Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 05, 1904, PART 1, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE OMAHA DAILY HEE: SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 100.
SPEECH BT JOHN MORLEY
British Historian Diliren Oration at Aoni
Ytrury of Carnegie Institute.
INTERNATIONAL JURY AWARDS PRIZE
Pafntlas; "Aeroas the River." by
W. E. Brhoflrld, Win Gold
Medal and Caah Award
Of 1,BOO.
PITTSBURG, Nov. 4. Not since the open
ing of Carnegie Institute ten yearn ago has
greater variety been Inducted Into the ex
ercises of tha annual founders' day than
today, when John Morley, Great Britain's
famous historian and parliament leader,
made the principal address. Edmund
A man-Jean, a dean of the International Art
Jury, spoke In French of the Influence of
American wealth upon art, and Beth Low,
former mayor of New York, delivered an
extemporaneous talk well adapted to the
occasion.
Andrew Carnegie, founder of the Insti
tute, remembered the occasion In an en
couraging letter and the report of the secre
tary, Samuel Itardln Church, Indicated
prosperity In all departments of the Insti
tute. An American artist captured the
first honor In the department of fine arts.
President W. N. Frew Introduced the
Rlfht Honorable John Morley, who came
from England at the solicitation of the
founder, to deliver tha principal address of
the occasion.
Mr. Morley was greeted with prolonged
applause and throughout his address was
frequently Interrupted by expressions of
appreciation.
He opened his address on "The Power of
Congress," by recounting the capture of
Fort Duquesne, the nucleus of the present
city of Pittsburg, by General George
Forbes, accompanied by General Washlng
' ton. Referring to tha vast immigration to
this country, he said:
The persevering absorption and Incorpor
ation of all this ceaseless torrent of hetero-
rreneous elements Into one united, stable,
ndustrlous nnd pacific state Is an achieve
ment that neither the Roman enlplre nor
the Roman church, neither Bysantlne em
pire, nor Russian, nor Charles the Great,
nor Charles V, nor Napoleon, ever rivaled
or approached.
After referring to the growth of English-
speaking peoples, and the probability that
before the end of the century they will
compose four-fifths of the human race, Mr.
Morley touched upon the growth of liberal
Ism, which be considered In many parts of
the world synonymous with progress and
number of political and social revolutions
due to it. He said toleration In religion was
the best fruit of the past four centuries
end much of this was due to America.
He continued:
' Of all the points of social advance In
my country, at least, during the last gen-
ertlon, none Is more marked than the
change In the position of women, in re
spect of rights of property, of education,
of access to new callings.
, After saying "Whether democracy will
make for peace, we all have yet to see,"
he continued:
Bright signs shine on the horizons of
our time. Strenuous efforts are being made
to Improve that body of adopted usages
and rules which we call International law.
. The Impatient may call It slow, but It Is
very real The Hague tribunal opens anew
a door of hopG. Already two of the lesser
states of Kurope have agreed to submit
all disputes of whatever kind that may
arise between them to Its decision. While
all of us In face of the new and extraor
dinary distribution of the forces of race
and nation taking good care meanwhile to
keep our powder dry, let us at least dream
of a day to come when mightier states
will do something to follow that example.
Mr. Morley was followed by Ama Jean
and Mr. Low, after which President Frew
closed the exercises ' by announcing the
awards of the international art Jury as
follow:
First Prize "Across the River," by W.
E. Schofleld, painting; gold medal and
each award of $l,G0o.
Second Prize "A Rehearsal In the
Studio," by Edmund C. Tar bell; silver
medal and cash award of $1,000.
Third Prize "White and Gold." by How
ard G. Cushlng, bronze medal and cast
award of IS00.
Honorable Mention "School's Out," by
H. M. Walcott; "In an Old Gown," by
Martha S. Baker, and "Spring Mood," by
George Bruter.
Rogers, Peel & Go.
Overcoats,
$17.50 to $40
Orpnrrnn
mxasssnsCK
rfi
r i n r.
mill i iiim 1 1 mil in min ii ii in i
Rogers, Peet & Go.
SUITS,
$17.50 to $30
J. F.
J. F.
GOLDBERG & GO'S. WHOLESALE CLOTHING STOGR
GOLDBERG & CD'S. RETAIL CLOTHING STOCK "MI;,;;"""
OR! SALE SATURDAY """,Sa.,
The climax of the greatest clothing cvc?it ever conductcd'in the
west. Tomorrow will be a day of bargain-giving long to be re
membered by the men who share in it. To make tomorrozvs
inducements stronger we offer more bargains and greater values
than ever beore. Remember it is all hijh grade up-to-date fall and winter clothing-
Overcoats
M'KINLEY MONUMENT DESIGN
Meetlas of tha National Association
to Make Final Arrangements
for the Memorial.
bsifeiMi Mm
j 0
Men's $17.50
$18.00, $20
and $22.50
Suits,
$10
IVe give this assurance to every man who needs a ?iew overcoat
or suit and prefers clothing that wears well,
fts ivell and holds its shape: you never had
a better chance to save half your clothes
money clothing made of fine domestic wool
ens, tailored by skilled workmen positively worth $17.50
$18.00, $20.00 and $22.50, at
1
AX
From J. F. Goldberg . Co's.
Chicago Retail Stock
All the $10 and $12.50
Overcoats S
and Suits, fit
From J. F. Goldberg & Co.
N. Y. Wholesale Stock
All the $7.50 and $8.50'
Overcoats 5)50
In Basement at
Children's $2. 50 and $3.50
Knee Pants Suits and
Overcoats
Norfolks, double breasted
Russian etc.,
in the Basement.'.
tAh'i Children's $5, $6, $7
Overcoats
From the F. J. Goldberg
stock, latest and
prettiest styles
on third floor,a
ouag Men's $10
Overcoats H Suits
Single and double
suits, fitted Over
coats etc., from
J. P. Goldberg
stock, at.
JO
Big Shirt Sale Saturday
2,000 povoriinu-nt wool shirts go on sal" Saturday
made expressly for the U. H. govermnent, but refusal by
reason of late delivery. We bought nt auction at about one
fourth real value and offer to Omaha men tomorrow:
Men's $1.25 Wool Shirts at 29c
Gray Wool Shirts warm and made for good
substantial winter wear all sizes every 9 J f
shirt in the lot well made and worth up to fjf J
1.25 each Saturday, your choice
MEN'S WINTER. UNDERWEAR.
A big line of sample underwear bought from two of the
foremost underwear mills in the country all wool-
natural gray, silk and wool lleece under
wear in all sizes the right winter weight
worth 50c to $1.50 at
25c -35c -45c
Men's Mimsing Union Underwear The
comfortable, form-fitting underwear that
will last throughout the winter f.JO . A .50
1 ,0T
and give complete satisfaction-
prices, a suit
Men's Shirts at 49c and 75c
Stylish patterns in negligee
shirts, stripes and figures,
very neat ef- M f J p
fects worth upwr m IP
mrw
I
baited gg tWlt
MX II
Men's Custom Made Skirts
The very latest fall fashion
negligee, stiff and pleat
ed bosoms nov- g f
t7, :i'rnv':.R,t to
to 1.50-at.... 1 fancy-aT....:.... V
BOYS' BUSTER BROWN SWEATERS
We have the exclusive sale of these popular styles made
up in plain and fancy weaves a big variety Q Q to
of bright and pretty colors for little fellows at
Fashionable Fall Hats
Just the latest and smartest style In high-class
head ward is what you can always count on at Bran,
dels a big assortment.
Brandeis Special The Style Leader.
If you wear a Brandeis Special, you are in style all
' right so far as headweitr is concerned it is the
od ly popular priced hat that carries
ail the style of a hat costing twice
as much. We make it a point to
to see that these hats are the latest
style and the best goods ever sold
at.
Up-to-date stiff and soft Cfl SO ST
hats-all the leading 1 J A m f
3.49
John B. Stetson Hat Known the country over
latest fall and winter blocks, at
J. L. BRANDEIS & SONS, BOSTON STORE.
J. L. BRANDEIS & SONS, BOSTON STORE.
J. L. BRANDEIS & SONS, BOSTON STORE.
Contributions are still coming in and
there is still use for them, slnc It is now
planned to raise a fund of IIOOOO for a
monument and park may be instantly
open to the public without the Imposition
of any admission fee.
Proceeding- in this effective maimer and
having the definite assurance of so much
money to spend, the committee m' the as
sociation again went to work In the same
thoroughgoing fashion to attraot to Us
services the best artistic talent nvailable.
There was, of course, 'no occasion to go
outside of this country -for artfcttic skill.
American architects, sculptors, painters
and designers have secured recognition in
the world of art. At the same time, the
competition was thrown open to the entire
world in order to be sure that the best
might be secured wheresoever It should
originate. More than 500 artists resident in
this and other lands asked for tkie speclfl-
Toward the end of this month the boar! ; cations and a very great number of them
of . trustees of the McKlnley National Jle-! went lnto tno Preliminary competdflon last
mortal association will meet In New Yorfc spring.
to decide upon a design for the nationgj L ut of thls competition were ofposen the
monument which Is to be erected in Can- f tcn architects or firms of archltts whose
ton. The charter of the association is per- designs aro to be considered thto month,
cetual. and the coniDletlon of the monu- i Among them are some of the mf.st distin-
permanent endowment In order that the' Company. Error from Lancaster. Affirmed
waiver of his right to compensation there
for and cannot be made so by statute.
13539. State ex rel. Crandall agHlnst
Chicago, Burlington & Qulncy Railway
Rient, as well as Its future, will remain
Under the supervision of the . trusteen.
When the design has been selected, how
ever, . the present work of the trustees
will be practically complete; the rest of
the undertaking will he a purely profer
alonal accomplishment. The preliminaries
except, of course, the final choice from
among the competing architects have u.U
been finished In a' thoroughly American
spirit, one that seems to accord with th
character of William McKinley.
Already the site has been selected and
purchased. The McKlnley monument will
stand in a park of twenty-five acres, domi
nating a wide stretch of typical American
landscape. Above the east branch of the
Nlmlshlllen river, about a mile and a half
out from Canton, rises a bare hill of noblu,
swelling contour, hard by the Westlawn
cemetery, where the body of the president
now 'lies awaiting its final resting place in
the mausoleum. The bigness und sweep
that are almost everywhere the distinguishing-
feature of American topography
especially impress the visitor here as he
htoka off from the summit upon the city
and Its environs.
The spot where the monument will be
erected la about seventy-five feet above the
river. Pelow It extends the smooth boule
vard over which Mrs. McKlnley is driven
every day to her husband's tomb. The site
la also reached by the cars of the Canton
A Akron Street railway a circumstance
that Is characteristically American, for ao
cess to the monument will be easy for ull
Nearly every town In the state is now In
connection with Canton by electric rail,
roads. Perhaps nowhere else In the United
States has so remarkable a network of
trolleys been extended over a large terri
tory. President McKinley's body now lies in a
receiving vault. It Is still guarded, as It
has been guarded ever since his death, by
a company of seldlers; and It is a remark
able tribute to. the remembrance In which
the assassinated president is held that the
tomb Is nearly every day visited by a great
throng.
If the landscape accessories of tho monu
ment are In keeping with the native Ameri
can character, not the less so are the meth
ods by which the necessary funds have
been raised. This la a land of superlatives,
nd the manner In which the large fund of
nearly $iKV,000 has been brought together
certainly merits superlative epithets. It Is
indubitably the largest sum that was ver
raised In so short a time for the erection
ef a memorial. Only three years have
passed stnoe McKinley's death. This 'coun
try has previously had experlenre with
projects fur monuments whieh have seemed
to drag almost luterminably. Thus the
Garfield memorial, which coat 3uu,000, re
quired seven years; the Lincoln monu
ment. ' costing tmoOO. needed thirteen
years; the Grant monument, conting $u0U,
tv tssrsssM tare.
guished this country has produced. The
complete list la as follows: K. P. Casey
and Arthur Dillon, New York; Guy Lowell,
Boston; II. Van Buren MacGonigle, New
i York; A. R. Ross, New York; A. W. Brun
! ner, New York; Cnss Gilbert, New
j York; Wyatt & Noltlng, Claltlmore;
Eitrros & Young, St. Louis; D. H. Burn
i hum, Chicago; Carrere & Hastings, New
York. The designs they have prepared are
to be passed upon by an expert Jury of
award, on which are Walter Coik, a dis
tinguished New York architect: Daniel
Chester French, one of the leading Ameri
can sculptors, and Robert Swain Peabody,
the 'president of the Boston Society of
Architects. Brooklyn Eagle.
SUPREME COURT SYLLABI
The following opinions will be officially
reported:
13040. Pollard against McKenney. Re
manded with instructions. Error from
Nemaha. Sedgwick, J.
A dtcree establishing a constructive
trust should not be limited to a cancella
tion of the conveyance whereby the con
structive trustee acquired title to the land;
the trust should be ascertained and en
forced. V52.V1. Chicago, Burlington & Qulncy
Railway Company against County of Cass.
Apptal from Cass. Affirmed. Oedgwick, J.
1. "A right, question of fart distinctly
put In Usue and directly determined by
a court of competent Jurisdiction as a
ground of recovery, cannot lie disputed In
a subsequent suit between the same par-tie-)
or their privies; and this even though
the eucond suit Is for a different cause of
action." Stale against Broatch, Neb., M N.
VV. hep., lUlti.
2. A cluim for taxes under the assess
ment for one year, Is not the same cause
o( action as a claim for taxes on the
same property under an assessment for
a prior year.
3. If the liability of property to taxa
tion depends unun the existence of a
sperlAc fact, and that fact is necessarily I
determined in one litigation, It cunuot be
controverted by the same parties in a
subsequent litigation.
4. The west half of the railroad bridge
over the Missouri river owned by the com
pany which operates through paatsnger
and freight trains continuously through
different counties of this state to and over
isuiik. bridge and thence through adjoining
stales, Is "a part of the continuous line
of road" within th meaning of suctions S9
and 40 of the revenue act In force- In IM
and Is assessable for taxation by the state
board ami not by local assessors, and a
prior adjudication that such bridge so used
Is not "a part of the continuous line of
road" Is not an adjudication of fart and
will not operate on an tstopnel against the
parties to such prior litigation.
a. The question whether such bridge so
owned ami used Is "a part of the contin.
uuus II. is of road" within the meaning
of said statute, is a question of law, and
not a question of fact upon which an es
toppel can be predicated.
VMiA. Kline against Cass County. Error
from Cass. Former Judgment adhered to.
Ames, C.
1. I'nder the constitution of 186( as well
as that of 175 mere passive acquiescence
by a land owner In the taking of his prop
erty for a public use, unaccompanied by
any condurt Indicative of an emrtnuttve
assent thereto, and not continued for the
statutory period of limit Hons, is not a
Let ton, C,
1. A common carrier of goods is required
to provide facilities for and to receive and
ship goods tendered at Its station on pay
ment or tender of the usual tariff rates,
and has no right to discriminate or favor
one shipper over another In -rates or facil
ities. 2. But this general principle Is subject
to the modification that if the carrier has
furnished itself with cars sufficient to
carry tho freight which may reasonably
be expected to be offered for carriage,
taking Into consideration the fact that
at certain seasons more cars Are needed,
It has exercised due diligence In that re
gard, and where through causes which are
not within Its control It -lannot supply
the cars temporarily mnde necessary by
unusual demand therefor. It Is entitled
to apportion the same in a fair and equit
able manner among its patrons and can
not be compelled to provide one shipper
with cars to the exclusion of others.
3. Under the facts set forth in the
opinion, held, that no unjust discrimina
tion has been proved and that the relator
Is not entitled to the writ of mandamus
prayed for.
13561. Campbell, receiver, against Tracy.
Error from Johnson. Reversed. Letton, C.
The decision In this case Is governed by
the principles announced In Campbell, re
ceiver, against Moyes, Norman and Com
pany, which Is followed. ,
lto72. Eddy against City of Omaha. Ap
peal from Douglas. Remanded with in
structions. Letton, C.
. 1. Where the amount of ari apparent tax
lien not Included In a decree has been de
ducted from the appraised value of the
debtor's interest by the appraisers, and
the purchaser, assuming that the taxes
were valid, takes ndvnntage of the deduc
tion thereof, he will be presumed to hnve
agreed with the Judgment debtor that he
will pay the taxes so deducted, and will
not be heard to deny their validity in an
equitable proceeding seeking to enjoin
their collection.
'i. Where a purchaser of lands which are
subject to an apparent Hen for special as
sessments procures the title to the prem
ises by a conveyance which recites that
they are subject to the specific Hen of the
special assessments, which with Interest
thereon the purchaser assumes and agrees
to pay as a part of the consideration
thereof, he will not be permitted in a 'ourt
of efjulty to set aside the tax as invalid.
3. The provisions of a statute and ordi
nance requiring thirty days' notice to lh
given property owners to designate the mii
terlal which they desire used In repaying
are mandatory and Jurisdictional.
4. Where the charter and the ordlnnnces
of a city require notice to bo given to
property owners for thirty davs to desig
nate material for paving and notice is not
given for the specified time, end the city
relies upon facts tending lo'show a waiver
of the failure to elvn notice. It should
plead the wnlver In Its answer, and no
waiver having been pleaded the facts nre
outside of the Issues In the case.
13D0U. State ex rel Prout against North
western Trust Company. Original. De
murrer sustained. Judgment of ouster.
Sedgwick, J.
1. If the onr"nlntlon snrt Its plan of
doing business Involve receiving from each
of Its members a stated sum at stated
intervals until a specified amount Is re
ceived from such members, nnd Investing
this money In property for the benefit of
Its members, It Is an Installment Invest
ment company within the mesnlm; of Chap
ter 29. Laws of 1903, Compl'ed Statutes,
Chnpter 1H. Sections ?lfi-217 Cnhhey's An
notated Statutes. Sections fi61!l-Ov;n.
2. It la competent for the legislature ti
provide for nuMlcitv of the condition and
business methods of such corporations, and
to make reasonable clisslflontinn of corpor
ations, companies and Individuals for thnt
purpose.
3. The ststnt In n"estnn 1 not in vio
lation of Article H or of Section 1 of Ar
ticle VI of the Cnjtllutlon. nor does It
give the state banking hoard si'ch arbi
trary powers as to be unconstitutional for
that reason.
13flo7. Whestley srnlnst Chnmherliln
Banking House. ppcal from Johnson. Re
versed. Letton. C
ISfill. piatr s gainst State. Error from
York. Affirmed. Barnes, J.
1. When an Information contains two or
more counts charging distinct and seps
rste offense of the same nature, the trial
court may, Ip the exercise of a sound dis
cretion, reoulre the countv attornev to
elect on which count he will relv for a
oonvlctlon either befor the commence
ment of the trl. or after the slate has
rroduced Its evidence In chief, and hefnr
the accused is required to make his de
fense ?. Peeord examined and held that th
defeni'ant's motion to quash, the second
and third count" of the information was
pron-"tlv overruled.
8. Evidence contained In the Mil of ex
ceptions examined and found eufflclent to
resist the demurrer of the defendant
thereto, and his motion to require t
court in direct the Jury to return a verdict
In hl fivor.
4. Held, that the record discloses no re
versible error In receiving and rejecting
evidence.
6. Evidence la relevant which shows
that the uccused has threatened to assault
a wltnessj has endeavored, to prevail ot
him to abscond; has procured his absence;
has endeavored to Induce him-to testify
falsely, or has concealed the whereabouts
of such witness from the prosecution, and
such conduct on the part of an accused
person Is an Incriminating clrcumstnce to
be weighed by the Jury in determining the
question of his guilt.
6. In a prosecution for statutory rape,
frequent acts of improper familiarity be
tween the parties implicated may be re
ceived In evidence to prove their adulterous
disposition toward each other.
7. The trial court may, to a reasonable
extent, permit leading questions to be
propounded, on direct examination, to a
hostile or reluctant witness.
8. Record examined and held, that de
fendant's application for a continuance,
after the prosecutrix had changed her evi
dence, was properly denied.
8. It is within the sound discretion of
the trial court to permit a party, In fur
therance of Justice, to rcoptn his case and
introduce other and further evidence at
any time before the closo of the trial; and
where It is made to appear that there has
been no abuse of discretion, and the sub
stantial rights of the opposite party have
been lu no manner prejudiced by such a
course, error cannot be predicated thereon.
lu. An objection to the appearance of
private counsel to assist the county at
torney In conducting a criminal prosecu
tion, to be available, should be made at
a suitable time and In the proper manner,
and must be supported by at least some
showing that the county attorney did not
request or require any assistance, and the
court had not appointed such counsel for
that purpose.
11. Held, that a general objection to the
appearance of ouch counsel made during
the trial In connection with the examina
tion of a witness and without any showing
to support it was properly overruled.
12. The fact that a single clause of an
Instruction la Incomplete is not sufficient
ground foi a leversal, If, when the whole
paragraph Is read and construed together,
Its meaning Is clear and certain, and It
appears from the record that the Jury
could not have been misled thereby.
13. Evidence reviewed and held, suffi
cient to sustain the verdict.
WOMAN IN CLUB AND CHARITY
Story of Ganymede's Birth.
A professor In a western college, while
giving an examination In mythology In a
country school, called upon a -bright look
ing girl and asked the following question:
"Who was Ganymede?"
Promptly came the answer: "Ganymede
was the son of Olympus and an eagle."
Tho class teacher blushed fur her pupil
and exclaimed: Why, Elizabeth'! Where
did you learn that?"
"Indeed, It says so In the book," replied
the girl.
The professor then asked the girl to find
the place and read the paragraph aloud,
whereupon the class was both astonished
and delighted to learn that Ganymede was
borne to Olympus by an eagle. Llppin
cott's Magazine.
Doing; Londoners Do.
An American Just returned from a visit
to London has a etran.se atcry to tell of
hie compatriots there. "I am li the habit
of hearing them speak with an English
accent after a short sojourn In London,"
he said, "but I was col prepared for tha
trace of German that I nutited In the
heavily rolled and the guttuial emphasis
of many words. Thla new wr.nklc, com
bined with an acquired Eng i.h accent, was
too much for me. On lnquliy I learned
that it was couit Engll ih. The king's ao
cent ho been adopted as the ttyle by ull
those about him and haa been taken up
even by the Americans, who, being In
London, think they rhuuM do what lh
Londoners do." Chicago Chronicle.
At New York Arrived: Mongolian, from
Glasgow; Ctdrlc, from Llveipool. Sull.d:
C'retic, for Uibraltur and Isuplu; LaSuvuiu,
for Havre.
At Genoa Arrived: Republic, from New
York.
At Hamburg Arrived: Deutschland, from
New Yolk.
At London Bulled: Menominee, for New
York.
At yueenstown Sailed: Oceanic, for New
York.
At Liverpool Arrived: Teutonic, from
New York. Sailed: Cymric, for Boston.
At Bremen bulled: Krunkf urt, fr New
York.
At Naples Arrived: Koenlg Albert, from
New Yolk, via ( iibraltitr. for Genua, and
proceeded. Bulled: I'rlns Adelbert, for New
York tMMtoplc, for Boston.
Mrs. Sarah Piatt Decker has called a
meeting of all the officers of the General
Federation, and presidents of all organiza
tions belonging to the federation, to meet
at Chautauqua, N. Y., June 3. This body
is known as the general council, and this
will be Its first meeting held except in
conjunction with the biennials. The pur
pose of the council is for the promotion
of club interests in all lines.
The dowager empress of China has con
tributed 100,000 taels, or about $130,000 to
ward the formation of a Chinese branch
of the Red Cross society. The action of
China In thus becoming at last one of
the signatories of the Geneva convention
is received with satisfaction by philan
thropists and peace societies generally. Tho
Red Cross society is strong in Japan, the
Women's Red Cross society being the
strongest women's organization of that
country.
I the lack of Judgment and to the brutality
I of their methods.
' At a special meeting of the executive
committee of the Institute this afternoon
a committee was appointed to collect evi
dence about the conduct of the police and
to proceed against the officers guilty of
brutality.
BLAMES POLICE FOR TROUBLE
President of Institute of Technology
Issues Statement About Thurs
day Night's Collision.
BOSTON, Nov. 4. In connection with
the scrimmage between policemen and
students of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology last night In which Beveral on
each side were injured. Chairman W. II. H.
Emmons of the Boston police board, this
afternoon stated that an investigation had
been begun to ascertain whether the police
of the students took the Initiative.
President Pritchett of the Institute to
night gave out a statement in which he
said:
The responsibility for this unfortunate in
cident does riot rest with the students, but
with the police and was due mainly to
ATTEMPT AT JAIL, DELIVERY FAILS
Prisoners Had Dug; Tunnel Thirty
Feet to Outer Wall.
SIOUX FALLS, S. D., Nov. 4.-(Special.)
Another attempt at wholesale Jail de
livery in this city was this evening de
tected and frustrated. The leader in the
attempt was J. H. Wilson, a noted forger,
who on September 30 last, together with
a prisoner named Ryan, made his escape
from the county Jail, after striking Jailer
Crooks a violent blow with a piece of gas
pipe. Both men were recaptured and since
thut time every effort has been made to
prevent Blmilar attempts. Shortly before
the supper hour tonight, while Janitor Dow
was cleaning the outside windows of the
Jail building, he heard a scratching. The
officers were Informed and investigation
disclosed a tunnel about thirty feet in
length which had been dug under the Jail
building to the outer wall. Wilson and
those implicated with him, had In some
manner yet a mystery, cut a hole through
a steel and cement floor In the bath room,
running the tunnel from this point. Some
of the dirt had been piled behind objects
In the bathroom, but what was done with
the remainder has not been discovered.
Hud the attempt not been discovered when
it was It Is probable all of the fifteen pris
oners In that part of the county Jail would
have disappeared befort it morrow morning.
Name the Town.
Stranger You seem to have a good deal
of crime in your city. Have you no police
force at all?
Native Yes, we have a good one, but
It's pretty busy superintending wrestling
matches and boxing contests and the like,
you know, and seeing that the law gov
erning such things Is not evaded in an
way. Pittsburg Post
Pennyroyal pills
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EXERCISE YOUR SKIN
keep up its activity, and aid
its natural changes, not by ex
pensive Turkish baths, but by
HAND SAPOLIO, the pnly
soap that liberates the activities
of the pores without working
chemical changes. Costs but a
rifle.
Ml
The people who have to work need all the help they can get
from the nerve tissues of body and brain.
It doesn't matter whether you work with your head or with
your hands, if your work is worth while doing, you require health
and strength to do it.
Ghirordelfi's Ground Chocolate contains all the nutriment in
the cocoa bean, (and cocoa outranks nearly every other food in nourish
ing value). And more than this, it has the strength and flavor of the best
Breakfast Cocoa and thc.mellcwnes3 of sweet cake chocolate together with
a delicious flavor of its own. It being in condensed form is stronger and
more convenient tlaan cake chocolate for beverages as well as baking.
Look for the patented hermetically sealed cans used only by
All others are imitations.
GhirardellL
Made in California vUert if file if doullt that of all other
cocoa tomiined-a proof of iu tupcriority.
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