Newspapers / French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, … / July 4, 1907, edition 1 / Page 2
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on am piT.JiijPTniii i,IE LL VOfJ VARSITY OflGE Desperate Struggle Witli Ccluni- In Vlctory by 3 Few Citizens!, of PaloietlBnState, ICaoture, tficr j'iw w VjsSia Exposition City Fours at PoughkeepsIe.T' " " niaonSIIHIERS KILLED II BifD -J - ". .. . 200 -Men Are Rcut2hi 307lr-: rested in Piadrnont !Ua Tea of the Mountaineers Were Killed in the Pitched Battle and Womea and Children Driven From Homo. '.-2-3 Lcndii of Chicago Dem,. J I Oil WAS GLORIOUS OCCASION Afldressesiof Day Eeceived With Great Enthusiasm, Capt. W E. ' Gonzales Deploring' " Tact ... That Etate Has No Building and Thank v ing Goevrnor1 Swanson f or Use of ! "Virginia Building Celebration of ;. Day Continued at Exhibit Palace at I Conclusion -of Ofidal Ceremonies-- South Carolina Raised Tea, Ppnr- ed by Ofidal Ladies, Served All ! Callers by Japanese Girls. Norfolk, JVa.; Special. Friday was observed as South Carolina Day i the Jamestown Exposition with (Gov ernor Ansel, his staff, the South Caro lina State commission, the Second Regiment of Infantry, South Carolina National Guard and several hundred my - province to " harmonize'lhe "ap parent contradiction. The ; South Carolina' commission - must t deal more wnii we present. . "In these times of peace we cannot indulge in Boston Tea Parties, or live entirely within the reflected halo of Moultrie! or Sumter, but it is some thing to have the only tea gardens in America; it is more . to be endeavoring by precept and example, to elevate the standard ox our citizenship." Mr Gonzales deplored the fact that South Carolina is without i a - build ing at : the ' Exposition, and thanked Governor Swanson for the use of the Virginia. State. " building,5 where j he said, the South Carolina' commission I had violated a time honored tradition by inviting , the Governor . of South Carolina and " the Governor of North Carolina to "clink glasses of water. V CREWS IN REGATTA, ORDER u vinmh AND TIME 3 J - TTIfV r A Y-vW i - j i i . tit t -. . .... . --'.f ' f r i University eight-oared shells, four miles: i . 1.. Cornell, 20 min. 2 2-5 seel! -2. Columbia, 20 min. . 3 seci 3. U. a Naval Academy. 20 min 13 4-5 sec. -, - - ' 4. Pennsylvania, 20 min. " 23 2-5 sec. .: - ' . 5. Wisconsin. .,. No time taken . o. -ueorgewwn. r No K time ' laxen. . , . -, ; 7- Syracuse. Boat swamped.! - " Preshmaa. eight-oared shells, two miles: .- 1. Wisconsin, 9 mia. 58 sec. 2. Syracuse, 10 min.' 3 sec. : 3. Pennsylvania, .10 min. 4 sec .4. Columbia. 10 min. 6 2-5 DA. . . OvU ... . , . 5. Cornell, 10 min. 7 4-5 sec University four-oared shells, ",uiv'uk wiswaiM, nro miles: 1. Syracuse, 10 min.5 37 1-5 sec .. ,. Co. -ell, 10 min. 40 sec " 3. Pennsylvania, 10 min. 49 sec ; 4. Columbia, 10 min. 59 3-5 sec. j, . , Asheville.-N.: C In a pitched 1at.rt tie at Piedmont, a wooded and rocky pass In the inbuntalhs ten miles from this 1 city, -a ; smata army of revenue' officers routed 200 moonshlners, who. werorcncotmgedMn the battle by meir wives ana daughters. Ten of the moonshiners were killed and -thirty were taken prisoners, with Wv-1 rai. women ana a half dozen chiN uren. , , if our. ; tuohsand gallons' of whisky were seized. . ' ?'v mh4' Teile 'army 5 was led by J. will. Roberts, who had been planning the raid, for!, three, months. . He re ceived information- that the moon shiners had (fathered for sale running of mountain dew;": and ;"ttt mountaineers were In such force .thev vera nremrMi the revenue officers. Roberta Mth. ered men from u dozen ;.point3 and mem ior tne mountain ri led moonshiners were Intrench a ing an attack from the front under cover of the darkness Roberts led his men by a clreultona mn w the mountain until he was above the mountaineers. : At dawn he sent a man under cover of a white flu A. mandlng surrender." but ' the moon. shiners, with derisive cheers, fired a volley over the head of the messen ger.: 1 -.... . .,. The battle at One A Orwan CA anil from the first went against th mrn. shiners. - They were bewildered at iao neavy nre directed against, them. I 1 'WASHINGTON. The President signed Ihe. Pomin kan treaty. , ; -. . . ne government concluded its case undai Tnf H. in tne trial of Statistician Holmes for II-'- 7- rvT""11 "equestefl ChrerustIceFr earHblPr'esT' I wriM,Zr " ' dent .Roosevelt, his acceptance , of the ln 71 T ui""18 " wfcj uuiauiu oii uaw&iLV! n 1 uuneg 11 etf t Advices rccelted by th4 State ?De- U?r tne Ieading officers of the si Dartment say that m attArV hv I ard Oil Comnanv f aragua on Guatemala .and Salvador I Subpoenas were also is apprenenaea. . s . .; 0fficer8 cf the SfanTT "i0r tii Many navy officers believe submer- f of Ind f an ji sion or tne 'armor belt is a serious - jdfect-ln,thedesign-ot-the x-ff0X In" of the Standard 000 ion battleshlDs. " ' Company of New Jersey, fnr w ft?-- ;-'- r -..',. -i J v. ' ; ' I Summons vr IcaWui ' 1 "IO111 ine lorestry service has appointed Rockefeller " "-.,1" Johli ft J.- M. ; Moody to killwolves ind :cbu- RKfe & jngrffr?61 .vWi" 4farsin.thewDlxre.Nationai :B're.K ?iJ????reie' Jobn -D. Archbold S utah. . ... . , , 7 S"S!Kfi The ostoffice;Department: hJflaCTearViamp:- Howe 3 sned a fraud order DratngtVtvti.wi.. T. JL' owe assif. io nMiV-Tir; ZrL.VrT 1""i,?Brer w varies T. tr. to l .vv'lcv u - I assistant secretary. uDugationswntoret,' of Stoekholm, Sweden.-? Y.-.i'hux'n ... . - assistant secretary. The. following offiefala of thQ dard" Oil PiTrriTM-pi-w t.ji also summoned :J. Ai Moffetf J? dent: W.; P. Cowan, vieo-nr; THE VIRGINIA BUILDING. South Carolinians present to partici pate in the events on the day's pro gramme. The official exercises occur red in the mam auditorium building and were attended by hundreds of visiting and resident South Carolin ians. The principal address of the day weer made by Capt. William E. Gonzales of The Columbia State, Co lumbia, S. C, Gov. Martin F. Ansel, President Harry St. George Tucker 1 tne Jamestown Expositionand Hon. Wflltei TTa..J n -i uo4u, ui- ueorgetowa In referring to the South Carolina e,b.t at the exporition Mr.' Gou- neS3 cloVed quIcklThatThe . 1 " 65a, ocftfcuugai irom tne "It- that which ' has been aceom. monitor. Arkansas was plished here is gratifying to altaMtSTJXS Carolinians, if in viewing their I " A e.allant third in this wonderful PoughkoeDsie. N. YPftWi miles in the twilight down a broad- CUU18 niii-riagea river, while Kn nnn persons cheered dellrfonniv 1 . SiiJ?. 01 ad Columbia believing that they had not luucDi RTirn n nattia . . i r . .w crews ev;; fon;" "u .inan a. 8m.a of revenue men nrt - -rrnrJ" . to aeai witn. Mwam n uii n iiim vniniAw 4b1mm' ... of sDeed In the loor IT muA" U11U cmiaren came W nf r. .V.h. r .tuwi.MVping--. iromcaDins an over the e7i ..J " Bae" sweeping across the I mountainside, and the women worn 11111KI1 unprnroofftn ni. . . i . . . " vp v.iT L . Ui ine xew insistent tbat the noaltlon he It became untenable after an hour's hard, flghtlmr. and the main. hod v iuuuumiueerB, comprising 100 men, succeeded in a aulck retret The prisoners taken were Isolated In an advanced post " Five of the rev enue omcers were wounded, but none was Kinea. in all fifteen wounded men were brought to this city and arenow in tne nospitaL ; . OXJR , ADOPTED ISLANDS." Secretary . atrsranouMement and G. W. StahL-secretarv r, 3 Vn 4 . j x. . . . '1,- u-tx m .. s nmci iv;u wuiiaLion:woiMxoaiT,i-"T5'y- xnon, presiaent of tv was received with few marks of In- Uonner general freight agent of X terest in Havana. . s . nA - t I Chicago and: Alton , Railroad, erl In a fierce fle-ht, hotwT, m,-, I also served with subnoenas. stabulary and Moros, in the Lake 1 1. Iasuance of the subpoenas u Lanao District.-P . ' T . Revomt I tne-direct result of the refusal nf .. constabulary and many, Moros were attorneys of the . Standard Oil Com killed. " ,. Pay to supply Judge Landis of th The co,t6f recruIUngandrlngIne lllllB . tne 5000'Porto Ricans to Hawaii was J lu "A """"f1- coon 0f 1564,191-, or J112 per.-capita. Yorkers. But from the first dip of tne oars at the head of th til the winning Ithacans dropped their ?HC ano- ieu back, half senseless, in their victory, not twenty-five feet separated either shell, and at the end tne Columbians were so close up that the great crowd on the banks thought the triumph was theirs. unusual picturesquenesswas added t me scene py tne fact that dark INHERITS FORTUNE, DROWNS. State's first appearance at a great ex position they are given a larger con ception of that State's resources and made to appreciate more fully her in. heart-breaking struirele rowed the mucn-vauntea Annapolis team. au tne way from the first mile post it naa been anybody's race. Prom any part of the observation train at tne. nnisn it still seemed like any- dustrial victories, if by. the stirrinff I body'a race, with the majority be- j . - . "-rill AVI fltV hn m a m m ot their nrid-e these a 1. a ueau neat naa neen ; v wwu uu uaugum I rowed ser are encouraged to greater endeav or and achievements, then the exbib- t ' I i ... ' , M, I ' " s ' I "SV '; I " ' ; t . v-.-t--:'. ' 1 ' 'n,."M-.. 'iLhj.-.-.t ' !... f f'v.i I 5'; : 1 f 1 - .., 'MMIiMIMaMMIIMMtMigM Thus for the eighth time has Cor. nell won the 'Varsity, Challenge Cup in this the thirteenth annual contest. Yet the "big race" was onlv one of three, the climax of a series of water contests that held 50,000 persons on iae snores or tne Hudson River for more than three hours. , , . The first contest, for the Kennedy naMenge-xropnywas tbe race of the university iours. Tnere were only iour enterea ana tne standing was: Syracuse, first: Cornell, second! Pennsylvania, third, and , Columbia, fourth. " . The second race was of the fresh men eignts. . It was won by the Uni versity of Wisconsin, and was the first time the boys from the Badeer State have taken the Stewards' Ctfp since 1900. The .other freshmen crews came in as follows: Syracuse. second; Pennsylvania, third; Colum bia, fourth, and Cornell, fifth. In the great throns that - eathered for the race Annapolis was a general favorite. Uncle Sam did his best to cheer his sailors. , ,He sent three mon itorsthe Florida; Arkansas and Ne vada -up the Hudson, and they came to anchor in the morning near the line of the finish. Flags were broken out from stem to stern and made a brave showing among, the gayly dec orated craft which hedged the course below the bridge. FATAL PINE BEACH FIRE. Unexpected Joy and Grief For Father Probably Crazed Handle. South Norwalk, Conn. After learning that his father had left him $40,000, Frank C. Handle deliberate ly drowned himself. It must have been that the conflict of Budden emotions. Joy over his nni expected inheritance; added grief for nis iatner a aeatn, unbalanced Han dle's mind. - He was thirty-five ver old, healthy, of good habits and nnn ular in Winnipauk. his home. h His father. Joseph C. Handle, died a. ween Deiore. Jf or rortv-fl-e -oom he was postmaster at Winn Ins Tilr - For more than half a century he kept DUr 8 c Governor-General Smith, of Manila, declares that Pulajanism 'is ended in the Islands of. Leyte and Samar,., , s Tho ctockholders of the Hilo Rail road, of Hawaii!' have authorized a bond issue" of $4,500,000, of which $1,000,000 will oe used for refunding L purposes,-$2,0 Q0t0 00 for the exten sion or tbe road to Hamakua and the remainder for further extensions. i:--? DOMESTIC. -, . ... Formal announcement was made of tne. proposal to luild a four-track elevated monorail road between New ark and Jersey City. ' The Wisconsin Assembly passed a bill permitting policy holders ef ' mutual life insurance companies to vote for directors by mall, proxy or in person. ' - '" - " j ' George A. von Lingen, sixty-eight years old, German Consul at Balti more since 1876, is dead. . He was head of a shipping firm.. One of the best known bookmakers ln the country, William MVAyresi. was killed by an electric car as he was leaving the race track at Seattle. Subpoenas were- issued by Federal Judge Landis, at Chicago, to . compel the officiafs of tue Standard Oil Com pany to testify as to the Trust's flnan-f ciai conamon." 11 Charged with rtlcipatlng in the murder , of Georgo W4 Maoust. Lee Clifton and Clinton Fallaw and Isaac Taylor have 'been arrested at Bates- the country store in -which the nnct. office is. Washington. Pa. wmia . a ; Breene, a day laborer, was so overl come by the news that he had Inner-1 ited an estate valued at $100,000 mat ne iamted. He died half hour later intho hospital; an TROLLEY KILLS TWO GIRLS. Sent .Around Carve at Passaic, It Crushes Them. J- 4 . Passaic, N. J. As the resnlt of trolley car turning down a street which it should have crossed, two young women were run down and killed here. The victims of the n. culiar accident are Belle Krones and Annie Worksman, both twenty years old, and the daughters of merchants. The- girls.- who had been iifeinno. chums, were on their Wav home when theywere struck at the corner of Pas- eaic ana oecona streets. , Captain Davis Acquitted. Captain John F. Davis han heen acquitted at . Ironton, Ohio, of the murder' of Dr. Wayne McHov hla family physician. Captain Davis had Wall Street was 'greatly cheered by a reassuring interview given r out by William Rockefeller, in which he said he saw. no signS'Of business reac tion ih the ' near futurer ' Harvard College held ;her 2 71st : commencement exercises at Cam bridge. Mags. ,.t .- . Much damage to property was done by a windstorm at Cleveland, Okla., and Tulsa, I." T. ' ' ' Telephone girls at Butte," Mont., struck in sympathy with the linemen. Burglars, robbed the. postofflce at Chiltonville, Mass., of. $260 in money and stamps. The new " scout cruiser Chester, wih a contract speed of twenty-four knots, was launched at Bath, Me. Governor' Comer, -of Alabama,-has signed the commission, of ..John' H. Bankhead as United States Senator, succeeding John T.' Morgan. the company; The attorneys deci?r0 that t the information should hav6 been sought at the time of the trial and declared that ,t the request of Judge Landis was extra-judicial and unwarranted. The Judge replied that he was. entitled. to the informa tion and intended to have it, and di rected District Attorney Sims to pre pare subpoenas for such officials of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, or for any of the officers of the control ling corporation of the Standard Oil Company who might, in the omninn of the District Attorney, have the ia formation desired bv the Court. The Standard Oil Company, was in dicted In the Federal court on the charge of using illegal freight rates tendered to it by the Chicago and Al ton roaa, and after a long trial was found guilty on 1462 counts of the indictment. . A maximum fine of $20,000 is al lowed on each count, of the indict ment, making a total possible fine against the company of $29,240,000. Before passing sentence on the com pany Judge Landis announced that it was. his custom to proportion the fin& according to the financial condition of the person or corporation convict ed, and asked for specific information regarding the financial condition of the Standard Oil Company. This in formation be has been unaWe to ob tain, and the subpoenas issued were the consequence. DYNAMITE KILLS EIGHT. Heavy. Property Loss Outside James- I been informed that Dr. McCoy was -ine addresses were notable and were received with great enthusiasm. - w-E. Gonzales, president of the South Carolina commission to the - Jamestown Exposition, spoke in part as follows : "Our State may be charged with inconsistency in celebrating the land ing of the English at Jamestown three centuries ago, .while at the same time fe iff H6--JPtoKty of Col. William Moultrie m his little fort of palmetto logs. to the advances of Sir r-arKer on the 2Sth of .T,,.. But it does not come within H. ST. GEORGE TUCKER, President of the Exposition, 1770. it is its justification , and those that created it are rewarded. Following the official ceremonies the celebration of the day was contin ued at the South Carolina State ex hibit in the State's exhibit ;.. palace where the Palmetto State has an ex ceptionally fine exhibit of its products,- occupying almost one. entire side f of the palace. South Carolina raised tea' was served to all callers, being poured by ladies of the official' South; Carolina party and served W T . - Japanese Dirls. Libel Against the Chelton. Norfolk, Special. Capt. F. P. Sanford, master of the five-masted schooner T. Charlton TTent-u- r.. v ijua Deserted in American Ports. St. Johns, N. F. ' Special" - Ae- f"rli 41. m . . . ; schooner T. CharlfnTi tt-.. r . " omcers ol the. British ; ton sunk off Fire Island, N. Y., by the j Z rIe h wiled from ,w JV,X UVk consorts tne Ciood Hope, Roxburgh and the Hampshire off Cape Race 163 men deserted from the squadron while the vessels "were at Hampton Roads and othe Ameri can ports. The'foTii. et,;i. .. town Exposition Grounds. Norf oik, .Va. Six blocks of derlng ruins mark the track of the nre wnicn swept Pine Beach ' lavinc 1 . . . - a iow nuy noteis, . saloons, -i eating houses and stores, destroying $200, 000 worth of property, costing the lives of possibly, five persons, and en dangering the negro building, Inside Inn, and several State buildings with in the Exposition grounds. . An ex plosion of a gasoline stove in the rear of the Berkeley Hotel caused the fire. ' . . r Larry Harrison; a negro, was found mortally burned; under - the Hotel Berkeley; a man is believed to have perished in the National Club, Mary land avenue, and two women and a baby are believed to have been caneht when the walls 0 the' Hampton; uuaue 4Cii iu, . , , , , ! The Arcade, Royal Pine, Hampton Roads,- Washington ' House, Outside Inn, Powhatan, Carolina and Berke ley hotels were among the largest buildings destroyed:- ' Duke's Sistcr-in-Law Turns Gypsy. - A sister-In-iaW of '.the Duke of Westminster is touring England as a gypsy, j ; '! in the habit of calling on- Mrs. Davis, and on unexpectedly returning to' his home he found the rjhvRlrlan-anH m wife together, in the fight which fol lowed Dr. McCoy suffered fatal wounds. --. , Heavy Damages For Wreck. -The wreck of , a funeral train on the Cincinnati, Flemingsburg and Southwestern Railwav has resulted in the filing of suits by dent, to in quire into the prevention the suffererB for $156,000. or 180.- J 'f.losspf life by shipwreck and gen- 1 '" " FOREIGN. M. von Schwanebach, Controller of the "Empire; - has - resigned vfrom the Russian Cabinet: , ' - - ' A bombiwas thrown at ar wagon of the .Russian Imperial ank ln Eri- van Square. Ti Ills; two employes. of ; tne Dank were killed and $125,000 is missing. Richard Croker's Orby won'lhe Irish,Derby s Andrew Carnegie,. ha vinsr approved the site and plans for the Palace of. I'eace Duiiaing, lert Tne Hague for Scotland." - -;-'' - ' : A royal commission has been ap-' pointed at The Hague,' with Prince Henry, of the Netherlands-; as presl- Two Americans and Six Italians Are ' Blown to Pieces by Explosion. : Houston, Va. As the result of the premature explosion of a box of dyna mite, near Tola, eight persons were killed and six . others seriously in jured. . Two Americans 4 killed were Ed ward Clarke, of Charlotte County, fireman of a donkey engine, and Cor nelius Sullivan, of Lamont. HI., ford man of the McDermott Construction Company, of Chicago; which has the contract for , the construction of a part of the Tidewater Railway. The six others killed were Italian work men. " The accident happened in a deep railroad cut where about fifteen men were engaged. About - fifty pounds pf. dynamite exploded. The explosion was heard for miles around and near by houses were damaged by the ter rific shock. . - AUTOMOBILE WRECK AT TALE. 000 more than the -orielnai Mat nt the road. The Louisville and Nash ville, lessee of the line, is also ind ud ed ln the iuits. . :i . .: ,. . ' erally to study methods of saving life at ..aea. ;.; ..u ".vf..-,-a,f. y i ?. J ! . Warned of Fatal Collapse ; ; Police sent warning to the. Build ing department, of New 'York City. A tornedo was ..fired af . AtmiMi Wiren's cutter at Sebastopol, Russia.; !' Much damage was done In Mexico by an overflow f tho lower Rio Grande.- ;ii ; ft4; fv..ui--. -;i Socialist : and Labor v members of D. L. Oliver, of Pittsburg, Was Killed Instantly. New Haven. Conn. His head and body crushed together. D. Leet Oliver, twenty-one years old, a Yale undergraduate, and who a few years ago inherited several millions from 'his father, J. B.5 Oliver, a Pittsburg ironmaster, was instantly killed un der his racing automobile, which shot jover, the low side rail ' of an iron bridge four . miles from, here and landed bottom up on the bank of a little creek. Two other undergrad uates, W. Strothers Jones, of Re.. BankN. J., and John A. C. Colston, of Baltimore, were badly hurt. Er nest Hudson, a former Yale, mm, and wno was Oliver s guest ior tue com mencement, escaped with a few slight cuts and bruises. . ,were taken. xnusn steamer Chelston, Sunday June 23, filed a-libel in the United States Federal Court against the steamer asking . .$100,000 damagei The steamer will give bbnd here anl' proceed- on Iier vqyage f to,, Central American port, : ! r , - .' Only His Legs Left. ; After his wife had refused to come back .and,' live with him' because' of his drinking habits, George Kramer; a quarryman, went to the barn, at the rear of his wife's house at. Monroe, Mich.,, and lay down on the floor and blew himself to" pieces with a stlckof dynamite.1 " All that was found, of 1 mm arter tne explosion were -his legs. v: New York's Bad Roads. " ' r . An- etpert ciiir engineer has re ported-, that not" 100. yards of any of a ports. .The f out. ships Won their S!va?ment8 01 ork City are way.to Portsmouth England. ' - - - " . . four hours before the Walker r&Zn XrZZ? iV.v tenement collapsed, killing seven, but Ing the-Czar with breach of faith ; no measurea for safety of the inmates I ! r xr wlne'gVowers In France, surrendered tot tne autnorltles, and is In- Jail at Montpeiiier. ?. . v Ur w 't-.-.-t v, 1 .tv i The city, of .Hamburgh has voted. $14,375,000 for the extension of the port, which includes the developmentt ot tne narcor or Harburg. Move Fort Better Bails. . MJ ' Presidents Of many Important VaU-! ways will - confer with the ' heads of tne. unitea states . Steel Corporation In New York Citv supplying better steel rails. , Old Man Drowns In a Spring Barrel. ' Ar0611 Erler.- of Bernardsvlire, tN.-J., was. found drowned tnA tnrinw '.near the residence. of John B.'Dun ster, by whom he was employed as a hostler. A - large -barrel had been jsunk- Into - the -gound-around the 4spring, and it Is supposed that Erler Jfell headlong while drinking from it.' He was eighty years old. - - .. i ' Judge Aids Lovings. I Basing his opinion upon the ruling of -Justice, Fitzgerald in the trial of Harry Thawrfor'the murder' of Stan ford White, Judge Barksdale, at Houston, Va., refused to permit the introduction of a word of evidence tending to disprove the story of 'liss Elizabeth Loving, whose testimony is the mainstay ; in, the defense of her father, former Judge William ,G. Lov ing, .manager of Thomas F. Ryan's Vlrglnlaestate; on trial. for the shoot ing of Theodore" Estes. Oklahoma Congressman Named. The Democrats of the Fifth Okla- f homa District nominated Scott Ferris MPlctoU, Hhe 'Porelgnv Minister; Congress on the 296th ballot. . i . ; Bucket Shops Excluded. ; Mayor McCarthy and the police of providence,- R. I., began a crusade to drive bucket shops out of the clty cjommunicating 'to tne -Chamber of Deputies the text or the Franco-Jap anese, agreement, said that 41" similar treaty between ' Russia . and .; Japan might be-expected soon.'.. ' ' - . ! Lord Alverstone held in the case of Guerln.who escaped from Devil's 4oiuu, luul ai3riusn,suDject, convict ed of crime In a foreign country and . escaping to British territory ."was" not amenable to the extradition act' : J ; Prince Henry of Prussia was .ban ished from Germany ,by Emperor William for his . complicity; in the Eulenbere scandal.-' - ! v ; ' Swamped With Business.' i Men' who have traveled - from one end of the country to the other report that. there is nowhere apparent rea son' for the falling off in railroad stock, values,; as; the railroads have more business than they can handle, and the Industrial output is increas ing steadily. ; Wisconsin Kills Two-Cent Bill. 1' At jviaaison, wis., me u16 vote of 5. to 21 killed the Two-Cent Railway Fare bllUTl :. -- -
French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, N.C.)
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July 4, 1907, edition 1
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