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Show PIERCE OR FIST FIGHT OCCURS FLOOR TZFT TOUCHED Of THE SENATE HE! GOLD . H HONORS ANNIVERSARY IS EXPOSITION OF Exposition to the Public, a Great Multitude Being Present. Memorial THAT OPENED State Senator Henson ef llllnola and The Assistant InThrown Open Alaska-Yukon-Pacifi- c volved in Rough and Tumble Tight. Id. Seattle, Wash. -- - The Aiakan Yukon Pacific cxpoeltion that cost $10.1)00,-V00- , und the first sod of which was turned exactly two ago. was officially opened a; mum on Tuesday. June 1, with tilting splendor and ceremony with a great multitude in attendance. In the east ruuiii of the White House in the presence of a distinguished President gathering of diplomats. Taft opened the exposition by touching a gold key, studded with gold nuggets taken from the first mine A hearty opened in the Klondike. cheer front the assembled guests followed the flash of the electric circuit to the other side of the continent. The military parade, the President Taft's the magic re-sjionse all wete carried out exactly pug lisilc State Senator Janies A. Henson and Thoma-Slierldan, an assistant sergeant al arum. In which blood was spilled, marked the closing hours of the senate session early Sun day morning. The general assembly was in a d udlock on the question of sine die adjournment and the fight occurred when Seuatur lienson attempted to It ave the senate chamber after he had beta refused permission to depart. Senator lienson attempted to open the loekt d doors, when Sheridan, who la young and athletic, caught him by the anil. According to Sheridau, lien-sothereupon turned and struck him in the lace. A moment later the two were involved in a rough and tumble light. At the steps leading to the as panned. . main floor both When James J. Hill was introduced They were dragged apart, while Senator Heard, In the uteiiing exerc'zes. a tumult enan e soldier, begged sued that recalled the demonstrations them to "remember Illinois," and nut for favorites at national political condisgrace the senate. Senator Henson ventions. except that here 40,iiD peorose, his lace bleeding, and started at ple were cheering spuni-tnfor Sheridan, but was restrained and fur only one man, who waited several ther trouble was averted. Later apol- minuies before he could begin 'his address. The management iu their nce-logies weie made by all concerned. calculated program had omitted to PATTEN'S DEAL SUCCESSFUL. count on this ovation, und when President Taft pleased the gulden key at Bull Leader in Chicago Pit Satisfied noon, and touched off the high sgnal With a Profit of a Million Dollars. gong he cut short Bishop Keator's A benediction. Chicago. What is generally concedstriif.ig feature of ed to have been the most successful the parade was the popular applau.-wheat deal in the annals of the Chi- for the Japanese visitors' of the cago board of trade, closed Saturday cruisers Aso and Soya. and it closed without squeezing of HEINZES LIEUTENANT JAILED. shorts, which in other days was wont to furnish a show to the gallery vis- Mutt Remain in Prison Until Missing itors and leave La Salle street stagBooks of Copper Company Are gering. Restored. James A. Paiten during Saturday's New York. George Baglin, brief session made a fixed price of 1.34 a bushel. Through his pit clerk, of the I'uited Copper comEd" Walker, he bought or sold at pany, was taken to the Tombs prison that price, but the buying was almost on Tuesday und must remain there of purely theoretical on iiis part. He under an order of Judge did take in a few thousand bushels the United States district court, uutij from some trailer" who waited until missing books of the company, which the last moment for his profits, but contain evidence in the case of F. in the main he disposed of about a Augustus Heinze, are produced. A half million to shorts who had hoped similar punishment over Sanhangs against hope to the last moment, ana ford Koblnson, a prominent director then, in the parlance of the pit, took of the company, whose case will ba their medicine. Mr. Patten has made a fortune, how further considered by Judge lacomlie much he cannot say until his cash Wednesday. Both men are alleged to have perwheat ia marketed. His own admission, however, seems to make $1,000,-00- mitted the spiriting away of the a conservative estimate. It may books that were under subpoena. Bagrun much larger. The losses, it Is lin testified before the grand Jury l that he bad overheard Robinson and said, have fallen mostly on one of the Helnse brothers conspiring speculators. to remove the books and had interA 111. n six-eche- u-il- y e vice-preside-nt 0 profes-tieaft- WIZARD OF THE AIR. Count Zeppelin Travels 458 Milss In His New Airship Without Landing. Berlin. Count Zeppelin, whose remarkable performances in his first airship brought unbounded honor to the Inventor, on Sunday accomplished the most striking feat In his career. He guided his Zeppelin II from Friedrichs-hafe- n to BItterfeld, a distance of more than 456 miles, without landing. The journey hours. lasted nearly twenty-tw- o Count Zeppelin, who personally was in charge of the airship and whose hand was at the tiller during the greater part of the journey, had not allowed a word to be piade public relative to his Intention to undertake an endurance trip. It was, however, common knowledge that he purposed to seize the first favorable opportunity to proceed to Berlin in his newest craft, Zeppelin II, which was rebuilt to displace the one destroyed near Efchterdlngen. Fined $500 for With Strike. hours of Chicago. After forty-sialmost constant wrangling, the jury In the case of Martin ("Skinny") Madden, M. J. Boyle and F. A. Pou-cholabor leaders, charged with strike grafting, on Saturday brought in a verdict of guilty, fining each of (he defendants $500. The long delay is said to have been due to the inability of the twelve men to find a Madcommon ground of punishment. den almost collapsed when the verdict was read. He was scarcely able "Skinny" Bribery Madden in Connection x t, to speak. An Idaho Tragedy. Idaho Falls, Idaho. John I .amp. in the early hours of Saturday morning, Biruck down his wife. May Lamp, while asleep In bed, with a hammer, and then committed suicide by taking carbolic acid. Mrs. Lamp is in a precarious condition and no hopes are The entertained for her recovery. victims head was crushed by the blow. No cause can be assigned for the tragedy other than Lamp, during the past winter, sat on a coroner's jury, which is supposed to have turned his mind. Crittenden Dead. T. T. Kansas City. Crittenden, a noted Missourian, died at his home here Saturday morning. He suffered a stroke of apoplexy Thursday afternoon, and remained unconscious until he died. Mr. Crltten den was 77 years old. He was born in 8'uelby county. Kentucky. In 1878 Mr. Crittenden became governor of Missouri, and It was to Governor Crit- tenden that Frank James, the noted outlaw, laid down his arms. He was sonsnl general to Mexico under President Cleveland. Kentucky Town Fuirvii-wthe trees Ky. Among sliich have growu up alioui the birth-- j , I Over One Hundred Men Injured At Least Fifteen People Met Death While Many Were Injured, It Being Estimated Two Hundred Are Left Homeless. TRIBUTE President is Principal Speaker at mally Dedicated. Unveiling of Monument to Men Who Fought at Gettysburg. Davis since the iu the iilm-- l couth reiiiiiry. Davis family n moved to Declares That Services of Regular M the Jefferson Davis Me-- ! Army Have Never Been Commemorated Adequately by Congrese imii-i.i- t park was dedicat'd mi Thiirxor the Nation. Northeast across the state is Hodgi-nville- , near which Lincoln was lorn eight months after ills great op-. p'lm-ntGctlysburg, Pa. The dedication ol September, 19u7. when the gray. a monument to the regulars whs ranks of Kentiirkys famous "Orphan fought at Gettysburg was the brigade met In Glasgow. Ky.. at the which brought President Taft to this . grave of Ooui.tru city on Monday, May 31, a grateful their commander, tonner Governor congress haring somewhat tardily Buckner of Kentucky, broached the caused u be erected a $20h,uu0 shaft plan of tlie Jeffersoii Davis Memorial In the bloody angle where the regular were bote the brunt of Ihe Suliseriit ions association. fighting upon started, tin- - women of the soinli ail- the last day at Gettysburg. ing ably, and wheu all but $4,uhi hud The lniK)slng shaft of grauiie was been raised to purchase seventeen unveiled by (he president's daughter. acres at Fuirvlew, General Rennet i Miss Helen 1L Taft, while the president H. Young, commanding the Kentucky puld tribute to officers and men of dlvision, United Confederate Veter the United States army, past and tins, advanced that sum and made the present. memorial possible. Tlie president put himself squarely made on Oratory, music and flow-eras opposed to any reduction und A basket dinner the day notable. in the standing army. H told of the a barbecue were provided by the peohas arisra prejudice that often ple of Todd and (.TirlM'an counties, against the possible aggressions of a whkli share equally the town of Far-view- . regular army and a professional soldiery, and of the corresponding diffiGeneral Young, n former lieutenant culty in that love and pride of the gray, wrote the chief address of Llio arousing army which expresses llself of the day, and it was read by Colonel and has frequently expressed Milton. General Young asserted that today, in itself the past in behalf of Hie uavy. every southern state should rear a The asserted lhat tho serpresident shaft to Jefferson Davis, whose char vices of the regular army have never acter and sufferings he dwelt iipun. been commemorated by adequately He paid high tribute to Lincoln, sayor nation. tbe congress ing that lie lime had cunie wheu The profession of arms always men might apeak kindly nnd truly of has been au honorable one," he the past. "All honor to the regular army The plan la to rn sc $.3.1,000 more of the I'uited Stales. Never In its with which to build a memorial It a slain upon Its eshad has hisloty temple to contain all the records of cutcheon. the confederacy and to remodel a On the way to Gettysburg from two-storresidence on the Davis farm the president's car was Pittsburg, to house Ihe widows of confederate stdei racked at York for two hours, sold'ers. und during his stay be made a brief address in which he declare again his LEPERS ARE CURED. hoM for tlie early enactmunt of a But Years of Their Lives Are Wasted tariff law, If the lord will only be good and scud some real but weathar and They Are Left Desolate. tn June." Honolulu. After some of them had Four regiments of the regular army spent tweuly years of thetr life In were here to jiarticipuie In tbe exerthe leper set I lenient on the Island of cises. There also was a personal esMolokai, ten of eleven lepers who cort to the president, composed of were returned here at the Instance of veterans of the regular army who the territorial legislative committee fought In the Gettysburg campaign. The president arrived shortly before fur have been found 10 o'clock and was taken for a drive free of the disease. Of these, two over the battlefield. At several points are boys of six and seven years, but he alighted and stood on the promithe others vary In age from 27 to 79. nences overlooking the valley below and some of them have spent many and the mountains iu the far years in the aoHjomtiBl. A pathetic feature of thq i Returning to his private car for Is the probability that some of luncheon, he remained until tbe arthe older patients will petition to be rival of his daughter from Washingreturned to the Island, as they have ton. Miss Taft came with the secrebeen shut off from the world and tary of war and Mrs. Dickinson. Iu their friends so long that they have the party from the capital were also no place else to go. A few of the many distinguished officers of the patients were sent 1o the settlement army. test for the bacteriological The ceremonies of the unvelliag leprosy wus discovered, and It is be- were simple. Miss Taft pulled the silklieved that In some cases a natural en cord that released the flags draped cure has hoi-- effected. about the monument and the magnificent shaft of granite was exposed U Held Prisoner by Indian Police. the view of the applauding throng. Los Angelos. Ralph Rogers, a Montana Mining Man Suicides. hanker of this c'ty, lias Just reached Mont Walter Meach, J.os Angeles from Ihilm Springs, RivSheridan, erside rounly, and relates a thrilling aged 40 years, a prominent mining man of this part of the state, commitstory of how he and his son, ted suicide Sunday afternoon by staU two Indian were attacked by Rogers, a In the heart with police front the Agua Oallente reser- blng himself Mr. Mcscfe had not vation . (to whom they surrendered pocket kyilfe. well for some time past, a Ter being shot at several times. The been feeling In complete them to- and it Is believed was not Indiana then handcuffed of his faculties when he possession sun hot in held the and them gether His brother was the on the desert for eight hours with killed btmself. room with him at. the In the one the temperature at 115 degrees. The only and all he immediately hough trouble arose over a question of land time, him from stabbing: to tried prevent ownership. himself, was loo late. Floods In Idaho. American Steamer Saved from DanSpokane, Wash. According to regerous Position by Wireless. ports received from Lewiston, Idaho, Guaynias, Mexico. Through the uae the Clearwut or river Is a raging torwireless telegraphy the Americas of rent and Is rapidly reaching the high steamer Precursor, rendered helpless 1894. The Dimmer water stage of by a broken propeller, was rescued rial Trust company's bridge at Lew- from a position and towed iston is liable to go. The Snake Into thisdangerous on Sunday. The Preport river Is seventeen feel aliove low cursor had drifted aimlessly for three water, and one foot below the highest when a wireless cunimnniratloa record. Several houses on the low- days, hod with this port. A tug was was At Kanilah, one sent out and brought the steamer lands urr flooded. stone pier for the new si pel bridge to port. Some of the passengers bad has been washed away. At Freer, a become uncontrollable from fear and rise of another fool will hlork the bad to be locked In their staterooms. iif I early l)ar, wlii'ii tin- Dur I - j , Oklahoma City, Okla At least flf eeu people were killed Saturday night in a tornado that deastated the Oklahoma towns of Key West and Do pew. Fluty or more were injured. At least ton were killed in lcy West. That fiqtm is confirmed by s the number of people who fled storm. Five r.rc dead ut lie pew. Tat tornado svtci t ov-- r a wide streu-l- i ol i l: DU TAR'S Non-Unio- j f- -i Park in JEFF OF Purchased by Admirers of Confederate Chieftain ia For- Attempts of Street Car Company to Run Cars With n Men Results in Fierce Battle. Two Oklahoma Towns Devastated by High Winds and Rainstorm Which Swept Over Wide Area. BIRTH ir Folio., ins the wind came a delude of rain. Floods then added to the ter rible situation. The wreckage of Ke West soon was overwhelmed by the rlriug waters. Practically nothing wa left of the town of 200 inhabitants. The residence of J. 1. Hart was de mul shed after being rolled over a ball dozen times with the occupants in. side. Every member of llie was injured. Mrs. Hurt's back was broken, a little girls leg was wrenched from her thigh and Hart and two children were seriously injured. Depew was destroyed by a double twister that formed from that sttikin.-KeWest and from another coming from the east. The tornado wled out Depew and then pushed on northeast presumably spending its force a few miles further on. At an early hour Saturday after most unusnal noon was witnessed Small tornadoes rapid!) phenomena. followed one another. They rose high Into the air, circled about and dipped. As many as five were ob served during the display. The lllLB tornadoes had spent their force when the big one came along at 5 oclock fa-ni- l) niUdi-lplii- a Tin attempt of the rhiladelpbiu Rapid Transit uuii patty mi irS ,hl,,',luon ,,,,,,, re' - oct-aido- n ull'-- Wednesday night in ti niiml-eof Rerioiis rmis. it was tin tirsi ftirt to (, cm-,- , the lines at night, and after tciei'M I'm tie efforts to get tln-- j cer through tin- - mobs they were s ui j back to i ii barns. least one hundred men more nr serious'; injured in t(. rioting. In the Kensington district, where many ntlils are located, feeling ran high. Muhs of im-n- . women and chil dren pulled the motortnen nnd con ductont from t'.ii-i- r ears and heat them severely. in many instances cars were set on tire. The police were to control the strike sympathizers. Wheu they charged a mob it separated only to form Hgain in the vicinity of another car. Several policemen were Injured. In We-- 1 Philadelphia dynamite ca-were pig red on the trucks and crowd toned the nonunion workmen whtn the attempted to bring out cars, for.' lag them to return to the barn. lithe downtown aict1on conductors am: ntotormen were pulled from their car and their rlothea lorn off by nioli o' trike sympathizers. In aume turn: the terrified men had lo lie taken t private houses and guarded by pullet to save them from barm. The Imported crews proved a disap pointment to the contpuny,- - many o. them deserting their cars at the first sign of trouble and leaving them standing In the street at the mercy of the mob. w,-;- ,l i s jkiw-erle- TEXAS TOWN DESTROYED. LANDSLIDE u IN IDAHO. Killed and Many Other Roosevelt Flooded ai Result of Slide Three Milee in Length. Injured aa Result of Tornado. A ol Boise, Idaho. A special tornado Brownwood, Texas. to the great fury struck the little village ol Statesman from Roosevelt, Thunder of Mountain, May 31, via Smiths Ferry, Zephyr, In the eastern portion Brown county, at 1 o'clock Sunday June 2, says: A landslide three miles In morning, and left a p&lh of death and length destruction seldom paralleled. The and 2)0 feet wide, that plied up along death list has reached a total of Mule creek to a depth of 100 feet, octhirty-two- , and the number of serious- - , curred here today. The creek was will Mi-t-. flfre f'ff&out of its 1ed, the back wntera ly and fatxitf The atom formed half a mile south- ffiwamg Roosevelt until, this word posed no objection. west of Zephyr and swept down upon is sent, most of the buildings in the the village, cutting a wide swath di town are floating. EDITORS SCORE A POINT. "The placer property of Caswell & rectly through the residence and bui a Curran la destroyed, the giant maGovernment Must Prove Malice In the new dirtricts. Nearly fifty houses were entirely chinery and pipe being burled. No Indianapolis Newt Editorial!. demolished. Lightning started a eon lives were lost and no one was inIndianapolis. Delavan Smith and flagratlon which destroyed one entire jured so far as known. Charles Williams, editors of the In- business block. No effort was made Everything is in a chaotic condito fight the fire as the care of the tion. dianapolis News, on Tuesday successfully resisted, for the moment at least, dead and wounded victims demand CASE POSTPONED. their removal to the District of Colum- ed the attention of every one. bia to stand trial for criminal libel on Prominent Men to Teetify In CeleIdahoan Stood Up for Rights. account of publishing articles intibrated Panama Les Majeste Trial. Because Wash. he object mating that there was enormous graft edSeattle, booth to a the of erection selling Ind'anapolls. Judge Anderson on In the Panama canal purchase. on the grounds allotted to his state Wednesday continued till October 11 Lawyers for the publishers denied malice In the stories and editorials A. D. McKlnlay, commissioner from the hearing of the case growing out ex of the publication of the Panama Idaho to the graft complained of. They gained from was arrested and escorted charges. Thla was done on the govposition, Judge Anderson a ruling that evi- from the fair grounds by exposition ernment's contention that such, dels) dence should be Introduced to this efA protest was immediate!) was necessary in order that the guards. fect. might be heard. The defendants committed no of- lodged by friends of Mr. McKinla) Prominent financiers, polilic'anv fense for which they could be re- with Exposition President J. El Chil berg and Director General I. A. Ns and government officials must testify moved to another district for trial, in the criminal libel case of the govthey said. Attorneys for the govern- deau. The result was that an apolog) ment vigorously resisted the introduc- was offered to Mr. McKlnlay and the ernment against Delavan Smith and tion of testimony, but were overruled. booth was ordered from the Idahr Charles R. Williams, owners of the grounds. Indianapolis News. Conference on Trusts. WORK OF ARKANSAS MOB. Strikers Overpower Deputies. Washington. Herbert Knox Smith, S'sson. Cal. The power-housand commissioner of corporations, con- Unable to Capture a Negro Murderer lighting plant at. McCloud were cap ferred with President Taft on TuesHis Brother. They Lynch tured by the striking shingle mill em day concerning Investigations In his Ark. A posse of citizen! ployes on Portland, bureau. Mr. Smith says some Inves- on Wednesday and the town Sunday lynched Joe Blakely, a wnn in darkness Wednesday night. tigations have been on foot for years and only the inadequacy of his forces negro, brother of Sam Blakely, whr Between 300 nnd 400 armed strikers inarched on the plant in a body late prevented the clearing up of all the shot and killed Deputy Sheriff fair In near here Saturday morning. Unable the day, drove off the twenty-fivmatters at once. The steel to catch the alleged murderer of Cain deputy sheriffs on guard and took trust and Its business, the barvesier trust and all machinery the posse lynched the brother, aft"i compelling the men at work to quit. The deputies deemed It use combinations, cotton exchanges, lum- he declared that he Intended to get' Bud Harper, who had killed the Blake less to attempt resistance, and left ber, water transportation, water powers and tobacco are the principal ly brothers dog. Trouble over the when ordered to do so. Not a shot dog resulted In Cain's death and the was fired. Troops have ben ordered matters under investigation. to the scene of the trouble. lynching followed. Good Football Player But No Jurist. Vice Admiral Urlu Wants Peace. Woman Was Probably Murdered. Too much of a footWashington. Vice Admiral Sotokl Lw Washington. Angeles. As a result of the ex ball player and not enough of a law- chi Urlu of the Japanese navy and of the body of .Mrs. Eugem yer" is the sealed verdict of the sen- Baroness Urlu returned to Washing burning Bennett, It Is learned that strychnin' ate committee in the case of George ton Sunday from Annapolis. The ad was found to have been the cause ol W. Woodruff, nominated some weeks niiral and the baroness in the evening ago as federal Judge for Hawaii. In were the guests of the Jaiianese am- death. This announcement has been made by the district attorney's office consequence of this verdict, the com- bassador and Ihe Baroness Takahira Harper E. Bennett, a real estate man mittee has declined to report the nom- Admiral Urlu said: of You ask of the woman. Is being held ination of Mr. Woodruff and the nomi- war? I speak only for peace. Why husband for nation remains pigeon-holeIn the should not this great nation hare all had preliminary examination. Bennett brought suit for $50,000 damage! committee room. Unless there is a of that and more? It has abundant a local grocery firm, alleging chauge of sentiment among members resources, it has wisdom to guide. Tc against that hia wife had been killed by pto of the committee, the nomination Is me It Is a amone to be great happiness malne poisoning, due to eating canne not likely to be reported. you, for I love this great nation ol chile con carne. the west." Mob Record For Twenty-fiv- e Years. May b Treasure Ship. New York. That 3,284 men, women Crazed With Liquor, Chester, Pa. Government official's an children have been lynched In this Fort Benton, Mont. erased with are agitated over the discovery of an country in the last quarter of a cen- liquor and because he wa! obstruction in the Delaware river in tury was the assertion of Mrs. Ids found fault angered with, Jack Noore, a well the vicinity of Fort Mifflin, Wells Barnett at the National Negro which known painter here. Sunday afternoon they think may prove to be a treasure conference in this city. Asking why this was permitted by a Christian na- shot his wife and then attempted sui- hip. While a government boat was tion, Mrs. Barnett quoted John Tem- cide. Present Indications are that working there, the suction pump ple Graves as saying that the mob Mrs. Norra will die, but the suicide brought up several helmets such ar wrn by the stands as the most potenMai bulwark part of the tragedy was not a success, soldiers and r eIuPIn'nt- - English between the women of the sotAn and although the man la seriously woundTills discovery has ed. arrestNoore baa to the belief that Jt Is one of the such a carnival of crime aa would prefrequently been ed and has served jail sentences for of the government cipitate the annihilation of the negro abuse of his wife and other times ha which brought English race. All know thla is untrue, Mrs. gold to this country to tot absented hiA himself home from Its PF Barnett said. soldiers the war of III and was sunkduring varying periods at this point. Thirty-tw- o u - Alaska-Yukon-Pacif- s e d , d d p! 1 a 1 y dls-4Me- -- . e n rsllroad. Crank Gets Twenty-fiv- e Years for Murder. a DeKansas City. Mo. ITte jury in the troit. fi Maciiliuac railroad locomoof James Sharp, or Adam God," ease tive standing unguarded, with steam charged with the murder of Policeman up, Joseph Jeskonski, 12 years old, Michael Mullane tn a religious ri.it climbed inlo the cab, pulled the throt8 last, Saturday mornhere tle wide open and jumped to the returned a verdict of guilty of ing ground again, as Hip engine went murder in the second degree, and spinning down the tannery sidetrack Sharp was sentenced to twenty-fiv- e toward a standing freight train. The tn the penitentiary. When tbe wild locomotive and several freight years it a as read. Sharp verdict cars were demolished In the resulting without show of emotion. "Thats all rrash. The damage amounted to right. said he. "It's the will of and the hoy. who was slightly In- God." The case against Sharp's wife, jured, was arrested. Melissa, will come up soon. Bigamist Commits 8ulclde. Train Robbers Secured Only Three by reSan Francisco. Overcome Hundred Dollare. morse and unable to bear the It Is announced by the Neb. Omaha, of his bride of less than that the actual authorities office poet twelve hours, to whom he had con- rash secured by tbe robbers who held livfessed that he had another wife up the Overland Limited on the Union ing, William Graham ended his lire Pacific railroad on May 22, amounted Thursday by swallowing crude car to less than $300. Reports have been hollc acid. He was married to Miss received from all points where the Hannah E. Carroll Wednesday night, stolen registered packages originated. and after llu- - wedding festivities con- About $2M) was recovered from the with fessed to her. though withholding ilia three nun under arrest charged of dvnamlts sticks Three the robbery. his other of whereabouts name and In th attic of Brown wife. Ills bride upbraided him. when were discovered South Omaha, where Park school in be ended his 111c, Religious Boy Causes Wreck. AlplUii. Mich. Discovering d $3,-no- |