OCR Text |
Show iRIljSTllEi The Nevada Bar association will have a representative at the legislature legisla-ture to offer assistance in the technical techni-cal preparation of bills for enactment. Wilson Thyes, who was shot and wounded at Lovelock, New, by Avery Henkel, is reported to be making splendid progress toward recovery at a hospital in Reno. , Frank Bromo who several weeks ago stabbed Tony Catalogni at Reno lhas pleaded guilty to the charge of assault with intent to do great bodily bodi-ly harm, and will serve a term in the state prison. More than 200 unemployed miners, who assert that they have been blacklisted black-listed by the Anaconda Copper company, com-pany, met in Butte last week and affected af-fected an organization of all the so-called so-called blacklisted men in the Butte district. A summer resort at the very doors of Reno is being planned by several Reno men. The resort, or ''city" is to be christened ML Rose Camp and will be situated 12 miles from Reno at the foot of ML Rose, on the road to Lake Tahoe. Glen Austin, aged 23, a -private in the Sixty-third company, coast artillery, artil-lery, U. -S. A., stationed at Fort Wor-den, Wor-den, Wash., has been arrested, charged charg-ed with the murder and robbery of a woman at Allegan, Mich. The murderer mur-derer got $6 from the robbery. Governor Boyle of Nevada has advised ad-vised residents of the Sagebrush state that those who desired to send goods for the relief of Belgium would not be at the added expense of transportation transporta-tion charges, by reason of a plan made to transport such goods free of charge. A. S. Metcalf has been held for trial at Reno on the charge of administering admin-istering poison in a popcorn ball to H. Tanaka, a Japanese. A large quantity quan-tity of corrosive sublimate was placed in the popcorn, it is charged, and Tanaka had a narrow escape from death. The new electric power line from Lahontan to Rochester, Nev., is now completed into the camp, poles and wires being strung clear to the new mill of the Rochester Mines company. Practicf.ly all that remains to put the line in working shape is the installation installa-tion of transformers. Mrs. Bertha Difley, housekeeper in the home of Amos H. Hall of Tacoma, has been arrested on complaint of neighbors that she had beaten to death Hall's 3-year-old son Clarence. The body of the child, who died January Jan-uary 11, was exhumed by the coroner and found covered with bruises. A huge ocean warehouse at Seattle on the east waterway, was partially destroyed by fire. The warehouse, 900 feet long and of slow-burning wood construction, was not yet finished, fin-ished, and was still In the hands of the contractor, who Is well insured. The building was to have cost $S7,000. That transcontinental auto travel over the Lincoln highway is multiplying multiply-ing instead of increasing in the ordinary ordi-nary way, and that it represents important im-portant revenue for those cities on the route in Nevada is shown by a recent re-cent report by the Lincoln Highway bulletin. An increase of over 300 per cent is shown in 1914 figures com-piciyi com-piciyi to those for 1913 Rejecting a -petition from the Woman's Wo-man's Study league of Helena that ' a chaperon be appointed for women employees at the state capitol during the session of the legislature, a joint committee of the Montana senate and house administered a rebuke to the petitioners. The committee declared the petition was a reflection upon the lawmaking body of the state. Frederick S. Clewley, 35 years old, formerly manager of a sporting goods store in Seattle, which failed a year ago, made his will, wrote letters to friends concerning arrangements for his funeral, went to his home in Kirkland and committed suicide by shooting himself through the heart with a rifle. A meeting of unusual interest to Nevada will be held in Reno early in February when the men who represent repre-sent the biggest and best interests of . the state will meet together and plan for the expansion of the agricultural, mining and industrial interests of Nevada Ne-vada by such means as may be deemed deem-ed the most efficient. Application for release on writs of habeas corpus have been (lied in the district court at Butte In behair of Michael (Muckie) McDonald, Joseph Bradley, William Winchester and Owen Smith, confined in the state penitentiary on conviction for kidnapping kidnap-ping and deporting miners from Butte during the labor troubles there last summer. Edith Newlands Johnston, daughter rf Senator Francis G. Newlands of Nevada, has been given an interlocutory interlocu-tory decree of divorce from Charles Haven I.add Johnston, an author o: Washington. D. C. Evidence showed the Johnston had lived on allowance:-: from his wife and had struck her. Mrs. Johnston is worth $1,(100,000 In her own name. The Humboldt County Taxpayers' association has retained the law firm of Hoyt. Gibbons & French to represent repre-sent it in its endeavor to obtain relief re-lief from assessments levied upon its members by the state fax commission says the Winnemmca (N'evj Silver State. Declaring f r, ooo a year insufficient for the purpose of the Nevada Stale A.rneu'tura! S'.'-:y. whieli holds thiamin;:! thi-amin;:! state lai,-. in Nevada, the animal an-imal report of the president. W. II. Jlc!!l, d flares that fl'i.'too a year (.r more s'.jould be appropriated. In common w:" organi.at ions in other wrs:crn st..'. the rtah Hta'e Woolgrowr-rs' assoc iation v. , V.nd'-.'iv-or at. the coining session of the legislature legis-lature to sec-ire a mend inent s to (.he law covering; bounties on predatory i wild animals, to prevent bounties on J the. s-ime animal being paid more than ! once. As a result of a supreme court de- : cision, Jose Salgado, a Mexican who j stabbed an Indian girl named Bessie j ' Andy, on the streets of IClko last sum- j ' mer, must suffer the death penalty, , the lower court being affirmed. |