Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 14, 1904, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE OMAlIA DAILY DEE; MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, ISO.
COUNCIL BLUFFS.
r&stiaate, Bui Get in Line
JURY LETS TURNER OFF EASY
After Being Oat All Night Etuui ft Ver
dict f lltmlingbtar.
EIGHT, YEARS THE MAXIMUM PENALTY
Hill, ttk't Wmm with Him Tins f
Klltln and Also Indicted, May
Kot Be Tried I" View of
TkU verdict.
occupy the greater part of hia time and
that of hl deputies but wo'ild entail a
financial loss to him, as the mileage he
would receive on each notice will be so
small a part of the expense he would be
put to as to be barely worth consider
ing. Sheriff Bhlnn of Harrison county was In
consultation with County Attorney Kill
pack and other county officers Bwturday
on this question and It Is likely to come
up for some decision at this meeting of
the board. Judge Thornell Is said to have
given his opinion that serving of these no
tices Is special work which the sheriff can
not be required to do as part of his of
ficial duties.
Hirt Schiffoer
( Marx
Hand Tailored
Don
Pjpoc
k 1
That JtOhmt Turner, the nraro who shot
and fatally wounded George Chllwn, presi
dent of the Rollermnker' union of Omaha,
was guilty of manslaughter and not mur
der, waa the vordict of the jury before
which he waa tried In the district court.
Tho verdict was reached yesterday morn
ing at 8 o'clock, the Jury having been out
since 9 o'clock BaturJny night. .The maxl'
mum penalty for manslaughter In this atate
H eight years' Imprisonment 'n tr" P"'
tentlarri . - ' ' ,.
Turner' defense waa that he did not In
tend to 'shoot Chllaon. but attempted to
strike him with the' revolver, and, that the
weapon wns accidentally discharged; fur
ther, that If he did fire thertiot Intention
ally he, would have been juatlfled on the
ground of self-defense.
Chllaon waa shot on a motor car on the
nlnht of July 14 )at while returning from
the Kaglea' carnival in the western part
cf tho otty. The testimony of eye witnesses
ahowed that Chllson waa In a quarrelsome
' mood and started the trouble which ended
In hia being shot by Turner, who, with
a negro companion, Andy II1U. wap occupy
ing a Beat In Tront of Chilson and his
friends. Chllaon, It was shown, left hta
aeat and went to that occupied by Turner
and Hill and started to assault them. Hill,
fearing trouble,' took Turner's revolver
from the ttfTer'a hip pocket, but returned
It to him" when "Climer demanded It. There
waa some discrepancy In the testimony of
the atate' witnesses as to whether Turner
fired the shot while on the car cr while
standing on the ground beside the car. The
wound Indicated that the shot had been
fired at olose range and the contention of
the state waa that Turner, after being
forced off the Car by Chllaon, Jumped" back
on the car and fired the fatal ahot. The
shooting occurred about midnight near the
Illinois Central crossing on Broadway, and
Chllaon died a few hours later at the
Woman's Christian Association hospital
after being operated on by Drs. Macrae,
sr., and V L. Treynor.
Andy Hill, Turner's companion the night
of the shooting, waa indicted with Turner,
: but It Is doubtful if he will be tried this
term, and It Is possible, In view of the
verdict In Turner's case, that the county
. attorney may decide not to try him at all.
Far Went,
Desk roost for rent Be ofBoe, 10 Pri
street.
Call for Charity.
Mrs. J. P. Hex, chairman of the relief
committee, bf the Associated Charities, has
sent out kn appeal for assistance. One
' of the purtfosea of the association, besides
that of maintaining the Creche, Is to fur
nish relief to diatressed famlliea. ?-8uoh a
case Is now demanding the attention of the
association.; It is that of a widow with
six young chifdren. Including an infant of
4 month. "troaT anflfMHef Tfecesnarlea.ar
Weeded fnr'jhi family end rf their present
'distress Is relieved the woman can do work
at home.' 'Thffi, however, is but on case
pf distress, which the association has on its
hand and' the friends of the association
ere asked to lend their assistance. Coal
orders, provisions andl clothing are what
are mostly needed and Mr. Phelps will
b pleased' to send for any and all contrl
'buttons. t Booms and cafe. Ogden hotel
3 Drainage Matter Come Fp.
Tho November session of the Board f
Pounty Supervisors will be convened this
Afternoon. , The first business to come be
Fore the board will be the official canvass
of the vote oast at the general election
last Tuesday. In accordance with th r
jrtilrements of th statute.
A matter likely to receive the attention
ffi the board at this session will be th
rtuestion of serving notice for th Har-rlson-Fottawattamle
county drainage
kjltches. Th question to b determined
Is whether thes notices hav to b served
by the sheriff - as part of his duties or
Whether it Is special work and th notices
shall be served by any person or persons
Selected "by the -county auditor. The num
ber nf notices to be served . will run up
Into the thousands and It Is contended on
behalf of the sheriff that If he was required-to
serve them It would not only
CANKER. SORES
". Obstinate tfises of Canerum Oris raV)
v been telle ve'd ft.r threa or four applica
tions of
50ZODONT
!, LIQUID
i S A comptots euro has been effected within ft
weak from three applications a da. It is a
' wonderful dentifrice. Nothing to equal It,
IT CLEANSES,. HEALS. PRESERVES.
' FORMS; LIQUID, POWDER. PASTtt
WONDERFUL
FORTUNE TELLERS
' WTHEY MAVB ARRIVED.
tT7"
i I
, ssasN4asTftUa-'. iiafc issaWsi
THE DELMAIN SISTERS
They ara palmists,' card readers and
clairvoyants. They give you naaies, dates,
facts. They tell you the things you want
to know without asking you questions.
Test readings lOo
Complete lire reudlngs 36o
Card rtsdlns 6oo
Clairvoyant readings 1.U0
ours-rt a. in. to 10 p. m. Btor room
; 35 South Main Street
,i A few days only.
tatltfactloQ guaranteed.
LEWIS CUTLER
MORTICIAN
28 PEARL ST. Vm
Lady Attendant If Dwilred.
r
DEDICATE HEW MISSION SCHOOL
Westera Part of City Fravlded far y
Her, Henry De I. on a.
Rer. Henry De Long, familiarly known as
"Uncle Henry," the friend of the poor of
this city, especially the children, had the
gratification and pleasure yesterday after
noon of witnessing the formal opening and
dedication of his new mission and Indus
trial school on Avenue F. Mr. De Long
recognises the fact that he is fast ap
proaching the allotted span of life and yes
terday he announced that he expected thla
would probably b his last work la this
direction.
The exercise were attended by th chil
dren and teachera of the Broadway mis
sion and Industrial school, founded and
maintained by Mr. De Long, In the eastern
part of the city. The need of such an In
stitution In the western part of the city
Impressed Itself upon Mr. De Long and
the result is the bulljing dedicated yester
day. The building was well filled when Rev.
Jamea O'May, paator of the Broadway
Methodist church, opened fh'rf exercises
with prayer. In the audience were the
members of the Grand Army poet and
Woman's Relief corps, while Major TV'al
McFadden's fife and drum corps furnished
the music. Rev. Mr. O'May preached the
dedicatory sermon, In which he feelingly
referred t the work accomplished by Mr.
De Long, and short talks were made by
Judge Read, Judge Carson and Jacob 61ms.
K. T. Plumbing Co. ?- .MO. Night, Fttt.
Mea Drink Wood Alcohol.
The police were notified yesterday that
three men were lying helplessly drunk in
Rohrer's park. In th northern part of the
city. Officera were sent t the place and
they found Ed Cosad, George Shivers and
M. C. Coatersen stretched out side by side
In an almost comatose condition. A large
empty battle which had contained wood
alcohol, which was found on the ground
near th men, told th atory. With con
siderable difficulty th men wer gotten
Into the patrol wagon and taken to the
city jail..
Plumblr and Heating Blxby Son.
MINOR BfEJCTIOM.
Davis sells drags.
Leffert's glasses fit.
Btockert sells carpets.
Drs. Woodbury, dentists, Pearl St.
Duncan sells the best school shoes.
Night school at Western low college.
Duncan does th best repairing, 23 Main at
For rent, modern house 723 Blxtk Ayenu
New FR-tur mouldings. C E. Alexander.
M Broadway.
For rent, cottage, 1117 4th street; Inquire
1116 4th street.
Pleasing designs In wall paper work
guaranteed. Borwlck, 111 8. Main.
Th reamlar monthly session of the Li
brary' board Is slated for this evening. ,
MlMninf oik drv cord Wood M cord, deliv
ered. Wm. Welch,' 1 N. Main St. Tel. 123
Horn, to Mr. and Mrs.' C. A. Hamilton.
Thlrty-seveiith street and First avenue, a
aaugnier.
The case against Joe rruiu am unaries
Langdon, charged with highway robbery,
haa been dismissed In police court.
A meeting of the West Council Bluffs
Improvement club will be held this even
ing at Thirty-fifth street and Broadway.
Mrs. F. Elizabeth Nelson of Ames. Ia.,
frand chief of the Rathbone Sisters 01
owa, Is expected to visit the local temple
tbls week.
'Roy Wlker, 72Q Broadway, and Edith
Evans, 25 Avenue C, were reported to
the Boar of Health a suffering from
diphtherias
Thr will be a sDeclal communication
of Star Ompter No. 47, Royal Arch Ma
sons, ton'gnt for wora in me mini
ters degr.
Harry U. Booten of Henderson, la., and
i,.. iyrwr nf Marouetto. Neb., were
married In this city Saturday afternoon
by Justi(f ouren.
Thomas Tender, aged 82 years, died yes
terday at Mercy hospital. He had been a
patient In St. Bernard s and Mercy hos
pitals for thirteen years.
The city council will meet In adjourned
session Tuesday afternoon to act upon the
assessmont schedules for paving recently
completed -by Contractor Wlckham.
The Bee deslrea to correct a mistake made
In the Central Grocery and Meat Market
ad Saturday, which advertlaed pork loins
at 3' cents per pound when It should have
been 6 cents per pound.
Mrs. L. M. Graves has resigned as prin
cipal of the Courtland school In Cutoff. At
the last meeting of the Board f Kduca
tion patrons of the school preferred
charges against Mrs. Gravt and requested
the board to remove her.
The lecture course to be given this win
ter In th high school auditorium under
the auspices of the teachers of the public
schools of th city will open Wednesday
evening with a lecture by Prof. Thomas
H. MacBrlde, head of the department of
botany and- director of the university ex
tension' of the University of Iowa. Hli
address, which will be Illustrated with a
number of atereoptlcon views, will be based
on tils recent trip tnrougn Mew Mexico.
Mrs. RUiatwth Gordon, wife ot John W.
Gordon, ir.17 North Eighth street, died at
a late hour Saturday night, aged 71 years.
Her iHisband and two daughters, Mrs. J.
A. Mill of this city and Mrs. Dorothy
Smothers of Mills. .Neb., and two sons,
J. Ei Webb of this city and Henry S. Wehb
of EadwooL - 8. XJ., survive ner. th
funeral will be this afternoon at 2:30
o'clock from the residence, and burial will
be In Fairvlew cemetery. Rev F. A. Case,
pastor of the First Baptist church, will
conduct the services.
N Okjeotlaa to Ditch.
ONAWA. Ja., Nov. 13. (Special.) The
"Crane outlet" ditch, which atart in ac
tion 20-12-41, Sherman township, Monona
county, thenc running through Monona
and about thr miles In Harrison county,
emptying Into the railroad ditch along
the line of the old Bioux City Pa
cific railroad, bids fair to be dug without
th uaual amount of litigation that seems
to attend most of the ditch enterprises In
Monona county. There appears to be no
opposition to the work and no unconstitu
tional acta have been perpetrated so far.
Th auditors of Monona and Harrison
countl advertlae tho letting of the con
tracts this week and sealed proposala will
be received until 12 m., December 6, for
th work, which will b let by the Joint
board of the two counties at Onawa on
December T. Th work has bean divided
into sections and contains about 23.000 cubic
yards, and la expected to b of great bene
fit to th land through which It passes.
Riatr f Trala t'haasres.
CRE8TON la., Nov. U.-iSreclal.)-A
rumer Is circulated In railroad circles that
a new time card will be enforced on the
Burlington which will call for the removal
of trains Nos. It and 14. It will also
change the tlm of running for Nos. I
and 1, allowing them two more hour be
tween Chicago and Denver.
Hesksrs (Jet Bi Majority.
CRESTON. Ia., Nov. 13. (Special) The
returns from th Eighth district give Con.
gressman W. P. Hepburn a majority of
13.07s. This is the largest majwuy ever
given him and In som cuntles h ran
ahead i tit atate.Jlcket.
See Our Window
Display of $10 Suits
and Overcoats
CLASSES OF DIPSOMANIACS
low Freptrin g Plans for the Hew Institu
tion for Their Care.
WILL TEST THE NEW DITCH LAW
Supreme Caart .Will Constrae th
' Statnte Before Air Great El
pease Is Incurred lnr
, Its ProvUloas.
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
DES MOINES, Nov. 13. (Special.) Ther
will be two classes of inmates of the Iowa
state institution for dipsomaniacs when it
U opened some time next year, on f
which will hav th same freedom and
chance of departure at all times as the In
mates of the state hospitals, the other
cdnflned behind prison bars at night. This
much has been determined upon by the
atate authorities and it waa necessary to
do so before the plans for the buildings
uculd be made. Th board of centrol haa
located the new building and decided upon
their ferm. The present building owned
by the stat at Knoxvllle, which Is to be
made use of will remain substantially a It
is now. Another large building to b
erected will have prison bars over the win
dows and the Inmates will be confined a
If they were prisoners instead of patients.
Practically all the new arrivals will go
first Into th new building, but If they
prove tractable they will be plaoed with
the trusty class In the more spacious and
comfortable building. Th state will build
one new dormitory and an administration
building and to the rear of this a power
house and machine shop. There will be
no large general enclosur around the
ground and the only reetralnt will be
when the dlpays are aaleep, when they will
bo locked up. The plans now being per
fected call for buildings to cost probably
JlOu.OOO, to be constructed early next spring.
The state has purchased additional ground
and will have a beautiful park in connec
tion with the Institution which adjoins the
city of Knoxvllla
Boom Test TMtrk Law.
It Is learned that efforts aro being made
to get th new Iowa drainage law before
th supreme court at the January term for
determination as to some of its features.
It Is regarded as desirable that the courts
shall establish Its constitutionality before
the countlea have gone to great expense In
preparing for the ditches. Consequently a
case Is to cam from some northwestern
Iowa county under certiorari proceeding,
which will take the case Into court for
quick determination. Although the bill was
one of the most carefully drawn and moat
thoroughly considered of any of the bill
passed in recent years, good lawyers had
their doubt about the ability of the legis
lature to make a law that Would accom
plish the purpose and still be constitu
tional. Ditches and drains have been
planned already under this law' that will
coat millions of dollars If finished and com
pletely change the character of the drain
age In many counties.
Opposed to Charter Cities.
Judge Reed ef th United States dis
trict court for the northern district re
cently decided that the fir cipe lw
of Iowa doea not apply to special char
ter cities. This la brought up again
the question of the great difficulty of
making legislation uniform throughout th
atate so long as there are four or five
special charter cities In the state, and It
has started a movement to have the next
legislature abollvh all these special char
ters. There are no benefits under them
and several cities have abandoned Um
at different times.
Will DlaT lata Monads.
Prof. D. H. J.' Ward of th State uni
versity haa completed arrangements for
making exploration of the big mound on
the shore of Lake Okobojl, where It la
reported remarkable discoveries were mad
by other persons. Th mound Is flfty-flv
feet long and the skeletons of a number
of Indians are known to rest ther. Othr
mounds are In th same vicinity. Th
wnera of the laud hav given their can-
sent to the explorations. Prof. Ward has
been conducting explorations In mounds
on behalf of the State university th past
year and will make an exhaustive report
lasaraae Case Sensation.
In the district court at L:n, Decatur
county. Judge Towner has granted a new
trial In th case of th Stat Insuranc
company against F. A. and J. E. Green
land. The Oieenlands had obtained Judg
ment for $2.TV0 against the company on
account of the Ions of a barn aald to hav
been struck by lightning and th burri ng
of supposedly vsluabl animals. Now th
new (rial la granted on evtlanca showing
thut th barn was burned at th Instance
of on of th Greenland and that the valu
able animal had betn taken out and poor
And Wear a Hart, Schaf fner Ql Marx Overcoat
THEHB IS MONEY IN IT
For every man who buys one, because you get so much for
your dollars by finding the H S, & M. label i it's like finding
clothes money That's what so many of Council Bluffs' best
dressed men have already decided They are the best clothes
for the money on the market perhaps that's why we sell
more each succeeding year 2 X X X C
WE HAVE OVERCOATS FOR MEN OF EVERY
TASTE AND SIZE AND POCKETBOOK X X
7J0 J0.OO J2:50 l5M g7 JO 202
old animals substituted. The case was ap
pealed to the supreme court, but will be
dropped. ,
Lirse lovra Creameries.
According to reports to the state dairy
commissioner, the creamerlea of Iowa are
becoming larger and their number lass.
The number has decreased forty or fifty,
but th butter output is about the same
as last year. Forty pet cent of all the
butter In Iowa Is now made In centralirod
stations or hand separator creameries.
Ther are now J83 creameries using the
hand separator cnam and there are 25,
87 hand separators In use, but the reports
show that the use of these separatore de
crease the butter output per cow and per
patron. There are1 now sixty-five cream
eries that handle cream exclusively. The
average creamery of the atate has 130 pa
trons and WS cowsl ' Of the 730 creameries
In the state reports wer ' obtained from
61S, and these made 62,232,457 pounds of
butter last year, for which they got W,
SM.M3. The average creamery In Iowa
turns out more than 120,000 pounds of but
ter annually, a larger, amount than the
average creamery In any other state.
1 Bxaerlmek j: Station Crap.
, During the past summer the State Agri
cultural college maintained on th county
farm of Marshall .county an experlrr.en'
station for ceftaln crops, and It Is plannc
that thla system of conducting expeii
menta In grains and grasses bi extemlc
generally In, the state. The crops on thi
farm have been gathered the past wee!
and are carefully measured and recorde
by two students sent from the state ex
perlment station at ' Ames. The expert
ment is regarded as successful In ever-,
way and when these sub-stations are !
working order all over the state the valu
will be grett
FORECAST OF THE WEATHEF
Fair Today In Nebraska, Warner it
th East Portion Tomorrow
Fair.
t
WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 Forecast of t r
weather for Monday and Tuesday:
For Nebraska Fair Monday, warmer I
east portion; Tuesday, fair.
For Iowa Fair and warmer Monday :
Tuesday fair.
For Colorado and Wyoming Fair Mon
day and Tuesday.
For South Dakota Fair and warmer
Monday: Tuesday, 1 fair.
For Missouri Fair Monday; Tuesday,
fair and warmer.
Local Record.
OFFICE OF THE W EATHER Bl'REAl"
OMAHA, Nov. 13. Official record of tem
perature and precipitation compared with
the corresponding day of the past three
years: 1S4. 1302. mi.
Maximum temperature.... 42 4t 3' d,
Minimum temperature.... SI It S3 It
Mean temperature 36 40 36 It
Precipitation 00 .1 .18 .0'
Record of temperature and precipitation
at Omaha for tins day and since March 1
1904:
Normal temperature V
Deficiency for the day 2
Total deficiency since March 1 S!
Normal precipitation 03 Inch
Deficiency for the dav l Inch
Precipitation since March 1 24. 19 Inches
Deliuiem-y since Muriu 1 4.60 Inches
Excess fr cor. period. IIXiJ 3. 2o inches
Deficiency for cor. period, 1H02 2.40 Inches
Report from Station at T v. m.
H S3
-2 3
f'U 1
: : o
i ; f
391 421 .00
42! 62 .00
til 5Si .00
44 641 .00
441 521 .00
401 661 .00
34 1 461 .00
40l 56 .00
SSI 40 T
40 441 .00
4o 44i .00
34! 42! .00
401 i .00
621 631 .00
401 4f.l .00
3l 4fi .Oft
2 8 .00
CONDITION OF TH
WEATHER.
Omaha, clear
Valentine, clear
North Platte, clear
Cheyenne, clear
Halt I.11 ke L'lty, clear...
Rapid City, clear
Huron, clear
Willlston, clear
Chlcugo, cloudy
St. Louis, dear
St. Paul, clear
Davenport, cletr
Kansas City, clear
Havre, part cloudy.....
Helena, clear
Bismarck, clear
Galveston, clear
T Indicates trace of precipitation.
I.. A. WEI.BH. Local Forecaster.
Cavatln of Farmer.
LOGAN, la., Nov. 13. (Special.) A farm
er' convention to be held on Tuesday and
Wednesday, November 22 and 23, at Logan,
haa been announce! by the Logan commer
cial society of which Charles F. Luce Is
president; I. N. Berkley, treasurer, and
k Wonderful Midlelni.
If you rd tbls paper you know about Drake'.
Palmetto Wine fur tua SioniRcb. flatulency and
Constipation. We eontluuslly praie it. as hun
dreds of our readers do. Any reader ot this van
have a trial boitle ot Drake's i'aliucito Wine
tree, by sending a Ictier or postal curd 10 Inske
VormulaCoanmny, Drake HuHdliitf, Chicago. HI.
One dusea day of this ionic, laxative Palireito
medicine give luimedlaie relief and often cures
In few days. Drake's rlDieito Wine Is a
Wonderworker for Blood. JLiver and Kidneys.
beveoiy-OT clou i Drug fciores for a lark-o
boul. usual dollar size, but a trial bottle will
be seut Ire and prepaid to tyry rdar tf this
pPr & writs fwr l
COUNCIL BLUFFS. IOWA
J
Elegant Pullman Sleeping Cars,
Reclining Chair Cars, Seats Free
EXCURSION TICKETS
NOW
A handsome World's Fair folder containing complete information,
views of buildings, etc., and map of St. Louis, will be sent free on
request ' -vs
T- F. GODFREY, Pan. and Ticket figh, TOM HUGHES,
S. E. Cor. 15th and Farnam, Omaha. Neb. Traveling Pass. Agent.
H. W. TOWNSEND,
General Passenger and Ticket Agent, "' ST. LOUIS HO.
SEE LOCAL AGENTS FOR FURTHER
"Halliday's Rheumatism Cure
Cures
when
others
fail
K lv. Price, secrctury. At that tlm a
corn Judging contest will be held by P. O.
Holden of the Iowa agricultural college at
Ames. A display of cooking will be In
charge of Mary Reynolds Wallace of
Omaha and I. L. Todd of Atlantic will be
in charge of tlte ex hi bits of poultry.
Mad Caaaty Is Republican.
8TUBOI8, B. V., Nov. 13. (Special.) The
election has come and gone. Meide county
went republican by a Urge mujorlly. The
republicans elected on the county ticket
are as follows: Treasurer, Matt Flavin;
auditor; John fj. Hair, register of deads;
Frank Smith; county Judge., Charles C.
Pulk; state's attorney, Jamea MiNenny;
coroner, J. W. Bracket t; asuaaaor. Bailey
Madison; commissioner, Hoscoe Heave;
representative, Charles Ham; state sena
tor for Mead and tfull eouutiss, 8. Q.
WORLD'
FAIR
ROUTE
ON
SALE.
M'TWW -
Tilts Is not a cur.-sll. It dor but on thing. It drives out urlo aold deposits
from the system, whether the disease appears In the form of rhaumatlam, lum
bago or gout. All of this elasn of dleue ar caused by the presence of uri
acid In the blood, and the deposits of this poison In th muscles and - Joints pro
duces Irritation, sorenss and pain. Halliday's Rheumatism Cur does not cur
la day. but the Improvement Is gradual, and th cur 1 compt.
A cure guaranteed or your money bach
Price 50c
BEATON DRUG CO., ,STH fcl!1 STS AGENTS
Mortimer. Jesse Brown, democrat, wa.
elcctej sheriff.
Hnron ta Help Pierre Celebrate.
HURON, 8. 1)., Nov. 13. (Special.) An
linnienee crowd of citizens of Huron and
Beadle county contemplate attending a
big celebration In Pierre next week, given
because of the result of the lata capital
location campulgn. The fact that more
than IOO.OjO people wers transported to und
from Pierre during the six wcks preceding
the date of election and that not the slight
est accident occurred Is r?awiii for rejoicing.
Delay la f'.saiulnatlons,
BIOl'X KALl.H, S. I'.. Nov. U'.-(Speclal.)
Dr. CJurrett Dropper, president of the
I'nlverslty of Houth Dakota and chulrman
of the state committee of examination for
lb Rhod. scholarship, baa Issued tb
Xopyright 1904 by
Hart Schaffner i Marx
A STORE FOR
MEN WHO WANT
THE BEST
INFORMATION.
s iii4ianiifcWtPs-'r''Jr-'ai
following announcement: "I have received
official nntlco from Dr. Parkin, agent for
the trustees of the Rhode scholarship,
thut the examination fur this scholarship
will be held about the middle of January,
itisteud of the middle of April, a. hereto
fore announced."
Minnehaha Almost I nan Into as.
BIOl'X r'ALI.8, b, D.. Nov. U.-lBpeclul.)
The claim that this (Mlnnehaluu county
is the banner republican oiuity. of Boutu
Dakota Is subst:jr.tlati-d by tlie official
count, which has now been completed by
tho Board of Commissioner at u meeting
In this city. The ofllclul count .hows that
out of a total of 8,017 votes cast in Minne
haha county President Roosevelt received
4.4Ui. a plurality ot 1.4U6 over Parker and, a
majority ot l,Wi over all opposing tlvktt