{ title: 'The Newark gazette. (Newark, N.Y.) 1906-1908, March 18, 1908, Page 1, Image 1', 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/sn88074364/1908-03-18/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074364/1908-03-18/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074364/1908-03-18/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074364/1908-03-18/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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WW''''\-* I'i* '.'-••.'-• \•'• W&& \ v ' ;r: T'. '.\p^ 1 -\ 1 '•••;.-'_-^v'-;^ ^v?7ni^**H*^ \I? *f?- NEWiKM, NEW ¥0RK; WBOTS^Y AFTERNOON, MARGE' 18, 1908. VOLTJME 2? NflMBEB 2 Verdict off Guilty Agamst Four Defendants at Karrisburg, Fleet at MaodaJena Bay-nVerdict- on Cbllirivvopd Fire —S^ina Yields to japan—Thaw's Answer tp His Wife's Suit — ppjest's Slayer Sentenced, Sucessful Air §WR, T'ne jury in the first of the Capitol conspiracy cases to he tried gave a verdict of guilty, as to every one of tat four men who have Seen on trial at Hamsbtug, Ba„ for the last seven wi-.-Ks,, after six hours »<leliberation. The men found guilty are: John H. Sanderson, contractor; William P. Si;>der, former auditor-general; W. L. Jlathues, former stale treasurer, and James ii, Schumake^ former sur pnintendont. of public br.ildln.gs • aad-j-^vife fought fc.ounds. Tlis maximum penalties' for each ... ii-ndant in this case is- two years, imprisonment and ?1,C*0 fine., The four pen were convicted of de- (•.'iding the state in furriis.hing .the r. w Capitol, which cost the state a-out $13.000,0,00 instead Of $.4.000;00u, sei. tynife^. r,ag is » B ft* re-noist- ed„a Chinese warship will flr* a sa. lute. ^ • i ^. ; There isji .genera? feelih* of re- lief ID consequence of thli settlement of the Hwdenfc : Tried to D-stroy H!s Family. fciohel Cole, assistant cashier of the Matual tife 1 company's office at Buf- falo; is in jail; Charges oJ murder and larceny- have-- been brought against Win; . ••' — At. Cole's pietty littl* home in the village of Hamburg, a suburb, his one-year-did son • '• dead and his -wife is ill abed: The evidence fs that Cole •killed his bjiby with chloroform, and tried to kill lt!s' wife ana himself, Neighbors, • roused by the wife's screams, brought a doctor to the house ri*(Tin.the morning. He found the baby deadj the wife frantic and Gole dopey.,^Qfle had turned on the gas in thVhdusL intending, as the au- thorities thjiiL to disguise the fact that he had used chloroform. They think the wife, was wakened by. iha chloroforin. 'audi then Cole lost his nerve' or phanMsd his mind when his for. her, life. Manager Bewley of the Mutual Life, office In Buffalo says he doesn't know how much Cole stole. The attorney says' it is at least $5r0>00.. '• Alia Sentenced to Death. \Is there no appeal?\ These were . T , , the words spoken by Giuseppe Alia figure at which the contract was -jrWhen informed^ by Interpreter Mat- ter that the jjiry at - Denver had found , him guilty of murder in the first decree and fixed siwtence of death, Just' eighteen days *fter firing the shot which, prought death to Fa- ther Francis Leo Heinrichs at the al- tar' in St. Elizabeth's Catholic church, while in, the aptr of administering the holy sacrament,; this, wanderer from Italy, .an alleged! hut riot proven an- archist; heard hife doom, In. the court room hot three v blocks from th e church where he committed his crime and within the sound of the chinies which he said drew him tp that church, Ai^'received the judgment delivered by the jury. The attorney for the defense made a motion for a new trial and was granted five days in which to file'papers. (•-• mated The present case constituted one' if the longest jury trials in the his- •• >• of Pennsylvania courts and it a:!racteil much attention throughout 'ti' country. The prosecution - of , the- alleged. f.,:iU was the outcome Of the politir • i. upheaval in Pennsylvania in 1905 *': -b lesulted in the election of Will- irn. H Berry, a .Democrat, as state t:\.isurpi- in the fall of that year. tiovn threw open the books of the\ £-.atp treasury and showed that the «.-st of building the Capitol was more t!dti thrpe times the amount of the • ••ntract. The case was laid before the attor- • T-: general and indictments were jfnund against fourteen persons. Fleet to Return by Suez Canal. News that the American battleship fv*t i* to make a tpur of the world « thin two months after its arrival a,t Sin Francisco May 5 was flashed by » reless telegraph to the battleships o Admiral Evans' command atTVtag- Mena bay by the government station *•• Point Loma. Admiral Evans, who will relinquish ^\mmand of the fleet during its. stay - San Frttnciseo, and—who- goesrpn '. - retired list in August, was ex- , • ting some official word from W'ash- ;, iin on future movements of the : •', end it was to enable, the depart- - :.t to prepare its program that he • thp mosBace the night of his ar • -.ii i>tf Magdaiena bay that the ships, ud .start on any mission at a day's r ice. ~UH fact that but two-months are •' be allowed between the arrival of •i • fleft at San Francisco and its de- .».;ure for the. Fa r East'indicates th.: no serious repairs are needed by «r. of the vessels and that any stays \.•<t rray be made in drydpeks will be -s^edingly short. The tim.e...for re- pa. rs will be cut down by the excur- -:on of\ the fleet to Piiget gound to s've the people of the'NoFth Pacific •oast an opportunity to see antt ,visit *h. ships which have recently pecu' pi* '1 so much of the world's attention. U -teFbefe>ved-uy navy- officers hen •hat the flpet.will visit France, Ger- many and England Instead of sailing direct from Gibraltar tP New York. A formal invitation from Japan, It I? said, might be complied with during 'he stay of .the fleet in the Philippines or after the eom-pietion of ^ae-falttar- g«t practice.- \ Busy Week For Big Ships. the American battleship fleet at •Masdatena bay will put \in a Trasy w v*k at target practice] At frana- :• a' preparations have been made for series of, entertainments for thel tor. -do boat flotilla's officers d-uringjthe »pek. the vessels are scheduled to '••ave Panama Saturday fo'l; Acaptilco, Mexico.. | - Successful Flight of Aerodrome, Professor. Alexander Graham Bell's • new aerbdrome, the \Red Wing,\ was given its test flight over fcake kenka hy F. W, BaMwiii, the engineer in charge of Its construction by the Ae.rialvWs^ertment asspclatipn,- for ; LIeuteHai!;4'fs oma - 3 Selfridge, tJ. ;S: -A. The*J^efi^feiJme,. after gliding over the ica-Jfeilisite Keufea for aboiit SOff ;.fe|jt,.ros'§^pi.y to' the,heitht of about ; teif'feet»anj , sairea at that elevation for a distance- of 319 feet at the rate of from 25 to 30 spiles aft hour. After having covered this distance a portion I. of the \fail\ .g»*p way and the aero- !• drome Was brought down for repairs; f/ffhis is deci.:.\ed :to be the first suc- cessful puM'c flight of a heavier-than- alr flying nachine In America. The flight was witri'-'|ed by a number of people Iron' Hp.'itoondsport. Verdict on. Collinwood School Fire. Coroner -Barkertras\ rendered his de- ' c -°» in the CpllihwPpd school fire. ' nditlohs existing, are. blamed; but a fault is charged to anyone. \^lip coroner says the fire was « > p d by overheated pipes and the '• i h of the children was due tofaulty r •••'tructipij whereby a partition prp- .'\••»d in front of the-stairway. Tie coronet', recommends that the' '' ' legislature pass a law to make *• «-hopl buildings fireproof and that ' ' \liatic devices' be^ put in the v ' l.ngs to further safeguard the - of the children. \-\--Die rydtiums t-ro'm the ignition \••• frOiit stairway ffom the oyfer- v \1 pipes started in a.cioseJ •• ^'ntrway^h^nbe'pfiftftj \ it the bottom .of m 'he children turn. ' '•' their rush for tl • ororipr holds tl iinnic-strickf : \' I in the dooi ii in the hall toj \' ->r Hifter is e: \•' s-ays- the jahi| *'-\n the Ste bta\ '' aive,-the aiap; - Hre. and that] n ' rear deprs ol G'ln'a Yields firtory gej ft IT was anJT 1 ,v w'.tpfnoc. 1 '• ; aat the J ° m w »''i purchaii £\'\\'••• on bqJT ,Raitrjo<-f Los~ In Second trial. A. jury in N' w York city which did not flip a c n to decide an acci- _dent suit as did a .previous jury in the same case returned a verdict of $1,- 250 in favor of Thomas Dixon against the New York City Railway company for the death of his; brother, Little, 4% years^ old. In the original trial the jurymen after being out all night reported to Justice TJtiy in the su- reme court, a vcidi railway, company. Investigation re- vealed that one of the jurymen was anxious to close a real estate* deal, and as ail were apparently hopelessly divided they decided to flip a coin, heads for the defendant company, tails for the plaintiff. Heads won^. Jtis= tice-G.uy excoriated the jurors for vlo- latiPh- of their oaths, fined each of thein |50 and ordered a new trial. Death \of William- SutherFahd. William' A, Sutherland, recently ap- pointed counsel to the public utilities commission in the Second district*, died in the City hospital arRcicB.ester at 11- b'cTpck Wednesday night.' Suth- erland wfo a former corporatloii coun- sel fdjr 'Rochester and was active in Repu'blicah politics and Masonry, He '3eent^d«fegal-e IU Slate and ua tiOnaiVcpnventions and was once a memher of the Republican national : '.committee- and also held the office of ,grand7%ast'ef of Maspns-in..New Yoricr He wak : a brother of Supreme Court city and of Rev Ward Sutherland, who HVes in the southern part of this state. Thaw's Answer to Wife's Suit. i Denying the charge of insanity and praying, for'dismissal of suit. Harry K. Tftaw through his -counsel', made answer tt*E>fI'vn ^esbit Thaw's suit f rt r .jjri. •T»t , '\.\ ! \' rr ' nf thnlr -mnii.i'np.. Thaw's ahswi - ! was delivered to Dan tSlJO'&eill--; coitifel for Mrs., Thaw. \WINGS SANK DEPOSITS Were, Surpassed by Withdrawal* tp Amount, of $31,608,89-7^ Albany, Macph 17,-^-A general re- vision of the hanking laws affecting l Of Alleqed Political ConsDira- co-pperattve savihgs and loin asso- i -••\.''« '' ' - ciatipns is recommended by SupeHn- ' \ tbfS tjy President Nflfd. tendent Glark Williams 61 the state £ • . .-.'-\ \\ \\ \\ \ bank department in his annual report •! . ^\ r \ ^. (to- tlie legislature on buildi_ng T _Mii I jsataiiiBm[eiitJrh*t Geftepai. Afttenor Frr- Bpan : ahd op-operative loan -associa' ^»^^VW.««^«^/Vn» .4ty*n **tl^t~^m,,*ifrm~iy*0*,~qfl*gl yons. The repcirt says that this, class - of financial institutions passed through the recent financial disturb- ance %ith' a greater increase of assets jthan in any other period; In discussing national and local loan association the report says that \It seems almost an absurdity that these small Institutions organized 'for, the sajne general purpose should be trans- acting busines's under ho less than five different laws; a general revision of the laws relating to such corporations: in order to pror i , .. Jtnote uniformity and give the public \ lu *nary troubles-hiay be. generally a better understanding of Outwardly, Port au Prince is calm, their merits. ' and, following the execution on Sun- \TJnder present conditions, such di-1 day of ten .or eleven men alleged to- verse Methods were 1 pursued by differ- ' have been implicated in the plot. Pres- ent associations that: even those who \ ident Nord Alexis issued a proclama- mln, Who Is a Refugee in French Consulate,. Had Organised through Correspondence, a N»w Insurrection In Pprt-au »Prince^-pther Arrest*. Port au Prinqe, Jfayti, March 1-7,^ She Haytien government's attitude in summarily dealing -with a- number of alleged conspirators, in a threatened uprising'has had the effect of Causing anxiety in the? hearts of inahy, for it There should 'be^gjn,,,. Wown . ^^ m ^m Wow may fail, 6r how fas reaching the rev- are fairly familiar with the. business of a particular association have a very siighfo.comprehension of the hi'ethbds pursued, by; otljet,a.s.apclatifiBa^ . ...,.,. \The practice of making loans upon the divided or second mortgage plan should be prohibited by law, A limi- tation might well he placed upon the loaning territory of such associations, arid provision made for the rebate of gross premiums upon the repayment of mortgage loans before maturity. Such associations should also be pro- hibited from treating unearned gross premiums as a present profit for the purpose of paying expenses and de- claring dividends. The practices, however, which such amendments would correct have been largely dis- continued. \Business depression, deprecia- tion in the value of securities and other unusual conditions character- ing the year necessarily had their ef^ feet upon the savings banks in com- mon with other classes of financial institutions. Though the aggregate 'of amounts deposited had never be- fore been so large In any one year ex- cept in 1906,- fhe withdrawals were altogether without precedent, exceed- ing the record of any former year by $43,000,000, and for the first* time since 1893 overtopping the deposits received. . \This excess of withdrawals over deposits for the year amounted to $31,608.897-^-the deposits having been $390,0^5,749, and the withdrawals $42I,70C646. Dividends credited pre- vented a decrease for the year in. total resources, which were $1,463,295,667, a gain of only $344,844 since the pre- ceding January, though fhe - amount Hon to the people, in which he felici- tates them upon their calm attitude In the present trying conditions'and I gives reafiSHrances-tb^hecpTOmxrnltyr j promising that prdef and the security I of the government Will be maintained. | The Statement 1^ made officially I: that the government, having come I Into possession of proofs that general ! Aittenor Firmhr, the*-leader of the- | late unsuccessful revolutionary triove- | ment, who is now a refugee in the 1 French consulate at Gpnaives,\had or- ' ganized, tbrpugh ~ca~rrespQnd'ehce, a I new insurrection in Port au Prince, i decided upon the arrest of the prin- : Clpal conspirators. | this uprising, the* statement con tin- | ues, had as its object the overthrow • of the gcjvarnment and the aSsassin- I ation of the president and it was dis- ' covered through th e interception of letters sent by General Firmin to a number of his adherents and others in an attempt ;to enlist them In the new .movement. -The conspirators -were taken by sur- prise with ayms°and ammunition ih their possession, and were - executed forthwith. The chief \ conspirator, Masillon Coicou; before he was exe* cuted,.gave the narnes of several mil- itary officers who, he,declared, were implicated in the plot, These men have been placed under arrest and will be given a trial, it is stated, be- fore a regular court. Author o f \The Biography of m Prairie Girl. COPTCKICHt, 1906. BY McCIiURE, PHILLIPS fi. COMPANY. CHAPTER XVII. |HAT year in the northlahd wihtei' encrouohed\ greedily lipoft spring. The latter end of Xlareli the weather did not moderate, instead,-the wide, valley be- came a channel for winds that were weighted with numbing sleet. Then April returned angrily, bringing cold rains and blows tp check all vegeta- tion.' , . But April half gphe, a tardy thaw set in. The icy- covering o'f the rivet split Into •Whirling blocks, the snow grew, soft and bally; the crust rotted and pteked up. Soon the tempering sun drove the drifts from south ex- tne opportunity, and it was\pofne in flpon her finally that Louhsbury meant to remain away, perhaps until h e was bidden to corned t'udatjnted, she made plans to waylay him on the coulee road. Resting-the Sharps across, her arm, she set-out, morning of afternoon, Ph a Jong jaunt. But' LOlinsbUBy was not met. On one such rainble, however, an incident occurred that was far reaching if not fatal ih^lts results. She was going homeyrard slowly when she saw ap- proaching ;an -ambulance from Brannori drawn by a four tnule teaaj. . She' started timidly aside, then paused. The vehicle was .filled with ladies. A the coulee and the iow spots on the *>* *»»SPy occupied tte lengthwise prairie filled until they were- bcoad f^ f ^e carriage. Qne sat ibestde the driver. Dallas put herself in their ponds, around which the iriigratiils wild fowl alighted with jbyous cries. Now eayes drrlpped musically, slushy wagon ruts ran like miniature Missou- ris and were traveled by horny frqgs, prairie cocks made each dawning path and waited. How often she had watched these same ladles canter out pf post 6n their horseback fides, officers attend- ing them* or seen them,.make a rollick- weirdly noisy, and far and near where * n ? ^lkjng party to the bluff top. -showed the.mtelcome-.greeruulue-eyed .#? .*?-^jttJeiCtur^ io# some day anemones sprang bravely and tossed «! e y ^ouW he feMed to the bend, their fuzzy heads in the sharp air. - J h i y cqu'd. not have^ he'ard how her throughout this season the shack ?ather-talked. If theyhad,-they would hadbut;bnevisit\m'--SquawGharlev.\He ?** blmn ?, ^ If^tbey passea her, ( brought fuel -and once a week a basket. * hey w f ld mlle *» id, . t '^, maybe stop of supplies froth \B troop.\ Occasion- to speak. AMERICAN WAR VESSEL On Its Way From Guantanamo to Port au Prince. Washington, March 17.—An Ahief- due deposifors increased- $18,363,253 ,-lcan war vessel, probably the gunboat in the same period. ' • Eagle, is on the way from Giiantana- ^'The surplus of the sayings banks, ^o to Port au Prince, Hayti, where based on the reported market value •• the' Haytien government Sunday sum- of their stock and bond investments, | inariiy executed a number of alleged decreased $18,936,989 during the year, ; revolutionists. while the par value surplus gained $7,- [ The Vessel Is not sent there'because 8» ,871; In January, 1907, the market ; of any serious apprehension on the ally he came swinging a brant by the neck or caffylhg a-saddle of fresh ven ison; but, though his manner was as friendly as ever and he seemed no less She was all aglow how. The am- bulance rolled near. It was closed- on s Its sides; and the women within could not see her. The woman •on the seat, grateful and devoted, he Tvas always P^tty.,slender, daintily c ad did. Dal- strangely worried and distraught. The la , s leaned tprward eagerly, face flush- evangelist called by once or twice ^ ey?s s W- uta ?' when storms or the rushing, ice pack The woman also leaned forward and in the river did not prevent his cross- looked Dallas up and down searchlng- lng. As fpr LPunsbury, he traversed ly » coId ^- ^^ U P 3 * e ? e 8et in a the bend Often on his -way to Brannon, sheer. Her eyes frowned. Then the and If he, saw a face at a wlndPw ambulance bowled smartly along the. waved his hand In. pleasant greeting, «^ er catchlngat a leader with his but he kept to the road. i w hiP- Since the morning of the aurora the 1 \ Who ' s ^ at ' '***' eummings?\ The little famUy had ceased to speak of w ? m . ei? ' in the rear of the vehicle were him. That silence was neither de- Peering out, manded by the section boss nor agreed' \MM. •«uuwplsg» answered over her upon by the three. On Lancaster's snoul i d er ! Why part it grew out of the sneaking con- n *?i*' „ A j. ,„ sciousness of the ittgratltude he did lhe f e ^ m °^ and not regret. 6n the part of Marylyn It ' a £? U , >•-',. , ,, , arose from two causes^a sense of girl-' J^ ? w .«* «» 8 roadside heard. her it's the P16w Wo- \Ahs\ and ish shaine at having confessed her at- tachment and a fear that her father would discover it With Dallas, con- sideration for the feelings of her sister made her shrink from mentioning IiOurisbury. Yet there was another rea- son, and one no less delicate—she, as well, had a secret to guard,- , But ih the mind of the elder girl the kee P i f' J* 6 questioned the Slighted, fetmffed, wounded to quick,, she stumbled ( homeward, sight blinded by tears. She™ did not, wait for Lounsbury again. Once line, thought of writing-' him, of summoning him through a note given Squaw Charley; but, recalling her' father's treatment of the store'- 1T the latter value of the stocks and bonds held was something like $36,000,000 under cost, and in January, 1908, the differ- ence had increased to nearly $60,000^- 000, During the year the number of savings banks paying interest to de- positors at the rate of 4 per cent on at least some part of their deposits part of the officials here that Ameri- can interests at Port au Prince of at other points in Hayti are in serious danger, but as a mattef<3f precaution. It is asserted that General Firmin, the Haytien revolutionary leader, . now a refugee in the French consulate at Gohaives, is at the head of another increased from seventy-six to ninety- , revolutionary movement against the Seven.\ • 'constituted authorities and it is be- Libel l-Heved that the shooting of the'Etey- \ I tiens at Port au Prince is the direct Berlin, March 17:—-The notorious^-resmH pf the discovery of this fact Hail trial has been brought to the pub- .,| n is - not fte i ievsa a t the state de- lic attention again by the sentencing J j) artm e n t that foreign interests in of Herr Schmidt, editor of the Morgeh | HayU Bre ser i 0US i y menaced. The Post,- t o nine months' imprisonment | a isp0 aition of the administration Is to oh the charge, of libeling Olga Mpli- [ ^^ bat&s off and to rive the people tor. Cfafl Hau was tried and found . o{ ^ avti an opportunity to work out guilty of the murder of his mother-in- } t ^ elr own gal v a tion. ' 'law, Mrs. MoiitPi-i and Olga Molitor ; Mo g { of {he revolutionary refugees Is Hau's sister-in-law. the libel oc- ; in Hayti are ia the i^ en 6h consulate curfed to certain--a-Heged interviews }., at oonaive's, where in\ addition to with the state's attorney and the at- ! Genera i pfrmin there are about 'seVeh^ thought of Maryiyn's happiness was ^ mli heed ^ eF message; She felt the uppermost. There were dread nfo- hersel f isolated, but no hint of her ments when it seemed to hef as if that -bitterness was allowed to reach Mary- happiness were to be shattered. | lyn - The youneer girl knew ^Wy purlng all the past weeks ifltarylyn • bri «^ t * or4s and \neeasing; unselfish had- carefully harbored her fancies care . ^ about Lounsbury. Certain of the calico 1 For one thin S D a» as was dee P'y covered books on the mantel had no thankful-Matthews did, hot trouble- little part In this. Their stories of uh- the shack ' Da Vid Bond had told hef dying affection-of bold men lorn tMt when the tro °P s lef ' for the suin - maldens and the cruel villains wna lm*f campaign the. interpreter would gloried in severing them-helped hef to r,de witb tB em. the evangelist being: -• - • • • • - jtetaihed. at the-fort to fill the other's •nt--hef-Htfte-ch'cle lulu proper roles.' She loved and must crush but her pas- sion. -Lpunsbury,- whom she loved, had been sent away by her father, and she lived up to the play consistently. She. saw. the storekeeper anguished oyer hia hanishmenti saw depths, ofjnjeaa- ihg in the geodrhatufect\'satates'he^gave the shack. With herself, she accepted loneliness as a sign of deeper suffering. She was tortured by self pity, b3$ the, place. The latter declared that, by the pilot's report* Lounsbufy's name tinade Matthews \lay back his ears-,\ bu t that he no longer stormed about IOST Jng, the claim. - And npw came the warm, dnys-^days' la swtft. Sweet cdntrast to .those Just gohe. Sim and -shower baaded the sky With triple ares of promise. The robins arrlyed, a plump and saucy doubt she had flung\ at'-ftjfcna] py thai crew. Bent hill cnflews'^taiked about. tofney for Hau in which Schmidt ; ty native Haytiens seeking shelter. hinted that Olga Molitor might have, T j, e H a ytteb government is anxious that these men shall be required to quit the country, but the friends of the refugees are opppsed to sending them away. The government believes that If thev aro rjarmitted in remain ITwill hot belong beforeTBejrwllI'he engaged i.n another revolutionary committed the crime herself, that she had been Very friendly with Hau, and tliat she lived on bad terms with her mother. •^-^n^gTier-De^'rrte3--$10iWlJ'-Offer.\ Pittsburg, March 17.^-Hans Wagr ner, who has l-etired from basebali, received a . letter from President Schlichter of the Philadelphia Union league elub, containing-an offer of- $10,000 to- play with the team this season. \I will not consider the\ of- fer at' all,\ said Wagner, \tbfe sum of $10,000 from Pittsburg looks bet- ter to me than that of any oiie else.\ Wagner says if he plays ball again it will be a s a member of the Pittsburg club. \ / movement. Ambassador Sternberg of Germany, who has just returned frerh a trip' to Cuba, was at the. state department late in the afternoon—but -his mission was to seek information of: the cendi- tions in Hayti sp far as the state de- partment was in possession of them. 5-tire-papers stateT id be put on the ^Jantemp court Harry gly the iRtissell bcTared ipughly !.. r »liH,) Dead Man May Be Marous HanoerVi- Binghamton. N. Y,. March 17.-^The .body of a. man believed' to bejlarcus Hansen • of Jamestown, N. Y., was found on the Erie tracks at Susque- hanna, pa., at midnight Saturday. It Daniel Leroy Dresser Arrested. New Yprk, March 17.^Dahiel Leroy presser, who #a s president of the Trust Cdmpany Of the ReBublie, which several | went into llpuittation several years j »go, was afrestfed on a warrant chargr Ing-him witb.jnisappropriatiPtt^of $4,— I OO-S'. He was arraigned in court'ftrjdt paroled in the custody of his counsel. Mr. Dresser was prominent in the dry is thought he was struck by Brie pas- : goods trade of this city and the Trust senger traiti. In the pockets was a mirror hearing the ihscription: \War- ren Cafe, 10 South Main street, James- town, Martin Hansen aiid Jud Han- sen proprietors,\ ' , . V 1 Company pf the Republic, with which |: he was, connected, had a large share in I. the pfomotioh of the United SMttes I Ship Building company. feed were consumed. The fife was of Incendiary origin. The less is $7r OflO, half covered by insurance. FDlEYSHONEr-»EAR jyeebufgs Destroy Stock and Barn. Marietta, 0., March 17.—A large stock barn oh the. W. R. West farm, east of this city, burned early Sun-. day morning. Several horses an? , tMt the robDers . who recently cfcfws and a thousand dolars Mexican Bank Robbers Arrested. El Pasp; Tex., March 17, ~ A tele- gram from Juan A. Creel',, manager of the Banco Minero pf Chihuahua, \Mex- icp, the local branch of that hank. secureu' ^295,000 from that bank have been arrested and that the stolen njosey haf been located but not yet •recovered, firm belief that b;er.heart was hopeless ly fettered. Gating into a piece of looking glass that served her for a mir. rdr, she marked with sorrowful pride her transparent skin and lusie'rless eyes, She sighed as she watchecl from the windows; Patiently she-Hstened for -footsteps, her face half turned te the door. 'And yet what she topk so tragically was nothing but failing health.' What was not a fact the nigh,t of her admis- sion to Dallas, was almost come to .pass, The few days of great cold and; hunger in February, coupled with lohg confinement in the dirt floored house, jvere having their effect. She was oh the verge of illness. Lancaster, whenever he noticed hef dejection, was inclined to poohpooh it. \She looks a s ef she'd jes' been, slap- ped;\ he deelafepi' \an* is expectin' ail'- otherlammin' any minnit. Ef she'd cry she'd shdre weeplemou juice.\ Again, hp rprk^tiefl f 'fsome notion.\ Jealous and- suspicious a» he was, however, he got no nearer 'the truth. . But Dallas—she was misled far more than either. Marylyn or their father. She fought away from the-idea that her slstef might be breaking physical- ly and tenderly as a mother yearned over her. Anxious eyed, she noted the' ,'pallPr of the childlike face, the me'ahr choiy egression that had come td be habitual. She fretted pver the spare- ness of Ihe youngef glri, who ate drily when sjfie was urged, if, sated -with sleep, Marylyn moveji in the night,; Dallas aroused p i the instant and hov- ered beside her: At last,, thofpughly,alarmed, the elder girl determined te folipw out the Idea that had occurred to her in midwin- ter. What did it matter how hard and 1 hateful the duty would be? What dld ! fier own hidden feelings matter? She would appeal to Lounsbnry In her ,»!s- ter's'-benaifc But time Das»ed without brlnjclwc ho^ Utteiiha vvild arid mellivii callsj, .Xhii dwellers, off -the^gfpand- threw'- -up fresh - dirt around; their, burrows; The-marsh- vlplets opened £ale lilac cups, and the very-logs of th^er-shack pttt'^ortKTtaP' ~ bitlous sprigs, so, that froni the.frpjat, the grptesque head displayed .a.J)rtet^_ 'flfgi-een\ whisker. : The prairie\ was s awake, blood and soil and sap. - ^Ben nna • Berry showed tfianr.,lfljSK— spirits with comical sporting. ' ipW mules, frolieked together, pttcMng hind quarters, rearing to box and nippiag at SImpri. Fully as gay was he, ttioflifii his shaggy flanks were gauitti H* played at goring, tbenj -or frisked In ungainly circles^ Occasionally, hovr- ever, be gave sighs' of i|l humor, low- ered his broad horns threateningly , even at Dallas, pawed; up the riew;.' grown grass arid charged to and fro on the bend. Bis voice lifted In hoarse challenge. On the little family the light* tha warmth and added duties wrought m good effect- Lancaster's grumbling . lessened, and he helped to plant some • boxes with cabbage Sad tomato seed that the sutler supplied,' '\kaiftlyit coaxed out for a n hPhT or~tWo dairy, ~~ rewarded Dallas with smiles. Hef aj£. petite grew (rather t o her chagrin),'\ ahd when, she held the Hooking glass before her she saw a fairirtolor in her cheeks. \ i Tp Dallas the spring, brought rehew- Id coiirage and a vague longing. With 4he-first--rolld-ev©nings-she>'teok--terVeh- ; — turlrig out, vvritpped In her lbrig cloak, fpf a lonely walk. In her ibve of the- • gloaming she was like, a wild thing.\ frrprii birth the twilights of the mesa had proved irresistible. When she was. a child they soothed kef tittle trouble*. , In womanhood, If sorrow pressed* heavily, they 'brought her strength; The half light, the soft air and the lack -»f-sound were 'balm to bet spirit. Nightly she' strayed up the coulee, eastward, south or toward the river, until! ea'sly in Slay, a second Incident Occurred and interrupted her rambles. • She had walked as far as the swala- that was part way Jo the Missouri. There she was startled into a sudd&x • halt, Prom-n point ahead of her and' tp the left sounded a gunshot. She sank down,cautiously; and stayed' clPse to the ground; her fingers steady- ing hef, her breath suspended; ihefev s was no moon, and the stars were oh* . scured I>y clouds. The cottonwooda were a black, shapeless mass. She watched them. No answering shot fang- out; iba% . after :a Ipng wait, a reply caine fronj the grove. I t was a laugh, loud and taunting. She stayed crouching and preseritl5_ saw a srhnll black object leave tha .'. big blackness of the trees arid advance,-. . Frightened, she arose and retraced hef._.steps,. glancing behind her asj sha. went, At the shack, having ifPrittd'th* latchstring, she backed into the room, Hef father and sister were, asleep. Next morning, on a,plea of .hot wishing..' to alarm them, she refrained ffonx tell- ing of. the shot. It may have been'a hunter, she reasoned,. or a. drunken • tropper- or one of the Shanty TPwir gang. But the -laugh-it rang in h.ei ears; ^ Several twilights pttske^ then she' ventured out again. A' lip/ of moon, was dropping down an unclouded sky; the , stars hung low and white. Ajid whin she neared the swale She' saw, a good distance before her, that small black object separate Itself from the gfove- agriin and move forward. She stopped. She was not frightened now. : She knew who it .was. And whta she savr bis arrris come up ahp? caught- the gilnt of metal jhe called Out to -BimT\DontT iTmi'tl'TPs'meF*\ 1'here was a muttered exclamation, \and the arms fell. '^Mlss Dallast'' ha crl^d and sprang .forward. \1^1 was SQTe It was you,\ she ad- mitted tremulously. \And you've been' guarding here all-the- time!\ Lounsbury was panting. \Suppose I'd fired?'! he said. \I had a Blind to' Crimlnl!\ . ' = \You'd- 'a' missed likely.\ \Maybe not. You-see, I thought, well . . = that_ Matthews. on_that _DEpelpiia. •v? T* Continued on Page S. when eating, that yotif food is of highest whoIesonieness--that it hats nothing in it that can injure or distress you 1 —makes the fepast doubly comfortable and satisfactory* TThis supreme confidence yoa have when the food is raised with -t^jft only» baking ppwd^attSf tvitk Royal Grape Cre^'', There can b^altan baking pows ^ dence when^mists say that more or der food; alum powder in unchanged lessor alum salts remains in the food. *« ^ .s* /. ;X ••^t'