The Norfolk weekly news-journal. (Norfolk, Neb.) 1900-19??, November 26, 1909, Page 8, Image 8

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    8 THE NORFOLK WEEKLY NEWS-JOURNAL FRIDAY NOVEMBER 26 l',09
Woman Shoots at Cab Driver.
lidnn Inghatn , proprietor of an III
fumed ronort Iti the oiiHtorti purl of
the city and notorious HH tlio result of
n number of drainatlt : Incident's in
which ulio litiH figured during tlio pant
two yi > nrn , took n shot lit George Fox ,
a luu'k driver , last night as tlio result
of an nil round brawl. Tlio bullet
missed Fox but wounded one of his
hack horses In the hock of a hind leg.
Thu Inglmm woman , together with
Delia Adanm and Tlinlnm WockH , two
Ininntos of her place , were arrested
and County Attorney James Nichols
of Madison Hont for to prosecute them.
Kox charges "assault with Intent to
do great bodily harm. " The complaint
was Illod In .lustlco Klsoloy's court.
Constable John Fly mi made the ar
rests.
Kox Is said to have been the benror
of a letter addressed to Delia Adams
who , after It was delivered , refused to
pay the 25 cents charges to Fox. In
the wrangle which ensued Tholnm
Weeks Is said to have Interfered ,
whuroltpon Kox kicked her , she In
turn hitting him on the head with n
"boor bottle. In the meantime Delia
got busy and struck Fox In the fnco
with n cuspidor , driving Fox from the
'house ' Into the street , whore ho became
n target for Edna Ingham , who Is al
leged to have taken n shot at him
with n revolver. Her aim being poor ,
one of the horses proved n victim.
Edna IiiRham , at whoso place the
shooting occurred , was n principal wit
ness In the killing of Frank Jnrinor by
Herman Ilocho , It having been at her
'
house that that trncedy took place.
After that she was said to have found
tmsls for believing that she had In
herited a fortune In England. Later
she married and loft town , but recent
ly she returned.
It Is said the Inghtun woman loaned
Fox the money with which to buy his
hack. I
It Is rumored that the Inmates of
two other houses will bo arrested soon
as the result of a Norfolk man having
been "touched" there for $85 two days
ago.
Bail Allowed for Thornberg. !
Neligh , Neb. . Nov. 23. Special to
The News : Although charged with
murder in the llrst degree. F. M.
Thornberg was admitted to bail yesterday -
torday afternoon by District Judge
Welch In henrlng the habeas corpus
proceedings instituted in the district
court a short time ago for his release.
Thornberg has been confined In the
county jail since the killing of his
neighbor , A. G. Rake y. The amount
of ball wns fixed at $7,500. According
to the attorneys Interestdd In the case
It Is expected that the prisoner will
bo released in n couple of dnys. The | i
'trial ' Is set for December 20 In the district -
trict court of Antelope county. It was
,
at first thought that the cnso would j
not be rendy for trinl at the coming
term of court , but It is reported by
those interested that there will be no
delay when the cnso is called on the
above dato.
Another Snow Storm.
Another heavy snow , totalling two
Inches in Norfolk , covered northern
Nebraska and southern South Dakota
Monday morning. The snow had fal
len unexpectedly In the night. It was
the second heavy snow within a week
and brought the snowfall for Novem
ber to an unusual point. [ |
The snow fell evenly , without wind. '
and covered the ground like a blanket.
The mercury In Norfolk during the day '
cot up as high as 30.
OPEN DOOR' STILL OPEN.
Chinese-Japanese Treaties Found to
be Not Vlolatlve.
Washington , Nov. 22. The recent
treaties entered Into by China and
Japan as to the operation of coal \
mines along the South Manchurlan ;
railway and the Antung-Mukden rail
way do not create monopolies , and I
hence are not violations of the "open i
door" or the "equal opportunities"
principles , to the observance of which i
nil of the leading powers are pledged.
This Is the conclusion reached by the s
state department after a long and careful -
ful investigation of the questions In
volved. The department issued the
following official statement :
"In view of the widespread publici
ty of the statement that the recent
Chinese-Japanese agreement relating
to Manchuria created for Chinese and
Japanese subjects a monopoly to carry
on mining operations along the South
Manchurian railway and Antung-Muk :
den railway , which would exclude
Americans from an extensive Held of
Industrial enterprise , inquiry has been
made of the two signatory powers and
official assurance has been received
from each to the effect that no such
exclusive claim to mining rights was
Intended by the agreement ; and that ' ,
If minerals are found by Americans
and others within the designated ter
ritories , no objection will be made
to their working mines under conces j.
sions granted by China the whole
. scope and purpose of the agreement
being that any operation by Chinese
and Japanese subjects of the mines
within the territory mentioned should
bo joint as between themselves. "
Secretary Knox has reached a con
clusion commended in diplomatic cir
cles as fair and statesmanlike , and
as of great importance In view of the
"explosive" possibilities of the situa
tion.
tion.Whether
Whether tnero are otnor provisions
of the treaties which the state de
partment is considering , possibly ini 1-
mical to American Interests , the de
partment Is non-committal. Dut from
the fact that the provision as to
the operation of the mines was re
garded as possibly containing the best
grounds for complaint , It seems ren-
sonablo to believe that othei features >
of the treaties will not for the present
at be brought In question.
Says It' * Fake Townslte Plot.
That the Northwestern railroad has
not ( Hod any notice with the secretary
of state of South Dakota of a pro
posed plan to extend Its line from
Dallas , and that the report sent out
from I'lorro recently published In ihU
paper as well as those of Omaha and
Sioux City , was n fake schema whoso
motive wns the boosting of some town- ,
silo enterprise , Is the declaration of
W. H. I'lne , n Honestool real estate
limn , who passed through Norfolk yes-
tnrday and who had n letter from
the assistant secretary of state of
South Dakota to provo his assertion.
Mr. Pine wrote to the state secre
tary to ask about the published report
and to ask about the "law" compell
ing railroads In Dakota to fllo an
nouncement In ndvnnco of building.
Ho Is Informed from the secretary of
state's otllco that there Is no such
law In South Dakota. Following Is
the letter ho received :
' State of South Dakota , Department
of State , Pierre , S. D. , Nov. 17. W.
H. Pine , Iloncsteol , 3. D. , Dear Sir ;
Replying to yours of the 13 lust. , will
say there Is no such law In this state
as referred to In your letter , namely
requiring railroads to file papers six
months In ndvnnco of building of any
railroad contemplated to bo built.
Very respectfully ,
R A. Platts ,
Assistant Secretary.
Golden Wedding at Lindsay.
Lindsay , Neb. , Nov. 24. Special to
The News : Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand
Hlttner , living about sevent miles east
of here , celebrated their golden wed
ding yesterday , first attending n solemn -
emn high mass at the Catholic church
in Cornlea , Father Madam saying
the mass. A reception wns held at
their homo , relatives and n few Invited
guests wishing the aged couple many
more anniversaries. Mr. and Mrs.
HHtnor were married In Austria fifty
years ago. In 1877 they came to
Amerlcn buying a piece of railroad
land near Cornlea ; Columbus , nbout
thirty miles awny , was their closest
railroad stntlon. They have lived on
the same farm ever since , going
through all the hardships to prosperity
when now their land Is worth $125
per acre. They have seven children ,
thirty-four i grand children , three great
giandchlldron alive ; three of their
children i arc dead two dying In Aus
tria i and one here. The children were
all i present. Theodore , Alfred , Conrad
and i Louis all live In this neighbor
hood ; : Fred in Greely county ; Frank
In York and Mrs. John Fry in Peters
burg. ]
burg.Math
Math Hcmmer of Cornlea and Miss
Katie Korth were married at the
Catholic ( church here.
Lindsay has a now restaurant , mak
ing three for this place.
John Englcbert bought the livery
stock formerly owned by A. M.
Werdner.
The Storz Brewing company of
Omaha has commenced work on a new
store house hero In Lindsay.
Firemen Make It a Success.
Firemen today estimate that over
$275 was cleared at their fair , which
was hold at the skating rink last night.
This nmount is clear above expenses ,
and today the firemen are jubilant over
the success they made of their celebra
tion. Many people are richer by a
ton of coal , n sack of flour , and even
a town lot , which were auctioned off
under the supervision of Julius Haase
and William Hauptli. The lot Is lo
cated at the Junction and N. A. Rain-
bolt , the dondr of this property , val
ues It as worth at least $50. Ben Ska-
lowsky was the lucky bidder for this
property , which went at $21.
The raffle wheel , which was operat
ed by Jess Beemer , wns nn attraction
all by Itself , and many articles were
quickly disposed of and the lucky num.-
ber always drew a handsome prize.
Asa K. Leonard drew a fine Edison
phonograph , A. W. Flnkhouse a fine
chair. Others have orders for hair
cuts , shaves , merchandise , photo-
graphs , Ice coupons and the Thanks-
giving dinner of many others was also
furnished by the spinning wheel. H.
Boomer's lunch stand did a rushing
business. The cane rack also was an
nttrnctlon , but the fish pond , operated
by John Naper and A. E./Amerlne , was
a feature In these attractions , mnny
casting for a prize and none going
1 awny disappointed , the fish always be
lng solidly cnught by the'hooks ,
(
The central attraction of the free
shows was Hans In his lightning oil
sketches , which were sold at remark-
ably low prices. The Norfolk quartet
did n turn and were much applauded.
The moving pictures furnished by E.
F. Huso and the Crystal theater were
much appreciated.
The attendance was at mnny times
during the night far beyond the capac-
ity of the rink , and everyone wont
nway well satisfied with the entertain-
ment furnished them by the Norfolk
fire lighters , who arranged the sue-
' cessful fair In less than a week's time.
As Viewed at Fairfax.
Fnlrfnx , S. D. , Nov. 24. Speclnl to
The News : Something unusual and
somewhat annoying to at least some
, of the'Gregory public officials was the
'
nrrest on last Thursday of the mayor
d'of Bonesteel , A. W. Llntccum , on a
j charge o' larceny , the charges growing
iout of the circumstance of the chief
ref police taking up n stray cow on the
streets of Bonesteel , which for lack
of "pound" facilities wns sent by Mr.
Llntecum to his ranch a few miles
out of the city , sometlmo during the
summer or fall. The case vas brought
3before County Judge Davis on n
1change of venue and was dismissed.
It Is quite probable that "spite-work"
1 at the bottom of the matter , as It
seems that Bonesteel Is suffering from
othat Incurable malady "factionalism"
each division of which Is endeavoring
to "outclass" the other.
This Is the second "cow case" In
which the popular chief oxecutlvo of
the city has been Interested In lately ,
as In the other case ho seemed to hold
the losing hand , that case being do
elded against him.
r TAKE ONE
Sale Opens WRECK The Sale is at the
Old Western Union
2ndWRECK Telegraph office
one door east of the
Dec. 2nd Schelley building
.
,
Norfolk Neb.
BY THE WRECK SALE COMPANY
Wortl1 of mon'8' youths' , boys' and children's clothing of the best makes In
the world ; also a complete line of men's furnishings , men's and ladies'
shoes and men's hats were In this wreck , and as the railroad company wanted to sell all in a
bunch wo bought the entire $25,000 stock at our price , and now offer the entire stock at
unheardof prices. We want to bo brief and state what we have to say quickly and to the
point. We ask you to wait , wait , for the biggest , most startling , unmerciful , bonafide sac
rifice sale ever known In nil past history. The entire $25,000 of up-to-date merchandise will
be thrown on the market at the mercy of the public In the most astonishing , rcdlculous sac
rifices of low prices ever set into type and at such powerful reductions that ever met mortal
eyes. This big railroad wreck bargain-giving event will positively last three days only at the
OLD WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH OFFICE - - NORFOLK , NEB.
Days'
Sale
$25.00 Men's
OVERCOATS
Railroad Wreck
price T. . .
Men's Suits
or Overcoats
Men's suits made by Kuppenhelmer's , guar
anteed $20 values , our Wreck sale
price
One big lot of men's suits slightly soiled , but
not much. Have hair cloth padding and
very beautiful patterns , $18.50 7I Q
values , at Wreck Sale /H I )
$12.50 suits , some-worsted Meltons and
cheviots ; only need a little pressing , In
a single nnd double brensted ; your A OC
choice nt T1. 0 0
A bunch of men's overconts which the cars
put a little on the bad order , but they
are good ones Wreeck Snle
price
Tallor-mnde suits from the Corbett System
tnllorlng of New York , were in the wreck ,
but not damaged , actually $35.00 j n no
values nt I U.oO
Kuppenhelmer's men's suits , very Intest up-
to-date pntterns. We have them In all
tastes , $22.50 vnlues Wreck Snlen nn
price O.UQ
Here Is n world benter , rich blnck worsteds ,
Venetians , loose panel black $16.50
values Wreck Sale 7 n
price i ii
The best-on-earth brand. A mixed lot of
worsted suits , the famous Bell System
Perfection , $15 > 00 vnlues Wreck D nn
Snle price U.UU
Men's suits sell the world over for r An
$13.50 Wreck Snle price u'rQ
' In nice up-to-
Men's suits strictly up-to-dnte -
dnto pntterns , $10.50 values R QO
Wreck Sale price U.OO
Notice
200 men's and youth's hlgh-clnss suits ,
t nnd 2 of a kind will bo sold nnd choice
given for $2.50 a suit. These arc actual
$8.00 values or we will refund your money if
not as represented.
Men's Suits
One big lot of slightly damaged $10 n nn
values at A.OO
Railroad fare re
funded on all $25
purchases ; also with
all $10 purchases we
will give you free
meals.
You will see throughout the store- Big Red Tickets with the mark of destruction on
thorn. You will see 23c tickets on $1.00 articles nnd so on throughout the entire store. The
whole place will bo ablaze with the most wonderful bargains. Theio will bo only one place
where bargains will be delivered to the people , and that Is at this sale. We propose to
pour out our own bargains to the people , and wo wish it understood that the closer you
como to this sale the bigger your dollar gets.
This Gigantic Stock of high grade clothing Is to be sold nt this great sale for less than
one-fifth of the manufacturer's cost of production. The entire stock is being marked and
arranged and the store Is closed and will remain closed until our opening , when the entire
stock will be placed on snlo. It's the battle of our lives. The very walls of our city will
shako from center to circumference when our great army of busy clerks commence swing
ing the famous sledge hammers as the doors of this institution swing open to the public.
We will put forth such offerings that , no matter what the weather conditions may bo , you
must and will be hero to get your share. Don't miss it ! There will bo a crowd , but you
will be jostled by good-natured people , nnd you will receive prompt attention.
Men's $2.50 Hats , $1.23 Men's $2.00 Hats , 98c
CLOTHING , GENTS' ' FURNISHIN
SHOES AND HATS
$20.00 Men's
OVERCOATS
Railroad Wreck
price
$17.50 Men's OVER
COATS. This is a
dandy. Railroad
Wreck price
For Three Days , Beginning
THURSDAY , DECEMBER 2d
nnd will continue from day to day with even greater bargains than advertised. We are posi
tively under obligations to close out the entire large stock. Words utterly fail to describe
or do justice to the thousands of irresistablo bargain crashes that will set the people wild
with excitement. Actually twenty-five cents will buy one dollar values , nnd one dollnr will
buy four dollar values. Not a lot of unsalable , unseasonable merchandise , but the cleverest
productions in Amerlcn. Though truely pome suits were slightly damaged , but again case af
ter case were thrown from the cars undamaged. Come , Inspect , compare and consider di
rectly and Impartially. We do not fear your decision. We tell you there never wns any
thing like it. Positively this is not an ordinary sale , but an extraordinary occasion , as we
must positively turn this mountain of merchandise into cash in a hurry.
Little Fellows' Suits
Make the little fellow's heart glad. Wo
have suits for the young ones In every con
ceivable style and quality , straight or
Knickerbocker pants , suits In blues , blacks ,
grey and brown. All new styles for less
than the cost of the raw material.
A big lot of $3.00 grades will go In i M n
the Wreck Sale at . ItO I
$2.50 grade will go 1 I Q
at I I O
$2.00 grade will go
$5.00 grade will go I fl Q
at I.OO
Boys' Knee Pants
Boys' knee pants will go at this great i n
sale at only
Pants Bargains
$2.50 values' 98C
Men's pants , $3.50 values I M n
at I .48
Men's pants , $4.00 values i
at I.
Men's pants , $5.00 values i nn
Muu'a pants , $6.00 values 0 AQ
Men's Corduroy pants , $4.00 values I An
$35.00 Men's OVER.
COATS. This is a
$11.98
snap. Railroad
Wreck price .
Men's Suits
Extra fine qualities in all tastes and up-to-
date $20.00 values 7 neat
at /.ye /
Men's , Ladies' and
Children's Shoes
$2.50 values nO
at UbC
$3.50 values i A n
at I.H-0
$5.00 values I nn
at
Men's Socks
lOc grade r
at OC
20c grade n _
at OC
25c grade
at iOc
Special Sweaters
Men's S2.50 sweaters , Railroad Wreck Q p
Sale price
ien's $1.50 sweaters , Railroad Wreck A On ,
Sale price
Men's Shirts
Men's swell dress shirts $1.00 values QQ
Men's dress shirts with collars , 75c HC-
vnlues at uOC
Men's dress shirts , $1.25 values
The opening day will be a gala day. We wll. look for you and expect you , buy or not.
We want you to come. There will bo excursions on all roads. We advise you to save this
advertisement and bring it with you so there will be no mistake , but that you will get exact
ly the goods as advertised in this document. We guarantee every article as represented.
This will be an opportunity such as never before presented. Therefore , it will pay you to
supply yourself for now and the future.
REMEMBER THE PLACE-DON'T MISS THE PLACE-LOOK FOR RED FLAG SIGN.
The Railroad Wreck Store
IS AT
Old Western Union Telegraph Office
FIRST DOOR EAST 'OF THE SOHELLEY BUILDING.
Days'
Sale
$12.50 Men's
OVERCOATS-
LOOK !
LOOKI
Young Men's
Suits or
/ Overcoats
A big lot of young men's suits , this sea
son's newest models and fabrics. These *
suits wfcro made for one of the largest /r
clothing stores in the country. They arc
regular $17.00 values , go n n C
at . D.bO
Another lot , consisting of worsteds , chev
iots nnd serges In the most up-to-date
patterns. Regular $15.00 values , Mj r
nt . 4. 10
One big lot of young men's suits , nil snap
styles. Ask to see them. They n n n
arc all great $10 values at . U.Du
Youths' Suits and Pants
We have a big variety of all shades and
fabrics that will be sold for less than the
cost of the raw material.
Men's Pants Bargains
One lot of 350 pairs , a good variety of pat
terns. Ask to see them. They are good
ones and a little damaged to go n r
at . OOC
Men's Ties
COc grade n n
at ZOC
$1.00 grade
at
Men's Suspenders
50c grndo i A
at I bC
2Gc grade
at
75c grade nn _
at ZOC
Handerchiefs
15c grade r . . .
at OC
lOc grade n
at O C
The doors will be
open at 8 A. M. sharp
and you will see the
wheels of commerce
turning as you never
\
did before. t ,