Newspapers / French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, … / June 14, 1906, edition 1 / Page 6
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Hhill ib MLillHa ijUIOilic r- Tiitma? 0. )rnzs, of Pittsburg; ' Shoots Himself. Was Read of Jones & L::3- ".Vorks, and Would . Have miiet'.Ud $50,000,000. rittsrurr, Thomas O'Conor Jones, as-Ntant general manager of ilie Jones & Laugnlin Steel Company, hriv to a foriune estimated at $50,000, (XX). worth himself several ' millions, and a social leader in Pittsburg, killed liiji'.scif at the. Hotel Schenley, where ha and his inoiher, Mrs. Cecelia C. Jo:-es-Murocck, occupied apartments. No cause can be assigned for the suicide oU)r than that the young man had bseu ill for -some time past, and that he believe! kTiis ailment would ause him either to go blind or become insane. The only mystery surround ing the suicide is as to how he ob--tained the revolver with which he killed himself. The Coroner believes it was smuggled into his room by some person whom he paid to do it. Every )$5ffort was made to keep the fact that $e had killed himself a secret, Lis rela ; tlve.going so far as to attempt to have the' Coroner suppress the facts, v - All the arrangements had been maue to take Jones to Cambridge Springs. In a statement which she made to the Coroner, Mrs. Murdock said that she had spent most of the evening before the suicide in her son's room preparing for the trip. . , -' '" ' She went to bed about midnight, but entered his room again at 2 o'clock and found 4 her son seated at a window. They talked tbgefher for some time, and then she retired. At 4 o'clock she was awakened by a revolver shot. Iiuiining' into her son's room, she found him lying on the bed. She mired his head, and soon afterward he died in her arms. Thomas O'Conor Jones was the oniy child of the late George W. Jones, brother of B. F. Jones, former Chair man1 of the National Republican' Com mittee. When his father died he left all of his jast fortune to , his wife and their only child, "who has taken his life. Mrs. Jones married Dr. F. H. Murdock, a well-known physician, who is at present in Boston attending a medical convention Jones, who was just entering his thirty-sixth year, was a graduate of Tale, and had been in the steel business ever since he left college. He was a member of the Pittsburg' University and Allegheny Oouuty Clubs, as well as a number of JSTew York clubs. CHICAGO .TURNS FROM MEAT. . "lf.;me of the Packing Industry Becomes ' a Vegetarian City. Chicago. Chicago is turning to the '.zt of the vegetarian. Meats are ;rrned bys people all ever the city. Tl;o greatest, slump ever experienced In the demand for meat for consump tion in the homes, ho? els and restaur Jints of Chicago is on. because of tlio publication of . the ,Neill-Reynokts re port. ' . Fish dealers are rejoicing because iLe down turn in the meat trade h;;s brought a brisk demand for fish. In many homes and hotels dishes in whk-h ''Iicese-' and ". eggs v figure-, prominently iliij.ve supplanted v roa st! aiul broile'.l meats. Meat market men generally admitted that , the , disclosures affecting tl.e 'methods of the big packers at the sto'-k y.'irs have caused a falling off in retail business. The decrease in sales of sausages and other manufactured prod ucts from the packing plants is cle- . clared to have been from-thirty-five to forty per cent. , throughout the city. , CHAMBERLAIN IS RE-ELECTED. tlorernor of Oregon Defeats Republi-tiv-j can Woman Suffrage Rejected. Portland, Oregon. George E, Cham berlain (Dear.) has been re-elected Gov ernor of Oregon by a majority of not ; less than 1000, and perhaps as muoh ,?s 2500 over Dr. Jamiv Withvcouib (Rep.). .Jonathan Bourne. Jr.. (liep.) has re ceived the popular nomination for United States Senator by probably a "little over ,5000 majority. W. R. Ellis Rep.) has been chosen Congressman in the Second District by a large majority-over J..H. Graham (Dem.) and riW. C. Hawley (Rep.) has a safe lead Over C. V. Gallowav in the First Dis .trtct. AWoman suffrage was defeated by a Lti-ge majority. t' FLOOD WIPES OUT VILLAGE. Two Drowned, Four Mortally Hurt 'r ; -and Valley Swept Clean. Ironton; Ohio. Scottown, a village twenty miles north of here, with a population of 200, has been washed away. Not a house was left on its foundation. Mrs. Sayre .and daughter - were drowned. Bridges were swept way atjd telephone lines are down. 'The disaster.,, was due to a flood fol lowing a heavy rain lasting for six hours. .The-town is at the confluence of the branches of the Indian and Guyan Creeks. The valley , above Scottown is long and narrow" and the flood swept everything before, it. Men, .women and children escaped - to the bills in their night clothes. Four persons were injured and canuot re- . cover. . j.ne vauey irom scottown to the river was swept' plean. The dam age to crops cannot be estimated. Railway Took coal Stock. "Vice-President jRossiter,-of the New Xbrk Central, testified at the Inter state .Commerce ommlssiors hearing in - Philadelphia thatUbe Beach - Creek Coal and Coke Company gave the rail rpadv company $5C0,0CJ in stock "for traffic reasons." , ' J Missouri For Bryan. iThe Missouri State Democratic Con vention, in: session at Jefferson City, fflins' oiit sti-bugly for William Jen nings Bryan for President in 100S. . foe." melcelS bolesae Trices ed ia Kew York MILK The Milk Kxcnange price tor standard, quality is 2c. per quart, .turns eamery Western, extra.? 19$ 9H Firsts 18 ( 19 State dairy, fancy 19 18 15 10 10 7 2 22 21 IS lirsts i .... Factory, thirds to firsts.... State, full cream, fancy.... Small. T.. .. Part skims, good to prime Full skims Jersey Fancy State and Penn Western Firsts .. 17 12 1014 10 (s - 3 20 20 M 18 (Si Southern.. UKANS AM- Beans Marrow, choice. Medium, choice.... .. Pea, choice...... .... Red kidney, choice.. . White Kidney Ye.Jow eye Black turtle soup.. .. Lima, Cal , VKK 3 ... 2 ... 1 3 3 .. i 3. 3 00 00 3 05 024 60 05 35 55 35 12H 57 J 4 fa) 1 00 (3 3 '2d 50 30 10 (,' 3 3 1 $ 3 (Si 3 r-IMTI AND I:!-': Apples, Baldwin, per bb!.. 5 50 6 00 Unseat npr hhi : 4 00 (C 5 00 Ben Davis, per bb!.... '.. 5 00 (a 5 50 Northern &py, per bbl.. 5 50 (& U 50 Strawberries, per qt. 4 15 Black berries, per qt Huckleberries, ier qt Cherries, per qt Gooseberries, per qt ; 10 S 8 10 13 16 10 12 UVK FOULTRT. Broilers," per lb. 24 Fowls, per lb.. Roosters, per lb Turkeys', per lb.. H Ducks, per pair 50 Lieese, per pair IW Pigeons, per pair . DKKSSED rOULTUV. Turkeys, per lb 12 Broilers, Phila., per lb 25 Fowls, ner lb 10 id 13 7 12 SO (Hi 1.50 (j 25 14 32 13 H (S.'. Dnolviinirs. Tier lb 13 (2! Squabs, per dozen ..... 1 25 2 00 nors. State, 1905, choice Common to fair Pacific Coast, 1905, choice. . Good to prime 11 9 13 (z llJ.iC! 10 14- 12 HA A.M STRAW . Ilav. prirae, par 100 lb..... 95 No. 1, per 100 lb "90 92 No.. 2. per 100 lb S2fe 85 Clover mixed, per 100 lb. 63 M 80 Straw, long rye G5 (J 70 VEGETABLES Potatoes, Maine, per has !tate, per bag . . .. Sweets, per basket.... Tomatoes, per carrier F!'Tr ilia tit lipr linv 2 25 2 W 2 50 ( c 2 75 50 ("y 1 00 1 00 (a - 2 50 . 1 00 (2; 3 00 03 1 I' - - - - Squash, per crate 1 00 3 00 re:is, per basket.. 1 IH) (a au Peppers, per carrier 1 50 (tt! 2 50 Lettuce, per bb! 1 00 2 00 Cabbages, per crate 10-:) ($ 1 50 Sti-ins beans, per basket... 50 (a; 2 25 Oiiioii, domestic, per bag. 10 (a: 1 00 . N. ()., per bag. .. . . Ciirrots, per 100 hunches.. IJci-ts. per 100 bunches.... I iu ::tp. p?r bl:. , ." 1 25 07 1 3 2 00 (g 4 m 2 00 (a 4 X) 1 50 2 Oil 50 (aj 1 00 VaUicres. -j)er I'JJ bu'ehes 1 00 Kalt ier bl! f. . 25 Qf. 1 50 (a). 50 2 50 (fS 75 (nl 2 25 dC 3 75 (a) 1 CO (a - .1 (10 Okra. per carrier 2 00 il idishes, per 100 btmc-iics. 50 (.'..u ibers, per l:aket 75 .-sJ!;-i;gus, per doz. bu cues .0 !?ii;i'.iiiii. per 100 bunches. 50 Ll'r.a btuns. per crate 1 50 Mint, per 100 bunches 1 50 3 00 GRAIN. ETC. ;"otir Winter patents. . . Spring patents Wheat. Xo. I X. Duluth. .. 4 00 f 4 : . . 4 40 (J. 5 Xi .. (a 90TJ .. S4 (ff 95 (a) 59 ,. (.' 58 .. (3 39 .. 41 uv A-lVi . (2 Ms .o. -J red C.rri. X'o. 2 white Xo. 2 yelloAv Oars, mixed lipped' white f-u id. city LIVE STOCK. Jeeves, city dressed C(? CV.'.vcs, ity dressed 8 ( ( ountry dressed tiVz'f'l 8 11 01' ;.eep. per J00 lb (s 5 00 f.am,)s. per 10) lb 8 25 (j 8 GO IIo-s. live, per 100 lb 6 2-5 G SO BETTER PRICE FOR TOMATOES. L'annors Are Generally Advancing Quotations Because of Demand. Baltimore, Md. The demand for canned" tomatoes, the scarcity of labor and, more than all,- in some sections, the demand for the fresh vegetable, iias forced canners to raise the price for tomatoes grown for them on con rract and also to remove some of the restrictions which have made it impos sible to grow the crop profitably with any .certainty. Certain forms and shades of color are no longer con demned, nor are growers compelled to buy the plants from the owner of the cannery, as was the case in many sec tions.' XO CLOUD IN THE SKY. Business Situation Calls For a Vigor ous Forward Movenient. New York City. Developments indi cate continued business prosperity, and the logic of the situation calls for nothing short of a vigorous forward movement. Traffic on all railroads is on the increase, many of the great freight lines being literally , swamped with, freight offerings, exceeding by far the capacity of their motive power. There is no cloud in the commercial sky to-day. "Bucket Shops' Denounced. A -"resolution passed at the meeting of the State Presidents of the various divisions of the Southern Cotton As sociation at Jackson, Miss., has just boon made public. In it bucket, shops and brokerage offices are denounced as uens or iniquity," and "gambling tiolls," and legislation doing away with these institutions is demanded. , , Even Wall Street Shocked. Wall Street has been shocked by evi dences of railroad graft. Failures Increase in May. Commercial failures during the ironth.of May are reported by branch offices of R. G. Dun & Co. to the num ber of 890, and $12,092,809 in amount of defaulted indebtedness- This -compares with SCO failures in the corre sponding month last yerfr, when the labilities were $8,007,301. Abundant Russian Harvests. 1 The South Russian harvest promises I-) be the most abundant in twenty years. PUTS HI'S VALUE ; INTO COLD CASH , , , . ; ;- Determination in Dollars of Brain and Brawn's Economic Worth. HAVE YOURSELF APPRAISED Forty Years th Limit--Dr. Erastus Holt Declares Professional Man's Value at That Age Is $29,344.. 68--Septuagenarians, $17.13. Boston, Mass. Reaffirming the the ory of Dr. Osier regarding man's value according to his age. Dr. Erastus Holt, of Portland, Me., at the ophthalmology session of the American Medical Asso ciation, In an elaborate paper on "Phy sical Economics contended that the economic value of a laboring man de creases after his twentr-fif th .year and that the value of a professional man wanes after the fortieth , year. Dr. rllolt presented elaborate tables show ing that a man's value in money can actually be determined by taking into consideration his occupation aud age. Dr. Holt is an authority on the topic, having worked out a theory which changed the methods used in the Pen sion Bureau for determining the amount of a man's pension according , to his disability. He was i.. an accident one time himself, and says that he had nothing to do but think for six months, and that he worked on this theory dur ing all of that time, and has amplified it a great deal since. In his tabie showing the value of in dividuals of the American laboring class he states that at ten years of age, on a S1 per cent, discount basis, a boy is worth 20(VL.G2; at fifteen years of age ho is worth $42G3.GG; ..t twenty-five he is worth . $3488.03, aud from that time on his value decreases, unlil at seventy he is worth but $17.13, and at eighty years of age je is a drawback on the community to the extent of ?S72.84. The professional man at twenty-five years of age has an economic value of $2f,89S.D4, and his highest value is at forty years oi age, when he Is worth ?29,344.G8. Dr. Holt says that all damages to a person through accident should be as sessed b3 a jury in a systematic man ner, and not in haphazard way, as it is done at present. The tables which he has used in determining the value of a man are taken from those of the fa mous Dr. Farr, but he has amplified these tables in such a vay that he can determine the percentage of loss due to a specific accident, such as the loss of an eye, a leg or an arm, or any diminu tion of the person's value short of total disability. He advocates the plan of having every man and womau procure for himself or herself an economic rat ing, which he explains as follows: "There is nothing of more impor tance to be instituted in the science aud practice of medicine than the care fully made records of physical and la boratory examinations of every person. 'J hey should be Instituted when the chikl enters school and be repeated at stated times during the whele period of school life. A new school officer would be necessary, who would ana lyze a child, detect all abnormalities and aid in correcting them during school life, and thus have the body improved with the mind. From these records data could lx obtained which would give the rating of the child, tak ing into consideration his functional ability, on which his technical ability so largely depends. With this work carried out during school life it would soon demonstrate its own importance by ivaking these record of the highest value in the training of the mind and body, the promotion of health, the pre vention of disease and the advance ment of the nice."' REPUBLICAN TICKET NAMED. Ex-Mayor Stuart For Governor of Pennsylvania Indorsed by Roosevelt. Harrisburg, Ta. The Republican Stale Convention nominated the fol lowing ticket: Governor Edwin S. Stuart, of Phil adelphia. Lieutenant-Governor Robert S. Mur phy, of Cambria County. ' Auditor-General Robert K. Young, of Tioga County. Secretary of Internal Affairs nenry Houck, of Lebanon. The platform commends the Na tional aud State administrations, advo cates legislation giving to trolley com panies th right to carry freight, advo cates a two-cent passenger rate on steam railroads, and deals at great length on other State issues. The President was commended for his aggressive action in regr.rd to common-carriers who violate the law, and the pending .egislatlon designed to re form packing-house abuses was urged upon Congress. The ticket represents all factions of the party and will, the party leaders say, harmonize all past differences. President Roosevelt is said to have advised the selection of such a ticket. Typos Re-elect Lynch. The result of the election of officers of the International Typographical Union was announced at Indianapolis, Ind. James Lynch was re-elected President. Earthquake Fund'Dwindles. "Ex-Mayor Phelan. of San Francisco, sour a message to Hermann Oelrichs, of New York, to the effect that the total cash received for relief is less than .$5,000,000. Secretary of State Bribed. Walter E. Houser, Secretary of State of Wisconsin, was charged with at tempted bribery in connection with Equitable Life Assurance legislation, and a warrant was issued for his ar rest. . Unrest Among Russian Troops. Advices from St. Petersburg, Russia, say that there is serious unrest among the troops, the revolutionists having made great advances toward sapping the loyalty of the army. PEIIliSYLVAl ROAD'S ' CHIEF CLERK TOOK GRAFT Joseph Boyer Kent AH of the Money For Himself. SUM OF $57,000 FROM MINERS Others Began, the Practice and ; Boyer Says He Continued It Because He Thought It Was .Customary. Philadelphia, Pa. That he accepted gifts of stock amounting to $11,000 and money aggregating more than $46,000 from coal mining companies during a period of tbree years was admitted by Joseph Boyer, chief clerk in the office of A. W. Gibbs, superintendent of mo tive power of the Pennsylvania Rail road. Mr. Boyer purchases the fuel coal used in the locomotives of the company, and the donors of the gifts were the coal companies which furnish the fuel to the railroad. Mr. Boyer named five companies which allowed him from three to five cents on each ton sold to the railroad company. He said he never asked for the allowance, but accepted it because he believed he was following a custom of the depart ment. A. W. Gibbs, Mr. Boyer's superior ofheer, on the stand said he was un aware that such conditions existed in his department. Mr. Boyer said he was at first disin clined to accept the money,, but after thinking it over decided that he was doing nothing unusual. "How long did you wrestle with your conscience? ' queried Commissioner Clement. The witness did not know. Mr. Boyer said he had 200 shares of stock in the Jamison Coal Company, given to him for his one-third Interest in the MacLaren Coal Company. The MacLaren stock was given to him by Mr. Jamison. He also had ten shares in the Valley Coal Company and fifteen in the Eon Coal Company, which were presented to him by Captain Alfred Hicks. Ten shares of Preston Coal Company stock were sent to him in an envelope. He was not certain who sent it. but thought it might have come from Joseph Aiken, a railroad man, or H. A. Kuhn, an operator. All of these stocks paid dividends. Mr. Boyer said also that he holds an interest 'amount ing to JfSOOO in undeveloped coal lands on the. West Penn division. He paid for this stock. Mr. Boyer's stock holdings were only a small portion of the gifts he admitted receiving from coal mining companies. In his capacity as purchaser of fuel coal he testified that he had received from five companies an allowance of from three to five cents a ton on coal nsed by the railroad. for fuel pur poses. From tho Utter part of .3003 to date he had received a total of more than $4'i.00T. The mouey had been first sent to him in cash, but later cashiers' checks had been sent to Cashier Hastings of the Second Na tional Bank of Altoona and placed ou deposit for Boyer. He was asked why he discriminated In favor of BJythe & Co. He replied that he did not discriminate, as the money came to him without solicita tion or any effort on his part. He be lieved that the money, had been paid in the same manner to his predecessors in office, and believed that he was only following the custom of the depart ment. The companies which made him the allowance were the Graff Coal Com pany, the Clearfield and Grantou Coal Company, the Dunkirk Coal Company, Boyer, Smith & Turner and Thomas Blythe & Co. The Graff Coal Com pany allowed him five cents a ton and the Clearfield and Granton Com pany gave him a share in the profits which amounted to not less than four cents a ton. Blythe & Co. gave him three cents a ton. "What did you do with the money?" asked Attorney Glasgow. "I kept it all." "Did you not share it with others in the employ of the railroad?" "No, sir; I kept it all." 'How do you account for getting it?" .'T imagine somebody had been get ting it before me." Roughly estimated the money re ceived by Mr. Boyer from the com panies mentioned was as follows: Graff Coal Company, $13,000; Clear field and Granton Co., $9000; Dunkirk Company. $1S30: Smith & Turner, $18, S20; Thomas Blythe, $2000. SLAIN TO SEAL HER LIPS. Woman Who Knsw of Arkansas Bood ling M ordered in Hotel. Little Rock, Ark. Mrs. Charlotte E. Leethem. proprietor of the Drummers' Hotel, who is said to have more inside information concerning the boodling operations of Arkansas legislators than any other- outsider, was found mur; dered in her room. The body was lacerated with deep knife or razor wounds. A man's coat and hat, the latter slashed amTboth covered with blood, were found. . A negro porter says a prominent State official left her room at midnight. The hotel was the headquarters of the alleged boodlers. Indictments against several of them were revived last week. The murdered woman would have been summoned as a witness in these cases. Decrease in Horse Supply. . . i "uw " yuL "?are on the decrease in jiontana ana otner Western States Packers Enter a Denial. , A representative of the Chicago pack ers,, before the House Committee on Agriculture, In Washington, denied spe cifically many of the charges made in the Neill-Reynolds report, and criticised the Beveridge amendment to the Agri cultural bill. Agrarian Risings in Ruisia. Agrarian risiug3 are reported in four Russian provinces; troops r - Orenburg fired on a crowd which attacked, the prison. , PAWL DYNSiVIITE EXPLOSION Men and Women Blown Up at ' . Pequea, Pa. Report Was Heard 15 Miles--Re mains of Victims Hangrng to Trees 100 Yards Away. Lancaster, Pa. As a result of the explosion of the dynamite factory near Pequea, owned by the C. R, McAbee Company, of Pittsburg, eleven men were killed and five injured. The McAbea company's factory was built by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company to keep H. S. Kerbaugh & Co., the contractors, supplied with an ample quantity- of explosives. The work involved some of the heaviest railroad blasting that the country has witnessed since the construction of the transcontinental lines to the Pacific. How many tons exploded will never be known, but the detonation was heard for a distance of fifteen miles. ' . All of the buildings save one were completely destroyed. . The structure that escaped was occupied by women employes. The cause of the disaster is involved in inystery,' as all who might have shed light on the affair are dead. For great distances the landscape was laid waste, while the scene of car nage at the plant was sickening. The forty girls escaped as if by a miracle, as the building they occupied was in the Immediate vicinity. All are pros trated and deaf from the shock, and it will be days before some recover. Two men from York County were leaving the building with a wagon load of dy namite just as the disaster occurred, and their bodies were blown to atoms. Windows in houses a mile away were shattered. Immense holes were torn in, the ground. ' , The. dead are: Benjamin Gebhardt, aged twenty-two; Benjamin Rineer, aged twenty -one; George Rineer, aged twenty; Fred Rice, aged twenty-three, married; Collins Parker, aged eigh teen; Phares Shoff, aged .eighteen; William Funk, aged nineteen; . John Bbatman, aged seventeen; an unknown man; two men unknown, residents of York County. All except the last two lived in the immediate vicinity of the dynamite plant. The seriously injured are: Walter Brown, Martine Rineer, George Gray, Charles Cramer and Jacob Shoff. . THREE BURNED TO DEATH. Woman, Daughter and Granddaughter Lose Lives. Middletown, N. Y. By the burning of a farmhouse at Wallpack Center, N. J., a -grandmother, her daughter and granddaughter were burned to death. The three were Mrs. Jacob Emory, seventy-two years old: Mrs. Matilda Gar rison, forty-two years old, and Eiilah Garrison, twelve years old, Jacob Em ory, the husband of Mrs. Emory, was awakened by the smoke and found the whole horse, in flames. Jacob Garri son, nis granuson, leaped ireni a second-story window and escaped unhurt. The three women were in a back room up stairs and a ladder was run up to the window by the men. Flames were bursting forth and the women could be heard moving about for an in stant. Then there came. a cry and all was still. Some hours later the bodies were found in the cellar burned to a crisp. FOUR KILLED BY FIRE. Three by Explosion of Oil Stove and One by Playing With Matches. Syracuse, N. Y. In a fire caused by the explosion of an oil stove, Mrs. Homer G. Alexander, her sister-in-law, Mrs, Desmond Davis, and the latter's three-year-old daughter Gladys received burns from which they died at St Joseph's Hospital. Hearing the explosion the two women rushed into an adjoining room to rescue Mrs. Davis' two children, but one of whom escaped injury. . While playing with matches in the rear of the Alexander residence Viola, the three-year-old daughter of Bur dette Brooks, received burns which re sulted in her death. Her father had his hands burned in trying to save her. )30 ZULUS KILLED. British Lose Two Officers in a Battle Rebels Routed. Durban, South Africa. Natalian forces uuder Colonels Mackenzie and Barker have had a severe fight with rebels in the Mome Valley. The rebels were defeated, 350 of them being killed, including the important Chief Mehlo kazulu. The Natalians lost Captain Macfar lane, of the Transvaal Rifles, and Lieu tenant Marsden, killed and several troopers wounded. It is reported that Chief Bambaata was wounded. The rebels fled demoralized. KILLS WIDOW AND SELF FOR $10 Youth. Tlefused Money, . Commits ' Brutal Double Murder. Findlay, Ohio. Herbert Ostrander, of St. Louis, Mo., shot and instantly killed Mrs. Anna McKee and . then killed himself. The tragedy occurred at the McKee home shortly after Os trander demanded $10 of Mrs. McKee. Ostrander was a cousin of Mrs, Mc- Kee's husband, who died more than a , vear ago. It is said he wanted her to d ed h nronerty to him and return to 0. T Afo xrTr OL. UUU19 miu mm, n iuvu auio. uikucc refused to do. . " Cures Tuberculosis in Cattle. . Dr. Leonard Pearson, of Philadel phia, discovered a cure for tuberculosis 4n cattle which it Is expected events ally can be applied successfully to the treatment of tuberculosis in the human race. Cassatt Denies Being a Grafter. President Cassatt told the Pennsyl vania Railroad investigators that h6 is interested .in no coal mine on that system, and never has received any commission c; sift from any shipper. : . '. ."Wonderful Thing. . Mr. Brown had just had aeleptrnn connection between his office ho and was very much plea -J; f 7lU' Smith'" he was saymg "this telephone business Is a wonder! ful thing. I want you to dine with me this evening, and I will notify Mrs Brown to expect you." ' Brown (speaking through the tele phone) My friend Smith will dine with us this evening. - "Now listen and hear how plain h- reply comes back." Mrs. Brown's reply came back with startling distinctness: "Ask your friend Smith if he thinks we keep; a hotel." N. Y. World. For Fire Insurance Call on J.i MADDREY. He 'represents somo of the oldest and best companies. WHISKEY, MORPHINE, and other DRUGS, and nervous dis eases treated. Charges more reasonable than other like institutions. $25 00 per week pays for treatment, remedies and board. Results absolutely the same. L G CORBETT, M. D. The Carolina Sanitarium, Greenville. S. U. ILL the COUGH AND CURE the LUNGS 9rB Clin WITH mi in isGouiry CONSUMPTION Price FOR 0UGHS and 50c & $1.00 Free Trial.-, OLDS Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or MONEY BACK. A Gallon of PURE UNSEED OIli zolxsl 7ita & eallon ox mntM 2 gallons of the V&E.Y best Pahh? in the wosu ct yo-trrrmnt 13 FAS HOHE r.mABi.'E tnan Pure wsitk Lead and is ABSoi.trrni.7 jiot Poi sonous. HAM2JA3 Paint is made of t he best Off PAINT materials Each as all good painter" fce and isercrand thick, veby thick. l-otrouoto mix, any boy can doit. It U tlie COiisioN tmmyt o House Paint. KoBETizsp&iaicaiifcsaiiii; &t Airy coat, and is hot to CaAck, Blisteb, FetTi or Chit, r.nA3I3LfiJJEAINS,CO.fSt.Ifoiii5,2Eo. CAPSTAL PAID EH 5300.GQO. SOLD AMD euvTEED BLY BROS., Hendersonvillc, N. C. TRANSYLVANIA RAILROAD CO. General Offices, Brevard, North Carolina. . WINTER SCHEDULE Effective Monday, October E, 1905. No. 8 Eastern Standard Time No. 7 Daily . STATIONS Daliy P.M. P. M. 3:25 Lv S. Ry. Asheville S. y 12:15 3:30 So, Ry. Biitmore So. Ry 12:10 Hender 4:25 Ar S. Ry. sonville S. Ry 21:15 4 :30 Ly Hendersonville Ar U :10 A. A A Yale Horse Shoe Cannon Etowah Blantyre Penrose Davinson Rivtr Pisgah Forest Brevard Selica Cherryfield Calvert -Rosman' Quebec Lake Tox&way 10:56 10:50 10:47 10:42 10:37 10-30 10:20 10:16 10:10 9-55 9:50 9:45 9-40 9:22 9:00 1 4:50 1 .OQ 5.10 5:20 5:24 -5:30 5:43 5:50 5:55 6:00 6:18 6:45 Flag Station. Parloi Car daily between Lake Tox away and Asheville. w Southern Railway Trains ' Effective Monday, Oct. 9, 1905. Trains on the Southern Railway leave Hendersonville as follows : No. 14. No. 10 East Bound East Bound West Bound " West Bound 8:10 A.M. 5:15 P.M. No. .9. No. 13 West Bound West Bound 12:50 P.M. 6:35 P.M. Connects at Lake Toxaway with Turnpike Line to the Resorts of the Sapphire Country and Highlands at Hendersonville with Southern Rail way fox all Points North and South. T..S.BOSWELL, . ' , ' Superintendent J. H. HATS, General Manasex
French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 14, 1906, edition 1
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