of 208 to 31. .
The premier was not satisfied , fear-
Ing that it was a vote of complaisance
rather than sincere support , and in-
sisted that the assembly be dissolved. .
He had his way and November 28 was
set as the date for the elections for a
new revisionist chamber.
Opposed to the recent assembly was
the ministry , cordially supported by
the king and the populace.
Berlin.-An unconfirmed rumor was
circulated on the Boerse Thursday
that a revolution had broken out at
Athens. The fact that telegrams-of
Inquiry sent to the Grecian capital re
mained unanswered was taken as par
tial confirmation of the truth of the
reports.
. . .
ETHEL CLARE LENEVE FREE
Girl Companion of Dr. Crippen , Sen-
tenced to Death , Acquitted of
Charge as Accessory.
London. - Eth ° l Clare Leneve was
acquitted Tuesday as an accessory
after the fact in the murder of Belle
Elmore by Dr. Hawley H. Crippen.
The trial lasted but three hours. .
It was for love of Miss Leneve that
Dr. H. H. Crippen , now under death
sentence , murdered his wife. The
crown counsel , Richard Muir , failed
to snow that Miss Leneve had knowl-
edge of either the American's inten-
tion or of the crime itself.
No witnesses were called by the de
fense. Immediately upon the conclu-
sion of the speech of Miss Leneve's
attorney , F. E. Smith , Justice Alver-
stone delivered his charge to the jury
and they retired , returning in twenty-
two minutes with a verdict of ac
quittal.
Miss Leneve's slim , girlish figure
was the center of interest as she stood
before the bar and , in a sweet , low
voice , replied to the court's interroga-
tlon as to how she would plead :
"Not guilty , my lord ! "
. 'NATIVES KILL AN AMERICAN
Bands of Manobos Slay Planters in
Mindanao-Troops Rushed
to the Scene.
Manila. - Two bands of Manobo :
tribesmen are devastating the wesv ,
coast of Davo , in southeastern Min-
danao island , and have killed sev-
eral planters , including Earl Gerr , an
American. All available troops were
ordered to the scene today.
Brigadier General Pershing , com-
manding the department of Mindanao ,
lias left his headquarters and Zambo-
anga to command the reinforcements
which are being hurried to Davo.
The Manobos dattos declare their
purpose of expelling all foreigners and
Filipinos from the district.
, DEITZ TO HAVE HIS LIBERTY
Judgo Decides Defender of Cameron
Dam Can Have Temporary Free .
dom on $40,000 Ball.
Hayward : , Wis. - Judge James
Wickham decided that John F. Dietz ,
the famous defender of Cameron
dam , was entitled to his liberty ,
pending his trial for tho murder of Os-
car Harp , if he could secure bonds-
men that could qualify in the sum of
$40,000. Efforts are being made to
get the bondB. The bail of Leslie
'Deitz ' was fixed at $10,000.
To Investigate Seven-Day Work.
New York.-The question of seven-
day labor in continuous processes in
the iron and steel industry will be in-
vestigated by a committee appointed
by ; E. H. Gary , chairman of the United
; ; States Steel corporation , Thursday.
Americanhonor to King.
London.-King George accepted hon-
, orary membership In the Ancient and
IHonorable Artillery company of Mas-
achusetts. A committee of Americans
( notified him of his election Thuri- . ,
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AIRMEN AT ijUEBEC E C
HAWLEY AND POST REACH CA-
NADIAN CITY IN FAIRLY
GOOD SHAPE.
BIG CROWD WELCOMES THEM
Salloonists Tell of Hardships They En-
dured in Struggles Through Forests
and Wilderness - One Was Injured ,
Making Travel Slow.
Quebec , Que.-Looking somewhat
fatigued from the several days' hard
ship succeeding their sensational
flight through space , which won for
them the coveted trophy of the world's
greatest conquerors of the air , Alan R.
Hawley and Augustus Post disem
'
barked from the Quebec & St. JohnI
train in the old historic city of Quebec
Thursday night .
The United States consul was there
to greet them , as well as a number of
enthusiastic citizens who cheered them
lustily.
Their balloon , the America II , is
still at Lake du Banc de Sable , the
township in which they landed. It
is believed that Joseph Pednaud and
Joseph Simard , two trappers who
brought the balloonists in a bark
canoe to St. Ambroise , will go . baclt :
and see what can be done J to get the1
big bag from its cache on the side of
the mountain to the railroad here.
Messrs. Hawley and Post landed
about 46 hours after their departure
from St. Louis. The balloon basket
touched earth at 3:35 the afternoon of
October 19. They probably flew about
1,600 miles , although the direct dis
tance between the two points , on
which the international race Is de
cided , is only 1,355 miles. This would
make their average rate of progress
about 35 miles an hour.
WILSON MAKES MILK RULING
Bars From Agricultural Department
All Lacteal Fluid Not Subjected
to Turberculin Test.
Washington. - An order issued
oy Secretary of Agriculture Wilson
bars from the department and all
its branches milk which has not been
cubjected to the tuberculin test. This
is so important a ruling that all the
departments are expecting to have
'
similar orders issued. This will be
a severe blow to the dealers in milk
who are opposing pasteur and tuber-
culin tests and many of these dealers
have undentaken to attack pasteuriza-
tion before the department of jus-
tice.
ICK POSTAL BANK OFFICES
Trustees Name One Place in Each of
Forty-Eight States to Test
Savings Plan.
. -
Washington. - The board of trustees
af the postal savings bank system has
approved a list of forty-eight second-
class post offices at which the plan
will be given its first trial.
The list Includes one office for each
state and territory. Among them are :
Tekin , Ill. ; Princeton , Ind. ; Decorah ,
la. [ ; Houghton , Mich. ; Bemidji , Minn. ;
Nebraska City , Neb. ; Wahpeton , N.
D. ; Ashtabula , 0. ; Deadwood , S. D. ;
Vlanitowoc , Wis.
Picks Negro for High Post.
Washington. - President Taft , it
was stated , has decided to appoint
a colored man to the highest of-
fice in an executive branch of the
government ever held by a member of
that race.
.
Makes His Employes His He irs.
Mineola , N. Y.-The 1,200 workmen
In his factory are made residuary lega-
tees of the $600,000 estate of Isaac
Remsen , a New York manufacturer : ,
who recently died at his home here.
His will was filed for probate Thurs-
lay.
I
New Count Ordered for Tacoma.
Washington.-Complete re-enumera
tion of the population of Tacoma ,
Wash. , was ordered Thursday by Sec-
retary Nagel as a result of the pro-
tests made by . the _ - , people - . - - - of that city.
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JURY PROBES TREASURY STEAL
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CALLS OVER FIFTY WITNESSES
IN $173,000 CASE.
Removal of U. S. Marshal at Chicago
Bring New Developments in
Mysterious Theft.
Chicago.-It was developed that the
federal grand jury has been for
some time seeking evidence on
which to base new indictments against
certain persons who are believed to
have been accomplices after the fact
with George W. Fitzgerald , the former
paying teller at the Chicago subtreas-
ury. and now under indictment on the
$173,000 = : : robbery of that institution.
More than fifty witnesses have been
called before the grand jury in the
past few days. Many of these were
employes of banking and business
houses supposed to have had dealings
'with Fitzgerald.
Books of the Northern Trust com-
pany are said to have been taken be-
fore the grand jury on the statements
of witnesses that they believed Fitz
gerald had a deposit there.
New evidence which has developed
since the arrest of Fitzgerald also has
been presented before the grand jury ,
and witnesses have been asiced to re
late their accounts of deals with him
as a preliminary to their testimony in
court.
Attorney E. R. Litzinger , who repre- I
sents Fitzgerald , " claims the present
calling of witnesses shows a weakness
in the government's case and an effort
to bolster it up. This is denied by
District Attorney Edwin W. Sims , wht
claims the government had a strong
and conclusive case at the time it re
turned the secret indictment against
Fitzgerald lust February , just before
the statute of limitations expired. .
A new scandal promises to crop out
in connection with the case in ' the
plot to discredit Marshal Eberstein ,
the government's chief investigator ,
who collected much of the evidence
against Fitzgerald. Eberstein has been
superseded as chief investigator for
the Department of Justice by Charles
F. De Woody.
VICTORIA , B. C. FIRE SWEPT
Flames In Business District Destroy
Many Fine Structures-Loss
$1,500,000 to $2,000,000.
Victoria , B. C.-Fire , which started
late Wednesday night and burned with
unabated fury , swept through the heart
of the city's business section , wiping
out several of the finest buildings and
causing a loss estimated at $1,500,000
to $2,000,000. Huge firebrands float-
ed on the high wind , which swept
toward the water front , and it was
with great difficulty that the firemen ,
aided by the militia and the garrison
at Work Point barracks , kept the
flames from sweeping a broad path to
the edge of the water.
Many blazing embers were carried
out over the bay , endangering the
shipping in the harbor.
Among the buildings burned were
the Victoria Times office and the Five
Sisters building , a five-story office
block. The five-story Pemberton build
ing and the Drlard hotel were threat
ened , both were saved. :
Fire Loss Was $15,000,000.
WashIngton.-Six billion board feet
of lumber , valued at about $15-
000,000 , was destroyed In the re
cent forest fires upon the national for-4
ests in Montana and northern Idaho.
The total area burned over in this one
district was put at 1,250,000 acres.
The first rough estimate of the fire
loss in the great district was completed
"
by officials of the government forest
service.
Boy Bites Cartridge ; Dies.
Nyack , N. Y.-Joseph De Bonti , aii
schoolboy of Haverstraw
eight-year-old ,
Thursday put a cartridge in his mouth
and began biting on it. The cartridge
exploded and the boy fell dead , the
bullet having gone upward through
the brain.
Aviator Is Killed In Fall. !
Rome , Italy. - Lieutenant SagliettI
fell with a military biplane in which
he was maneuvering Thursday and'
was instantly killed. The machine was ;
wrecker1
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, STRAUSS WISHES \ I TO RETIRE
.AMBASSADOR TO TURKEY ANX
IOUS TO LEAVE SERVICE.
United States and Ottoman Govern-
ments Arc Without Single Diplo-
matic Hitch.
Washington.-Believing he has ac
complished his mission , Oscar S.
Strauss , the American ambassador
to Turkey , is desirous of retiring from
the diplomatic field and return to the
United States permanently.
Mr. Strauss saw the president and
reported that all the matters In dis
pute between Turkey and the United
States which he had been delegated
to adjust have been satisfactorily dis-
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Oscar S. Strauss.
posed of , leaving the two nations for
the first time in many years without
a single diplomatic hitch between
them.
Because of this state of affairs and
for the reason that his acceptance of
the Turkish ambassadorship was
based on the representation that his
services were needed to restore har-
mony between the two governments ,
Mr. Strauss feels that his mission has
been accomplished and there is no
further reason for him to expatriate
himself. He has not resigned his post
and If the president Insists upon it
Mr. : Strauss will return to Constanti-
nople at the end of his sixty days'
leave of absence.
RUIN WROUGHT BY CYCLONE
Believed 100 Lives Lost in Storm ,
Tidal Wave and Volcanic Erup-
tion in Southern Italy.
Rome.-The extent of the havoc
wrought Monday : by the strange ele
mental combination of cyclone , tidal
wave and volcanic eruption on the
slopes of Vesuvius and on the island
of Ischia , has not yet been definitely
determined , owing to the interruption
of communication. .
One hundred persons are said to
have been killed. The monetary loss
will probably be great.
The disaster appears to have come
in the form of a cyclone , having three
centers , the first over the island of
Ischia , the second over the town of
Torre del Greco on the east coast of
the Bay of Naples , and the third
sweeping the gulf of Salerno.
Accompanying the cyclone were a'
cloudburst , a tidal wave and violent
eruptions from Mount : Vesuvius and
from a crater suddenly opened on the
summit of the long extinct * Mount
Epomeo on the island of Ischia.
Many houses collapsed in this city ,
due to the subsidence of the surface
of the earth during the recent vol
canic eruptions , and thirty feet of
mud covers ma/iy of the roads in the
outlying districts.
The inhabitants fled to the higher
parts of the island , and those who
escaped the rush of water are report-
ed to be suffering from hunger and ex
posure. The Italian minister of the
Interior has been appealed to for relief
measures.
Ischia Is an island almost directly
west of the city of Naples in the Med-
iterranean sea. The storm which
caused the wave has broken communi-
cation and details are lacking.
It is reported that shipping was
damaged and many boats lost. Prop-
erty damage in Casainicciola was
heavy.
HAITIEN GUNBOAT BLOWN UP
Seventy Die When the Liberte Is
Wrecked at Sea-Twenty Per-
sons Are Saved. .
Port au Prince , Haiti. - The Haitien
gunboat Liberte has been lost at sea
off Port de Paix , following an explo-
sion on board. It is estimated 70
persons were killed or drowned. Twen-
ty others were rescued. News of the
accident was received here Wednes-
day.
day.The Liberte sailed from this port
last Monday , having on board 90 per-
sons. Among the 70 who were lost
were ten Haitien genenals.
Details are lacking , the only definite
Information being as to the loss of
life and the fac , that an explosion oc.
curred.
Alaska Delegate Is Re-Elected.
Juneau , Alaska.-The official count
of the votes cast in the election held
last August to choose a delegate to
congress was completed Wednesday
and shows that James Wickersham
was re-elected.
La Follette Returns Home.
Rochester , Minn.-AccompanIed by
Mrs. La Follette and feeling fine , Sen
ator Robert M. La Follette went home
:
Wednesday to Madison from the Mayo
hospital , where he recently underwent
an operation. . - ,
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Will Come Up Thursday.
the railway com :
The case involving
mission's order permitting the Omaha . ,
Stockyards company to increase it3
Omaha
switching rates at the South
" railroads to ,
yards and "requiring the
absorb the increased charge , will !
come up for a hearing on the objec
. be-
companies
tions of the railroad
Thursday
fore the commission on
, ef-
to become
next. These rates were
fective October 24 , but the commis-
extension until Novem
sion issued an
make a
might
ber 1 that the railroads
against be
showing on their protest
ing compelled to pay : the increased
charge. The railroads in the past
at _ *
switching charges :
have absorbed . . .
the stockyards , and when the permit
the
granted
to increase rates was
commission incorporated in its order
the
must . This
that the railroads pay.
of
railroads will fight and an array
roads
legal talent representing all the
involved is expected to appearbefore
the commission Thurslay. he.r . , -
roads will question the jurisdiction
of the commission to make such an
order.
In Memory of Mr. Cowgill.
Railway Commission Henry ! : .
Clarke , Jr. , and H. J. Winnett at &
meeting Friday ' adopted the following : -
resolutions : , . . . .
"Whereas , Our friend and associate ,
Honorable William H. CowgilL was ;
called from this life on Sunday , the
16th day of October , nineteen hundred
ten , and
"Whereas , During his two years of
service as a member of this commis
sion , the excellence of his character
became especially well known to those
with whom he was thrown in daily
contact , therefore be it
"Resolved That in the death of
Commissioner Cowgill , we keenly : re
alize that the people of Nebraska have
lost the service of a most capable up- ' '
right and diligent official , and in com
common
mon with his family and friends. we % : a
share a deep personal bereavement.
"Be it further resolved , That this
resolution be spread upon the minutes
of the Nebraska state railway com :
mission and a copy forwarded to tht
family of the deceased. "
Will Take Leave of Absence.
Prof. A. L. Haecker , head of the 1
dairy department at the state univer-
sity farm , has asked for a leave of .
absence ! ! for' ten months apd it ir : p1 : ob-
able that his request will be granted
when the board of regents meets on"
October 27. Mr. Haecker at first con-
sidered resigning , as he desires to
engage in business , but because of " . , . . . j .
the great need of his services at the ' /
farm he was induced to make the re- ; , -
quest for a leave of absence and to ; /
give perhaps one-fifth of his time to
the work which he has had in ' charge
so long. A number of bulletins are
to be prepared for the dairy depart-
ment and Mr. Haecker will ! have r
charge of this work and will aid in
other lines of dairy work as he finds
} I
time to give to the state school.
Three Guardsmen Released.
The general court martial of tha
Nebraska national guard called for
November 15 , which is giving'a bad
case of shivers to two or three score
of guardsmen , no longer has any ter- - d
rors for G. M. Boehler , R. L. Liberty
and E. A. Miller of company L. Sec-
ond regiment , of Alma. The charge-
of absence without 1 ° ave and dis r
obedience of orders , preferred by Ad-
jutant General John ' C. Hartigan
against the guardsmen named , has
been withdrawn by the adjutant gen-
eral upon recommendation of the cap.
tain of the company , who reports that
the accused have furnished satisfac-
tory evidence of their " . " '
"inability" to-
ittend the maneuvers at Fort Rilev.
- -
Elect Officers. .
F. L. Haller of Omaha , member oi
the Omaha library board and of the
Nebraska library commission , was .
elected president of the state library
association at its business session re
-
cently. : Other officers elected were
First vice president , Miss Clara Craigr ,
of Lincoln ; second vice president
Mrs. Frank of Kearney ; secretary-
treasurer , Miss : Guess Humphrey
Lincoln.
"Statements" Not on Ballot.
Candidates for the legislature whose ,
names appear on the official ballot
in November will not have any state-
ment No. 1 on the ballot after their
names. Secretary State Junkin
held that the Oregon law , enacted by :
the legislature , applied only to th&
primary election.
Guenther Declines Appointment. '
Governor Shallenberger was in his.
office a short time this forenoon
and :
announced that Chris Guenther of t
Columbus , to whom he had offerecb
the appointment of. railway commis :
sioner , had declined to accept. . -
' s. .
Warning Against Flues. - .
Fire Warden Johnson issued a new : V
bulletin warning people against , th&
dangers liable to result from
the uset . i
of neglected flues , chimneys anJ : ! |
stovepipes that are not spark proof' ;
. and from defective ehimneys.'J *
hJ
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