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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1895)
m Hood River Grlac ine ler. It's a Cold Day When We Get Left. VOL. 7. hood river, Oregon; Friday. September 27, 1895. NO. 18. 3eod liver (5 lacier. PUBLISHED EVERY FEIDAT BT .-', ! S. F. BLYTHE. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. .' On. year......., 8tx months Three months.., SnKle copy 00 1 or , , 60 I C.nU THE GLACIER BARBER SHOP, A- '. '.-..' HOOD KIVEK. OK.;., . '1 GRANT EVANS, Proprietor. Shaving and hair-cutting neatly done. Satis faction guaranteed. , bAWNMOKt INyUIKY. Captain Woodside Kxonerated of all San Francisco, Sept, 25. The British naval court, which was convened by Vioe-Consul Moore to investigate the wreck of the Bawnmore, off , the coast of Oregon last month, has made its re port. The findings completely exhon erate Captain Woodside : from all blame, and his certificate is returned. ' "Upon the evidence given the vessel Dnniiora n havo 1-ionn ti u t 1 n-a f o rl in a tsvauittii-axLv uiuiixiur, auu, 111 mo vipiu ' ion of this court, the stranding of the ' ship is attributable to an excess of our , rent setting in toward the land, of , which the master could have no knowl edge in the thick weather, prevailing in the compass also appears to have ' contributed to the loss of the vessel in causing her to be taken from her course , up to tne 37tn or August, wnen ine er ror in the compass was discovered and rectinea. considering these circum stances, the court sees, no ground for , returns his' certificate herewith. , The , offioers and oew appear to have con ducted themselves properly and used . their best endeavors to save the ves sel." '., '''- ' . wantea, a Husband. ; ' San Jose, gept.. 25. Hip Sing Lee, a wealthy Chinese merchant of this oity, offers a half interest in His extensive merchandise .business and $5,000 'in , cash to any reputable young American who will marry his daughter, Moi Loi. , Hip Sig Lee , is the wealthiest Chi nese in this valley, and his fortune is estimated '.'from $50,000 to $100,000, He conducts a general merchandise ' store, witK'a lottery game on the side, and has branch stores in Watsonville, Santa Cruz and Salinas. Lee has be come thoroughly Americanized, and he .' is getting old and wishes his' daughter ' TriflrriFwl tn a o-nnd Amfirinnn whn will ' look after and care for his daughter, business and wealth. Lee's wife died a year ago, and, as several attempts havo Vtncm tnaHa tn lridnan TWni hft ia -i . afraid if Moi does not marry soon, the her. : '- .:: ';'., '. V ! ;' :' .-.'-,' Opposition Cable to Hayti, ?' . New York',' .Sept. 2.5. The United; wtlcB w xiaju vauiv uuuiiiauj mod .chartered the steamer; Maokay-Bennett AJ but Ul o.b DWVIUU n BUUUinilUO, cable to connect New York with Hayti, " Woof-. Tnrlipu. Thn Manknv-Rfinnfitt ar rived here Friday." and today submerg ed the heavy shore end of the cable,, a length bf about ten , "knots. iCompeti- tion will begin with the establishment of the new lines, and ' will result in bringing down the present high ; rates. The Hayti company will be able to handle business for!- the West Indies, , Venezuela, the - Guianas and Brazil. The board of directors of the oompany '. which is an American corporation, are: J. W. Mackay, George Ward,. J. W. , Mackay, jr., A. B. Chandler and Al bert Beck.- ,''' . ' -'s-yj, V.;;,-'.;. . San Francisco's Pneuinatla Guns. Sari Franoisoo, Sept. 25. The United Kf.ar.ps covfiriiment is now able to -blow out of the water, at m . day's notice, a to enter Golden Gate. The battery, of big pneumatio idynamite g'uns ordered for thn dfifonse of this nort a vear or more ago has been advanoed so far to--ward completion that two of the guns could be effectively fired yith only twenty-four hours' peparation. The two guns now set up' will ' be actually fired during . the , contractors'- prelimi ' nary tests within ten -days, and it is - iWr,o.tfl t.ViQt witVilri hit wApliii RnmA old . hulks will have' been blown to splinters in official tests and the bat . tery will have been turned over to the government. , . ' .."'. , : - The Baltic Ashoret San Franoisoo, Sept. 25. The Occi dental & Oriental Company reoeived a dispatch from-Yokahama via Liver pool, today stating that; the steamer Belgio was still ashore,, but that prepa rations were nearly completed to float her off. ' " . ITS ; CASE COMPLETED Prosecution Closes in the Dur- rant Murder Trial. DEFENSE KOW READY TO BEGIN The Testimony of William Sterling, Gas. fitter, Was . Important In. an. ,1 . . ' ' ' ! Unexpected Way..-, ' . San Franoisoo, Sept. 20. "The case for the people." In these words DiS' trict Attorney Barnes announced this afternoon that the . evidence for the prosecution in the case of the People ys. Durrant, was complete. Tomorrow morning, there will be some fag ends of cross-examination of witnesses who have already testified, .but they won't be long, end Mr. Barnes has nothing more to offer except in rebuttal, should there be anything to rebut.-' 1 ' The testimony of William Sterling, gasfitter, was important in an unex pected way. , The oross-examination brought out that April 4, the morning after the disappearance of Blanche La mont, the knob of the belfry' door ? was broken, and although Sterling tried to turn the handle with his nippers, he could not. ' Blanche Lamont's body was therefore located in the belfry from that hour, and there were no means of acoess to it exoept by climb ing a steep ladder to the false roof and from that place crawling through the uprights into the belfry. This small fact, brought out by aooi- dent, almost at the end of the case for the people, has a serious import in more than one way. For some days, it has been obvious that the only possi ble line of defense was to show that Blanche Lamont was seen alive after 5 o'clock April 8. The circle is narrow ed both as to time and plaoe. The gas fitter swears that the doorknob was broken on the morning of April 4. There is no other way by which the body could be oarried into the belfry, although a man without a load could creep in over the false oeiling reached by a . high ladder. ... The condition of the door, therefore, is proof that the body of Blanche Lamont was . in . the tower' that morning. She was seen alive the-previous afternoon between 3 and 4, and if she was living at any hour later, she must have been in easyi reach of the church. She could not have left the oity, for instance. In that way, the circle is narrowed and the circumstances surrounding the tes timony of the sort indicated would be more easily verified. " The theory of the prosecution is that Blanche Lamont was murdered during that part of the afternoon of . April 8 between the hours when Durrant was seen entering the ohuroh with a woman and when he was seen disheveled and overcome in the church by King. . The period during which Durrant was out of sight was about an hour, more or less. Of oourse, that time would not be long enough to allow the murderer to oommit the crime, drag the body up the high,, steep ' stairs, strip it naked and hide the clothes in widely sep arated nooks and crannies about the belfry! , There was one , phase of the gasfitter's testimony that remained ob soure. So far as he saw, there were no marks of a orowbar or jimmy on the belfry door when he saw it on April 4. Marks of that sort were found on the door when '. the . polioe searched the church ' after the murder of Minnie Williams,' Somebody had tired to get into tne belfry by force. The gasfitter saw nothing of this Bort,'. but his testi mony is only negative. The marks may have been there and passed un heeded by a man not looking for-suoh things. A theory advanced by the po: lice is that the man who killed Minnie Williams wanted to carry the ! body up the same way, but found hirnself ;un able to break in when he had himself shut the door. ..That theory ignores the splashes of blood that smeared the walls arid floor of the room in which Minnie 1 Williams- was killed. '. With such stains in, f ull .view,, the disoovery of the body in any part of the building oould only be a question of a few hours, no matter where concealed in the church, and by placing the bodies together., the murderer would have made certain the finding of botb; :.:r.t . . ; Witnesses were . summoned . who, while they furnished no additional links in the ,chain of 'circumstantial evidenoe against Durrant, were design ed by the district attorney to strength en the entire case by fiUing. in the weak places. . The testimony of all the witnesses today was brief. The chief point whioh the proseoution sought to establish was that Durrant had said that the jlast time- he had seen Miss Lamont was When he parted from V her on' ' the morning of April 8, she gbing to school, he to the Cooper medical col lege. In all his statements regarding the disappearance of Miss Lamont the defendant stuck to that declaration. . Detective Anthony, who arrested Durrant when off on a jaunt -with the signal oorpa, testified today that Dur rant made that statement to him when returning to the oity after the arrest. Dr. Thomas A.'. Vogel, a member of Emanuel church, and an intimate ac quaintance of both Blanche Lamont and Durrant, also stated on the wit ness stand that Durrant had, the Sun day after the girl's disappearance, made the same statement, about the last time he bad seen Blanche, thus' corroborating Officer Anthony and sev eral newspaper reporters who have al ready testified in the case. That Dur rant' s story of his last meeting with Miss Lamont was to be ' questioned by the proseoution was evident by the testimony elicited from , Mrs. Yogel, Miss Lanigan, Miss Edwards and Mrs. Dorgan, all of. whom saw Durrant with Miss Lamont on a Powell-street car at 3 o'clock on the afternoon of her disappearance. ' - 1 The proseoution expects to score . a strong point by demonstrating to the jury that the prisoner made false state ments regarding his movements and the associations with the girl whom he is - charged with having : murdered, The district attorney, it is said, . will make use of the matter in his address to the jury, and will use it as the base of an argument, the gist of which will be that Durrant' s false statements were inspired by a sinister motive. -. If he had nothing to hide, it is argued, he would have told the truth about his last meeting with the girl. That was the reason for the Anthony and Vogel testimony. : . The plumbers who repaired the gas fixtures in the church on April 2 were also called today. " William Sterling, one of these gasfitters, explained the work he.performed in putting new tips on the gas burners. He said that on April 2, when he left the church,' no gas was escaping.- He. did not work there on April 8, the day Blanche is alleged to have been murdered, but on the 4th he returned to the church and no escaping gas was found. Attorney for the defense . cross-examined this witness at length, his intention being to show that an immense quantity of gas escaped while the repairs were in progress, the object being to justify the assertion made by Durrant that he was overoome by gas fumes in the belfry, and not from the excitement caused by exertions in killing Miss Lamont. . Dr. E. C. Farnnm, demonstrator of anat omy at Cooper medical college, was called to the stand to testify that the blocks laid , under the dead body of Blanche were laid in the same manner as under a subject in the dissecting room. -'' " ; ' Harry Partridge, a fellow-student of Durrant, swore that about a week after Blanche disappeared Durrant had told him that the girl had either met with foul play or had been led astray, adding that she was innocent and would hesi tatingly submit to advances made to her. "V . ' ' '.' -:..-.. ' . Professor Shernstern and Organist King each denied writing his name on a slip of newspaper inclosing Miss La mont's rings, whioh were returned to Mrs. Noble, aunt of the dead girl. : Allen Church, a former lamtor of Emanuel church, said Durrant had a key which would unlock all the rooms in the interior of the church. He had frequently seen him opening the vari ous rooms. The prosecution then rested, and the defense asked a continuance until to morrow. .': Durrani's attorneys wish to ask a few questions of . several wit nesses who have already testified,- and promise thereafter to proceed with th defense immediately. The opening statement of the defense is awaited with much interest. '; Owing to the re fusal of the court to admit evidence of the medical students of Cooper oollege, relative to Durrant's attendance at the leoture on the afternoon of April ; 3, a number of witnesses summoned to tes tify were not called, and the proseou tion therefore closed its oase much earl ier than it had planned. y ' - - '"--" The attorneys and detectives who are -defending Theodore Durrant held an important conference last night to dis cuss the case., -The' conference was a long one, and .Attorney W." W. Foote was called in consultation to ' give ad Vice upon certain phases of the de fense which the attorneys will not discuss. : , : - . DOLLARS' TO CENTS. The Discrepancies In the Assessment of - Improvements on Lands. Olympia, Wash., Sepk 25. Great discrepancies existing in the assess ments of improvements on lands, as equalized by the county ' boards, are such as to oause the state board consid erable trouble in ' reaching a satisfac tory adjustment. "As a rule, there is considerable, difference . in values ' be tween the east and west section of the state generally, but there are some particular instances whioh show greater divergence than others., . For instance: The board of Adams county equalized her improvements on a basis of 83 oents an acre; Pierce county, $59.61 an acre; Whitman, 85 cents; Wahkia kum, $40.84, and Kitsap, $56.58. : y The county assessors throughout hav ing, with few exceptions, failed to make satisfactory returns to the state bureau of immigration and statistics, that department has been compelled to resort to other methods to secure data. Private Citizens, managers of industrial institutions, labor unions,, eto.,. have been called on to volunteer such information- as they can furnish, in lieu of that which the law provides should be furnished by the county assessors. CIVIL SERVICE ORDER Rules for Filling Vacancies in - ; 1 the Consular Service. FOR A BOARD OF EXAMINEES Thai President Issues an . Order A flee t .. Ins; Consuls and Csunmerelal ' Agents of the United States. Washington, Sept. 25. The presi dent's new civil servioe order, affecting consuls, issued today, is as follows: "It being of great importance' that the oonsuls and commercial agents of the . United States shall possess the proper qualifications for their respeor tive positions, to be ascertained either through a satisfactory record of prev ious actual servioe under the depart ment of state, or through an appropri ate examination, it is hereby ordered that any vacancy in a consulate or com mercial agency, now or hereafter exist ing, the salary of which is not more than $2,500 nor less than $1,000, or the compensation of which, if derived from official fees, exclusive of notarial and other unofficial receipts, does not exoeed $2,500 nor fair below $1,000, shall be filled: : ; ' "(a) ' By transfer or promotion from some other position under the depart ment of state of a character tending to qualify the incumbent for the position to be filled; or . " "(b) By appointment of a 'person not under the department of state, but having previously served there under to its satisfaction in a capacity tending to qulaify " him for the position to be filled; or " .. "(c) By the appointment of a per son, who, ; having furnished the cus tomary evidenoe of character, resposiJ bility and capacity, and being therei upon selected by the president for ex amination, is found upon such exami nation to be qualified for the position. "For the purpose of this order, no tarial and unofficial fees shall ' not be regarded, but the compensation of a consulate or commercial agency shall be ascertained, if the office is salaried, by reference to the last preceding ap propriation act, and if the office is not salaried, by reference to the returns of official fees for the last preoeding fiscal year.- ::: "'- " -. "' -' The examination hereinbefore pro vided for shall be by a board of three persons designated by the secretary of state, who shall also prescribe the sub jects to which suoh examination Shall relate, and the general code of con ducting the same, by the board. The vacancy in a consulate will be filed at discretion only when a suitable ap pointment cannot be made in any of the modes indicated in the second para graph of this order. " '...,.':' 0 , Mrs. Iiangtrv's Jewels. London, Sept. 25. Mrs. Langtry was interviewed today on the loss of her jewels from the Sloan-street bank, a branch of the Union bank of London, last week by means of a forged order. She said she had obtained no further light on the question as to the identity' of the recipient of the box. Mrs. Langtry said thrfre was no suspicion against any of her servants, , but that the scheme must have been worked up by somebody who was cognizant of her affairs, for never before was there muoh .of her jewelry at the bank. Her maid suggested that she take the box with her to Baden-Baden, but she had thought it safer to leave it in the cus tody of the bank. Mrs. Langtry ' Said she thought it was curious 'that the people of the bank were not aware that she was on the continent instead .of in London at the time. - :' v ' - ";; . . Spokane's Mew Industries. - Spokane, Wash., Sept. 25. The for mal opening of the new saw mill of the Northwest Milling ; Company oo eurred today. This company is ex pending several hundred thousand dol lars in local industries including a saw mill a 1000-barrel flour mill and an electric power-house. Today's cere monies drew a large crowd. United States Senator. Wilson delivered an ad dress " Mrs. Oppenheimer, the , aged mother 'of Simon Oppenheimer, who originated the enterprise christened the new mill ''Phoenix."- Mrs. Ida Helen McKinley -Morse a niece of Governor McKinley set the machinery in motion. Conflict Between Authorities. , . Nashville, Sept. 25. At Gairiesbbro near the Kentucky line, a oonflict has arisen ' between Tennessee , and Ken tucky sheriffs, having requisition ' pa pers for the arrest jof United States Deputy Marshal Young , and ; United States Commissioner ' Linsley, charged with murder, and the friends of . the latter. They refuse to go, fearing they will be mobbed, and have their friends in town ' armed to resist attempts . to take them,. .They; are. charged with killing a moonshiner.' "'.-. ;'.y.-.- ' " Dr. George S. Armstrong, secretary of Washington board of health, is inak ing a tour of the state to secure an en forcement of the law requiring that all births and deaths shall be reported to the county auditor monthly. I PAN-AMERICAN NEWS. People of Mexico Bordering; Upon aKe- "': lisious War. ;.: ,", ; City of '. Mexico, Sept. 24. The Amerioan minster, Mr. - Ransom, and Consul Crittenden request theProtestant missionaries not to issue a ' daily paper attacking the adoration of the Virgin of Guadeloupe, it having been the in tention of the missionaries to oiroulate a paper broadcast during the coming coronation of ; the virgin festivities. The United States authorities here fear a popular outbreak against mission aries, and say that in suoh an event the United N States government would be plaoed in an awkward position, for the missionaries would be guilty of having aroused the popular passions against them., The missionaries have been re ceiving anonymous letters threatening them with death. . , , International susceptibilities are be ing harshly ruffled these days. , . Some Mexicans and Cubans hired a ooaoh, put a hand-organ by the side . of the drivef and went about crying ; "Viva Cuba libre," and "Death to Span iards, ' ' creating disturbances. . Corres Espano, the organ of the resident Span ish colony, asked the government to prevent any further trouble or insults to Spaniards, and intimates that dem onstrations on the part of the populaoe against Spain might end in a rupture of the present oordial relations of the two oountnes. ' ' ; - A Frenchman hearing the report that Bismarck was dead,' which has been - current ' here, drank toasts, in which he insulted the German' people and the ex-chancellor. The fellow was roughly handled by the Germans. , FITZSIMMONS STARTS SOUTH. He Will Train at Corpus Christl and Then Go to Dallas. , . New York, Sept. 24. Bob Fitzsim mons left this afternoon on a special train of three oars for the South. He was aooompanied by Mrs. .: Fitzsim mons, Martin Julian, his manager; Mrs. , , Julian; Charles ; White, his trainer, and Emil Boeber, the German wrestler. "Nero,'.' the fighting lion, was one of the party, also, ' together with four crates of live chickens, that will constitute Fitzsimmons' chief ar tiole of food on the journey. He will go to Corpus ; Christi, where he will train until he goes to Dalals to fight. The first stop will be made at Lynch burg, where Fitzsimmons gives an en tertainment. From there they go to Corpus Christi, making a short stay at San Antonio. Fitzsimmons has rented a cottage at Corpus Christi, near the race track, where daily exhibitions will be given during the ' season . while he trains there. Speaking of the referee to be selected " for the fight with Corbett, Fitzsimmons said: ; .'-.-' ' "The difficulty in relation to the referee has been amioably settled. The names of ' six men will be selected, three by each side, and these six men will select one from their number who will be the referee." '. ., Fitzsimmons would have nothing to say as to what he thought would be the outcome of the fight, except, "I shall domybest."-. ' ; ' Iiondon Stock Market. .. London ) Sept. ' 24. The unprece dented congestion in the money market continues, and there is no indication of permanent relief for a while. It is hoped that the drain from the United States is checked for the present The release soon of millions in con nection with the Chinese loan will add to the existing plethora: The volume of business on the stock exohange has been much reduced,' even mines being dealt in on a smaller scale. The vol ume of most speculations has received a setback, 'The release of the govern ment dividneds within a fortnight has strengthened the market, and a recor ery of the prices of all first-class stocks is anticipated. --' American - railways have -shown a pretty general, though farotional advance. Grand Trunk shares were livelier. ', ,. ' A Protest Prom Armor-Makers. Washington, V Sept. ' 25. Secretary Herbert was visited today by Presi dent Linderman, of the Bethlehem iron works, ' and his attorney. : While no definite information was given out as to the purpose of the visit, it was the surmise about the department that it was to protest against the adoption of the resolution of Mr. Hichborn that hereafter 'the armor for the vessels for the, navy be included , in , the, eontraot -for the ships themselves. The armor -.makers object, to . the change, on the ground that the present system is more economical for the government and at the same time more, advantageous for them. ''''';'""'. "''.' ' . "'':,'. . Wisconsin's Forests Again Burning. , Kenosha,'" Wis.; Sept 24. Forest and marsh fires .have , broken , out arid the flames are raging along the West shores of .Green- bay and in the North west timber land of Door county. ' . An extensive fire is sweeping through the northera'part of :Oneida. reservation, west of .this city, and threatens much trouble, ;;: The. wind . is blowing hard. The flames are spreading rapidly in all diretions, . -- j- : ..i ,,. ', .. . .- SYMPATHY FOR CUBA Replies of Congressmen to a Newspaper's Queries. A VISITING COMMISSION FAVORED Majority Strongly In Favor of Recogni tion as Belligerent So Soon as It Can Be Done Consistently. ; Chicago, Sept. 23. The; Tribune prints letters from four;.United States senators and forty-two representatives in reply to questions addressed to them whether congress should send a com mission to Cuba to look into the condi tion of affairs there. They were also asked as to what, in their opinions, should be the conditions of affairs there. Replies were . received from Senators John Sherman, of Ohio; Baker of Kansas, William C. Chand ler and J. H. Gallinger of New Hamo- shire. Of the representatives, five are from Iowa, four each from Ohio and Pennsylvania; three each from New ' York and Indiana; two each from Ken tucky, Kansas, .Texas, Missouri and Arkansas; and one each , from Connec ticut,' Maine, .- Mississippi, ' Wisconsin, , Louisiana, Illinois,' Nebraska, Ala bama and Virginia. In commenting editorially pn the replies, the Tribune says: ; ,.-'' -' ,'.''.;'",' " As will be seen . from the replies. there is a strong sentiment in favor of the dispatch of a commission to Cuba and also in favor of recognizing the belligerent rights of the insurgents as soon as it can be done consistently. There is only a little handful of mem bers adverse to taking, any action, and there were fifteen others who were not yet ready to express their views, but tne large majority of those addressed declare themselves strongly in , sympa thy with Cuba and in favor of recosr-- nizing the insurgents and aiding them as far as can be without violating in ternational agreements. ' Senator Sher man, it will be observed, is in favor of recognition when a de facto govern ment is established, but is opposed to annexation." ': 1 ;-.; . .. s A Letter From Gomez. Philadelphia, ; Sept 22. A letter. . dated August 80, was reoeived today from General Maximo Gomez, commander-in-chief of the Cuban army, , with headquarters in Camaguay. It is addressed to the secretary of the Cuban revolutionary . , party in the . United States, and sums up the condition of affairs existing. Among other things the letter says: .. ;-.-. We are on the eve of the formation of the government. The representa tives of the state of Santiago de Cuba, Major Rafael Portundo, Joaquin Cas tillo, Manuel Manduelly and Civil En gineers Aguilera and Major Maraino Sanchez, have arrived already, and those of Camaguay, headed by the Mar quis of Santa Lucia, are waiting only for those appointed by the state of Las Vetas, in order to form the . assembly and elect an executive and cabinet and appoint, with sufficient powers, our ministers abroad, and especially the diplomatic agent in the United States. who will be authorized to raise - loans for the republic. With a few more ex peditions we will be able to arm the 1 rest of our increasing forces, " and ex tend our occupation to Matanzas. "As to the war carried on, against us, the Spanish have done little to di minish our growing ' strength. The -v late personal defeat of General Cam pos, at the hands of the brave General Maximo, has caused the prestige and fame of the Spanish oaptain-general to sutler a great loss and the discipline of his troops to be endangered. . Ihe success of the revolution is as sured. , It makes no difference whether I fall and others die also, i The revo- -lution will go on until it triumphs. The country, from end to end, is hos- tile to Spain; those who serve are forced to do so, and forced : stability is not . a guarantee for the stability of any gov ernment. This is our situation, and you can make it publio to the world without fear of contradiction. .1 do not know how to lie. - I respect myself too much to descend to such debased methods as our adversaries do. 1 "The morality and discipline in our ranks are excellent, and we take care to correct the least fault which would detract from the nobility of our cause. ' ' Granted a New Trial. . ' -: ''' Port Angeles, Wash., Sept. 24. M. . : Clump, ex-county treasurer, con- : vioted last Monday of misappropriat ing county lunds, has been granted a new trial by Judge MoClinton,! on the grounds . that ' the county treasurer booSs, and other books and papers not admitted as evidence in the trial, were left in the room where the jury oould i and examine them. . The new trial is set for October 22. . Verdict of Accidental Shooting. Seattle, Sept. , 25. The coroner's jury to inquire into the death of Lean der Hibbard, whose body was found on Sunday . in his cabin with a , hole through his heart, bought in a verdict of accidental shooting today. -.