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On this date in 1912, there were several dramatic stories
circulating around the state.
In Fargo, 25-year-old Julius M. Hanson was accosted by highwaymen outside
the Lincoln School. Coming out from around the corner of the building,
they surprised him and told him to put his hands up. Instead, he called
for help.
One of the robbers pressed a revolver to Hansons stomach and fired.
The bullet severed a main artery, and neighbors found him lying in a pool
of blood on the sidewalk. Hanson told them there were two men, both white
and wearing masks; both were short and stocky.
The robbers ran away empty handed without Hansons watch or
the $35 in his pockets. Hanson was rushed to the hospital but died before
doctors could get him onto an operating table.
The description of the two robbers didnt give authorities much to
work with, but it was the second murder in a year that highwaymen had
committed on that same street. Police deduced the robbers were locals,
and Mayor M.D. Sweet put up a $200 reward for their arrest.
Elsewhere in the state, farmers were reaping bumper crops. In Valley City
the rye and wheat harvest was finished, with predictions saying it was
the best yield in 15 years. A newspaper story read, Wheat as a bumper
crop is a thing of the past in this state, but Barnes County will reach
top figures in yield this year, the average being between 10 and 12 bushels
to the acre.
Barley, on the other hand, was so heavy, it was lying down in the fields.
Oats, too, was expected to have superior yields.
Ironically, the excellent harvest was posing a problem at the state penitentiary,
where the inmates made not license plates, but twine. A report out of
Bismarck read, Western North Dakota is facing a shortage of binding
twine on the eve of the best harvest in the history of the Missouri slope.
The state penitentiary has been sold out for a month and could sell forty
more cars of twine if it had them. The International Harvester Company
sold seventy-nine cars in the past ten days in the slope country. Twenty-four
cars of twine were received over the Soo Line in three days. Where twine
cannot be supplied farmers will use headers.
Back in the eastern part of the state, there was a great to-do over H.R.
Chaffees lost will. Chaffee was a wealthy bonanza farmer
from Amenia, and he and his wife were aboard the Titanic when it went
down in the north Atlantic. Chaffee got his wife into a lifeboat, but
when she pleaded with him to stay with her, he said no. He went down with
the liner.
Chaffees estate was estimated at two million dollars an enormous
amount in 1912. In his will, he had set aside money for two Minneapolis
organizations, the Plymouth Congregational Church and the Minnesota division
of the International Sunshine Society.
When Mrs. Chaffee returned to her home and found her husbands will
was nowhere to be found, she began a legal battle to prove the contents
and carry out her husbands wishes.
A story in the Hansboro News read, It is said that her two sons
oppose this action and will demand that the estate be divided according
to the inheritance laws of North Dakota.
Source: Hansboro News. 9 Aug 1912.
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