The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, September 26, 1907, Image 3
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ROAD TO VIGTORYj
Poinll^Out to Cotton Grow-!
ers by President Barrett.
t".
URGENT APPEAL ISSUEDi
gyj"-'
Farmers Must Stand Shou-der to J
Shoulder in Demand for the Minimum
Price of Fifteen Cents.
Loyalty Means Success.
1:A ;
National President Charles S. Bar- j
rett of the Farmers' Union has given
oat an appeal to the members of the
union throughout the cotton belt to
stand firm for the minimum price of
15 cents, showing that if they do,
"victory is sure to be theirs. He says:
Just after the annual convention ac
jC % ,
Little Rock has named 15 cents a
pound as the minimum price whlcu
the southern farmer should receive
tor his cotton during the ensuing yeai,
u the specualtors in the cotton ranks
feave managed to depress the markets
and to beat down the price.
I address to you this line as a fraternal
appeal to hold steadfast to the
council of your annual convention,
and with heroic fidelity to abide its
ultimatum to the markets of the
p? world.
Hold your cotton for 15 cents and
hold it until it brings the price..
The National Union, when it fixed
the minimum, knew more about the
situation than any cotton gambler or
combination of cotton gamblers. It
was not fixed upon an impulse or an
uncertainty, but after deliberate
study and investigation.
With all my heart and with all my
mind, I urge you to the last limit ot
7 W
your ability to hold steadfast to this j
policy adopted by your National j
Union.
The present status make a definite |
and decisive crisis in the history of |
our great organization.
Up to this date the farmer has
or?r>r?cition and aeainst the !
f* ui iv^u v* >. ^
possibility of defeat.
We have won victory after victory
by this splendid1 policy. We stand
now face to face with a combination
which affords us an opportunity to
show the world that the southern farmer
is resolutely determined to maintain
his rights. The eyes of the
world are upon him as never before
and the history of the organization In
the future will depend in no small
degree upon the courage and fidelity
with which he meets the present situation.
For three years you have
won ou$ in every proposition that you
have presented to the business v-cr?3.
Win once more in this important
issue and it will he henceforth easier i
f sailing for us all.
You have the key to the situation.
You have the cotton, you have the
warehouses, and if to, these you only
add the courage, the business stamina
and the common senaVto hold your
own, you need not fear the future
Do not be scared by the con^r.
acy which has been begun to make
you part with your cotton for less
than the minimum price.
I do not ask you to hold your cot'
X
ton to the injury of your creditors.
Every farmer's duty is to pay his
debts, but this is a period when the
individual farmer and the Farmers'
Union can use their influence with
their merchant friends toi induce them
to bear for a little while with anyfarming
debtor whom the local union
may recommend to their confidence
and regard.
Let every farmer face the situation
without fear, and as God has prospered
him in other years and as tyis
union has prepared for him in the
storehouse for his crop, let him put
his shoulder to the shoulder of his
brother and breathing courage, confidence
and determination, let him repeat
to the world the statement that
the man who buys. his cotton mu?i
pay him 15 cents a pound!
CITIZENS HORSEWHIP PREACHER
A Case of "Affinity" That Turned Out
Most Disastrously.
Citizens of the little town of Krem*
ling, Colo,, take little stock in the
belief that "affinities" should have full
sway.
They formed a band of "white caps"
and dragged the Rev. H. Hasha, a
Methodist minister with a wife and
grown family, from a room with Miss
Ruth Shumacker, and horsewhipped
him until he begged for mercy. The
girl was placed under arrest.
PARLIAMENT FOR CHINA.
. ..? -- civina Chinks
First move is? moww a
a Legislative Body.
Ail imperial edict was issued at
Peking, China, Friday, authorizing
Prince PIlin and Sun Ani, in co-operation
with grand council, to frame regulations
for the establishment of a
council of deliberation to aid the government,
"so that the vundation may
he laid for a parliament.'
V[saw
goebel murdered.
Woman Makes Affidavit That Turner
Igo of Rowan County Fired Fatal
Shot from Courthouse Window.
Turner Igo, of. Farmers, Rowan
county, Kentucky, is charged with
j The killing of Senator William Gotbel,
of Kentucky, in an affidavit by
j Mrs. Lulu Clark, which was puoj
lished exclusively by the Richmond,
Ind., Evening Item Saturday. In Mrs. |
t Clark's affidavit, which was taken at |
| Indianapolis on April 11, 1907, in the I
1 law offices of ex-Governor Taylor,
of Kentucky, she says that her maiden
name was Lulu Williams and she was
1 born at Rothwell, Menifee county,
Kentucky, but lived most of her lne
and at the time of Goebel's murder
her home was at Mount Sterling, Ky.
, She is 2. niece of Judge Frank Day,
of Frenchburg, Ky., and also of Jas.
Williams, of the same place. She has
a cousin named Gertrude King, wno
lived at Maysville at the time of Goebel's
murder. Miss King was at that
nnnv TxritVt TnVin Qon.
unit: nct-piug tuui^iau.) nuu ???
! ford of Covington, Ky.
Upon the day of Goebel's murder
the two girls went to Frankfort, Ky.
They started to enter the state house
by the rear entrance and when on
the steps a shot was fired. At tne
same time they noticed a man standing
just inside the door whom they
recognized as Sanford. In a minute
! a second man came running out of
the building, dressed like a mountamj
eer, and carrying a rifle. He ran to
j Sanford and said:
"I got the
That man was recognized by the
! affiant as her friend, Turner Igo, of
Farmers, Rowan county, Kentucky.
Both men ran out of the building to
a fence, where Sanford gave a pair
j of shoes which he was carrying to
[ Igo, who exchanged his boots for
j them. The men then disappeared,
j The affiant states that Igo told her
I at Mount Sterling on January 25,
I 19t>0. that he was going to kill Goe
bel and tljat she saw him afterwards
at Jeffersonville, Ind., and he reminded
her that he had fulfilled his promise.
She also says that Sanford had told
Gertrude Xing, a few days prior to
Goebel's murder, that he intended iv
kill Goebel, saying: "Here is my
chance to get revenge. The legislature
has met."
The Evening Item also publishes
correspondence between Caleb Powers
and the persons who secured the
affidavit and afterwards investigated
its allegations for verification, showj
ing that the expenses for the information
gained were paid from the
Powers defense fund through John
Marshall of the law firm of Gibson,
Marshall & Gibson of Louisville, Ky.
The original correspondence of
Powers and the copy of t^ie affidavit
| are in the possession of The Item.
99 YEARS FOR THE JONES BOYS.
Jury Returns Verdict of Guilty With
Recommendation to Mercy.
At 8:30 o'clock Saturday morning a
verdict was reached in the cases I
against Albert and Porter Jones at
j Eaton ton, Ga. The jury was out allJ
I night and brought in a verdict of j
guilty with a recommendation for J
mercy. Judge Lewis passed sentence j
and gave the boys 99 years' impris- i
onment. j
Attorney Ccopex made a motion for
a new trial, and the judge fixed the
date for hearing the motion on the
third Monday in October, at Gray's,
j Jones county.
In passing sentence Judge Lewis j
j said that the evidence against Albert j
! woo nnt satisfactory entirely. A j
I new trial will necessitate a change j
of venue, as the jury box of the coun- j
ty was almost exhausted in making j
up the jury. J
Robert T. Adams, for the murder of
whom the Jones boys weer convited,
was a well known planter, and a
member of a prominent family.
NEWS FOR WOULD-BE BENEDICT3
i
Thousand Marriageable English Girls
Coming to Seek Husbands.
i The remarkable exodus of marriage- j
able young women from England to j
the United States and Canada is emphasized
by the departure from Liverpool
Thursday of a thousand unmarried
women on the steamer Baltic
alone, while several hundred mora
j were among the total of 5,000 pas- j
| sengers carried on three trans-Atlan- j
J tic steamers which sailed during the !
day. i
j
THIRTY-TWO PASSENGERS HURT,
! Bad Wreck on Southern That Was
I ,
Devoid of Fatalities.
| Thirty-two passengers wear injured, I
j none of them seriously, by the derail- [
ment of the Chattanooga and Washington
Limited train on the Southern
I
railway just north of Ryans Siding,
Va., early Sunday. A broken rail was \
the cause of the accident.
I
ROPING GRAFTERS
Looters of Pennsylvania's
Treasury Under Arrest.
FOURTEEN IN THE LIST
Many Prominent Men, Among Them a
Congressman, Implicated in Crooked
Deals ? All Are Held in
$60,000 Bail Each.
The long-expected arrest of those
held to be responsible for the frauds
committed in the furnishing and decorating
of Pennsylvania's $13,000,000
capitol were made Wednesday at Harrisburg,
the attorney general causing
warrants to be issued for fourteen of
the eighteen persons and firms named
by the capitol investigation commis- *
sion as being involved in the scandal.
Those for whom warrants were issued
are:
Joseph M. Houston, architect, and
his active assistant, Stanford B. Lewis,
both of Philadelphia,
John H. Sanderson, Philadelphia,
chief contractor for furnishings.
Congressman H. Burd Cassel, Marietta,
treasurer and executive officer
of the Pennsylvania Construction company,
contractors for steel filling cases.
James H. Shumaker, Johnstown, Pa.,
former superintendent of public
grounds and buildings, who receipted
for the furnishings.
George F. Payne and his partner,
Charles G. Wetter, both of Philadelphia,
builders of the capitol and contractors
for the ?303,000 attic.
William P. Snyder, Spring City, Pa.,
former auditor general, who approved
the warrants of the contractors.
William L. Mathues, Media, Pa., former
state treasurer, who paid the bills
of the contractors.
Charles F. Kinsman, Wallis Boileau,
John G. Neiderer and George K.
Storm, all of Philadelphia, stockholders
In the Pennsylvania Bronze company,
organized by Sanderson for the
manufacture of the ?2,000,000 lighting
fixtures.
Frank Irvine, auditor in the auditor
general's office, who audited the accounts
of the contoactors.
Nearly all of the defendants appeared
during the day, waived a hearing
and entered bail for their appearance
in the Dauphin county court. The
principal defendants were held in $60,000
bail, which was furnished in every
Instance by surety companies. .
All the defendants are charged with
conspiracy to cfreat and defraud the
state by making false invoices, which
were approved by Houston and Shumaker.
Charges of obtaining money
by false pretense were also entered
against Sanderson, Congressman Cassel,
Payne and Wetter, it being alleged
that they furnished fictitious
? oraotor nmnnnf than thev i
U11IO iui a t,1 *?? ??.??*
were entitled to receive under their
contracts.
The action taken by 'the attorney
general was the outcome of an allegation
made by State Treasurer William
H. Berry during the campaign of
1905. He startled the state by charging
that, according to the state treasury
books, the building and furnishing
of the state capitol had cost $13,000,000
and not $5,000,000, as had been
generally believed, and that $9,000,000
of the money went to furnish the building.
He charged that $5,000,000 of
the $9,000,000 was pure "graft." Governor
Pennypacker, other state officials
and the contractors denied the
charges, but the agitation for an investigation
which immediately began
continued until the last legislature appointed
a commission to investigate
the whole affair.
KIDNAPER CHEATS THE PEN.
Under Sentence of Twenty Years Harrison
Fires Bullet in Brain.
Before he could he apprehended by
the Norfolk, Va., police at the request
of the Noith Carolina authorities,
Joseph Harrison of Currituck
county, that state, put a bullet in
his brain late Wednesday afternooii
at the Gladstone hotel.
Harrison was convicted of abducting
Benton Beasley, a son of State Senator
M. Beasley, all of Currituck. The alleged
act was committed in 1905. The
child was never found. Harrison was
given twenty years in the penitentiary,
but was out on bond. His application
for a new trial was denied by the
vnrth Carolina supreme court Tues
day.
COMPLAINS OF CASH FARES.
Georgia Commission Asked to Stop the
Roads from Charging Extra Cent.
A complaint has been made to the |
railroad commission of Georgia about
the rule which permits railroads to
charge an extra cent a mile of passengers
who have either neglected or been
unable through some reasons to provide
themselves with tickets before
boarding the train. J
ONE THOUSAND PER CENT
!
In Profits Made Yearly by Oil Trust
More Light on Dealings of
Gigantic Monopoly.
More light was shed on the remarkable
earning capacity of the vaj
rlous subsidiary companies of the
' Standard Oil company at the hearing
' in New York Wednesday, when Frank
B. Kellogg, who is conducting the federal
suit, succeeded in placing upon
the records the profits of seventeen of
the principal subsidiary companies in
the years 1903 and 1906. The state
ment cf the earnings or tne sianaara
Oil company of Indiana, which was
recently fined $29,200,000 by Judge
Landis of Chicago for rebating, disclosed
that in 1906 the company earned
no less than $10,516,0S2, on a capitalization
of $1,000,000, or over 1,000
per cent The Indiana company in
1906 earned more than any subsidiary
company of the big combine.
In 1903 the Indiana company's profits
were $8,853,410, so that in two
years the mother trust received from
the Indiana company more than $18,000,000
in profits.
The Standard Oil company of Nev
Jersey owns 9,990 shares of the Indiana
company's stock. The Indiana
company is capitalized for $1,000,000.
The dividends paid by the Standard
Oil company of Indiana last year aggregated
$4,485,500, or a little more than
$6,000,000 less than the profits.
Mr. Kellogg developed during the
day, while Clarence G. Fay, assistant
comptroller of the Standard Oil company,
was on the stand, a curious process
of the financial bookkeeping, or
handling of accounts, which Mr. Fay
failed to explain. From figures submitted
it was shown that the Standard
Oil company of New York, in 1904,
made a profit of $7,751,100, and paid
in dividends to the Standard Oil company
of New Jersey the total sum of
$32,998,430.
The statement of dividends and profits
in 1906 of seventeen of the subsidiary
corporations of the Standard
Oil company of New Jersey as presented
in the federal proceedings now
in progress follows:
Atlantic Refining company, capital
$5,000,000; dividends, $2,249,955; profits.
$5,506,237.
Buckeye Pipe Line company, capital,
$10,000,000; dividends, $5,799,798;
profits, $7,023,362.
Continental Oil company, 1903, capital,
$300,000; dividends $405,000; profits,
$575,043.
Eureka Pipe Line company, capital,
$3,000,000; dividends, $3,949,634; profits,
$2,433,104.
Galena Signal company, capital, $10,000,000;
dividends, $1,377,200; profits,
$2,803,056.
Indiana Pipe Line qompany, capital,
$1,000,000; dividends, $2,179,345; prof
i'ts, 12,314,583.
National Transit company, capital,
$250,450,200; dividends, $5,090,330;
profits, $1,929,767.
New York Transit company, capital,
$5,000,000; dividends, $2,099,958; profits,
$2,343,282.
Northern Pipe Line company, capital,
$1,000,000; dividends, $2,000,000 ;
profits, $1,591,614.
Solar Refining company, capital,
$500,000; dividends, $449,460; profits,
$1,253,519.
Southern Pipe Line company, capi*tal,
$5,000,000; dividends, $4,595,933 ;
profits, $4,649,306.
Standard Oil company of Iowa, capital,
$1,000,000; dividends, $3,904,808;
profits, $673,977.
Standard Oil company of Indiana,
capital, $1,000,000; dividends, $4,425,rnA.
unfits 510 516.082.
auu, t??? ? Standard
Oil company of Kentucky,
i capital, $1,000,000; ; dividends, $1,994,j
400; profits, $1,307,750.
Standard Oil company of New York,
capital, $15,(M0,000; dividends, $10,149,000;
profits, $9,560,310.
Standard Oil^company of Ohio, capital,
$3,500,OOo7* dividends, $174,960 ;
profits, $1,009,526.
; Vacuum Oil company, capital, $2,500,000;
dividends, not given; profits,
$1,449,575.
TOM JOHNSON NOMINATED.
! Slated for Fourth Term as Mayor of
Cleveland, Ohio.
I M?" or Tom L. Johnson was nominated
by acclamation at the city democratic
convention in Cleveland, Ohio,
Saturday for mayor to oppose Congressman
T. E. Burton, the republican
nominee for mayor. Mayor Johnson
is now a candidate for a fourth
| term. In his speech of acceptance he
said:
I "Shall we have a monopoly-owned
| city or shall we have a city-owned
I monopoly?"
I MOORS ARE FINALLY SU3DUED.
Allied Troops of France and Spain
* Proved Too Much for Them.
According to dispatches received in
Paris from Casa Bianca, the mission
which took General Drude to Morocco
has been fully accomplished. The
submission of all the tribes now appears
to be practically assured. The
tribesmen will return to agricultural
pursuits.
fl TV i feS
KILLED BY TORTURE
Woman Done to Death by
Fanatical Religious Sect.
IGNORANCE EXEMPLIFIED
Crazy Gang Claimed That Victim Was
Possessed cf the Devil ? Their
Rough Treatment Unexpectedly
Proved Fatal.
A Chicago special says: Five people,
members of the sect of Parhamitoc
oto nnHar nrrpqf in Zion Citv.
accused of torturing to death Mrs. Letitia
Greenhaulgh, [-64 years old, a
cripple for twenty ytars, to show their
belief in the religion they profess.
The people under arrest are Walter
and Jennie Greenhaulgh, the son and
I daughter of the woman; Harold Mitchell,
Mrs. Harold Mitchell and a Mrs.
Smith. All of them are accused of
manslaughter.
Mrs. Greenhaulgh had been for
twenty years an invalid, suffering from
paralysis and rheumatism.
The sect of Farhamites was founded
about a year ago by Charles Farham
and numbers about 200 persons.
The members of the sect originally
hftloneed to Eowie's church and be
lieves in the gift of tongues, and especially
in diabolical possession. It
is their theory that sickness is an evidence
of the possession of the body
by evil spirits.
The condition of" Mrs. Greenhaulgh
convinced her son and daughter and
the three persons arrested with them
that she must be possessed cf the devil
and they determined to exorcise the
evil spirit. The five knelt by thd bedside
and. after praying, commenced
their work. The arms of Mrs. Greenhaulgh,
stiffened by rheumatism, were
twisted about in order that the de\il
might be driven cut. The cries of
the aged woman were considered to
be those of an evil spirit and were
greeted with triumphant shouts. After
a course of this violent treatment
Mrs. Greenhaulgh not only became
so weak that she could not use her
limbs, but became incapable of making
any motions. Then her neck was
twisted and for some time this treatment
was kept up.
Walter Graenhaulgh testified at the
coroner's inquest that Mitchell and
his wife had beheld a vision in which
Mitchol was ordered to q.uit work and
devote his time in casting out the
devil from the sick. Young Greenhaulgh
declared that his mother's consent
wa3 obtained before the treatment
was commenced.
Mrs. Smith's part in the treatment,
according to the testimony before the
coroner's jury, consisted in raising
Mrs. Greenhaulgh's head and holding
| her while Mitchell and his wife attempted
to straighten the woman's
limbs, which had been twisted by
years of rheumatism.
Greenhaulgh broke down and cried
as he told his story. He declared that
for sometime his mother bore the
treatment jbravely, but at last the
agony grew so great that she could
not'restrain herself and she* cried,
"Oh, Lord, help me!" a number o:
times.
The case will be further investigated
by the authoriteis of Lake
county, in which Zion City is situated.
FORTY WERE KILLED IN WRECK
All the Victims Except Engineer of
Passenger, Are Mexicans.
Late advices show that forty persons
were killed and thirty-four injured
in the collision between the southbound
El Paso express and a northbound
freight on the Mexican Central
railroad at Encarnacion. All the killed
and injured except Engineer McFarland
of the passenger train are
Mexicans, who were returning home
from national fiestas. The trains
met on a curve.
MURDERED TWO BROTHERS.
Catholic Priest Found Guilty After Confessing
Many Shortcomings.
Ludwig Szczgiel, Roman Catholic
priest from Chicago, who has been on
trial in Pittsburg, Pa., for the murder
of Andrew and Stephen Starzynsky,
brothers, was convicted of murder in
dearee.
IUV/ w_
The trial was a conglomeration of J
sensational testimony and features. j
To protect himself from the supreme
penalty, the priest unburdened his past
life, confessing his many shortcomings,
especially his drunkenness.
! QUAKE FELT IN CALIFORNIA.
i
| Seismic Disturbance Was On Heavy
Order, But No Damage Done.
I
A sharp earthquake shock was felt
j
j in Redland, Cal., at 5.45 o'clock on
j Thursday evening. The duration of
i the loud ruhibie was two seconds,
while that of the shake was one second.
No damage is reported, though
the shocks were very heavy.
WHY MR. ROGERS IS SICK. ^
Standard Oil Magnate Ha? Been Hit' |
for Forty Millions, Half of Hit |||
Wealth, in a Railroad Deal.
Financial circles in New York an / ..j?
not surprised that H. H. Rogers, the ';/?
Standard Oil magnate, is reported to |?
be critically ill. The loss of $40,000,000
would make most people ill,
and that is what Mr. Rogers has lost.
Reports have been current in Wall
street for some time that H. H. Rogers f|
of the Standard Oil company had.heen
heavily interested in the Tidewater
railway project in Virginia ahd that
he had lost heavily by the investment. Jva
The New York Evening Post says that ^
it can be stated positively that Mr.
Kogers incurred a personal ODUgaucn -.3
In the Tidewater project much In exr
cess of $40,000,000. The Post also "M
says the situation has been entirely
cleared up, and continues:
"Confirmation was obtained on Wall
street Thursday of reports to the <#
feet that H. H. Rogers was heavily
interested in the Tidewater railwayproject
"According -to the stories previously
circulated, upward of 40 per cent of
Mr. Rogers' fortune has been involved
in the Tidewater investment It was 5|?
reported Thursday that the personal.
obligations incurred amounted to $40,
000,000. It can be stated positively ?jja|
that the sum is much larger than the
amount named; also that the situation, gji
/?1aonn < iSS
lids UCCU CUUiClJi viwueu u y.
"In order to meet the demands made ^|8
upon him in connection with the con?
struction of t*be railroad, Mr. Roger#
was forced to dispose of a large vjj
amount of investment stocks at a' jjji
sacrifice. All during the recent decline
in prices, the vice president of >
the Standard Oil company sold giltedged
stocks, such as Standard Ott^
Consolidated Gas, Union Pacific and
St. Paul.
"Some five or six years ago.
against the advice of his friends, Mr. ?
Rogers started to build in West Virginia
a low-grade road which would- "J
parallel the Norfolk and Western. His
object was to carry coal and lumber J
to tidewater. The line was to be 444 '
miles long. Only 125-miles have bee?vr|S
completed.
"Only a few. months ago, in order |||
to raise $10,000,000 for the Tidewater
road, H. H. Rogers issued his personal
note secured by $20,000,0(70 mortgage gfflM
bonds, 110,000,000 stock and $10,000,000
dividends or interest paying cot T
lateral. These 6 per cent notes were
indorsed by H. H. Rogers personally.
"Railroad officials who have Vatclht^|S|
ed the construction of the railroad .'*iM
with interest from the beginning say
that the project, even at this stage,.
is more or less problematic. It is ' -i
confidently believed, however, that,.
with the sacrifices already made in : ?M
disposing of high-priced securities, '/||m
Rogers is in a position to gain Ills
end and see the mileage complete^. IS
"It was learned some months ago <1||
that the Standard Oil man and his aasociates
had bought up all the avail- ;
able lumber and coal lands in West
Virginia. These purchases amounted-^8
to thousands of acres, and will in
some future time supply the Tidewater
rqad with traffic."
CARTOONS RILE COMMITTEE. V*
Atlanta Citizens Denounce Allegations - a
of "Whitewash" Made by Journal.
The special waterworks investigat- Xfi
ing committee at Atlanta, a report |j|
from which was recently made to the
city council, will probably be called
together again in a few days to take i
some action in regard to certain cartoons
which, have appeared in the Xll
Atlanta Journal, and which members ../'-&s?
of the committee think reflect upon
them in a manner unwarranted.
The cartoons in question haye
charged that the committee, instead
of making a fair and honest report ,>11
of its Investigations, has "whitewash
ed" the water board.
Members cf the special committee ^
say that the use of the term "whitewash"
carries with it the imputation
that the committee ascertained that 'qjj
there were matters collected with the #?(
waterworks department, which wer&
either dishonest or there was1 mis- ../J>
management, and that the committee^ '-M
not acting with fairness and honesty, }. v*
had covered up such dishonesty and v>||
mismanagement by a report uv?,
keeping with the facts'as they came m
?iit.
One member of the committee was - ' /;$
so incensed that,he spoke of making
the matter personal, and said there ^
was a "way to stop such calumnj *
and that if the committee would back _ J
him up he would take the necessary -vjgj
step to stop it. |
11
^CONSTANTINE FOUND GUILTY.
^ " !Wr
Life Sentence uiven udyu ?> ?.< ? ?.
of Chicago Woman.
Frank J. Constantine was found ;*?
guilty in Chicago Saturday of the rruir- "I
der of Mrs. Arthur Gentry by a jury ;
in Judge Kavanaugh's court. His '%
punishment was fixed at imprisonment v V
in the penitentiary for life. The jury
was out about two hours.