The Albany News (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, June 3, 1910 Page: 3 of 8
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CZARINA OF RUSSIA.
Reported to Be Insane and
Dying From Broken Heart.
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KAD NARKOW ESCAPE.
Reinforcements Save Estrada's
M en From Annihilation.
The timely arrival of General ,Mena
and his forces is all that saved the in-
surgent. Nieara^uans of General Estra-
da from annihilation near Bluefields.
(ienerals Lara and Rivas closed in
ou the revolutionists, who fought with
desperation, and were saved oul.v hv
the arrival of General Mena.
Kstrada's forces were driven into a
swamp, where many were killed or
wounded.
The insurgents abandoned their huge
siege guns and threw away their small
arms
That about a hundred were killed or
wounded in the battle of the day pre
vious has been confirmed.
Another cablegram stated the gov-
ernment soldiers had to retire, with
small losses, before the heavy artil-
lerv of General Estrada.
CRIMES
AND
CASUALTIES.
American Schooner Searched.
A Nicaraguan government force has
boarded and searched the American
schooner Esfuerzo, flying the stars
and stripes, off Bluefields. The force
was from the gunboat Venus. This
was done in defiance of a ruling from
Washington that the Venus had for-
feited her right of search.
Paralee Burns, a ne-
gress, charged at
Paris, Tex., with the
murder of her child,
aged two years, was
given an eighteen-year sentence in the
Sixth district court on a plea of guilty
of murder in the second degree. John
son Williams, jointly indicted with
the woman, had been previously given
seventy-five years on a plea of guilty
to second degree murder.
In district court at Gainesville. Tex.,
a pathetic scene was witnessed when
W. H. Brown of Denison pleaded
guilty to five cases of horse theft,
after which thr. e other cases were dis-
missed by the county attorney. De-
fendant. who is past fifty years of age,
recently pleaded guilty to four other
similar cases in Grayson county, and
was given two years in the penitenti-
ar\ in each case. At Gainesville he
was ten-year sentenced, or eighteen
years in all Brown's wife and son
were in the courtroom at Gainesville.
He addressed the jury in his own be-
half and nearly every one present was
moved to tears.
Mrs. Levi McGuffey, whosehusband
was shot, soon dying, by J. W. John-
son at Dallas, following a dispute, it is
alleged, over a furniture bill, McGuf-
fev being a collector, has lost her in
fant daughter, five months old. The
bain 's body was laid beside thatof her
father.
Two uegroes made an unsuccessful
attempt to snatch a purse of a lady, a
passenger on a Texas and Pacific rail-
way train at Dallas, who was seated
at a car window. One negro was ar-
rested, but the other escaped.
Fourteen persons were injured when
two coaches of a Denver and Rio
Grande railway train jumped the track
two miles from Cucharas Junction,
Colo. Spreading rails caused the ac-
cident, Two of the cars went down an
embankment.
Forty-eight pails of cloves consigned
bv a New York firm to a tea and spice
company in Cincinnati, were seized
under the pure food act by Federal in-
spectors. According to law destrution
is demanded. It, is said the oil had
been extracted from the cloves by a
"lemie.al process, and that they were
d with iron to hid#this.
Because she did not have supper
i-eadv for her husband Mrs. Frank
I jowandows'tv of < hicago is dead, say
the police Her husband is alleged to
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have beaten his wife so terribly as to
bring about her death
A motion for anew trial at Chicago
for Dr Haldane Cleminson, convicted
of the murder of his wife, was over-
ruled bv Judge McSurley; a motion in
arrest of judgment was granted and
the sentence deferred to permit taking
of an appeal
Bv the discharge of a supposed .in-
loaded pistol in the hands of a boy
comrade Clarence Brown, eighteen
years old. of Nolan county, Texas,
was shot in the neck and killed.
i lie q nest ion ol
GENERAL er a < hiea "> or
NEWS has ilie rigli t
HAPPENINGS, thecoior line •: <
fuse to se!: tie-:':
for Iowa floor seats to regro.-s > . -
presented to a jury in the con- < !
Municipal Judge Walker in the ■ ' I
of George A ' Wilson, a negro, a"-:
a theater of that city. Jury re.. .
a verdict for the theater.
•General opinion at Manila re1:
to the sinking in the harbor tin .
the dry-dock Dewey is that it v;:
to carelessness and not to the de *
ate purpose of Japanese navul > :>
employes to do damage.
Six members of the (Jai'.aiM
Gamma Sorority of the North ••o
university. Chicago, have bee
pended b\ the faculty becausetin . • . j
tained a member, in violation
rules of the faculty.
Lincoln OltMy, a prominent
of Caldwell county, Kentucky,
looking at Halley's comet, was sii
and seriously wounded. Lie was- id-'
tilied with the Dark Tobacco assoeo
tion and concerned in suits tiled ian
at Paducah. He was also a wit
against the alleged night riders '»:•,■
recently at Hopkinsville. His iis.-n ;
ant is unknown.
Brokerage firm of E. F. Button .
Co. of New York has been suspend'
from the privileges of the stock <■'
change of that city for one year, to
lowing the submission of charges tb
the firm had been guilty of viola;'
the exchange's regulations tegui'iiui
the sharing of commissions.
The two-year-old son of Ernest Al-
len of Syracuse. N.'Y.. while play in;:
close to the railroad tracks near bi-
home, was struck by the step of a, loco-
motive. He lay between the rails while
the locomotive and many cars pas;;
over him When the last car had
passed the youngster was picked up
uninjured exceptinga bump, the result
of his fall.
Hon. Henry M. Teller, for a number
of years one of the leading members
of the United States senate, repre-
senting Colorado, is now eighty years
old. Since he left the senate, a year
ago, the ex-senator has divided his
time between his home, at Central City,
and Denver and Washington, visiting
the two last-named cities to look after
his business affairs.
Three women in Little River, Ark.,
are the mothers of fifty-six children,
according to official census takers.
Mrs. Abraham Butler, thirty-four
years old, is the mother of fifteen chil-
dren; Mrs. Laura Bundles, forty-four
years old, is the mother of twenty-four
children, and Mrs. Maggie Howard.,
married nineteen years, is the mother
of seventeen children.
Fred Luer, an aged street musician,
suicided in his lodging house in the
Bowery, New York city, by inhaling
gas through an old rubber boot. He
bored a hole in the boot sole, inserted
a gas tube in the hole, turned on the
gas, then placed the top of the boot
upon his head, putting it on tightly.
Luer was dead when found. He had
been despondent since a Bowery truck
smashed his cherished violin several
days before. The old man was quite
an expert performer.
<♦> <$- <$>
Warned by the ring-
OKLAHOMA ingofa burglar alarm
NEWS AND of his own invention,
NOTES. L. Griffith, proprietor
of the Griffith Cash
grocery of Oklahoma City, who lives
next door to his establishment, went
into his place of business, in response
to the alarm, in time to catch a couple
of burglars in the act of robbing his
cash register. He emptied his revolver
in their direction as they made a hur-
ried exit through one of his plate
glass windows, but did not succeed in
winging either.
Because he interfered when he saw
his sister being abused by her hus-
band, named Bedford Godwin. James
Orcutt was fatally stabbed at Tusla
by his brother in-law. Orcutt had been
automobiling with his sister and had
stopped at her residence to get a coat,
owing to the cool air. Godwin was
intoxicated and began abusing his
wife. Orcutt interfered and Godwin
plunged a large knife into his abdo-
men, inflicting a mortal wound. God
win made his escape in a buggy.
United States District Attorney Em-
bry of the Western district of Okla
homa, at Guthrie, has been instructed
to co-operate with the attorneys of the
Osage National and Indian Territory
Illuminating company to protect the
interests of the Osage tribe in the
action recently brought by Mrs. Mar-
tha Leahy, wife of a member of the
Oklahoma legislature, against the In
dian Territory Illuminating company,
testing the rights of the tribe in the
mineral royalty, amounting annually
to $250,000.
B. F. Dudley of Ada lias been m>-s-
in" since April and his family and
friends fear he has either become de-
mented or is the victim of foul play.
Bis family relations were congenial
and he was much devoted to his wife
and children, who are now in destitu e
circumstances.
Oklahoma Spanish-American W;.>
Veterans' association met in annua i
session at Muskogee John Me
of Oklahoma City was unanimoi".• \
elected department commander. Ye;
ta was selected as the ltd 1 convent'.->n
city.
Throughout Oklahoma crops are im-
ported to be.irt fairly good condition,
although the cortl mornings and
have tended to retard their grow
cotton in particular
Governor Haskell has paroled ' :
]^v Vann, a Cherokee I ndian boy. \>ho
was given two years lor an aggra vt
ed assault in Delaware countv.
Boone Gross, census
TEXAS supervisor for Eighth
AND Texas congressional
TEXANS. district, prominent in
insurance circles and
| one of the best known men in Houston,
i died at that city from what is thought
to have been ptomaine poisoning. He
resided at Houston for eight years,
going there from Corsieana, where he
I lived a short time. Before becom-
ing a Texan his home was at Chicago,
j Census work is about completed except
i the compiling.
i While Owen Lloyd and another
j young man named Luther Brown were
playfully snapping pistols at each
other near Norton, Uunnel-r'cm;n , ,
Brown's weapon was discharged. *
bullet hit Lloyd over the rig's' e e.
killing him instantly. Lloyd's r.er'.
a widow, had juste; utioned i.(e>.i
they had examined the pistols to see
they were not loaded, but Brown over-
looked a load in his.
W. B. Coppick. seventy-five years
of age, who resided four miles north
of Bastrop, was gored to-death by a
bull. He was handling the bull when
the animal became enraged, hitting
him in the neck.; After falling he was
gored several times in the body, death
soon resulting.
Claiming R. E. Chumbley was ad-
vancingon him with a knife in a Dal-
las saloon H. J. Hammond struck the
first-named man with a scantling. The
crushed Chumbley"s skull and he died
in a few hours. Hairimand gave him-
self up to the sheriff.
It is state i that 4,000 cars will be
needed this season to haul the wheat
and oats from the stations along the
Santa Fe railway between Cleburne,
Tex., and Purcell, Okla. Both these
crops are especially promising between
Fort Worth and Gainesville. Last
year less than 300 cars were needed in
the territory stated.
Brought all the way from California
to San Antonio because of mistaken
identity, which was proved when bank-
ers saw Louis Schneidermann and de
clared he was not the man wanted on
a charge of forgery, the latter was re-
leased. Schneidermann stated that he
would sue the detective agency caus-
ing his arrest.
Following the failure at Orange of
the jury in the case of Jack White, a
negro, charged with the murder of Po-
liceman Combs April 17 last, standing
eleven for the death penalty and one
for a life term, fearing rr.ob violence,
the negro was taken by officers in an
automobile to Beaumont.
G. Cleve Buchanan of Marietta,
Okla., a young man and single, was
shot - in the chest in an alley by the
Oriental hotel, Dallas. He ran into a
store in the hotel block and expired in
a few minutes without uttering a word.
Ernest Brown, a clerk in a drug store
in the same block, married and also a
young man, gave himself up to Chief
of Police Ryan. Buchanan had been
employed as a clerk in Dallas, but had
resigned his position and was on the
eve of returning to Marietta.
"You are convicted of the charge of
being a vag and assessed a fine of
$200. If you support your wife and
child this fine will not be collected. It
will be held against you, and if you
don't do your part, you will be forced
to work out this fine on the county
roads. Now take carc of herand your
child." City Court Judge Mathis of
Dallas thus addressed a white man
and latter promised to do the proper
thing.
After a delay of several days work
has been resumed on the $85,000 Fed-
eral building at Denison. Under or-
ders from the; supervising architect of
the treasury the east, south and west
walls are to be completed to the sec-
ond story, and it is thought that by
that time the necessary steel will be
available and the structure rushed to
completion.
The state tax board meets at Austin
July 15 to decide upon the rate of tax-
ation for the current year. After the
state rate is fixed tuen the county com-
missioners of the variouecounties will
fix the countv rates.
to© Bo%
TEXAS
this
shoe like a ball.
This "Diamond Special" Oxford
fhas the most flexible sole In
all the world. It is one of the Peters
"Foot Comfort" Shoes that
•are made both in high cuts and low]
cuts; in men's and in women's- j
These are the shoes for comfort and
at the same time, they are full of
style and character andJ
wear. Ask your .dealer
for Peters' Foot
Comfort
Shoes.
If he hasn't
them, write <
us.
S\ LOUIS.
}ix ?U -■
Woman's Friend
Nearly all women suffer at times from female
ailments. Some women suffer more acutely and
| more constantly than others. But whether you have j
| little painr or whether you suffer intensely, you
should take Wine of Cardui and get relief.
Cardui is a safe, natural medicine, for women,1
prepared scientifically from harmless vegetable in-
gredients. It acts easily on the female organs and
[gives strength and tone to the whole system.
ARDUI
The Woman's Totiic
Mrs. Verna Wallace, of Sanger, Tex., tried Cardui. She writes:
j "Cardui has done more for me than I can describe. Last spring 11
was taken vim female inflammation and consulted a doctor, but to
no avail, so i took Cardui, and inside of three days, I was able to do
my houscv/ork. Since then my trouble has never returned." Try it.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
0
Kwr-' iPfn
i" *. £:/. . i
A Dreadful Wound
from a knife, gun, tin, rusty nail,
fireworks, or of any other nature,
demands prompt treatment with
Bucklen's Arnica Salve to pre-
vent blood poison or gangrene.
It's the quickest, surest healer
for all such wounds as also for
burns, boils, sores, skin erup-
tions, eczema, chapped hands,
corns or piles. 25c at Gregg's.
Albany and Dallas News one
year for $1.75.
Business Education
TOBY'S
Practical Business Colleges
WACO, TEXAS
laoorporated Capital $30,000.00
NEW YORK CITY
School of Corr., 156 Filth Am.
Bookkeeping, Banking:, Shorthand, Typewriting
Penmanship and Academic Department*
Fr.« THE HIGH GRADE SCHOOLS Ent.r
catalogue FOR HIGH GRADE STUDENTS *«y n—
FOR YOU
SHORTHAND BT HAIL a Specially
Thru Trill Lessons sn '
Complsts Set l( lot
■j$3.50
Tou Cm Writ* in lntalllKtbt»
Letter In Shorthand After Irtl
Leeion—IBfEST'GATS
BOOKKEEPING BY MAIL
UNITED SPECIALISTS
ELECTRO-MEDICAL.
PHYSIO-MEDICAL.
ECLECTIC,
OSTEOPATHIC,
HOMEOPATHIC AND
REGULAR MEDICAL
AND SURGICAL
TREATMENT TOGETHER
WITH BATTLE CREEK
AND HOT SPRINGS
METHODS.
Regularly licensed Socialists
from thene >0110018 make up our
Stall of Physicians and Burgeons.
An Institute that can give you
your choice of treatment and by
the very magnltudecf its organ!
nation assures you of modern and
u p-to-date methods of treatment.
United school of medicine and methods of treatment
all under one management. If you bare failed to receive
a oure consult our specialists. We make permanent
curee. We have Electro-Medical Treatment for Nervous
Troubles; Hot Springs and Battle Creek Methods of Treat-
ment for Rheumatism, Blood and Skin Diseases; Physio-
Medical, Eclectic and Homeopathic Medicine for Delicate
Stomach and Delicate patients;Balmy,SoothlngandHeal-
ing Oils and Vegetable treatment for Incipient Cancers.
A Large And Competent, Thoroughly Hoepltal Train-
ed Staff Of Regular Phyelclane and Surgeons, Each
and Every One a Specialist In His Particular Line.
The following diseases, if not too complicated, can be
succesifullv treated bv our Mall or Home Treatment;
NERVE, BLOOD AND SKIN, NOSE AND THROAT,
STOMACH.BOWELS.KIDNEY, BLADDER TROUBLES,
RHEUMATISM, CATARRH, AND LUNGS, DISEASES
OF WOMEN, WOMB COMPLICATIONS, NERVOUS
and SPECIAL DISEASES OF MEN and WOMEN.
ANTITOXIN treatment for CONSUMPTION, ^VT.W»
Fn e" ■— Consultation Examination and Advice, in person or by mall. You aie under no
K t t obligation to take treatment unless our charges; terras and arrangements are In
every way satisfactory to you.
The following Dlsea«es require personal examination and treatment at our office or sanitarium:
VARICOCELE, HYDROCELE, STRICTURE, RUPTURE, PILES, FISTULA, APPENDICITIS, PARALYSIS,
%HCER, LUPUS »r TUMORS, they can be cured permanently and cured so ther* Is no
INCIPIENT CANCER, J ^
return of the Uisease. Write regarding our methodsand terms of treatment and make arrangements
for personal treatment with ourVtay slcians.
OFFICE HOURSiS a.m. to Sp.m., SMI • a.m. to I In.
tv) <\rn miuf vomvlmu pimimv du pwatk
D/lLLAS TKXA
umiim to ivum
dbucatk diseap.es, may fob privacy, addrksh lock box 46:
■ IfcllTm CDC/MA ■ ICTC Sanlhwesl Comer Mala and Field Streets, (Cnd Fl»
UNIItU SrCvlHLIB I 9 Eatraaee 101 Field ItrMl, DALLAS, TEXAS.
i™~ '.....
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The Albany News (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, June 3, 1910, newspaper, June 3, 1910; Albany, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth416605/m1/3/: accessed May 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Old Jail Art Center.