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The Daily Herald from Port Huron, Michigan • 1

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Port Huron, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ALL THE NEWS OP TODAY LOCAL, MARINE, TELEORAPH. I Alerchants Manu- THE WEATHcR. Showers this afternoon or tonight. Friday fair and cooler. Fresh west winds becoming variable Friday.

TMl TTh A TT IT 7T TT .1 I Mdurers liay 4 NUMBCW 327 PORT HURON, MICH. THURSDAY, AUQUST 22, 1901. TWENTY-FIVE CENTS A MONTH TTD A IT Tl Is NO CHANGE IN Mb.erfc THE STA BERiWENT DOWN 'nIE DftT OOODS AT HCTAJL." THE SITUATION Fish. Strike Districts Peaceful and Steel Managers Resting. Collided With the Big Steamer Alex.

McDougail FINE MELONS THIS WEEK. CARNEGE MILLS RUNNING Heading, Aug. 1'L'. Pro- 4 fessor William Krctz. of tho i Hoiks Occult Science society is arranging for a more dangerous experiment than burying a man alive, lie says lie proposes to fill a tank with oil gasoline, hv- 1 puotlzc one of the members of the society and stand him in it.

A match will bo applied and if Professor Krcts Ideas are cor- I root ail the oil will be burned without? leaving the slightest I scar on the subject's body. Pro- I feasor Krctz has called a meet- ing of the society for Thursday night. Steel Men STORE CLOSED TODAY Sev-I Expect to Reopen cral Mills. HANY NARROW ESCAPES On Wednesday vc will have choice large Georgia Water Jlelons at 25 cents each. Large fresh Osage Melons at 10 to 12 cents.

Although tarts by Non. Union Men, the! Passengen Carnegie Group Are Going Ahead With Same Force. J. and Crew Floundered he Water for Some Time About in iny workers wiio might conic from i-iusDurg, Aug. The situ the mill.

None came, but the crowd Two shrieks of a whittle, an answer pieces of the wreckage and immediate ation underwent no change yesterday. became noisy and the large force of policemen on hand ran me leaders There was no extension of the striko ing mast, excited cr es, a mighty ly several small boats put out from uifferent points to their rescue. The captain and Fre4 Lavers, one of the (all foreigners) into the mill office Home grown Musk Melons and the steel managers did not at crash and the little Stauber disappeared ferry 'steamer beneath tho and called for the patrol. American Federation offlrials of tempt to start any more mills. Late In the day the fires were lighted In 10 to 15 cents.

passengers cut loose one of the yawls, ue other, having been crushed in the waters at the mouth 08 St. Clair river collision. the Dcmmlcr tin plate works at Mc- fered bail for the prisoners, who are charged with disorderly conduct, but the magistrate refused to accept it. They climbed into the boat, but she Keesport, but the machinery was not started and no attempt was made to Tho men will have a hearing today. Ripe Tomatoes 5 cents a qt.

soon began to fill with water, having sprung a leak. It was then found ne Joliet, Aug. 22. Striking steel operate it. It is believed, however, cessary to abandon this craft and a yawl from the.

Ida, lying near the Can workers have held another Joint conference. They were addressed by that the move Js preliminary to a start Long Thimble Black Berries Vire-President Davis of Chicago. adian shore, came to their rescue. Rex Cole and Jess D. Knowles were Nothing official could be learned of with non-union men.

The managers of the company have jjeen preparing for several days to reopen a number 124 cents a quart. pfiMillill; the proceedings, but persistent rumor first alongside with their boats and picked up Miss Pearl Kaumeier and has it that the men are preparing to of their properties, and it is thought two of the male passengers. go back to work. It is said if notice that they have decided to act at once. Miss Kaumeier had an exciting ex msi jugiu wnne neany 11 dozen passengers ilouudered about in frantic efforts to keep above the surfice of the swiftly running stream.

-Ajnd. miraculous though it appears every one escaped a watery grave and live to tell the most thrilling experience of their lives. I It was shortly after seven o'clock last evening when the Stauber left her moorings at the north end and proceeded on her regular trip to Point Edward. Capt. Nate Woods, of 510 street, was in charge of the little steamer and Dennis Kerrigan was at the engine.

There were nine passengers on board and nearly all were watching with interest two large steamers and their consorts 'coming up stream. As the Stauber steamed out Into the liver and the big boats ploughed along the distance narrowed rapidly and is posted calling them back, the men Fancy Elbcrta Peaches 40 cts will go, and such notice is looked for perience. She was going down when she caught one of the men by the foot and held on with a deathlike grip. He by Sunday. The rod mill men may Their Monessan plant is moving ahead uninterruptedly with full crews and their Crescent works at Cleveland a basket.

hold out, but the others will go back struggled and managed to catch a por Supt. J. It. Rodney of the American has about half the machinery in op tion of the wreckage, pulling her up Steel Wire Co. has returned and will go to Pueblo.

to take charge Michigan Pceches 15c basket of the works of the Colorado Fuel wun aim. Ail or tne passengers were thrown into the water but all managed to save themselves on the wreckage until the small boats came to their Iron Co. eration. There has been no break in the Carnegie group, and the mills that have been starteu with non-union men since the strike began are going ahead with about the same force of men. The leaders on either side were busy all day, but at nightfall both said there rescue.

Foil lino of Home Made :0 me nig steamer McDougail never TWO INJUNCTIONS. soon the Stauber was only a few rods naitea or cnangea ner course lor a were no announcements to make. WB MAKE FILLINQ. distant from the big boats. Of the lat-! second.

She went right ahead into the! ter the Douglas Houghton and. consort lake, carrying with her a portion of the Veryl Preston was at the office of the Judge Law's First Official Acts to Baked Goods for Wednesday. STORK OPEN AT NIOIIT until 10 p. m. stern of the Stauber, which afterwards Carnegie Steel Co.

and conferred at length with President E. Corey and were coming up near the American shore and the Alex. McDougail and consort toward the Canadian shore. floated down the river. The captain Grant Them.

other leading officials. President Shaf of the McDougail didn't even wait to Prescriptions a Specialty fer was at the office of the Amalga Judge Law was sworn in at nine find out what damage had been done of ine noats were coming along at a good rate of speed, the Houghton be o'clock yesterday morning by County mated association all day and spent most of the time conferring with delegations of strikers. On i-e streets it Clerk Hartlett and his first official act ing a little In advance. how many lives had been sacrificed. The Houghton also proceeded on her course without delay.

Both big boats A cording to the story of Captain was to grant an injunction in the Miller divorce case preventing Miller was a day of exciting rumors, begin are the property of the steel trust. oods, the Stauber passed a Bhort dis tance behind the stern of the Hough ning with a circumstantial story of a from using any personal violence to The Stauber, at the time of the ac ton and found herself confronted with wards his wife The second matter which the judge disposed of was to cident, was not carrying lights, the captain claiming that it was still very the McDougail, still a' short distance erf plot to destroy tne Monongahela plant and ending with a tale of the removal of the largest plants of the United States steel corporation to Knuland. Between the two, rumor grant a temporary injunction stop light and that people on the shore on away. Then the captain says, he blew the starboard signal and kept in his ping work on the scaffolding at the either side could be easily distinguish northeast corner of the Meisel block. The accident.

-must have occurred Fill them accurately, call for them and deliver them promptly, at a price that will bring -us your next Foe some the -captain says about a minute, the big steamer again' settled the strike in several Judge Law takes hold like an old at just 7:10 o'clock, it was at this ways. At headquarters cold denial hand. railed to respond, and then It was with was given to all the interesting sto a cross whistle. time that Engineer Kerrigan's watch stopped. The engineer was thrown against the boilers by the force of the collision and his right hand was quite prescription.

If you are not already dealing with us, Again, according to Woods the Stau Colombia Gets a Big Gun. New York, Aug. 22. Since the visit ber blew twice and, to the horror of ries. It was another day of peace in all the strike districts, although the general probability of trouble still holds good at the places where feeling all, they saw tho McDougail swing severely burned as a result.

to this city -of (Jen. Herbert O. Jef- ferles, tho American who is taking an The steamer Stauber was built in 1883 and had been the ferry between around so that her bow was aimed at the little steamer. Woods gave the try us and see. telephone 131 COFFEE runs high.

President Shaffer of the Amalga active part in the warlike prepara Point Edward and the north end for tions being made by the Colombian signal to go ahead at full steam, hoping to cross the McDougall's bow be years. She was of 42 tons gross ton mated association says he has well defined plans to bring tne great strike government, a couple of months ago it nage and was valued at $1,500. The fore she could reach him. Every eye was strained as the distance narrowed has been known in some quarters that military supplies were bring quietly boat was not insured but was inspect to a close. This is to oe dono by bringing about such a crisis in the to a few feet and the big hull of the rjr ccxxi oollee at low go to Wtm' spot cash slor.

Arbuckle l4o ground or unground. Splendid drinking ed August 2 last and found to be in first-class condition. She was owned by Engineer Kerrigan and a man McDougail loomed up before the hor differences between the steel corporation and the Amalgamated association shipped from American ports to Colombia, these supplies being placed on manifests as machinery. rified passengers on the little steamer. win cewoe at 11c, lb lor a quarter, Following colTee we all buy green and named Keeys, of Cleveland.

The Stauber was, perhaps, three- as will force a settlement. Just how all this is to be accomplished is a It has been learned that the Colom Bricker's White Drug Store, Captain Albert L. Curtis regularly uTinm roauea, so know what wo jnarters of her distance across the has charge of the Stauber but he was mystery, but it will not be by arbitration or litigation. bian government has succeeded in purchasing the Driggs-Seabury 15-pounder which has been on exhibltlor talking about: Santo blend, 17c Maracaibo 20c. Java, Mocha Ma- III BarB ATaaua, Caff.

Rlrar. bow of the McDougail when the big boot struck her with tariftic force. To ail it seemed as if the little boat was away on his vacation and Captain nrrfto bland 'Z-ta. Mocba sod Java 'And Woods took his place. Among those rn answer to questions about the numerous stories going the rounds of at the Pan-American exposition.

This Old uovernment Java 40o. on board the boat at the time of the modern piece "of rapid-fire artillery lifted out of the water. The rushing, seething water, the excited voices and all lent horror to the affair and in a few moments tho hull of the Stauber accident besides the captain and en gin'eer were Tom Clancy, of Ishpem- mediation or arbitration, Mr. Shaffer dismissed all by saying; "We have not heard from the other was withdrawn from tho exhibition without attracting attention, and on Ing; Pat Buckley, of Point Edward; side; we have not placed anything be Ab. Finch, of the north end; Mr.

shook from stem to stem and disappeared beneath the river's surface. Saturday will be shipped from here to Cartagena by the Hamburg-American Atlas service liner Athos. It will be accompanied by 500 rounds of fixed ammunition. The powerful piece of Wdodsides, of Point Edward and Miss Pearl Kaumeier, daughter of Leonard Then it was that an Incident occurr I UB goods are and always have bean the fin eat arar handlad. GREEN COFFEE At ic, 17c, 28c and 32C.

ivaumeler. Such pianos as the 1 i The blame for the accident cannot ordnance secured by the Colombians be accurately fixed but was undoubt ed that saved the lives probably, of all on board. The upper works of the LV-tlo craft parted company with the hull and tho passengers hastened to scramble ofr safety. They clung to; Is of the typo which may be used as a STEINWAY, edly the result of the cross signaling siege gun, mounted in a fortification, between the boats. or used on shipboard.

SOHMER, Train Load of Big Men. Buffalo, Aug. 22. Director General IT'S NOT ABOUT BOYNTON- fore them, and I know of nobody acting: for either side or on any "We are not hunting for arbitration. Arbitration, representing both sides, might be worse than the strike itself.

Two willing champions, one for either side, might have a worse fight In choosing a third party and In settling the dlfrerenses than we In the continuation of the strike. I have told tho other side that personally I would consent for disinterested arbitration in tho hands of such pubuc men. as Archbishop Ireland, Bishop Potter and Seth Low, although I did not as an officer suggest such a move, I was willing to advise it." Seven strikers -were arrested near tho gates of the Pennsylvania tube works in Soho. When tho whistle blow at 5:30 a crowd of about 1,500 eathered to rive a warm rcccDtlon to Buchanan has returned from Philadel WOQMAN phia, where he went to make the nec The Bee Hive for August Is out, and essary arrangements ror the special train which is to bring to this city as Mr. Markey's interview in The Her and ald foreshadowed there was no men the members of the president cabinet and the jastices of the supreme court, foreign diplomats and others tion of tho Major's libel suit, nor any reference to him, except that the fol STCKLINQ, Sails and Overcoatings Trousers a specialty.

Fit guaranUd. The choicest Una of Suits and Over-coftUngi to lelect from in the citj at Joe. Uenhard's, lowing article headed, "The Difference for participation in tho events of President's day at the exposition. The government officials will leave Washington for this city on the night of Sept. 4, arriving here the following may have Between 'In and 'Out, some such construction given It: day.

A special train on the rennsyl whom gratitude has been overcome by greed. "We have an exhibition of this kind of conduct at present, if published reports are true, in two of our American fraternities, where wise councils have decreed that the good of the societies demand a change in the fellows holding the reins. "It reminds us of the old saying: 'There Is no promise of dying grace to those who let grace die. The Fraternal Monitor, after an elaborate review of Supreme Commander Markey's report to the supremo tent, says: "All in all, the report of Supreme Commander Markey is one of the most Important, as well as one of the most complete and exhaustive that has been made to any certainly stands first The man who turns his. face against vania road has Deen sec aside lot their use.

the society that his distinguished him Everybody la familiar with the name No mUtaka Thay are leaders tha world over. I I Coma and see us in our commodious new qnaxUra. Wa leu oa easy payment to anit. the purchaser. and provided him plenty, would under any circumstances, be considered un- i Another Negro Hanged.

Charlotte, N. C. Aug. 22. Luke aiipreeiatlve.

When such action seems to dc HASSOCK SALE Haugh. a negro, was nangea near Wadesboro. N. by a crowd of en- GRINNELL MUSIC HOUSE, Always aome sHrt-ly usd pianos on hand at reduced prices. promptd solely by jealousy over the fact that others in the management of raeed cltlrens.

His body was then the Institution are enjoying tho honors riddled with bullets. He was accused of assaulting Miss Keith. He had en and emoluments, as a result of ac among thoso which, have been hereto knowledged honest successful effort tered fcer house and tried, to cut hej K. in its behalf, then such person takes fore made to the supreme 1 ei, O. T.

throat. The negro admits his guilty. The Keiths are prominent people. on the character of an mgrate, in i QEO. BAUSENBACfi, MANAOER.

Niagara Falls. N. Aue. 20. 1 Beard, Goodwiltie Co.

iilHIMOHtMttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt' 1 I A Just received a new stock of Hassocks in Wiltons, Brussels, which are selling at 35c, 50 and $1.00 These are bargains. You should make an early selection. General Insurance Carlisle D. Graham Is arranging to" make a dual turn in the whirlpool, rapids In company with Maud Willard. of Canton.

O. Miss Willard will go through the rapids in Graham's barrel. If raw mofy'm wHh for SO afys Vehicle Prices Reduced. mi Puma mint Best Companies in the World Money to Loan. CARLETON CO.

Office 35 White BoIIdlnc Phone 4. two rinf she is swept out of the whirl- 4 pool Graham will leap into the river, protected by a life-pre I server, and swim with the bar-I rel to Lewlston. If Miss Willard I bo rescued in tho pool Graham will make a trip from the whlrl- pool outlet to Lewiston alone. the distance being four miles through frightfully rough waters. BEARD, GOODWILL! CO.

J. A. Davidson Co. Wbo'waU Heavy Ha dwtrt, Iron and Iteet 3'-3 4 HorB Avean..

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About The Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
20,474
Years Available:
1900-1910