{ title: 'The Ravena news. (Ravena, N.Y.) 1897-1907, September 29, 1906, Page 6, Image 6', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031158/1906-09-29/ed-1/seq-6/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031158/1906-09-29/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031158/1906-09-29/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031158/1906-09-29/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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ITHEARST NAMED BY -~NURSE CONFESSES- MURDER-! HUGHEfNOMINAlf~ BY-MANY NEGROES KILLED , i\l~~~; 1 ;.~;d:;~g~:,;,;;¥;~:~j OfMOGRATS AT BUFfALO Indian Girl Accuses Herself Over : SARATOGA CONVENTION BY MOB IN ATLANTA' :~~:~gb~:~i~:~~!i~ ~~~~B.~~;~~f2b!·!~.~ Nominated For Governor of New York on First Ballot. BITTER FIGHT IN CONVENTION Suh<•t• -- Lr\ll!i S. Chnnl<\l' Fm· f~h•utt~nnnt .. (io\'('rnor- f'onlt• .. ls I)Nitkd J•'m• IIPUI'SI, and Ut lilll('S l Xdtlnq ol COll\C<IIliotl ll~ ( \ t\\l ha;; 0VPI' hr•~''l \I'nfl\1~f't1 In anv rn•1 ... H•ntlon In t!.e ;o'l<l<al hhtto:·y of t'1ls Stat' 'fhl· fl1nl v :~ 1 1;-o\ oC l1is oJ.po- noUt::i c.ar.1r~ 1:1 Lh .. u·t:nin;::; \\ h' n the d~legatl< n from ~fanhnttan aiHl tho BrQux \\llnt lulfl ca11tus anrl b} a vote of sl~t' ·th: ec> to thll n··sl ( d<>- t<•Jilliuerl to <•lr•rwrt ~11 He,u·st nn•l apply unit r •''· thls gl\iJl[: him the OlltJJ•e !fJ} rlt;:JPg:fitPS Tne nom1natlon \vas made.- on the 11rst ballot. Hoa1·st hnrl 309 vot~s. William Sutze1 1 ~4 llilll .fohn q Iii\ seventeen J The voting In•· (]ni'PrnoJ' he~nn nt 1 45 n m Alhnny Count; ll•d orr \With nina vot•·\ t'nr· Hearst Tummauy rnst nlnet)'·slx vot<>s f()J' Heat·st anti nin•' tOl' Sulzer Kings cast slxt)-nln\ 1otes IOI' Snl?.\r When On<•ncla!l'a Counry had neen :reached on the 1 all call Ilea.rst had ah cady n·c~l 1 ocJ 2 2 9 votes or tlu eo llltJL e than n~cr:,snry for a nomina- tion 'l'lle nnnounrPmc•nt of the Hearst vote was ree,.,ll·e•l wtth a great cheer, whlrh was f]nwkly hushed. howev01', to hear th€ \ otc 011 tho other cand !- dun · At 1.5'1 a m Chairman :'oi'lxoa d~ clal'ed Wlllmm Randolph Ilearst om- dally the cand1dat~ of tile Democ1 a- tr~ patty lor Governor. Lewis Stuyve.nnt Chnnier, or Dutchess, was nominated for Lleu- tenant·Gove• nm· .John S Whalen. of Monroe, was ~hosen unanimously for Secretary of State. Martin H. Glynn, uf Albany, was unanimously chosen for State Con· troller. William Schtnler .Ja~kson, of B•lf· !nlo, was unammously chosen for Attorney-General For State Trensul'er Julius Han· '5er, or Surto1k, wa::> unan1mol!sly cho- sen. Freder1ck W Skene, of Qur>ens. was unanimously chosen for State Engmeer and Sun eyor, comvl~ting tile nominntwns Chairman Lew1s Nixon called the eonveutloa to 01 der at i :; ; p Ill . The hall was packed, eve1·y avaJiahle toot of seating or stand !ng spaeP he- ing occupied All s01·ts of subter· !nges were 1 esorted to IJ: outsiders to get n seat on the J>latform Lewis NlxOJ,l was temporary ami permanent <\hairman. Senator T. }'. G1 ady was the chairman of thl' Com- mittee on Contested Seats Bourke Cockran drew up the platform Tile platfol'm was unanImously adopted The conYentlon drd not meet for business unt1I about 8.30 o'clock p. m , and its early hours were taken up with a debate on throwing out of the ant1-Hear,st dele!!iations On the questwn of subst•tutmg the mlnonty report far that of the ma- Jority a 1 oll call was clema'lded bv Stanchfield Th1s >ote was rec;atcled as a test or the Hea1 st str~ngth. Kings County cast Sixty-nm<> votE'S for the substitutiOn of the mmo11tv report. Th1s showed Senator ~Ic Carren opposed to Hearst. JIInqJhy cast n1nety-fhree votes \No and the motion was lost by a vote of 2 4 4 to H 2 This forecasted the uommatlon of Hearst, and tiler e \1 as n storm of theers. When nominations were called for Wlllfam V. Coole, of Albauv, present- ed the name of W11iiam R Hea1·st Allegany County seconded M1• HParst and Broome County named Congress- man Sulzer, sending George Rames, of Monroe, to the stage to make the nomlnatmg speech, amid cheering. The cheermg for Sulzer routmued tor several mmutes, many of the delegates stanrl•ng on the chairs and calling loudly 'Stiizer\ Thomas M. Osbol'ne, of Cavuga County, one of the orl:;lnntoJs of the Albany conference of anti-Hearst Democrats, took the platform at 12 20 a. m. and placed in nomination .John A. Dlx, of Washington County, a nephew of the late Go~ ernor Dl ,, of New York. Child's Corpse. 1 - the)' cont\Jnt with th11 mere nttacklng I New York R~publlcans 1\ccept Five Whito Woinon Were As· of ciefonsoloss nn<t lnnooent negro~~ 1 In !hell· I(Ol'Y closh·o !o•· 1'0\'onge II POll llulltltl to .Jail at Whit<' l'lnln•. :-; I Candidate by Acclamation. II saultod in One Day. those who hnd bJ•utnlly rl'ttackod \ ,, to SaH' flt•l' l•'•·urn :1 I'\'\ whlto wom~n ln the 111\Bt rnJ•tnlght. I • 'L'hr.)' went about town ~mashing win· slblt• T,•·nchlng, 1 1 1 t 1 e l\ ol ' ' BRUCE GETS SECOND PLACE I NORST RACE_ RIOT_ FOR YEARS I ~~~;\:~~ 1 1 to~ 0 ~,;,~~ 1 b~ ~~~llo';n~~t~n~i OiO\'o'Ct~r. N, Y -\\'hllo the fun. nl ot little \\'llbui' \\'tushtr> WIIS being held In the \\'lnshi[J homo at Co11 lo~ Corne1s .Jonnlo Burch, tho dead, childs , fOUI'teon- )'eiU -old nurse• th1·ow herself acrosa the open caokct nnd cried out \Oh my God' ~annot keci• it I kill()<! him. : ~olsonl'<l \\'11110 · '!'he Sill thon 't~ll til tho Ooo1· In n swoon. 1u the Inotllvl or th~ little ,.,,., tlm Iushed !01 \\Ill d, shn~;klng exc•em· tlons at the nnLullsctous flr:ur<• !Jur In~ t Jt,. ,.~, ltulll~ht Coronel !\IItcholl tool< tho gil I U\1 ll', and on(e outsltle tho house· 1\ d<'tcrtll~ hur'l'ierl 1 hC~I lr) n pltH'(,.l (Jf s~lfN) (\s thet'(l \L' 1 (,' n les of L; nc h hc1' l\ lll hc•1 '\ fr'cHII ~ome o! the )oungcr men amonl': the I maui'IWr• Sho \1 as late1· plac!'d In a C!ll'll.tr;o and hunlod to the \\'hll•t Plains Jnll, the CoJ·onel' l>elns a!i aid 1 to put her lu tile Putnam Count~ in• : stltutlnn 1 J!el h\rt \\'lnshlp, fatheJ' or lllll mui·dcred boy, Is a wcll·to·do ~attlll 1 I raise I. 'l'hi·ec ) en•·s nt;o he employed tho Burrh girl who Is the gJ•eat- gJandcblld o! a !ull·blooded ~lohnwk I Indian. Winshtp's big bm n wnH but ned and othei' myster :ous fires !ollowetl. 1 Au hoUI' after a detective had left 1 the house, the Winship boy was t'ken 1 seriously Ill. He died as ph)'slclan\ w\re wor! .. ng O\'Gr h1m, the doctor~ , giving It as thelr opinion tllnt he had I been killed by either arsenlc 01 strychnme The girl had, in the meantime I !allen in a faint. When she 1 evll·ed she declai'erl silO nnd tho child had been made ill by eating a peach. 1 She was not suspected of the pol!t- onlug, which was !Jellevod t,o have lleen accidental. A.TLANTA NEGROES UETALIATI:. Sqnntl of County Policemen Flr<'d t:po11 From Ambush In Suburbs. Atlanta, Ga.·-Just as the State and city authorities were congratulating themsel vcs that they had secured con· trol or the race rioters, who had ter· rorized this city and caused hal! a dozen or more deaths within a da; or two, tile mobs ran riot again. The trouble began In Pittsburg, the negro settlement In the southern part of the city. 'l'he blacks tnem· selves opened hostilities this time. showing that they have begun to re· tallate on the whites. While a •.quad of county pollconum were riding past an alley near Clark t.:nivcrslty, a negro Institution, they were ftred upon by a party of negroes f1·om nm- !Jush. County Policeman Heard wae killed, three other omcers were wounded nnd one 1s missing. _ d•·Jnlc 1 'J'lJO CllllllOI'ill{.( molls, RWI\Yin(! :'llnl't'l' nn•l llw n•••t of tlw Stnt•• '·lllltln nmJ tlw J.'il·~ Jl<'ll:ll'lmrnt SIH'• thro11gh tho stl'cots, making nttncks ' 'l'h kl't Cho\•n \\'lthout Op;H>~I· ,.,.,.d .. tl In n<'~tr•alnhl\ tlw PNJ• upon stJ•oot cnJ'R, drngg!ng nogroe6 . , \ li'OOI vehicles nncl chasing them Into tlon-l'lntrorr•• Ho•t•omnwnd• He· pi<•- NoltJ'O<'S J•lt•d null Uc· the \.Jim C'IOW\ CJIJartol', had kepi fntm' In l'uhll<' .\IIAh•s, nuHm•d In Hiding, tho clt)' In nn'UPI'OI\1' nil thi'OIIgb tho • . I night, ami the pollee wot·o -.ttorly :-:' nt .~., ;.; ' 1 hr• n·•publlr:m I .\tlanta Cln -.\s an outgl'owth of powe 1 ·Jeijs, The)' were taughe.~ at In l'tnl' t n:,~< ·1f,ou PPI,linarMl t'nal'l~s JYQ ~-·:'al·atc Assaults b)' ncg1oes uprm Lhoii' efforts to make arrests, and cit· 1: lflll'h• <, n~ Xatlnnul fi\J,Ic bnc·a .1hlt\ \\OI•1~'1 Jn Atlanta tho neg1o lr.cns who endonvored to dissuade the \f 1 \\ In \u ,, n< r 1·11 ~Rtl ;.1ll•m, f•Jr ltniii'tl'l\ \l th<• 'it)' we• I o at tnclwd b)' ~~~.)~ 1 <!~ 1 j 1 ~ t ~nJH% 11 ~~~ 11 nud !Joys weJ•LJ 1 (, ''\''\n a:Hl '' 'lomlno: HI~~ J,lnll nluiiatcd mobs 0f whit's anrl from Hovo1tH ns to tho nnmhc1· or ldllorll 'l'h'1 rn tc, t\\ nt1 hltti'IIH \1('10 killed nntl nnd lulnJ•ed vary, of OOIII'SD, hut somo r 1:11 ;.;• n 1111 1 J,': tlllllllldfull) hen ton. have It that at lon~t \oventeen nc· r.;I oc•s wt•ro killed. Othel' J'eportB l'c,;Iu~d \\'\ attu~ked \h~ 1 ' 01 ' 01 ' hn1•e It that not more than ten rntnll·l oun<l The•) WPl'<' pullt>d fiom slle<t ties ocrnl'l'ed. In reality only tour rmm~tllnt••ly ,, \ ,tn•l 11 o;n <:>l'<'l'r publlr plaro bodtos ba1•e hcen found at lo~al un-~ of th~ .-on1 cn· 1he.c> lh•·'· sought reru,;~ In lhell· d~J'tnklng estnbllshments, but It lH Ito~ ~ 21 , t>eu 1 , 11 111 ,. 0 , tlrn th\ 11 ,.\ Hlnl• t'•nnmltt'''' was or- CJ!Ol', nnll b0nt~,>n nml kicked with· Rllld thnt tho n~g1ocs we1·e so t~rrllled DJ• s. B.lluitmuu,Cvlutuhus,Oillo. 'II nF.Il _,. that they cnl'l'ied many ot tho bodies Dour S•r:- ~nnlzc•tl and Tlmoth)' L \\'onrliuff 'l'hc> nttnclts \1£'1!' pnltlcularl)' to tlw sulJUr!Js for hltermant. ~'ully 1 \'\\ 11 /et•t•IIJ/o Hll/}('/'1'1' \\'\ \IllS <1~\t~l\ l'ihllr·m II in place or ox- 1 hr<• In fJncnllii' stJPPt, whl~h Is es- fOllY blacks anti whites lli'e !mown peh•lc u•t!nl.·m·•H \'\' llld lwflllac 1 11! Uonrno1 0<1•·11 1 , cialll' lJ'Pqll\'11\•••1 by n~gl'oes. to have been b11rt. co••II\\\\Wifl, I wa• notulilt• '\ llv '\Y \\ ith n 1 \111Hik dcmono•ration Thn Vfl•p D<'PRI'Iment was called A black face was a rnrlt~· In tl1e buuoc11o1k 1o1 111\8~11 \n•l lw•l•.•wl fo1 l'I<••illcnt Hoo\e' elt, and • lth 1 mt to ~lll'Jilem\nt thP (>!forts of the stroots. Ordlnn1·lly one sees about I WJo 1 18 8 Y 00 1 nn•l, 1 ·,tu•o•\ 11 ~\u\ 1 1 ~~i,\' t 0 11oiTI~ chee1 s frll Tait, Jll\.\ins, 1 1 I ,, 1 tho 1nol ns man'.' n'•gJ•oes as \'hit•s btit the M ncnr Y ' \'•• '\• ·' ' ·' ,., n~ )01 ce 0 condo 01' SllPPI'OSS ), ·' ~ .... \' Pcrurm. i toot<. lour tJotllt 1 1f 0' II umJ Willi Drurc• a till \\'uds\Hll'lh In con!ICf'Uon 1 dill In some Instances JIOII'OJ'Iul stern experience hall Its effect on tho rnnl)lft•Jclv '''\''\ 1 1 hml< I'll''\'''·~ 1\lth th.• Ie<ltal of their soJvlces in 1 tlf'ams ot wate1' !tom the hose negroes ~·111 they remained at their u•onderjut tllfltlldlw and hu1c '\'\\'' rhe admlnl,trntlon of tho nffalt•s o,, hOled mol'c ttllcaclons thrru Jlollce homes. Prnctlcnlly every home in mentl<'ll 11 lo ruy 111eud•, \'~h 11c lcty !\'at ion nntl Slfltt', I he Repub .can 1 1 ALl t 1 ke(J tt servant\ tl1e n• be•t ol:emt•a : u '\ an n nc s \• ~· • . •.·tiJftr 'I .~l•ln·r. St.\to Convention hntl been Oll;[t.li~etl ,. 1J 1 I • 1! c•lion I I f ld t t l'e til 011\11 '\ ' \ ' I ,,ugl o~s ct n m·eiJ c l' , , v;roes 1e ng n rn oven 11 r ., Very leiV ., 1 1 he J!rr\' multiiull• \' wom. th,. rln'' lt~fort• ·~( 11 Jill I ~~~~d h\' n sepn1 ate moh. the strl)ets to reach the places where en who lilll'e hcer> reiJcH•d nt b\\'\ !J\'1\Ic \\'hen St,Jt<> Cnnilllll\11 B~njamln B. ''here \~l't' no Jc:Hlt>rs. The 11 hole the)' wel'e emplo)'ed. d•••n•e or w~nl.nc\\ by l'cllma ~1·cr con· Odell, .Jr • c·n!l('cl - 1 le con1·cnt1on to I hill<;\ \HIS spontaneous \'omt?n In Penchtree street, tile ecnt 11? J:ll'e u tcs!llllotlllll to ''\ 1ca~ ~Y \' Ju· nt 1 ~ ~I P m, the hull was 1 Tlw n«aults on white women rashlonnblc residence part of tho city, the puulle. '\ 011 rl •d \i' '' <lel,'llfil 0 ' and ope•ta- 'lndt Jli'OI'oked the cmutu WCI'c all who have not touched n culinary The1e nrc, ho,,e,·er, 11 lew ,ourn~•lou•. to·. and 111 .. (1111: hii'HliNlS ct I '1C:- I litllillllle nj(\ Jlnlll\ 11 I I 1 • oclf·Mcrlh<lll~ 1\00Jen IVhO \\ill lui lhe~.ikO I , ~ utens 11 yea! s preporec mea s .or of thmr •nlfm·lr ~,. 101 .. uii<><Y r heir .tre.< ic'.lll Un~~ 11 c1 o P'>l tl.ltH or Lincoln, ~fro. P. Al'l'iold was attacked In the the II• families. Th& hotels Wol'e prnc· to ho J>nhli<h. • · iiiC'I\lniP)' an<l H•1os• VPlt. Chall'man I taid of hi?I homo in the westel'll 11art tlcally without servants, and not n ~lro ~lilncr '\ one ot thc•fl In bor (Jolell, In lwhnlf or diP Srnt•' Commit- ,i the rltv at ; o'f'ioi'J{ and esrnped ne~:ro bootblack nor a newsboy was ~\\''';,~. tnr hrr rrstorntwn to hcnlth she '\' · PI~'\\llll?d thP Jwmo or H\Pl'OJen- !11' scr·rumlng fo1· help. 'fhe negro to be seen In the st1·eets. 1\ 1• w1llm:; lhnt the latlvCJ ~llc•ha~l g fJJ•J,r()JI, or Sl'l'a- ''<aped. A suspect was lll'lcstecl nne! Onlr once was tho mob balked, nml 1 A GRATEFUl. wonwn \ 1 the \ 1101 ~ ru•c tn hP tJ?mr>ninlv 'hall'l\lOII of' k I h l I f 11 d tllnt •vns w!lell ono section o• It ll'\a II LETTER TO 1\orl•l shoul•l l\Jo•.v • • n L•n to po 1r\ eac ~ua1 CI'S, o OWP , • - 1 DR HARTMAN i\, A chronic mm· the ron vent lou,_ .\II. ll1 !<\nil f!nlshed f n· n tlll'eatenlng c1 ow d. raiding negro saloons and restaurants I • ~~~ blon~t•t hnck to Ri>(•nl;ln.: ut l. L• P m · n•1d the nsuat I ~11's Chaflln, living n<.>al' the Sol· In Decatur street. A fire alarm was 1 heuiL11 10 nu smull mnttcr. \\'onl• nre ID• 1uutlne resolutions w':rE', adopted. iw 1 ·s' Home, was attnrlted Inn simi· turne,! In and Chlet Jolnm·, recently ,.adequate to cxpro.M compll!te ~rnlltude. Gu 1e1 al Ste\\ a1 t L \\ oadfo1 d was nr mann~• In the aft et·noon•. nominntell for Mayor, came with I 1 s d d 011 lll!ldl? Chairman of the Commlltle an I SeYen similar attacks on white tlu~o engines. In a few minutes he Tbc Daazl ng tan ar • ftl?onlntlnn~ , ~·nmc•n hy negroes iiav0 occ\urred In had streams of water playing, and as The magnificence of Standard Oil After ' se\'lon of one hour ancl 111~ wD~k 111m claso to 1 \tlnnta soon as the water touched the mob it dlvlden!ls makes the average man lwent\·tl\'e mlnutes tlu~ convention I Aftc'l' the mob had finished Ita dissolved. I gasp. In eight-years that company took a rer•·ss until 11 a m rwxt da) \OI'k !t w.<s rllscovcJetl that an lnno- l\lnnlly rising to the situation, the II has paid to Its shareholders f332,• I'pon l casscm~ ling tho rep01 t of I '\nt man had bean done to death. entll'e fire department was called to 000,000, or more than three times tho Co~o1mittec on Crodenllnls was I rwo neg1 oes hnd bean arrested on PI·! or nn<l Decatul' streets, In the ne-, the amount of the par value of Its the fnst ordl'l' ol business usrnclon of being concerned In the gro qual'tet·, and with streams or b II f Next ('am~ the re)lOI't of the Com- ' <ssnult on :Ill'S Al'nold. The womnn wate1· playing in every direction the capital. It Is the popular e e • mittPe on Pe1 manent 01 gnnlzatlon, 1 ·ould not identify elthCJ' of them, but rioters wm·e dispersed, to gather which Is also the probable fact, that which was suh~nlttecl by Judge Eren· ' ale! she thou•ht ono who called him· again nt points out of reach of t~ ... I the creat Rockefeller group acquired ner. 'Jf Kings : .elt .Jack llu;ray was tho rnan. She wnte1·. The department remained o~ I ita ownership of the stock at rela· The rorommondatlon of the com-~ node no charge against Henry Moore, duty all night tlvely small 1l¥ures. These men or• mlttee was that SJ?natal' W. W. Arm- be othCJ' negro. The hulk of the violence took place ganlzed the company, nursed it In strong, of !\lam·oe, should be penna- The office1s started to jnll with In the flist two hours, much or It ld Infancy, and now It has become the nent rhalt man, and the Senator was I 1oth negroes, but. an the wa;t Jaclt thh·ty minutes. . . giantess that plays mother to a big csca1 ted to the chair by Herbert Par· I!Url'aY, who was suspoctec! IJy Mrs. The mob afforded some cunous Sit• brood ot subordinate oil trusts sons and Cong1·essman Sereno Pa)·ne . \motel. escnper!. '!'he oa!rers contln- nations. Jn f10nt of tho postomct lie hP;~\nn to spenk at 11 28 o'clock. 10d with Henry Moor€'. On Marietta 1\lormon missionaries were prencllln8 around the world. Chait man Armstmnp; finished spetLk· 1 treet some one raisetl the cry that bl'otherly love; tess than 100 yard• The recent riots In Southern Rus• lng at 12 06 and was loudly cheered. he offlcel's ha(l Mrs. Arnold's assail· away two negroes w&re killed umlet sla stllled the petroleum Industry The ontlon lasted half a minute. tnt. Almost Instantly a crowd sur- the viaduct. A block further down there and brought a profitable grist The Chairman announced that the •ounclccl the 'Jfficers tool! the negro l\larletta street the Salvation Arm' I to Standard 011. It was the onl7 nPxt OideJ• of business was the re1lort rn<l riddled him. ofhe tragedy was was holding forth: near by a negro eoncern on earth that could supply of the Resolution Co~1m1ttee, ancl ~ ltnessed hy manr people, among wns stabbed to death, two more were all the ),!etroleum required. An in· General Stew a• t L. \oodfor<l was hem children playing in the st1·eet. shot and others were fatally stabbed / ereaseii demand accompanied by the The victims, besides Heard, are County Po!Jceman R. ~'. Jordan and Marshal Buchanan. County Police· man Poole was pursued by the lle· groes, but managed to reach a tele· • phone and notify .Atlanta pollee head- quarters. MHitla and city , ohce were !rome· dlate!y dispatched to the scene. artJ!andecl ns be took the strmd to Govmnor Terrell having placed the or beaten. M 1 bl hi h' 1 d 1 th tead the platfolt.1 It \las appatPnt •ltr Jll'ncticallr under martini law A meeting of prominent cltlzeM 1 lnev ta e g er pr ce ur ng e 1 ft·om tJ.e 1 ea<llng of the platform that here was no genet al resumption next was held at the Piedmont Hotel to 1 past couple of years, bas steadily the RPJ11ihlkans had decided to mnke II:>.\' of negro hunting h)' white mobs, Informally discuss the riots. It was 1 enriched this greatest American l~nosevelt I he leading issue in the ,.lilch, according to tho latest 1•eports, decided that the sltuntion dtd not de· trust, rampalgn Everr 1 efe1·ence to tlw . ·esultetl the dn; hefore m the death mand any further action than the as· While the venerable Croesus who Pres1den:'s name brcught out mol'e • lf twelvC' 11egroes and two whites sembly or the militia. The burden of Is president of the mighty Standard onthul'•ts of enthusiasm ILnd the wounding of fully 100 ne- the maJority of spenkei'S was regret Oil Is reputed to be dodging process The negroes retreated to the woods w!th the militia following. In the encounter which ensued twelve ne- groes were killed, It Is reported, and [our captured. .Tndg\ Job Hedges, of Xe\\\ York. ~roes nn<l half as many whites. that so much inJury would be done lervers his millions In dividends roll wa~ 1 ecop;nlzed at 12 2 7 o'clol'k to rt was 4 o'clock a. m. he fore n sAetnlntmuteantby this outburst of race re· !Into his' colrers and add to his laurels plart' Ill nomlnatinn Chat·Jes E lmmblanr<> of ordPr was restored In lluc;he~. of ;{ew York. be c 1 o. At 2 o'clock Gove1 nor Ter- as the \richest man who ever lived.\ Senatot \\' .r Tully, of Col'ning, a ·ell ordered out nil the State troops -Philadelphia Press. Otllcer Jordan put up a bra\•e fight before being entirely disabled. He lifted Heard's dead body and, using It as a shield, fired from behind it at the member of tho Insurance Investigat- n the city and placed them 1 u charge ROBBERS \\'RECJ{ T\YO B:\NiiS. mg Committee. seconded the nomina- lf Colonel Chlfard Anderson. As I ' blacks, killing three at them. In the City Pollee Court Judge 1 Broyles lnfticted the extreme sentence of tile law on thirteen young white , men charged with inciting to riot, I g!~!ng each thirty days in jail and p'uttlng them under $1000 bonds each. I tlon of Hughes In a br1ef speech lie 1 .oon as Colonel Anderson coulcl get w~s followed bv Speaker .Tamez W. I nta touch with his subordinates he \\ adswoJth, of the Assembly hstr1huted squalls over the city, plac- 1 Senatot Georp;P Raines, of Ontario, ' ng them at strategic points, and l.l I mov~>d that the Secretary of the con- 1 t sh01t while th•e situation was grent- \entwn cast one ballot for Hughes. y improved. The resnlutlon was passed unani- A heavy rain, which began : ~ a 1 mcusl~ and Cha11·mnn Armsti'Ong an- l'clock and continued foi' nearly two 1 nnnncNI that thP Secretary had cast c.1rs, was probabl)' more effective one hal!~! and Hughes \\as the nom- n subduing the mol> ancl sendinv; Its I lne£•. nambers to rover than even the .>res· , STENSLAND D.\.CI\, TO ACCCSE. I As soon a• he eonld get ordet• the> mrP of the State troops 1 , 1 ,--- • f'ha11·man called for 'lomlnntlous for The preseuce of a thousand sol- I .h1•eatcns to E•J•ose Chicago Fmnn• 1 Lleutenaat-Govei nor. He recognized Hers scattered over Atlrnta in squads • cie1·s, Wbo Helped Ruin Bank. I Congi'P£sman Parsons, of :'oi'ew Yo1 k, ·nnp:mg from twelve to fifty, ac~ord- 1 New York City.-Followlug au a-f- \ho offd ed the name of bien tenant- ng to the importance of the location, fectionate meeting between Paul o. Go\·ernor :II Linn Bruce, of Manhat- ~ave the city n mlhtar.' air that It I Stensland, Chicago's self-confessed 1 tan. to sue ;.eed himself 0 1 1as worn ?n no Sahbatll since She•·- ; bani< wrecker and captured fuglt!Ye, 1 On .motwn or Congressman uher- na•1 wast nunderm;; at Its gates back I and his son Theodore th!lre was a I man tne other nominations were n the '60s long nud earnest dls~usslon durtng made in a lump unanimously. All Despite the develovments the ne- whlch the father, who returned here ' the r,resent State otllrials Wel'e re-~ ~roes are still Impudent, and talk of • on the steamship Prinz Adalbert from lnonunated, with the addition of Mar- ·eslstlng. Many of them are arming I Tangier, Morocco, finally convinced tm E Lcwts, of :i.lfomoe County, who fll\; latest report Is that another his favorite son that It would be un- was namPd for the vacancy of the wh1tc woman bas heen assaulted. but I wise to fight extradition and he went ofllre of Controller mch 1s the state of afrnh·s in Atlanta i voluntarily to Chicago, .;.,here he will The Re1mblican Stute ticket is as t11at no definite information IS o!J- shoulder part or the responsibility foliLws :amable. ! tor the $3,000,000 bank loot. I F?r G~VCI'nor-Charles E Hughes, ManY 1 oquests were madP to Gov- 1 Stensland was taken direct to Po· 1 of New 1 ork. . ~rno~ Te1 rell to put the city under lice Headquarters \Where he spent For Llcutenant-Governor-:l<L Lmn martial law. He wrote out such a I the night In a cell.' He admits thefts D1 uce, of Xew York prorlamatwn and showed It to those nggregatln~ UOO,OOO, and hy t•Jrn· . For Ser1etary of State-John F. 1slllng the atder. '':hen the citiens 1 lng State's eYidence against others, 0 B,'·ien. of Clmton. reacl it they •leclnred 1t was not what I whom he says are lmpllcatecL he will, 1 f OJ Controller-Merton E. Lewis, they want?d, ns the o~der gave the I It Is expected, startle Chicago with a of :i.l!om oe. 11111ltla entirely too muco nnthorlt;•. 1 s<:'llsatlon equal to that firat felt by For Attorney-General-Julius M. Tile negroes say they are afrnld to the 22,000 del,N:lltors when the !Jank Mrner of Xew York. ~aJ ry their dead to the local under- l presldent fied. For State Engineer-Henry A Van takers fo.- fear that tile mob will at· His confPsslon acc\l,ses many prom- Alstyne, of Co!umh1a .nck them. Ancd Townsfolks nod Got Awn)' With llrtwcen $2000 and $-!000. Grnnll Rapids, :Mic,ll.-Eight burg·/ Iars, masked and armed, visited White Cloud, a village forty-ftve / 1 miles north of here, and robbetl the Xew:ago County Rank. They at· 1 temllted also to rob the bank of R.l Gannon & Son. The men rode lute tile town on horseback between 12 1 and 1 o'clock a. 111., surrounded the buildmgs containing tile two banks aucl posted guards outside, while lapanese J<jxtortlon. A correspondent gives us an exam· pie of the get-rich-quick process of reasoning as adoptlld by our Japan· ese friends In pursuit of their post· bellum task of raking In tile shekels. The Japanese In question Ia a washerman, and in three weeks he bas raised his price for washing shirts from seven to ten cents.-Ko· rea Dally News. other members of the :;aug worked THE \VAY OUT Inside. • Change of Food Brought Success and The Interior of the Newyago Bank wns completely wrecked by two ex· Happiness. J>loslons The burglars got between $2000 and $1000 in cash. Dynamite was then used to wreck the interim of the Gannon Bank, but while thE thieves were at work the townspeo· pie, awakened by the explosion, gath· erPd In such numbers that the guard! I evidently decided It was not prudent to wait longer. They called out tho man working In the bank before they could gel the safe open, and, covering the cltl· ~ens with their piswls, rode out of town. COX:,ECTICUT REPUBLICANS. Conwntion Xomlnates' Woodruff b) Acclamation For itlle Gol'emol'!lhlp. An ambitious but delicate girl, after falling to go through school on account of nervousness and hysteria, found In Grape-Nuts the only thine that seemed to b ulld her up and fur· ::111~ her the peace of health. \From Infancy,\ she says, \I have not been strong. Being ambitious to learn at any cost I finally got to the High School, but soon had tl) aban· don ::tY studies on account of ne;voua prostration and hysteria. , \My rood did not agree with me, I grew thin and despondent. I cout• not enjoy the simplest social alralr for I suffered con~tantly from nerv· ousness In spite of all sorts of n:edl· cines. At 1.45 the nominatious !or Gov- ernor were rleclar ed closed and the 11ecretary began to call the roll of c:ountles for tlle1r votes , The vote on the nomination : lnent Chicagoans, and much of the For State Treasm e1-J ohn G. Vi\ a!- Two of the negroes killed were I responsibility tor tile immense de· leamelCJ', of Erie tnken to . the country lor bm·lal. licit Is placed upon Cashier Herrlni, ' A tele~ram to Senator Page was Their relatives say they preferred to who Is now under arrest and who /t'eretved f1 om Mr. Hughes, accepting bury them a way from the city, where New Haven, Conn. - Indorsing President Roose·1elt and the reform measures he forced through Con· grass, nnd adopting a platform bnsed mainly for and upon State issues the Republican State Convention b~ acclamation nominated Colonel Rol· !Ins Woodrulf, of New Haven, fol Governor. \This wr- · ·hei condition contln· ued until I was twenty-five, when I became Interested In the letters of those who had cases Uke mine :1nd who were being cured by eating Grape-Nuts. for has been attemptmg to dicker with tile nominatwn, \w ttlwut pledge oth- thPI'e would be no danger, nud It is the State's Attorney by aidlu• the I e1· than to do my duty according to believed that in .this way the negroes Governor was: Haa1·st ...................... ~on Sulzer .•..• , ...•.••.....•.. 124 Dix ....................... 17 1'1llliam Randolph Heal st, son of Senator George Hearst and Mrs. Phoebe A. Hearst, was horn In Snn Francisco on Aprtl 29, 1863. His father was a llllssoul'lan and his mother the daughter of Randolph Walker Apperson, born in Vu·gmia, !rotnl Killed In n Year 9103; Numb~!' Inju!•ed, f!Q,008. Washington, D C.-Acco1 ding to a ~tatemellt issued by th\ Int~rstat(' Commerce Commission, an a;·erage •I twenty-six persons were kille•l ,eacb day and 238 injured dally on ralli'Oads in the United StatPs during the year endmg with .Tune, J 9 0;; Tbe total !lumber killed 11 ns ~ 7r3, file inJured 86,008. prosecution of Stensland. o m• conscience.\ ·~re getting rid of tho?ir dead. Secre- Tbe convention then adjourned tlve ,under 01d1na1r c!Icumstnnces, Cashier Self-Accused Defaulter. ~me die and the meeting of the new they a~ ten times mall~\ so in light of 0 B Stella d hi f tl p :>tale Committee was held immediate- the recent dev.,lopmeuts. , · · r • cas er o 1e eo· ly nftE\rward. Seventeen companies of National pies State Bank,_ of Se~an, Kan., Charles E. Hqghes Is the son of the Guards and a battery of artillery with. deposit~ of $7o,OOO, disappeared Rev Da•·ld C Hughes, a Baptist min· Hnally managed to restore order to ~~~~~~; a~d~~~~d 8 fi:J 0 i he was a de· iste1·, and was horn at Glens Falls, N, the terJ orized city, and peaceful cltl· ------·-· Y .. April 11, 1862. He Is a lawyer zeus, who deplored the worl{ of the in New York City. K111s TbJrd Man In a Yl'ar. Frank Finley and Kenner Kinley were shot and klll(.d In Raleigh Coun· ty, W. Vn., by A L Herman, charged with the murdeJ• of Jerry Davis at Martin, Ky., one year ago Frank Finley was a brother-In-law ot the murderee! man The shooting fol· lowed an attempt to arrest Herman at his home. Infernal Machin<' IJi•<'oV<'I'f'd. An Infernal machine addressed tc .Tacoh H. Sch!ff, a New York City banker, was found In Philadelphia. Tno Wonwn Thrown and J{iiiPd, Mrs. Clata C. Marsh was killed while riding a horge at Oberlin, Ohio. The horse reared and fell on her. l\1 rs Ma1 sh was the companion of Miss Florence Stm-y, a sophomore In Ohe1lin College, who was thrown f1·om he1 horse and killed the day before. P<>asants \\on't Pay Ta:t('S, Owmg to the unanimous and unal- terable refusal or the peasants In the Odessa dlst1·lct in Russia to pay ai'- rears of taxes the local zcmsivo hns been nohllecl that It is impossible to maintain tho schools nnd hospitals, Which must conseqll'ently be closed. The other nominees nre: Sceretar) of State, TheoCore Bodenvein, New London; Controller, Thomas D. Brad street, Thomaston: Trea'surer, Free. man W. Patton, Stafford, Attorney• General, Marcus H. Holcomb, South· ington: Congressmr.n at Large, George L. Lilley, Waterbury, State Begins Ouster Pr()('e!'ding! Against Watei'S·Piercc Concel'll. \I had little faith f\ut procured a box and atter the ftrst dl3h I ex· perlenced a ;,Jccullar satlslled feeling that I had never ;alned from anY ordinary food. I slept and rested 'better that night and In a few days began to grow stronger. \I had a new feeling of peace and restfulness. ;n a few weeks, to my ,great joy, the headaches and nerv· ousness left me and life became bright and hopeful. J resumed mY studies and later taught ten mouths with ease-d course using Grape- Nuts every day, lt Is now four yelillJ since I beg:m to use Grape-Nuta, l am the ,mi~tress of a happy home and the olu weaknesR has never re- turned.\ Name given by Postum Co., Battle C~eek, Mich. ' ''There'<s a reaaon.\ Reatf. tho Itt· tie boolr, \The Road to WeUvllle.'• ln 11k.Jts. p& BABY Found D gence • fourtc! IP.l'I'Ibl< dc11.th, !\o. 421 of Mrs. cr hY ~ by tho Lnlnlns got II. II o! the body Ia lloor, c she ho. about t fore, f 1 mntch nnd am beel'l de the bod last ho Ills st•·• edible • the encl was his would 1 Llttl< swollen him. I gasping Fald hiE head. sunken. gone dv toe he ' 111 the h lnes, T ach fro DOt OCCI pened h aurvlvec longer. Guese 'IBter, t ~ould d• •lny lla1 had tak• On all 1 baby hn too bar• l!ouquer. tie to 1 rate, he low tab up t11e glass WE swallow was a lound nr 10, The to todd 1wept tt bare In placed 1 must ha the blgh had cont empty l DelgbbO! ftour fr< agony ol EUOU! Into tha1 dlnnry c avenu<9 I In two waif-111 from tt !l'welfth -fought him tor to be hao he gnaw With Sll.' sharp lit cloth, nr good de! teething gnawed 1 Small !Jeep OVE that he three ra too Your years olo unlock t !right at The bab' an's hair sixty Yea lng sack the sleer pe,haps Yet-\\h -he had his little and his 1 of a bll'll the deacl Neigh! hearing ly notice was not !\ an1 a~mned VISit. Mrs. 1 Year ago J. Denh and fron the Guu Or.Jl.l!!!i• mother I eare oft ed, as h her Imp. Parents, had died other so Denham home o~ ham ado to,ooo