The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937, December 01, 1910, Image 2

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    CURRENT EVENTS
OF THE WEE K
Doings of the World at Large
Told in Brief.
General Resume o f Important Events
Presented In Condensed Form
fo r O ur Busy Readers.
Political factions had a fierce fight
on the streets o f Cork, Ireland.
Twenty-five persons lost their lives
in a box factory tire at Newark, N. J.
Governor Clark, o f Alaska, says Pin-
chotism is the curse o f that territory
Michael Cudahy, founder o f the
great
Cudahy Packing company is
dead.
K ing George, o f England,« will aid
the Liberals if they win the coming
elections.
The Internal Revenue department
says illicit distilling is largely on the
increase in Prohibition states.
It is claimed that several thousand
babies are starving in Chicago as the
result o f the garment workers’ strike,
which is no nearer settlement than
ever.
Count Nascimento, o f Portugal, was
not satisfied with the $1,000,000 dower
o f his prospective American bride, and
the g irl’ s father haa declared the
mate
match off.
¡p A force o f 600 Mexicans troops rout­
ed 400 rebels after six hours’ fighting,
killing 15 revolutionists and wounding
many.
The g over ment forces had
several wounded.
A prominent physician o f Moline,
111., was arrested fo> attempting to ex­
tort $36,000 from th'- president o f the
John Deere Plow coi pany by means o f
imitation Black Han .1 letters.
A big battle is ext acted for the sen
atorship from Kansas.
Woman suffrage v ill be voted upon
at the coming election in England.
Representative Tawney opposes the
idea o f fortifyin g the Panama canal.
General Madero, the Mexican revolu­
tionary leader is reported to be wound­
ed.
CHINESE LAUNDRY DOOMED.
Nation-Wide Crusade Against Them
Is Proposed.
VOTE IN DETAIL AS REPORTED
BY COUNTY CANVASSING BOARDS
Chicago— The doom o f the Chinese
laundry as it exists today may be the
result o f a nation-wide organisation
soon to oe inaugurated.
A crusade o f
education is *to be carried on through
newspapers and magazines warning i t
against the unsanitary
conditions.
The movement had its inception in
Chicago and it is expected the first
effects will be felt here through an or­
dinance which soon will be reported to
the city council providing stringent
regulations for all establishments en
gaged in supplying clean linen.
The ordinance originated with ’ the
health department, and at once re­
i 5! B; ! U s; g! ! si B ü S s SBBÍ ! ! ! g a l l L U l l
ceived the co-operation o f the Laundry
association, which obtained the incor­ S3 Bi a: i.U J i s h a: g B M l í i i S 5 5 Bi: S: : M :
poration in the ordinance o f clauses
even more stringent than those origin­
s 8i b N N B i l l i g ; l S B * 3 3 f l Ü L l # l g l l i s i
ally drafted.
The ordinance has been
favorably reported by the committee
Si ft : : : 5: Si
l i t : 33:
in charge and its passage is practically
assured.
It is declared the statistics o f the
8: S g: 5:
aSgftj : 3: Si: ; g
health department show that epidemics PJ» I r :
w :
:F :
:
o f scarlet fever, diphtheria and other
J i a sU 81 83: i s
diseases were more prevalent in dis
tncts where Chinese laundries were
sm l
: Si ssi
thickest, and these laundries have been
the cause o f spreading disease.
a[ 3 a 5 3 : « : s » : s :
i b b s : X az
iiliSL IIM SilL SIL IL
sh a
a: gg; si
CENSUS FIGURES FOR
PORTLAND AND SEATTLE.
.................. « j oui [a
.......... XeiM.H
............... uuujjaqy
lOlws
......(S ) PJOJÄBJO
....... < H>
"(a ) suiuuvjx
vm
........... ( a ) »»-»a
" ( H ) u«ujj«Aàoy
-3-§Sa3iIi58Í.TSí2íiÍl6SS0a38sBK!s58ssiSS
.*
Washington — The population of
...... ('») spj»no|H
Portland is 207,214, compared with
90,42f in 1909, and 46,386 in 1890.
The increase from 1900 to 1910 there­ I l 1 Í t ¡Í g I ¡I l'Í l§ 3 S S g 8 3 8 g S s 5 g S Í g g Í « S ¡S á .............. oa)
fore is 116,788, or 129.2 per cent, as
83
compared with an increase for the pre­
....... ( H) » o » u » h
ceding decade o f 44,041, or 94.9 per l i ! l ii5ia58g^8§iag58aSSigsi35B'sy¡'¡Saa
cent.
.....(«D »i*»a
The population o f Seattle is 237,194,
an increase o f 166,623, or 194 per cent
over 80,671 in 1900.
The population
L S b S í S 89 üb 56 aSs89i8aSg8s55î»6a£8i§gs8Î '(B ) Ptvuoa^w
in 1890 was 37,834.
......( a ) «Aito
Census Director Durand said that
until the complete returns for Oregon
are published, showing the population
•(d) A»»na
8 18s l9 B 3 5 5 5 g § s a B 3 5 a S B 8 g 8 S g * 8 tiia s g S
o f Portland’s suburbs, a just compar­
—
“
y.—
**
f
r-w
y*
y
î*r
.-r*
ison o f the population o f the two cities
"C H ) ¿ » x
3
¡S.
could not be made.
Seattle has an­
m r .
•(B) u * » 0
nexed its suburbs; a very considerable
population, similarly contiguous to
8tt65B83gpBBSgl9B8Sg8Ss5SaB«B8BBS5S !
Portland, is outside its corporate 831
"••(H) u»»H
limits.
The revision o f the Portland figures
resulted in the elimination of 15,745
• ( d ) >M*|JS
names. The number taken from Se­ y S j ►
-» toi-*
t-*oí ya J* M
M
M h-* _ .J >-*►
-»
attle’s count was 11,188.
......(H ) »PMHAIV
§
A
a
%
S ! SBSxaggagSgelqgsSsSSiryiisSsîsSSaggS
_ g l l l3g g | Íg lll8|SÍgÍ8aS388SB]f5S3SS^ ^
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I ‘ 8sS58g§sRgíÍalgiS8581i5s»Ftx53S38g8
HEIRESSES TO WORK LAND.
( B) ««< W
Berlin police have warned women Rich Illinois Girls Take Up Montana
•(B) “ »•<«
against wearing dangerously long hat
Homesteads.
2?
pins.
Aurora, 111.— Miss Winnie Bensch-
•Od-N) « )» I S
A ten-round fight at Akron, Ohio, bach, whose father, William Bensch-
was opened by prayer by an evangelist, bach, o f Princeton, is one o f the
•('«) »»lu n a
wealthiest men in Central Illinois, and
who was introduced by the mayor.
Miss Kathryn Smith, daughter o f W.
The fine trotting stallion, The Bonds­
•ce) »»uor
I. Smith, also a wealthy resident of
man, was sold at the New York horse
Princeton, have taken up land claims
show for $11,000 to an Oregon man.
- P wt-e
in Montana and next April will leave
•('d-N)
A number o f Jesuit priests banished their homes and go to the wilderness,
from Portugal have arrived at San 16 miles from Roundup, Mont., to work
Francisco and will remain in this coun­ their homesteads.
try.
Each girl will fall heiress to a for­
( B) «ui»u
Daniel Keefe, commissioner general tune o f close to $250,000. They have
each
filed
on
160
acres
and
will
live
in
o f immigration, declares that half the
■0s) *iJa
Their
Chinese in this country are here by log cabins for 14 months.
claims adjoin and the two cabins w ill
fraud.
WW» W >
— t« w
F*- w ¿
r . w
rw ••••(H) PAOJMVJO
be but 30 feet apart.
Both girls say W r* at* « e
An extensive mutiny is in progress they
understand farming and will
in the Brazilian navy. The men de­ superintend the work on their claims.
U) uvuiJtpiv
manded more pay and the abolition o f
corporal punishment.
THIEF C U T S OFF GIRL’ S HAIR
•OS) »(»PSOIH
The bursting o f an internal lake in
Behring glacier, Alaska, caused a dis­ Makes Away With Tresses But Leaves
•(a) « « « H
astrous flood in Behring river valley
Jewels Untouched.
which destroyed many miners’ cabins,
Seattle — Leaving untouched valua­
•(d) !»»JS
and it is believed many miners were
H £ s 8 a 8 B 3 g a 5 5 a 3 j 3 a 5 s g 5 j |i5 3 s « g a :i3 3 8 8 :fc 5
ble jewels and watches which lay on
lost.
her dresser, a miscreant whose identity
■(B) «pu«tXH
Three men, a woman and a child is unknown, to the police, entered the
were arrested in a shack on the Sound, room o f Miss Bertha M. Parks, 19
5s
where they had lived for three years, years old, at her home, 1216 East
••(•H) X»M|«na
apparently without work. The shanty Alder street, and while she was sleep­
was full o f silverware and cut glass ing, with her sister, cut from her head
•(•a) xwjpoo
ftE'Stiil ’
and also a quantity o f silk.
long tresses o f deep auburn hair, and
Mexican rebels have been victorious escaped with his plunder.
(B) Xxmo
Miss Parks immediately became hys­
in many night attacks.
terical and a physician had to be sum­
I >-» JO»-» MM »-»O» * M
t«
M w *-»►
■* «*» ¡-J-*
"OH) 1)«H
Premier Asquith was attacked and moned in an effort to quiet her.
She 9 5 l5 8 li| B a « 3 8 S iB B 8 a '8 e ^ B » '5 8 S 8 S 5 8 8 S a s 'S 8 8
beaten by English suffragettes.
had not been disturbed in the least, yet
......( a ) uo)»noH
A 12-year old boy o f Lebanon, Ky., her auburn tresses, nearly three feet
'£ ! '¡ 8 E l 8 3 Í 3 g Í 3 á E Í a 'Í 3 § í £ 8 g 8 « " Í l I 5 8 ^ " ¡ ! i " Í
long,
were
gone.
Her
sister
had
not
died o f injuries received in a football
heard any one in the room, but heavy
.........('a ) HIWJ3K
game.
tracks made by muddy feet were visi­
l is I »-» m . m h-J* *-*5 o
m m
H» s
J* J-»*-1*-» m W - h .........
Insurgency is rife among the Demo­ ble on the carpet.
5 3 ' a s 'H $ 8 ÌS S 5 g lìS fc g s ^ ^ »«a = i^ 8 a K B iS S 3 B 8 a 5 5 3 l
< «)
cratic members of the coming con­
gress.
Hostile Natives Killed.
(B) t o o »
Manila— Detachments o f troops and
81 g » S l g $ 8 3 a S I S g M 8 S E g M £ i 8 » i * g 3 l 8 k i
Internal revenue receipts are report­
r-
r
r r
-
r r r r y n *
ed to be $12,000,000 ahead o f the pre­ constabulary are operating against the Ppl I n
.......... ou)
hostile Manobos in Davao, Mindanao M i
vious fiscal year.
island. One column has killed several
u»JMOOO
Millionaire miningjfakirs’ arrested in of the tribesmen, these including two w.K
eî
*m
New York did not attempt to procure who were implicated in .the murder of b b ì bì ì s ì b
........... «Olivg
Earl,Geer, a planter from Seattle.
bail and are remaining in jail.
Another column has killed three impli­
An aviator at Mobile, Ala., struck cated in the murder o f Geer and other
••gsoestUO
the eatrh while flying low, wrecking his planters, and haa recovered Geer’ s
machine. He escaped without injury. body. A third detachment had two
C ow s That Answer T w o Purposes.
Three Brick Blocks at Coquille.
Eleven Austrians left Portland to soldiers wounded, while a fourth lost
Portland — M. S. Shrock, deputy
Coquille— The Merchants bank build­
return voluntarily to their native land, one man killed in ambush. The round­
ing, the last o f three brick blocks to dairy and food commissioner, has re­
where they will have to serve three ing up o f the tribesmen continues.
be erected here this summer, is finish­ turned from Wallowa county, where he
years in the army. They all expect to
Snow sheds W reck Scene.
ed and tenants are moving in.
The held three dairy meetings in Enter­
return to this country after visiting
Truekee, Cal.— A wreck occurred on building is double, the bank occupying prise, Josephine and Wallowa.
and doing their military duty.
“ There is quite an awakening o f the
the Southern Pacific in the snowsheds the corner room. The banking room
The steamer Beaver rammed and
is finished in solid mahogany, except dairy industry in Wallowa county,”
tr
Soda
Springs
at
2:30
o
’
clock
sunk the tramp freighter Selja off San
the wainscoating, which is o f Alaskan said Mr. Shrock. “ This has been pri­
Francisco harbor in a dense fog. The Monday morning which delayed traffic marble, as is also the tops o f the deal­ marily a beef stock country.
We
only fatalities were the drowning of more than six hours.
Two cars o f a ing counters.
The pillars at either found that the people are inclined to
two Chinese members o f the Selja’s west-bound freight trsln were wrecked side o f the main eutiaiii;« are 18 inches use what we call a dual purpose cow,
crew, although the injured steamer and tore down 200 feet o f snowahed, in diameter, and o f Red Beach gran­ namely, a cow that ia as good for beef
went down within 15 minutes after scattering the heavy timbers in a mass ite, and the steps are o f Tennessee as milk. They can never be successful
being struck.
in dairying in this w ay.’ ’
on the track. Rails were torn out for marble.
a similar distance. A wrecking outfit
Out-of-date railroad methods
Wallowa Sawmills Closa.
Elkhorn Vote Was Expensive.
from Truekee cleared the track.
blamed for high rates in the East.
W allow a—The Bear Creek Lumber
Salem — ixninty Clerk R. D. Allen
Union Man Faces Death.
company has closed it mill here and has figured that at the recent election
New M exico's proposed' constitution
The the county paid at the rate o f $9.43 a
Paris— A jury in the court o f assizes w ill not saw again until spring.
is much shorter even thanjthat o f Ore­
at Rouenbureen imposed the death pen­ Nibley-Mimnaugh mill closed down vote for the votes cast in Elkhorn pre­
gon.
alty on Secretary Durand, o f the Coal last week. Both companies will oper­ cinct. The total cost o f the election
It is reported that two Mexican clt- Handlers’ union, who was accused of ate their planers during the winter in that district was $113.20, and there
ies have fallen into the hands o f the instigating the murder o f Foreman sufficiently to supply the demand for were but 12 votes cast, o f which G ov­
Donge during ther strike o n the docks finished lumber. The Bear Creek com­ ernor-elect Oswald West received 10
rebels.
at Havre in September. Donge turned pany will make extensive improve­ and Jay Bowerman received none. One
Vessels o f all kinds are limping into strikebreaker and returned to work. ments to its pond and both Companies o f the other votes was a prohibition
Coast ports and report terriffle gales Soon afterward he was beaten to death w ill put in a large supply o f logs, in­ vote, and the remaining one was a
and desperate struggles for safety.
in the streets.
suring an all-summer run.
Socialist vote.
3mm
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MADERO HAS 6 ,0 0 0 MEN.
Well Armed Mexican Rebels March
ing on City o f Monclova.
Douglas, A r il.— Francisco I. Ma­
dero, the leader of the Mexican revolu
tionists, is now reported not wounded
but instead, marching on the city of
Monclova, injthe state o f Coahuila, at
the head o f a well-equipped army, said
to number as high as 6,000 men
News of Madero’ s being wounded
said to have been sent out by Mexican
officials to discourage the revolution­
ists.
This was the report sent by revolu­
tionists across the border into Douglas.
A local business man, who is a revolu­
tionary sympathizer, received the data
in documentary form from friends in
Mexico, and the dispatch was given
out for publication.
A small printed document published
at Chihuahua shows the local situa­
tion there and the purported move­
ments o f Madero.
This paper was
smi gg!ed in. Since October 31, it is
said Bj .vboys have engaged in smug­
gling arms in from the border, where
they were received from San Antonio
All the funds were supplied by the
Mexican junta and by Madero person'
ally.
.
It is said that both the mounted
troops and infantry o f Madero carry
modern repeating rifles o f 30-30 cali­
ber. Madero’ s mounted soldiers are
considered particularly efficient. The
foot soldiers were recruited from the
cotton belt, where it was known for
long time that the peons were ready to
take up arms.
According to the reports received in
Douglas, Madero’s first movement was
a bold stroke.
With his men he
marched to the great ranch owned by
General Terrazas, now appointed gov­
ernor o f Chihuahua, at Sans Ostenes,
where he captured 400 horses. Madero
and his soliders then moved into the
mountains. Here, with his troops he
will be able to stand off the govern­
ment army for an indefinite period, if
the claim o f the revolutionary sypa-
thizers is well founded.
BAD ELEPHANT EXECUTED.
6 0 0 Grains o f Cyanide o f Patassium
Kills Huge Beast.
MANY GIRLS
IN FIRE
Panic-Stricken Empïd
to Awful Deaî
Pour From Windows to Fl
and Fall in Show er]
Firemen’s Head!
T U R K E Y
you any T u rk ey« U M il
^î^Ducka to »«1IT
¡gu
to ««II?
jgo Chickana to «ell?
L ank l . s m i t h m e .
Minting the Beet Tr
I PORTLAND. O RES
B. E. W i
L , teeth out ard plate anc
out-of-town patrons w
Cwork in one day ii necea
Newark, N. J .— In ten
girls were burned alive or
death on the pavement by li
the windows and fire eaca
four-story factory building
HES'
and High streets, occupied
»«traction Fran when pla
floor by an underwear ma
»¿(red. Consultation Freo
concern.
r painless work anywher
ijrou pa/.
It was on the top floor
^ fullv Guaranteed for Hi
death list was heaviest,
floors were occupied by two
concerns and two electrical
tories. The latest count sh
3421 Washington St
o f the 25 bodies recovered
Portland
identified and that six girls
ing. They may be among I I » depot and transfer to W
tified or yet in the ruins. 1
o f a wall interrupted the
limping Y e u n g and V
bodies.
I Is a receipt for keei
U: Find an occupatio
F ifty were taken to the
whom two may die.
Ttll your heart. Th
■ set Justly toward
Among the injured is
Sloan, deputy fire chief, wH Jjtm are surrounded. T
taken by the falling wall a| Led, will Insure a g
bricks and rubbish. He i| lind health, and nev
[woman of forty-five
but may recover.
en years younger.
The rush o f the flames wl
and threw such terror into 1
offer with eye ' rou
the top floor that the body 4
found still seated on a cH |:om using 1 E FI
drui gists t
|2 dc . All dr
beside the machine at ws
Buffalo, N . Y .
been working.
Horrible as must have be^
try In Doing One’ s
curred in the crowded u
reason so many peop
what befell outside in the D
ed and happy tn tl
light was more horrible.
me they do not do
The building was exce^
¡(ever be satisfied wt
flammable and the first gu|
had cut off all escape by the
The elevators made one trijj
down no passengers and
back. The only exit was
escapes, the lower platforn
were 26 feet from the stree
Onto these overcrowded
lanes, scorched dancing hot
o f flame from the lowei
pressed forward a mob o f wi
withpanic, driven by the fi
others behind them.
A net had been spread
windows and the girls begi
IT W IL L CURE
like rats out o f a burning]
it vial. I f it fails to cur
the way a fireman d escribfl imonty. M unyon’9, Phila.
scent.
_J0N ’S R H t U M A T I S I
They came out o f the wiHo
thick treacle, rolled upon t h ^ M l j r R J I l Q i p I
those below them and casca^B>A I £ I f I J O l U I
fire escape to the pavement]
IRING A N D B A
INSTRUM ENTS
low.
Some o f them stood in til
Music 15c. Mail orders c
outlined against the flames I
SMITH & S T O R E Y
clear. Others jumped frona
127 F ilth S t., P o r
ings, still others from the J
they stood. The air waB ful
, Y O U R O W N TE
and they fell everywhere—if
on the necks o f the firemen,!
them on the hard stone slabf re achina teeth or cavities e
I for thy dental ordeal, try
When the awful rain i
It. At druinrists or by mail
were eight dead in the streJ
1C CO.. 351 Empiri Rife. Sultls. 1
gutters ran red. Seven wea (ink D rug Co., distributora
crushed they died in hospit J
|B. E. W rigl
EUMATI
New York — It took 500 grains of
cyanide o f potassium, the most deadly
poison, to kill Gypsie Queen, a trick
elephant, executed for the murder of
her keeper, Robert Schiel, on October
20. Less than one grain is sufficient
to kill any man and the first convulsive
symptoms supervene almost before the
victim can set down the glass from
which he swallows.
Gypsy Queen swayed backward and
forward, flapping her big ears, for ten
minutes before she showed the least
uneasiness. It was 44 minutes before
she was pronounced dead.
The poison was given in three pail­
fuls of bran mash, in which had been
sprinkled 100 capsules, each o f five
grains o f cayanide. The elephant had
been starved for 24 hours and ate
greedily. A t the end o f ten minutes
she shivered in all her bulk o f 7,500
pounds, her knees weakened, her trunk
grew rigid, she rolled her eyes and
finally fell.
In the next two minutes she get up
four times, struggling against the
chains that bound her. At the end of
20 minutes her breathing was imper­
ceptible, but 44 minutes after her first
MEXICAN REBELS RCfl
swallow she blinked when her trainer
Government T roops Kill
passed his hand before her eyes.
Wound Many.
That was the last sign o f life.
Chihuahua, Mexico— In m
SCHOONER SINKS, FOUR LOST ment near this city which i f
9 o ’clock in the morning unf
in the afternoon, 600 Fed«
Crew Set Out in Tw o Dories and routed a force o f 400 Madeil
One Reaches Sitka, Alaska.
ing them repeatedly from a
Juneau, Alaska — Four members of sition and compelling them ™
the crew o f the power schooner Sea the moutains.
The revolutionists lost 1G
Light, which was wrecked near Cape
Ommaney, at the southern end o f Bar- many wounded. There we^
anof Island, are believed to have been ¡ties on the Federal aide,
lost in a storm which swept the North including three officers, we<
General Navarro was in (
Pacific.
The Sea Light, which had eight men the Federal troops. He lefl
in her crew, was wrecked five days at 5 o ’ clock in the morning]
ago. The men set out in two dories, of four companies o f the sef
four men in each boat. One o f the ion and two squads o f caval|
boats arrived at Sitka with the report 13th regiment.
Near Fresno, 12 milesl
o f the wreck o f the schooner and the
probable loss o f the men in the other the Bquads o f cavalry f«T
dory. When last seen the missing guard the road. They wer<
dory was being tossed by a heavy sea by the rebels, who opened
hills on both aides o f the hi
and appeared to be sinking.
A fter several.hours of he
the rebels broke far the mo(
Three Shot in Strike Riot.
Chicago— Three persons were shot,
one being wounded seriously and many
others were subjected to a rain o f bul­
lets here in a riot caused by a clash
between striking garment workers and
non-union workers on the Northwest
side o f the city.
Vincent Belleno and his wife, Anna,
non-nuion workers, were accused by
the police o f firing the shots and were
arrested. The wounded w ere: John
Kelaity, saloonkeeper, George Gabler,
who owned the saloon with Kelaity,
Mrs. Alberta Allista.
Gibbons Foe to S u ffra g e ,
Baltimore, Md. — “ Avoid following
those who desire woman suffrage,”
said Cardinal Gibbons in a talk to the
students o f St. Catherine’ s Normal .in­
stitute, where he was the guest o f
or at the celebration o f the feast oi*SL
Catherine.
Do not follow in the
steps of those,’ ’ he ¡continued, “ who
have become manninsh .in their wayi
and who fight fo r a place in politics.
The
place for
woman ia in the
home. ”
Countess Tolstoi Gravely III.
SL Petersburg— A news dispatch
from Tula saya Coontees Tolstoi ia ill,
having a temperature o f 102.9. The
will o f the late Count Tolstoi makes
hia daughter Alexandra the legatee of
his unpublished works.
Ho
L b communication with ui
1,10
Add resa
F IL L -O
„C 0 F F I
T E A SP
BAKING PC
EXTRA«
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6 ,0 0 0 Sanies Are Sta
Chicago— The citizens’ si
mittee, which has investif
ditions in the fam ilies of SO
ment workers, reported
babies are starving as a re»
labor war. The report wai
Hull House and |a special b|
fund was started at once by
o f the committee.
EstimaJ
meeting showed it would ts
$100 a day to provide
actual want, and the sufferif
ed so great that $1,100 was i
by members o f the eommittd
Michael Cudahy Is
Chicago—Michael Cudahf
o f the packing firm bearing]
died at 8:46 o ’ clock Monday]
hospital here, o f doable
Mr. Cudahy had been ill flv«
disease becoming serious |
morning. Mr. Cudahy
Callan, Country Killkenn^
December 17, 1841. He c|
United States with hia
1849, the fam ily settling
kee.
Ban on Whisky Is U$
Knoxville, Tenn.— The
Supreme court hold* a
the act of the Tennessee 14
1909 prohibiting the man
whiskey in Tennessee.
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