There Is More Good Paying Enjoyment In The Booklovers' Contest … · 2017. 12. 13. · There Is...

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There Is More Good Paying Enjoyment In The Booklovers' Contest Than Any Plan Ever Offered You MAKE ONE TRIAL of Classified Ads and you will be a consistent Vol. XXIX SUNDAY CAPITAL NEWS THE WEATHER. Probably rain or snow THIRTY-TWO PAGES BOISE. IDAHO, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 15, 1912. No. 150 STAGE IS SET FOR T H E « « , PEACE CONFERENCE Speculation Now Centers in the Attitude ot the Ottoman Envoys Toward the Grecian Government Tells Them to Wait Until Conditions Are Improved —Overworking Mothers Cause of Crime. BUNK’S ACTION STRIKE SETJim HELD VOID BY STILL H ISSUE Index of Today’s Paper. First Section. 1‘ajri' 1—Stage Set for the Peace Con- ference: Judge Dietrich Make« Im - portant Ruling In Boise State Bank Case; Pari« Stirred by Shooting of Mumm; Kngliah Engineers'’ Strike PARIS STIRRED Settled; Senator B o ra h Ad »Ir*‘.>so s Pennsylvania Club of New Y. >rk. Page 2 Telegraph News. Page 3—Disclosures Made in New Y ara Vice Trust Probe; S i\ 11 A i y Bicycl«* Race Finished: Pr»:»sec u t io n Com- 1 . o n d o n Dec. 1 . W ith ** . rythtiiK in It w; s regarded as true that Bulgaria r» a d in e for the f'irm u l "1 •niiig of king to join the triple alliance, T u rk is! - la lk a n i OHOé CMUf •renee a St. tin* confederation of Germany, Italy Jam.s la," M M iclaj. 'litdomats and and Austro-Hungary ami the visit to u n !»h »la in the var game were eh oft y Prend* r 1‘ o i u c a i r e . in i’aris. by M. in te i » st er in th H ttitii'lp "f Tu •key D a n e ff Bulgarian peace envoy, there- and Gr», tO'A'i Pis each »»t l u 'f. The i on , was not understood in diplomatie ' il-* fis h »verum* nt. sa f t r as was circles. France is a member with Eng. known. Ii «s neith •r signed tti« p i'"t ».»col iaud aiid Russia of the triple entente. of La z ! t • h c or armh th-.’ lim n • liate!y after a preliminary cun- 'll! w ith th»-' O tto m a n gov ■»•>»- sultath m this afternoon w ith R«*chid ment. Y •t Jw < reek ell V v s CXp. •t."i Pasha, the Turkish chief. M. DamdT. t’. en! ■ tlu «•■Ulf •fence M» m iay. w ili-h depart»d for Paris, saying that he would » ill h- 1.' 11! • ’ ' i 1v an ad» ress by S ir remain there over Sunday as the guest 1h) war» •eretaw «f state for of Pr* nier Potncain , returning M»»n- f » reign fairs, w ,,, »liviirty has gre •ted »lay in time for the »»penlng of the con- tin' 1"- pion ip» tant ia nm at the for- form ,. • cign ofi K ng Ferdinand Leaves Fofia, That. ! i was no misai d. i -dan lin g Fron Vienna it was ! that c m » 11g • ; »! tir B. ! k ; 111 st it es K in g ! V rd im u u l <»f B u lg a r i ! made .oui tl ; t the alii; hcc was i i no da igcr a hurt- , ,! trip fl'ilii S'iti.i t.i i l. A ils - <•!' »ii.-ii gratk-n HS 'li« |l' tel “S »ina - tria -II n iH H fi.iii «■apiti'I and that ta* i, st in c i <MU C o u s t a n t in o p l» stated. v. a s in tim a oil that his government had al- « ;<i, ic i\ the 1 >1lo w in g serni-on cilll most . .a-!:- >t « ii HKi-'-fmcnt w uh tl"- publisi vil il; A il » ns: dual o cnarehy. ' T : n- II G r.’.-»’ ■ has »'..t it w • lea n il’ll fo n ig l t tl at t I p * Hal- • ai rni • ire sium!» la t b( in - kan «1«U-SHt'H» tiii'l ....... .. t" pr'ipns" i . :* »*: *t * .1 :: s a pro»*! o d is s e rt s i o n fo r chi irm a ii o! the *«»n-' » me Stojnn U mm»g 11 • allies A • •» »>P li Ig to i‘Npla- Novak > itch, S» r v ia n m r -»y. » x-pre- m itiiu is ft hep , Gr. >ar- m 1er a id th» oldest <»f the pienipoteu- ticular! that her ta\a 1 a< tion iiarles. Premier \Vnizelas of Grec.-e should i, •rrupted. i i order that was pt i forward, but he ta» tfully de- t a* P t ua lin g of the T irk is} i 1 '»«•<- c ! l n . « 1. 1. Epirus Mould not In rend That Une negotiations w ill long i" '- P'I' drawn out. is admitted, but that peace C on sidérée! A llie s ' Interests w ill e ••■nnmlJy be arrange») is not Gr». ; t sid. ring : inter csts don life 1 in any quarter. » f a allies rather tlu n her >\vn. Naturally, say the diplomats, all par- The a ’ 1 te*- is il tact ami vith it ta ve ties; t»» tlu- conference will nut forward b cri p «ervd he eluuu* - of p •ace t»»it Hit demands which H w do not hope which \ uId hav • suffered w ith tin re- t»» ha\ . nut. W h .’ii their tlenmnds infoic* ru n t o f tl o 1»ardent îles and the have i ■n seal» »1 d»»w n. th'-\* hope still T- luita y> garriSM ns. it has been sh iw n to ha v what they really expect to get bv the t * '<■'*! 11 r’urkish -11»»till! tl- ■at y out of tin- liiirKatn. that. - 1. \ ;.tgr**entents ne or not ne —— . «a ri ly 1 V precede 1 by an a ■m ist ice and Boats Exchange Fire. it is oft c ally announced th at t!i- »ïreck Constantinople. D r. 15. There was t'lp n ip " f itiaries w ill i« irti‘ ipate in the an ox* lange of fire today between a London r eace n gotia t ions. Türkis i destrover and t lu -* two Greek The f* »reg o ing explanation of th. g u n b o r is. patrolling the Dardanelles Gr- . k ; tt itude, 0»upled w ith the Po rte ’s straits according to a disnat» It from w itlu li. w ,1 .if it« instruct lons to R*chid Athens It was sai.l that the Turkish Pa«ha. ■hil f .1 t ho Turlîist envoys not \essel attempted to pass from Dar- !.. tr*’U vit h G reece u n til that n: tion ilanelh int»» the Aegean s a. but was signed th <■ p ro b »•oi. led t! " optimistic driven b t k t»y tl»* fire »» f the Greeks, !.. tl' 1" iat t l e r ■ w ould 1»* no frit t ion The T itkish forts on » it lo r side of tlie bft wem » rurkey nul Gré* »c in the ne- «.n. i- way replied to the Gr» » k gun- got iat i* 11 ! Boston, Dec. 14.— “ D o n ’t Ret mar- tried, girls; go on a mother strike un- I til industrial conditions for women are I better." was the appeal made at Jor- dan hall this afternoon by Miss Kate I Barnard, prison commissioner of Okla- 1 honm , where she Is sometime called ! “ O k la h o m a Kate.’’ I "W e have no need for more of our j race as It is at present,” declared i Miss Barnard ‘I have decided not to ! marry until women are far better off I industrially and politically, and 1 am not an old woman, either.” 1 Miss Barnard is w e ll, perhaps, she j m ig h t be 30- or thereabouts, and she I is very pretty. ! "The first cause of crime is the overworking of mothers and those who | j some day w ill he m others," said Miss j Barnard. She told how Oklahoma ! ! got. its child labor la w . which has j j been a model for 17 states since, and j said tlii« and the compulsory eduea-' ; tion law were aimed directly at this1 ! conservation of humanity and the re-; j duetion of crime. “ It’s a farce to pass a child labor; ! law or a compulsory educational law,"! ; she declared, "unless you provide; 1a g a i n s t poverty keeping children out; Judge Dietrich Holds Against the Globe Surety Co. SECURITIES MUST BE RETURNED TO BANK Decision of the Court Means Much to the Depositors of the Boise State Bank, Now in the Hands of a Re- ceiver. Right of Engineers on Rail road in England to Get Drunk Is Not Decided in Agreement. pletes Oa.se in A rchha Id T ria l ; Cab- inet Members Guests of Philippine Veterans. Page 1 S u it Brought for Commission in Railroad Sale. Page f*~ Women Juries for Idaho Being Agitated; Reported Nampa Is to •king Plant; m Association O ld Pocatell Berry tiro Neve Ba • • • • • She told bow her bill provides that if a widow has children at work, they -an be* taken from the m ill and sent to school and the state w ill pay their wages, just as though they were at work. There arc 54151 children now at school in Oklahoma under this pro- vision. Miss Barnard dec! bor in glass factor!» workers "last" from ed children la -. little three to five Senator Borah Speaks on the Constitution at Meeting ot the Pennsylvania Society fi tlio r.iuli -in not n m n itiilb ilth in ). b u t M\bh vu* I tin i'll I which Atioinov I J.'iit rul Wicker«!«'*'! "I-"!., tonit j:t i , 1lie i’t‘i;nsi iviinia -i.* ry. m- cti'iu ;..r ilk urimml Imii'i'U't at the Wahlnrf- : Astoria. lie ri'licul'.'i the modern utopia premised by refonm i «, ami bill - 1 telly condemned tic initiât!'o, lie ic - ci-fiidvim and the reeali. Among; the Speakers ic-ri' Hrltlsb Amiias-ador i liriee and Seim *o' Horal- of Idaho. Adniittintt that tic- < vils of mnehii,.»’ rule ami corporation eontrol of lim he-- . islature and judejar.' bad in tile pa,a. ticmanii'd dra-iie notion, the attorney1 die ■d. has o r r c c t n a PROTEST ENTERED BY CLEVELAND I. W. W. Cleveland, Doc. 14. Prohibited by city officials from placing contribu- tion kettles at downtown street cor- ners, Industrial W orkers of th* W orld here tonight held a mass meeting in protest. A committee was named to draft resolutions threatening a repe- al» open fight for free speech tit ion nml personal liberty recently waged in San Diego, Cab, W a lte r Glover, na- tional organize! of the I. \V. w . con- ducted the mass meeting. He declared that Cleveland members w ill insist, upon the right to station l w. \V . members w ith Kettles on the street w hen I lie Salvation Army and other charitable organizations are now do- ing so. Glover had appealed direct to Mayor Newton D. Baker for permis- sion, but the mayor denied tin* request, stating that too many already arc so- li» itin g Christmas funds on the streets. 1 o’t-s liave been applied by congress, thi.iuyi «ns« which d" not itffeit. the ’ oust itutiona 1 government. Ambassador Bryce, hi his speech, a un i \ zed the American government, il* insisted that friction existed be- 1vvt,,,n the executive and legislative hranclu > which could easily be remr- died He recommended the admission of the president and the cabinet into Un* deliberations of the house and sen- ate, saying this plan has hern proved successful in Switzerland. Borah on the Constitution. S-nator Borah spoke on the consti- lution. declaring that it was neither inspired nor obsolete. He said: “This is a fitting tine to look hack upon tlie formation and adoption of the constitution. W in n skepticism is abroad we do w e ll to acquaint our- selves with the faith of the fathers, it cannot be other than instructive to the mind and strengthening to our faith to examine anew the conditions under which it was adopted and recall again ami often the deep solicitude ami eager anxiety which accompanied the first Nears Of trial Titos» who have been disposed to look upon the great charter as an inspired document will Und in a renewed study of its growth and adop- tion ample facts with which to dispel the superstition. Out of concession and compromise, of clashing judgments and conflicting views came the. finished product. Those who are prone to re- gard it as obsolete, cumbersome and impracticable w ill find more than enough to dispel the illusion. In its fundamental conception it can never become obsolete u n til a people's gov- ernment becomes ancient and out of place, and the rights of the humble ami the poor shall be conceded to be tin property of power, the plaything (Continued on Page Two.) “And I say that the American girls have in) tim e for matrimony until this condition is changed,“ she cried. “We don’t need any more of a ra< until we can el»*ar up what we have/ gossipsg I nblow IN DECISION BY THE CALIFORNIA COURT Sacramento, Dec. 14. — Gossips who maliciously jmjI soh the mind of hus- band or wife against the other, there-'; by causing separation or domestic trouble, are liable for practically any amount of damages for which the ag-! grieved party may sue to recover, ac-! cording to a decision of the supreme! court handed down today. Written by Justice Angellotti, it sets, a precedent for the entire United j Slates in “poison tongue" cases. The case in point is that of Mrs. Beulah W orks, appellant*, against J. P Campbell, both of Kings county, th»’ woman having sued the latter tv>r $15.000 on allegations that through false report Uampbell had actuated her to divorce her husband. Sim states that she believed his reports at the time but later learned that they were maliciously untrue. The lower court ruled against Mrs. W orks because it held that the hus- band was the aggrieved party. The supreme court, however, declared in its decision that cither husband or w ife under such circumstances had the very best grounds for damages. Action Held Void. "If wr put aside, as not be- ing of vital importance, the fact that the call for the meeting was not by written order, and that the cashier di»l not notify any of the directors, ami if we assume that, so far as the three directors are concerned who were actually present, a ll for- m a litie s were waived, the fact s till remains that as to the other two directors the sub- stantial requirements of the. by-laws and of the statute were wholly Ignore»!, ami it must be held that the gathering of the three directors was a mere in- formal assemblage, and was in no legal sense a meeting of the board of directors of the Boise State bjink: proceedings l iken at a special meeting held by a bare majority of the mem- bers «*f the hoard of directors under such a statute and such by-laws, without notice to the other members, are void."-—Ex - tract from Judge Dietrich's de- cision. New Castle. England, Dec. 14.— The Northeastern railway strike was amic- ably settled today but it left the ques- tion of the employes right to get drunk if it pleased them, s till undecided. Magistrate Jones, before whom the railway men and their employers reached an agreement, held that Knox was Intoxicated 'fills le ft the moral victory of the conflict iii doubt Knox, an engine drivt-r employ ed by the Northeastern report» d for duty in a somew hat ex- »•ited condition and the company Im - mediately deposed h im , charging that lu was drunk. Khox had been an ex- press engine driver and was reduced t»> the freight service. He refused to a» » »‘pt the position and quit Three thousand of his associates on the Northeastern struck in sympathy with Knox and traffic was tied up. The railway men said that Knox had a right to get drunk if lu- saw fit and the railway had no right to complain so long as he did his work. Five thousand men on other North »»f England railways struck and pas- senger traffic, in four counties was paralyzed. As a result the collieries and foundries shut down. In a ll be- tween XO,0"0 and 100,000 men were Idle. Kn»*x appealed to Home Secretary McKenna. He said lie was falsely ac- cused He admitted that on his wav t■1 work th a t »lay lu- drank "two hot rums' but denied that he was Intoxi- cated. Magistrat»* Jones was sent here to conduct the lu-aring. Whether two hot rums would make a man intoxicated was a question that immediately be- came second in importance only to the question: Has a man the tight to get drunk if he so desires. On the recommendation of Magistrate Jones, the king pardoned all the strik- ers and Knox and all of his followers were reinstated, but w ill be docked six days’ pay. Bands Filed SPag* 7 Assistants to j era! Named; Future j Boise Dive Question. ! Page 8- Selection of L I by Northern Pacific. Page 9— W estern P; j Southern Idaho; Den ! Defendants at Indiai ?Page la Society and Glut j Page 11--Beaver River Company ; Big Force of Men at Work. Second Section. ; Page 1- Foreign News. ! Pages 2 and 3 “Outdoor Pastin' I an American Hunter." by Tie- Police Declare That the Woman in Case Was Not Shot I p o l i s Roo -it. I Page 4 Editorial and Features. ; Page 5—Additional Sports i Page I) "The Red Rose" Gomes Men* I This Week; At the Picture Shows. I Page 7 One Day's Trials of a Capital I News Reporter; Lewiston Ma»h Per- ; manent Home »»f Stock Show; Stock Company to <»pen St-ason Here. I Pag** 8...-Governor's Stand on Law and «»nier Recalls incident of Early j Days; B ill Providing for Study of ! C rim in a ls W ill Be Presented; 'A I I M'ton and Hi« Ant".1 ’ by Ain- M ar- ! Hu." ât l'âge H l.ia b ilitirs ot' l'irertor« an I Issu»* ln A c tio n j Page 10 Dave Lewis. Child of Under- ground, Mav Have Place in Gabillet. ; Pag»* 11 Classified Pag**. ; Page 12 Alfalfa Meal Being Tested as j Food for Stock; Relationship of Part- j ners Forms issue in Action. Third Section. ! Page ! -Carpenter Letter, 'The Land of tiu* Six-Gent Dollar." Page 2 Big Hats and Litt » Hats." by j Lady D uff-G ordon ; M a da un. Gava j lie rl’s Secrets of Beauty. Pag»* X ' in te re stin g Featui-es ».»f W in - ter Fashions," by May Manton. Pages 4 and 5—Comic Seetion. j Page tv The W onders of tin* Toy ln- j dustry; The Christmas Doll. I Page 7—Continued Story, His Rise t<» ; Power." Page 8— Lost Her Dre? Husband. MAN TALKS Of CASE Statement Made by Him Discredited—Warrant Is- sued for Woman’s Arrest but No Request for Extra- dition Has Been Made. « * # # Mrs. Barnes No* injured. ida; The • • © • • An ille g a l meeting of the board of directors turned over to the Globe Surety company $26,000 W o rth of se~ curities hearing a legal rate of inter- est which must now he returned to the Boise State bank. Absolute authority was given to the agent <»f the company to take what- ever he w anted of the bank's collât- (Continued on Page Two» MOTHER OF BOY WHO SHOT HIS FATHER IS IN DOUBLE TROUBLE STUDENT EDITOR IS PEEVED AND QUITS Eugene, Ore., Dei-. 14 Peeved al what appears to her to he the necessity j for a "live manager," Miss Flora Dun - ! ham. editor of the students’ monthly I magazine at the University of Oregon, j has resigned, and the monthly has sus- : pended publication. Most of the fi at- lures that were to have been used in i the forthcoming issue w ill go into a j special edition of the student daily pa- Jper, to be issued tomorrow. So far as j is known, this will be the first college ! paper in the country t « » carry a rnaga- jzine sect ion. It was declared at the meeting of the students' executive council that the monthly was being conducted at a loss, and the vote to abandon it promptly followed. BOXING ABOLISHED BY OMAHA Y. M. C. A. Î /is Angeles, Dec. 14. Directly from the funeral of her husband, Mrs. Daniel H. R ic k e r t went today to visit h e r I I - y » ar-olti son, who fired the bul - let that ended his father's life . At the funeral the doubly stricken wom- an bore herself bravely, but when she ieroh*»J the detention home where the boy was held tears streamed down her cheeks when he rushed to her arms. W hat Mrs. Rbkert's attitude will be when the time mines f»»r the disposi- tion of her son’s ease is causing much speculation to the woman herself. She plainly shows the effect of her mental struggle between her love for her boy and the duty she fears she. must perform. To reconcile the two, she is persistent in her belief that M a rtin shot merely to frighten his father and not t»» kill M a rtin did not attend his father's funeral. He has yet shown no sor- row for the shooting. BUGABOO O f JAPANESE WAR WILL CONFRONT PRESIDENT WILSON San Francisco, Dec. 14 When Woodrow Wilson assumes the. reins of government March 4 next, he w ill probably he confronted by the bug- aboo of war w ith Japan, precipitated by the announced intention here to- day of State Senator Sanford of Men- docino county to again introduce in th** legislature his alien land bill, an anti-Japanese measure, which almost resulted in an international squabble- in 11*07 a n d 1909. Sanford asserts he w ill introduce his b ill immediately after the legislature meets in Janu- , ary. j The b ill provides laws excluding i Japanese from owning American real - | ty. Sanford has waged his fight three: tim e s in the legislature. Each tim e ; the legislature has been torn by the 1 conflict The first time it was defeat-i ed by Colonel Roosevelt, then presi- j fdent, wielding the "big stick” and twice by the efforts of president Taft. i “No American » an own land in Ja-; pan," saitl Sanford He cannot even I lease it until he marries a Japanese. , ii am going to keep hammering until i m y bill goes through." but Won Her this morning de- ad ascertained that Van Rensimer F\s. Creel, who shot to, club man and s not wounded by y also said that woman unless the > 'll"« " I') lo.lp. which was consiii- peculation, con might continue Omaha, Neb, Dec. 14 The local V. M c a announced today that the boxing and wrestling classes are t<* he abolished, following the discovery that J. P Pitzenberg, a member of the senior boxing class, had engaged in a match w ith Rudy Unholz, a profes- sional, before the Flambeau club in South Omaha. The directors of the Y M. A declare their b* • xing » lasses a iv breeding profession;!liant. THINKS BANDITS ARE HIDING NEAR FRISCO Bakersfield, Ga!,, Dec 14.—‘ The de- tectives chasing us could not catch a blind horse. You needn't waste your strength. (Signed) “The Highwaymen, three of us.” The above message received today by Sheriff Baker, caused that o ffi- cial to w ire northern California au- thorities that he believes the band- its who. stole the $20,000 from a Santa Fe train near Taft early this week, are hiding near San Fran- cisco. 'I’he note was printed in sprad- dling characters on a piece of soiled paper. The em »*!ope was postmarked San Francis» o. RIVERS MATCHED TO MEET PHIL BROCK San Francisco, Dec. 14. Joe Rivers "f Los Angeles was matched today to meet Phil Brock In Cleveland for a 12-round bout early in January. Joe Levy, Rivers' manager, wired an acceptance of an offer of $3000 for Rivers to fight Brock in Cleveland. The fighters w ill weigh in at 133 pounds, ring side RUTT ANDFOGLER, GERMAN RIDERS, WIN 6-DAY RACE The Final Mile Sprint ofj Walter Rutt Gives First' Place to Himself and His Team-mate. Madison Square Garden. New York. Dec. 14.—Walter Rutt of Germany won the final one-mile sprint in the six-day bicycle race tonight in 2:00 2-5. w in - ning first place in the big race for him self and his team mate. Joe Fogler of Brooklyn. The final result was as fol- lows: Rutt and l'ogler. first; Bedell and M itten, second; Clark and D ill, th ird , j Root and Hehir, fourth; Drobach •uni! Collins, fifth; Grenda and Py e, sixth;! Kramer and Moran, seventh, P e r r h ir >t j and Egg, eighth. The contenders in the final one-mile j sprint for first prize were Rutt, «’lark.! Root, Bedell, Grenda and Drobach. A j separate m ile race to decide seventh j and eighth places was run by Kramer and Perch loot, Kramer winning. The winning team covered 2661 miles! and 5 laps. The record is 2737 miles ! and 1 lap. The riding during the early part of ' the evening was desultory, the men J realizing that they hud no chance to ! heat the record. They obviously saved j up their strength for the final dash and there were few sprints. The crowd was not large, but the faithful six day sleepers" were a ll there, cheering hoarsely, hut lustily, as the sturdy Ger- man flashed across the tape a winner. !.. be im sv vvit Ii t h.- shooting of \Va\- r Mumm. .iubman, sportsman, aero n.i ut ami jn e m her "f the famous w Itn -g fiiw ii»K t'am tlj . by the N, •w y o ik divorcc. M r: M an »■ Van il:en .s in nr Bi i rnes-' 'reef Aecording t». a re]aoi't i>> tlic police i Om m issary »nvesig nting the affair, M is . Barnes. as she was kmn» i%, her**. shot Mumm o n ly a ft»er h«* ha»I b ru t a b y hea ten and ki »k . 1 Reports tlmil Mu mai shi»t Mrs. Barneg fir•st and t luU sh* \x rested a Jewel. 1 re volver fron i his fin gers atul shot him were iliscrc giv< was the st a ferner: shot m t b M um n; ked hi ’Uf by Henri Mumm, brother »f ■untied man, that Mrs. Barnes a fit of jealous pique brought irts t»i break w ith fas. mating Mrs. Barnes could a m i. !L r luxurious apartment : sin* had not surrender- d it (t was said she had e sin««- iii shooting, it o u sly that she ha» I fie 1 1 that sh* was confine*! in a private hospital in the environs ot Paris. Friends of Mrs. Barnes who profess to km scout the ide* London and apr ilelined t tiling of the affair, she is In a sarr - 11v the authorities cept the idea that nt t<* London for no ut- ile h> the police to find W a rra n t Is Issued, uvest for her extradition lade, hut a wart*ant vvas issue*«1 for her rr*-«t at the re*un st .»f H e a r i M u m m . xx as sai«l that in remmsted the war- mt he not s rv. 1 unless \\ alt* r Fumni died. b*. the event of his re- »va r y , it was . that M n m in 's natlier wanted t In* xx a r r a n t hanging x er the h» ad of Mrs. Barnes as an ef- >f k*-»‘ping lier out of Heroic Treatment for Lockjaw. Milwaukee, Dec. 14.—After a six-day fight against lockjaw, the rigid little body of Joseph Karpis, aged nine, re- laxed completely today for the first tim e . His Jaws. which had been clenched as though bound by steel, <*pened and physicians gave his father and mother the first really encour- aging report tonight. H is recovery w ill he little less than a miracle, the doctors say Since the attack 30,000 units of anti-tetanus serum have been injected in the little fe llo w ’s finger tips and at the base of his brain. This was the largest amount of serum ever used in such a case. For Relief of Captain Scott. Christchurch, N Z. Dec. 14.— T h e \retie steamer Terra Nova sailed from h* re today for tin* relief of Captain I Robert F. Scott’» Antarctic expedition. THREE KILLED AND MANY INJURED ON GRADE CROSSING Perth Amboy, N. J„ Tie».. 14.— M ar- garet Daniel, 13 years old; her brother Thornton, 7 years old an»l an unidenti- fied woman were killed and 13 others were seriously injured tonight when an Atlantic C ity express on the Central railway of New* Jersey crashed into a heavily loaded Perth Amboy transpor- tation company automobile omnibus it a grade crossing south of De w aren, N. J. It was believed that the dead wo- man, who was elderly, was the aunt of Aaron Hyde of New York, who was in- jure!]» feottial means France. The » oncierge said that immediately after the injured Mumm left the apart- ment. it sträng»* man arrived in an au- tomobil»* and called in four physicians who worked over Mrs. Barnes an hour before she v able to lie removed. With the ai»l of the woman’s cook, the stranger carried Mrs. Barnes down u> the nutomobilc and the three disap- pes •d. W a ite night. Mmnm couhl not he found to- t various hospitals where re- (Continued on Page Two) WOMAN TO TESTIFY AT SMUGGLING PROBE San Francisco, De». 14. An investi- gation into tlie alleged smuggling of $ 1. 0 0 0 ,Ou*» worth of dress goods, silks and satins into the country by fash- ionable dressmakers throughout th»* United States w ill commence hero Monday by a federal grand jury. Miss Anna F. Cox, a fashionable modiste, w ill hr the first witness. Miss Cox w ill be asked t»j tell what she know s of M rs. George Ha Idem , alias Madam Haldane, who was arrested in New Y»»rk and indicted for smuggling silk* and Parisian gowns amounting to $15,000 into this country. Miss Cox was a passenger on the same vessel w ith Mrs. H a Id em. Miss* Cox 1ms been served with a subpoena by United States D istrict Attorne* A le Nab.

Transcript of There Is More Good Paying Enjoyment In The Booklovers' Contest … · 2017. 12. 13. · There Is...

Page 1: There Is More Good Paying Enjoyment In The Booklovers' Contest … · 2017. 12. 13. · There Is More Good Paying Enjoyment In The Booklovers' Contest Than Any Plan Ever Offered You

There Is More Good Paying Enjoyment In The Booklovers' Contest Than Any Plan Ever Offered YouM A K E O N E T R I A L

o f C la s s i f ie d A d s a n d y o u w i l l b e a c o n s is t e n t

Vol. XXIX

SUNDAY CAPITAL NEWS T H E W E A T H E R .

P r o b a b ly r a in o r s n o w

THIRTY-TWO PAGES BOISE. IDAHO, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 15, 1912. No. 150

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