OA DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD. VOLUME XVIII DAKOTA CITY, NEB., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1906. NUMBER 0. LATEST BY TELEGRAPH SUMMARY OP THE NEWS OF THE WHOLE WORLD. OFFICER STEALS WIFE iuxaway iussiax pair ah. hivk ix paris. Young Army Officer Is Doing Closely Pursued by the Wronged General- Couple Accompanied to Paris by an FJderly Woman. Great interest was created in Paris Thursday when it was learned that fugitive Russian Lieut. Gabriel Esst poff, accompanied by the wife of Gen. Oushakoff, had arrived there on the steamer- from New York. They had come on the steamer Savoie, flying from from the vengeance of the hus band and former friend of Lieut. Essl poff. The runaways landed at Havre Thursday morning and arrived at the St. Lazare station Thursday night. They traveled under assumed names and were accompanied by an elderly woman. The passengers on the Sa voie were not aware of their Identity, but Esslpoff was recognized at the sta tion at Paris. He was completely sur prised when addressed and in reply to Inquiries said: "I have nothing to say. We wish to be left alone. We are quite happy." . "Do you know Gen. Oushakoff threatens to kill you?" was asked. "Yes," was tho answer, "but he will never find us. We will be gone before he arrives here." The fugitives then took a cab to a hotel In Rue de Rlvoli, but later changed their quarters several times and succeeded in hiding their tracks. It is believed they intend to take another ocean steamer. The elopers fled from St. Petersburg several weeks ago, closely pursued by the general, who pursued them to various cities in Europe and finally reached Hamburg two hours after they had sailed for New York. The general followed on the next steamer only to find upon ar rival there that his wife and the lieu tenant had returned to Europe on tho Savofe. Gen. Oushakoff is now on board the steamer La Provonce on his way to Paris. HULGARIA PRODS SULTAN. . I'ltlmatum Issued Regarding the Dis pute on the Frontier. . Delay on the part of the Turkish commissioners to sign the report re sulting from Inquiry Into the frontier dispute regarding the delimitation of a portion of the vilayet of Adrlanople, which led to a sharp fight recently be tween the soidiers guarding the .Bulga rian post at Sujuk and the guards on duty at the Turkish post of Dervish Moglla, has brought out practically an ultimatum from Bulgaria, In which that country declares that unless the report Is signed by Oct. 14 Bulgarian troops will be ordered immediately to reoccupy Sujuk. MANY PERISH IN SEA. A Steamer U Lost on the Chinese Coast. The emigrant steamer Charterhouse foundered off the Chinese coast, near Hainan Head Sept. 30. Capt. Clifton and sixty passengers were lost. Tht steamer Kohslchang picked up a raft belonging to the charterhouse on which were Chief Engineer Dowse, twenty-three of the crew and two women, after they had been drifting forty-three hours. Start for Cuba. Fort Sheridan's contribution to the American army of occupation started from Chicago on its journey to Cuba. The Fourteenth artillery, consisting of four officers and 133 men, left in two trains for Tampa, Fla., where they will embark for Havana, and two battalions of the Twenty-seventh infantry, consisting of 36 officers and 542 men, departed In three trains for Newport News, Va., from which place they will be carried In transport to the Cuban capital. Thomas Not Seriously Damaged. Quartermaster General Humphrey received a cablegram from Manila Thursday stating the fire In the trans port Thomas was under control. The damage was not serious. Ilomb Hits General. Gen. Sterynkewltsch, governor of Simbirsk, had a narrow escape from assassination Thursday afternoon. A bomb thrown at the governor wound ed him In the hand and leg. Proetor is New Governor. Fletcher D. Proctor was Inaugurat ed governor of Vermont at Montpeller Thursday. Sioux City Live Stock Market. Thursday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market follow: Butcher steers, 15.75. Top hogs, $6.37. Warns British Unionist Party. A cable from London states that Lord Londonderry, formerly lord lieu tenant of Ireland, has issued a warn ing to the unionist party against the danger threatening that home rule for Ireland will become a reality. Football Pluyer Is Killed. At Toronto, (int.. Cameron Puulln. 21 yars old, dhd Thursday from in juries received Wednesday while at a practice scrimmage of the Toronto university football team. WIFE FAILS TO SEE PLATT. The Senator Refuses to Consent to ft Meeting. That the papers In Mrs. Thomas Collier Piatt's suit for divorce were nerved last week upon the senator is positively stated by those In a posi tion to .know tho truth, i The acttess who It is believed will figure In the case Is invisible to callers t her New York home. A close friend made the following statement: 'The vaudeville actress indicated in Mrs. Piatt's back-fire against the sen ator Is a godchild of Senator Piatt's. Her mother was Senator Piatt's school friend and her father was the sena tor's lifelong friend. I "The first wife of Senator Piatt took a great interest in the social and pro fessional career of their godchild. Both before and after the young wom an's marriage she was often at Mrs. Piatt's home. Her husband has been numbered among the close friends of the senator for years. "The senator's marriage to Mrs. Janeway was followed by the es trangement of many of his relatives and friends, among them the young woman In question. The new Mrs. Piatt was ever her enemy. Prompt and drastic action will be taken by her If any further publicity be given to her by the senator's wife." ROHHKRS RAID RANK. Kill Manager and Get $5,000 In Gold. Two robbers entered the Klmmon glnko, a Japanese bank, also known as the Golden bank, 1688 O'Farrel street, San Francisco, Wednesday at noon and after fatally beating S. Ura kata, the manager of the bank, and seriously injuring A. Sakake, a clerk, with a piece of gas pipe, escaped with 16,000 In gold. Manager Urakata died two hours afterwards from his injur ies. Urakata was acting as teller ot the bank. After striking down their victims the robbers dragged them Into a poor ly lighted room In the rear of the bank. There the prostrate forms of the men were found later. The un conscious men were lying in a pool of blood that streamed from their wounds, and nearby was a piece of gas pipe, a foot in length. J' Chief of Police Dlnan soon had de tailed on the case every available de tective and policeman in the city. He advanced the theory that the robbers are the same men who recently killed Pfeltzner and Fried, merchants, in their stores In this city. DRUNKEN FARMER'S CRIME. Fatally Wounds Wife and Then Cuts Ills Own Throat. --. Lying side by side in the same ward at St. Francis hospital in Litchfield, III., are Alonzo Curtis, a farmer, and his wife, waiting the result of the for mer's attempt at murder and suicide. Both are expected to die. The circumstances Indicate Curtis, a prosperous farmer, living three miles east of Litchfield, returned home from HUlsboro Tuesday night in a drunken rage and attacked his wife with a butcher knife. Two young daughters ran to the neighbors. Curtis resisted the attempts to aid his wife, standing his neighbors off with a shotgun. The people who first arrived left to obtain reinforcements and upon returning fifteen minutes later Curtis was found lying out in the yard with his throat cut. Rodies Sent to Fort Riley. The bodies of twenty-nine members of the Seventh cavalry who were kill- ed in the memorable battle with the ' Sioux Indians at Pine Ridgo agency, ! S. D., on Dec. 29, 1890, have Just been J exhumed and shipped to Fort Riley, Kan., for Interment in the post ceme tery. Is a Murder Mystery. A great sensation has been caused 'at Essen, Prussia, by the murder of Miss Madelaine Lake, daughter of an English army officer, whose body, ter ribly mutilated, was found In the city park. The police have been unable to throw any light on the mystery. Nine Corpses 1'lout Ashore. A St. Petersburg special says that nine corpses with sacks over their heads and bullet holes In their breasts have floated ashore near the palace of Peterhof. They are presumably Bailors recently executed at Kron stadt. Spain to Have Primary Schools. MinlsteT of Public Instruction Gi mento, of Madrid, Spain, has an nounced a project for a loan of $10. 000,000 for the construction of 5,000 primary schools during the next five years. Cruiser California Finished. The new armored cruiser California, which has Just been completed at the Union Iron works, left San Francisco for Santa Barbara Wednesday where her trial trip Is to be held. Moscow Officer Assassinated. According to advices received in London Capt. Dzlankowsky, of the Thirteenth grenadiers, has been as sassinated at Moscow. The murder ers escaped. Overwhelmed by Gas. Four men were killed and eight oth ers Injured, two perhaps fatally, at the Maryland Steel company, Spar rows Point, Md., Wednesday. The victims were overwhelmed by a rush of flaming gas from a hole in a blast furnuce. Murslial I Xumed. Tho president Wednesday appoint ed Eugene 55. Lewis United States 'marshal for the southern district of Ohio, vice Fugln removed. BATTLE IN A JAIL. Officers Fatally Shot by Mix bUe Mob. Roy Hoyle, of Mobile, Ala., a special officer of the Mobile and Ohio railroad, was fatally shot, and Alderman Sid ney Lyons, chairman of the city coun cil of Mobile, was slightly wounded In the hand Tuesday night during a fight at tho county jail between deputy sheriffs and a crowd of men determin ed to capture Dick Robinson, a young negro. The mob Is hunting the negro and threaten lynching if captured. Tho negro, who Is only 17 years old,. Tuesday attacked Ruth, the 12-year old daughter of Blount Sossamon, wh lives about three miles from Mobile. The girl was passing a secluded spot ' not far from her home when she waa attacked. Later she was found lying unconscious by the roadside and waa taken to her home. Detectives were placed on the track of the negro and within three hours he was captured. He was taken before the Sossamon girl, who at once Identified him. Sher- I I IT Hatch, knowing that the life of I the negro would be taken by a mob if ho brought him Into Mobile, caused him to be conveyed to a station sev eral miles up the Mobile and Ohio railroad. He waa pot taken to the jail at all, and was at least eight miles from the city when the mob which de termined to have him appeared at the Jail. SUPREME COURT VACANCY. Place Is Still Open to Taft If He Wants It. A Washington dispatch says: The president will not make any appoint ment to fill the vacancy In the su preme court of the United States until the reassembling of congress In De cember. Secretary Taft has been of fered the position, and has had the question of accepting or declining it under consideration for some time. The president has stated that he would gladly appoint Attorney Gener al Moody, who is soon to retire from the cabinet, to the vacancy, but real izes that objections would follow be cause Massachusetts is already repre sented on the supreme court bench in the person of Justice Holmes, AMERICAN IS VICTOR Uncertainty Regarding the Balloon Race Ends. All uncertainty regarding the result of the balloon race for the James Gor don Bennett cup ended Tuesday when a dispatch was received by the Aero club of Paris, announcing C. S. Rolls and his companion In the balloon Brit tanla, landed at Sandringham, Uplund, at 6:30 Monday night, thus establish ing Lieut. Frank P. Lahn, of the Sixth cavalry, U. S. A., the American com petitor, the winner. Slgnor Von Wilier, of Italy, was sec ond; Count de la Vaulx, of France, third; and Hon. C. S. Rolls, of Great Britain, fourth. CAUGHT BY RUNAWAY CAR. One Killed and Six Dangerously In jured In New York. A child was instantly killed and a score of men and women Injured, five or six dangerously, Monday night In New York, when a runaway car of the Yonkers street railway dashed down the Bteep Incline of McLain avenue, jumped the track at a sharp turn at the foot of the hill and turned over, burying the passengers In the wreck age. The accident was due to the break ing of a chain attached to the brake. WILL LOSE THEIR OFFICES. Two United States Marshals Are to Be Removed. President Roosevelt determined Tuesday to remove from office Vivian J. Fagin, United States marshal of the southern district of Ohio, upon the report of the civil service commission that ho had been guilty of making po litical assessments, and Marshal O'Nlel, of the western district of Lou isiana, on the allegation of general unfitness as disclosed by the report of a commissioner of the department of justice. Fire Destroys Show. In a dense fog Tuesday a limited passenger train on the Grand Trunk crashed into a suburban train at Els ton, nine miles from Chicago, de molishing three coaches and injuring a number of persons. Charles R. Llf erman of Chicago Lawn, was probably fatally hurt. Assassin Is Executed. In spite of the appeal for mercy by the widow of Gen. Kozlov, who was murdered in a park at Peterhof, July 14. in a mistake for Gen. TrcpofT, the assassin was executed In St. Peters burg Tuesday. May Investigate Death. Coroner Harburger, In a statement made Tuesday In New York, gave Inti mation that he was not entirely satis fied that the death of "Al" Adams, the former so-called policy king, was the result of suicide. .Storm on French Coast. Many fishing craft have been lost In a storm which has Just swept over the coast of France. Swedish Official Slain. M. Hager, Swedish vice consul at Batum, was murdered Tuesday while driving in a carriage In the outskirts of the city. The murderers escaped. Hager was manager of the Nobel naphtha works. Poultry Was DecomiHiMil. Thirty thousand pounds of decom posed poultry was condemned and seized at two cold storage warehouses In Chicago by the city health depart ment Tuesday. STATE OF NEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON. tENSED FORM. Home Folks Dlncil by Bryan Host Makes Non-Polltlcnl Address Get a Ixtok at Relic Collected Dui'lng World Tour. A reception and dinner to the "Bry an Nebraska Home Folks" was ten dered Monday evening by Mr. :uid Mrs. William J. Bryan at their home at Falrvlew, the guests being the members of the Nebraska party wlv met Mr. Bryan at New York on his return from his trip around the world. Seventy-one members of the party ut tended Monday night's dinner. Mon day was the twenty-second anniver sary of the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Bryan and the nineteenth anniversary of Mr. Bryan's arrival In Lincoln. Following the dinner the gttesui were shown over the Falrvlew home and relics collected on the trip around the world described. The most for midable of these were two Chinese dragons of heroic proportions, which have been posted at the entrance to the Bryan home, which Mr. Bryan said represented the positive and the nega tive the conservative and the demo cratic, and which he always sought to walk between. Mr. Bryan made a short. Informal speech descriptive of his Journey and the receptions accorded In the different cities visited. There was no politics In the address. TWO KILLED BY TRAINS. Woman at Hellenic and Man at Gmnil Island Dead Through Carelessness. Miss Lotta Woods, aged 30, was killed by a Burlington train nt Reilc vue, being struck by the engine pilot of a passenger train. Inquest was held at Paplllton Mon day, the verdict of the coroner's Jury being that she met death as the result of her own act. Tho testimony show ed that the whistle was blown and she stepped from the track and ln-n immediately stepped In front of the engine, giving the engineer no time to stop, Edward W. Huber, a barber of Cen tral City, was struck by a Union l'n clflc passenger trafn In the lower end of the yards at Grand Island and so badly Injured that he died within nn hour. Coroner Sutherland held an Inquest, the jury bringing In a verdict that the deceased had met death tr. the manner described, through no negligence on the purt of the com pany. OFFICERS ELECTED. Woman's Chrlstlnn Temperance Union in Session at Aurora. The Woman's Christian Temperance union convention at Aurora Thursday elected officers for the ensuing year as follows: President, Mrs. Frances Beverldge Heald, Osceola; vice president. Mrs. S. K. Dalley, University Place: record ing secretary, Mrs. M. E. Patterson, Omaha; corresponding secretary, Mrs. Emma L. Starrett, Central City; treas urer, Mrs. Annetta Nesblt, Pawnee City. The delegates to the national convention are as follows: Mrs. M. E. Patterson of Omaha, Mrs. Zara Wilson of Lincoln, Mrs. Adelaide Wheeler of Falrbury, Mrs. Olive Moore of Platts mouth, and Mrs. M. G. Townecnd of Holdrege. Saloon Row. George Wilson stabbed nnd danger ously wounded Fred Easlcy at Auburn. Easley is now at the hospital suffering from three wounds, one In the muscles of the left arm Just below the shoulder and two In the back, one of which Is a little below the shoulder and the other over the kidneys. The wounds are bad ones and Easley's condition Is serious, although not considered nccen sarlly fatal. Wilson Is In jn II. The stabbing Is the result of a saloon quarrel. Suits Against County .Indices. Suits against former County Judges G. W. Shields, Irving F. Baxter and Duncan M. Vinsonhaler. at Omaha, for over $11,000 collected for performln marriage ceremonies and not turne ' in to the county treasury have been started in district court by County At torney Slabaugh. The suits will be eight In number, one for each term served by the defendunts. Farmer Killed In Peculiar Way. Mr. Ira Moore, a prominent farmer living about four miles south of Long Pine, was killed by being hit by a broken singletree. Mr. Moore was stacking, and through some heavy strain the singletree broke and flew back, hitting Mr. Moore In the region of the stomach, killing him Instantly. Trump Assaults Little Girl. A dastardly outrage was committed on the 7-year-old daughter of John Onkcl, a farmer living near Reenter. The girl was returning home and wan met by a man In the roadway and assaulted, the man, presumably a tramp, escaping westward. The girl ' badly Injured. Banquet for Ball Ten in. S C. Hoover entertained the lei-guc baseball team of Lincoln at the Lln dell hotel at Lincoln Tuesday. The menu comprised nine courses, each designated as an inning. H. 'I'. Dob bins, editor of the Evening News, of ficiated as tonstmaster. Norfolk to Pave. Enough property owners In Norfol!: have signed a petition to assure a half nlle of paving on Norfolk avenue. Lighted 1 41 m p Kchtrojs Home, Fire destroyed the house of Charles Herr, In Lincoln. Tho loss Is about $4,000, with Insurance of $l,5no. Mrs. Herr was carrying a lighted lamp across the room when she fell and the lamp exploded. Mrs. lierr escaped with her two children. Run Down by l ast Mull. Daniel Ijiwrence Lewis, n slepvi n of F. W. Dltmer, wan Instantly killed by the eastbound fast mail at Kearney. The truin passed over hint, th; wheels severing the body at the waist. IjOVK CHARMS BRIVO MONEY. One line of Graft Proven by Unci Sam's Men to Be Bonanza. The postofTlce fraud order recently Issued against the Gem Novelty com pany and "Prof. H. Xalo," who were doing a thriving business In selling love charms, magic photographs and life horoscopes, has resulted In the ac cumulation of a vast quantity of mall at the Omaha postolfice for these par ties, the mall coming from all parts of the country. The establishment Is lo cated on North Sixteenth street and tho order was Issued to withhold all mall addressed to the Gem Novelty company and "Prof. Kalo" Sept. 11. Since that tlnto over 5,000 letters have been held In Omaha, which gives a slight Indication of the gullibility of the victims. Of this number 2.J6J let ters have already been sent to the dead letter ofCco.some returned to the writers and there now remains In the poMolIlce to be sent to the dead letter office about 3,000 letters. A fair esti mate would give about $1 being en closed In each ot these letters. The remittances averaging from 50 cents to $2. for a charm, magic photograph or horroscope. INHERITANCE WAITING FOR BON. Heir to Tecumseh Ertate Refuse to Claim It. Two or three years ago Judge and Mrs. John Wilson, now deceased, made a trip from Tecumseh to Alaska In search of a son whom they had not seen since ho was a young man. Ha ran away from home many years ago. The old couple felt they were not long for this world, and as they had con siderable property and no other near relatives they were particularly anx ious to locate the son. John Wilson, One day last week a gen tleman passed through Tecumseh who claimed to have recently seen and talk ed with the son In Alaska, but could not Induce him to return to Nebraska. It seems remarkable that the boy does not return to claim his heritage, which amounts to considerable. WOIIK OF KEARNEY NORMAL. The Enrollment Is Approaching tlto BOO Mark. The enrollment of students at the state normol school nt Kearney Is ap proaching the 500 mark, being 487 on Tuesday afternoon. The year Is start ing out in first class shape and the school Is being run according to the regular schedule which was mapped out before the opening. There have ben but two changes In the faculty from last year, and the number of instructors Is the same, twenty-six. Prof. M. S. Tate, of Graf ton, is one of the new members of the faculty, taking tho place of Miss Crawford, who Is nt present studying nt the University of Nebraska. The music department Is In charge of Miss Mary Bailey, of Kearney, succeeding Mist, 11. C. Richmond. - . nialia Electrical iVr.td-. , Jpeta.for & place on the eleven. The annual electrleaPpai-iJe'ce1o'" " fcti'-1" - - -i r v.vi bruting tho arrival of King Ak-Sar-I'en to participate In the fall carnival, which continues this year from Sept. 2fl to Oct. 6, occurred Wednesday night In Omahn. The parade consist ed of twenty tlonts brilliantly Illumi nated by electricity, representing the principal nations of tho earth. It was viewed by more than 200,000 porsons. ISlacUog Affects Cattle. I lacklcg Is appearing among the calves In the country around Peru. C. T. Mnrttuls lost four head last week, lint has checked the further progress cf the oi:iivisi by vaccination. Hog cholera Is nlsn reported as prevalent. Several farmers have already lost large numbers. Girl Run Over by Wugon. An S-year-nld daughter of August Selmlt-s. proprietor of the City hotel at A rn pit hoe, while endeavoring to ob tain a tide on ii uiiRim loaded with com. fell nnd the wheels of the heav ily loaded wriK'Hi passed over her. breaking an arm and collar bone, itnif the Injuries may prove fatal. Want Waterworks. . special election has been called In lb; villnro of Crab Orchard to vote on a ft. 400 bonding proposition for a ! tern of water works. The town has r:eeni:y experienced two very destruc the tins. The election will be held Oct. 16. Pi:iiv Chief Acquitted. The trlnl in the county court of Chief of Police Howell. for assault, whh hold In Tekamah. tho Jury return ing a verdict of not guilty. This trial Is the outcome of a free for all fight w hich took place at that city one night during the races. l.iiuiN'iinaii Killed by Cars. George Hrown, manager of the Pleiks Lumber und Coal company at Anslcy, was instantly killed by the ea;-:tl)ound passenger truln No. 42 Monday. The accident occurred on the rcllroad crossing about four miles east .f Mason City, near the Purcell farm. Seriously Injured In Well. While engaged In sinking a well, Al'mri De Allemand, a son of Prof. De Allemund, well known In Plattsmouth and. an early settler, was seriously In Jiired by the breaking of a ball which let n half barrel of sand fall on him. 1'ieli for Laud at North Platte. A land opening occurred at the United St riles land office. at North I'lc.tte Tuisday und at 9 o'clock a heavy rush w;-.s on. The land Ir.volve.l whs a!. tit liiO sections, located In ;(, ill's MuT und Banner counties. Morse Thieves ut Inland. A ti'.uit of while mines, weighing 1.4 'Mi ;" uids each, and a buggy and Iiui'iicfs were stolen from a burn at I ii In : ttl lust week. Fusion on Senator. The Democratic nnd populist con- j vcntloiiH uf the Twenty-eighth senato I rial f'b-lrlct were held in Mlnden Wed i nesdiiy. '. M. Sims, of Almn, received I the I'.uinlmous vote of the Democratic conv-nlli it und was elected on the li;t fi.rn.al vote .f the populist con vention. Neliras!,;i ITus r. e.in S i ll, Too. The t.vl frost of the season visited N'r.rf..lk Wednesday night. 'Hie crops ef northern Nebraska and southern South Dakota are all wife. Arrangemenst for the Five-College Debating association, of which Ne braska forms a part, have been prac tically completed, according to the reports received by Secretary Fogg, of the state university. The unlverel ' ties represented In this are Nebraska, i Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and Illi nois. The schedule has been arranged for debate this winter so far aa place i Is concerned, but the date haa not yet been determined. Most of the universities favor Feb. 15, but as this falls on charter day at Nebraska, there would be little opportunity for such a date there. Members of the faculty from each of the colleges have been working on the constitution and by-laws of the association during tke summer, and this work Is completed. Each university will have two teams, one of which will stay at home to meet Its opponent and one will go abroad. The debates between the teams will be held on the same night and all will discuss the same question. Wiscon sin will visit Nebraska. Secretary Royce, of the state bank ing board has completed the compila tions of the reports of the condition of the various banks of the state at the close of business Aug. 28. The re port shows there were 578 banks re porting on Aug. 28, 1906, an Increase of 11 over the number reporting May 1$, 1906, and In Increase of 43 over the number reporting one year ago. The amount of deposits has Increased $5,879,943.49 sincn the report of May 19. 1906. and $8,161,280.46 since the report of a year ago. The Increase In the amount of loans since May J 9, 1906, Is $711,008.64, and since the re port of a year ago the Increase shows $7,697,321.31. Ten years ago the to tal deposits In all state banks of Ne braska amounted to $10,227,637.93, showing an increase of $48,614,683.74. The banks were carrying an average reserve of 38 V4 per cent at the date of this report, being more than two and one-half times the legal requirement. Unless a change of mind Is brought about the Lincoln high school football team will not be on the gridiron this fall. This team held the western high school football championship last year and claimed the championship of the entire country. The decision In opposition to playing was arrived at by members of the team Saturday. On rctount of the scholastic-restrictions and qualifications required by the principal of school and the boar, ,the players "decided that the mainte nance of a team worthy of the school would be Impossible. It is said that 4he new requirements permits only nine of the aspiring players to com State Treasurer MortenseA's month ly report for September -shows that this Is the "hard up" period for the state, but that taxes will soon begin to flow Into the treasury. Notwithstand ing the small amount of receipts, the treasurer reports that he has $261, KB) In state depository banks, and, as usu al, he gives the names of the banks and the amount In each. There Is only $1,6$6.$1 In the permanent school fund. During the month the treasur er received $100,556.05 and paid out $210,690.43. He had a balance of $376,329.20 on hand Sept. 1. The bal ance on hand at the close of Septem ber was $266,194.82. Gov. Mickey commuted the four years' sentence of Mrs. Ida Terrell, an Omaha colored woman, who was oon vlcted of robbery. The woman waa received at the penitentiary May 14 and on May 30 was transferred to the hospital for the insane on recommen dation of an examining board. She was reported dying of consumption and her sister, Mrs. Blanche Brown, Kansas City, Mo., offered to take the woman and care for her. She was sent back to the penltenalary and waa Immediately taken away by her Bister. Her father, aged 70 years, Is waiting at Kansas City to see her, The twenty-second annual exhibi tion of Nebraska poultiy will be held In the auditorium In Lincoln from Jan 14 to 19. A meeting of the officers and board of directors of the poultry association was held In Lincoln and arrangements made for the annual show. Those present at the meeting were Judge T. L. Norval, of Seward, president; J. Cook Johnson, of Oma ha, vice president; L. P. Ludden, of Lincoln, secretary; I, L. Lyman, treas urer; E. E. Bowers and J. C. Sea brooke, directors, and A. D. Burhans, press agent, Secretary Royce, of tho state bank ing board, is collecting large pictures of tho men who have occupied this position and is decorating his office with them. So far he bus secured a nice enlarged photograph of Dr. P. L. Hall, who wus secretary to the board back In the old fusion days. Jay O'Hearn, convicted of murder In the first degree In Omaha and sen tenced to be bunged, has, through his attorneys, filed petition in error and a transcript In the supreme court. O'Hearn was sentenced some moirths ago and since that time has been kept most of the time in too penitentiary. Attorney General Norrls Brown is In Washington, where on Oct. 9, he will argue the Burlington tax case in the United States supreme court. Mr. Brown has already prepared his briefs in this case und expects It to hi called for iteuriiig without any delay. Those veterinary surgeons who have been appointed Inspectors by the gov ernment bueau of animal Industry, have also been appointed by Gov. Mickey deputy statu veterinarians. The appointees are as follows: W. W. Cummings of Lexington, W. F. Jones of McCook, II. W. Miller of Lincoln. II. R. McNally of Grand Island, J. M. Simpson of Fremont, L. C. Songer of Grand Island, L. s. Campbell of Alli ance, E. T. Davison of Kcurncy, V. II. Hurst of Chadron, F. E. Johnson oi Lincoln, Thomas White of Norf dk. William McC'lure of Allluiw RUIN IN THE SOUTHJ WIND AND FLOOD KILL AND DEVASTATE. Havoc Over Whole Gulf Coast Mar rlrane and luatait Wave lata date Toirn, Wreck Da tiding aatt Sink Ships. Death nud devastation mark th shores of the Mexican Gulf, from Mo bile to Pensacola. How many are dead It U Impossible to estimate. The loss In property la almost beyond computa tion. Mobile Is a wreck. Ten-tacola la In ruins, BUosI Is partially destroyed. The water rose aiz feet along tue rail road tracks In Mobile. Bodies Iter and there were seen floating out to sea. The shrieks of the drowning werct hushed by the walls of the winds. Tb waters from Mobile Bny were being swept high up the Mobile Itlver. Tide water was running at Slater'a landing, 2(H) miles from the gulf. Uhouls broke la upou the dead and wounded. Some were shot without mercy. Martial law reigns. The Mo bile Itltles and the Mobile Grays patrol the business districts. Thousands of bit lea of cotton have been swept to the ocean. Lumber vessels are toru Into fragments and their cargoes sent to the bottom. In some localities fires have added to the terror and destruction.. Women half dressed, children with no clothing, and strong men stood helpless. Kuln U everywhere and death bus beea swimming In ghastly eddies, through streets that were supposed to be lm uintie from flood. , Eitln Toast Swept. The wind reached ninety-six miles an hour. It swept all the coast country. It leveled thousands of homes. Coming with softness at first it gradually In creased In violence until the great heart of the coast was torn from Its body. The waters dashed high Into places where hundreds ran for safety The wharves of Pensacola, the greatest harbor In the world, and heretofore supposed to be the securest, were torn by wind and wave and sent crashing with the timbers of the forests far out Into the sea. It Is estimated that property worth t2nOHXWl hna hoen iloatrntrMi there The Louisville nnd Nashville Railroad, the only line entering Pensacola. Is deep under water. Few of the 25,000 lnhab-, Itantr escaped without some loss. The small houses lining the beach, to th est and west of the city proper, are In ruins. Entire families bare been lost, tluge bttslness- Wocfcs arc "Torn - frwa their fastenings. What Information haa seen received cume by way of Flomaton Junction, Flomaton Is forty miles from Pensa cola. Between the two cities is a wild rtrutcb of scrubby oalc The heayr pine trees long since have been sawed Into lumber. The country Is flat The gulf Is thlrty-flve miles awny, but the hurrrlcane has thrown the waters far to the north, making an Inland sea - Unit Is Impossible to navigate. Two Revenue Cattera Slak. Two revenue cutters have gone to the bottom in Mobile Bay with their crew. ' Heavy lumber vessels have disappear Steamships wero torn tntt their meer-' Ings and wrecked. Hundreds of sail hare perished. The river boats those plying the Alabama and Tomblgbee streams that happened to be at their wharfs have disappeared. All along the coast Innumerable fishing boats bare sunk. The bathing pavilions are no- more. Bienville Square, one of tho most pic turesque of Mobile's little parks. Is de stroyed. Te buildings surrounding It were dashed into splinters. Five of the . bundsomest blocks In the business sec tion were leveled. At Government and Royal streets the heart of the city -the water stood five feet deep. The Fed eral building, constructed of heavy granite, Is bndly damaged. The great wholesale houses that stand neurer the river are damaged Immeasurably. Christ Church Cathedral Is a mass of nil us. The storm struck the great edi fice and swept It away In five minutes. The waves beat high and furiously severe upon the mass of wreckage. In the wind's wake the ralus best heavily upon the unhoused. Trunks, cotton bales, roofs of homes, broken fragments of vessels, flouting timbers from hun dreds of saw mills and lumber yards, make a scene fearful In Its horror. In the pine tret country the huge timbers lap over each other In woeful waste. Fort Morgan, a few miles up the river from Mobile, high on the bluffs of the Tomblgbee Itlver, Is destroyed. Likewise are most of the little towns between Fort Morgan and Mobile, on the Mobile und Jackson Rallrund, In ruins. Citronelle, the great resort for consumptives, is partially gone. The fruit orchards are leveled. Between lMtrotidV'uud Mobile Is a vast truck garden owned by Illinois and Michigan people who have recontly emigrated there. These are under water. Ladd'a immense lumber mill U swept Into the river. It was the second largest la the world. Chararca Trpbulrf to Oraters. Dr. II. I. Tease of the New York State board of health, sjteaklng before the sanitary department uf the homeopathic congress at Atlantic City, said that ex pert authorities now agree that lh sud den swelling ot the list of typhoid cases during September is directly due to the fact tlnit at that time people begin to cat raw oysters, mussels and other shellfish. He says it Is true that persons who ban dlo the so creatures nr especially liable to lufectimi.