DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD. VOLUME XVI DAKOTA CITY, NEB., FRIDAY, MARCH 0, 1908. NUMBER 27 WO.ID'S DAILY NEWS CAREFULLY COLLECTED AND CONCISELY STATED, FIRE INQUIRY BEGUN WITSKMSKM INSIST COLI4XW001I - SCHOOL IMJOJl WAS liOC'KKO. Total Number of Dead In HI -Of These UT Have Heeii Identified, WIUlo 27 Are So Mutilated that There b Small Chance of lteoogul. I lion. Twenty-four hours after the disas ter that swept into eternity approxi mately one-third of the school child ren of North Colllnwood. O., the death roll numbered 164. Of these 137 had been Identified at the Lake View morgue, while t" bodies remain there In a condition of mutilation probably forever beyond the chances of being recognized. In an effort to fix the cause and responsibility for the holocaust vari ous Investigations were set under way. Coroner Burke Issued subpoe nas for the seven surviving teachers of the Lake View school. The Inquest was begun Thursday morning, when a number of witnesses were examin ed, without, however, developing any testimony that was beyond mere opin ion. f An Investigation conducted by the Colllnwood school board, which lasted far Into the night, at which a number of survivors of the horror told their stories, brought forth these facts: That one of th. inner doors at tha west entrance of the school was closed and fastened while children were pil ing up against it in the passage, ami that wing partitions in the vestibul narrowed the exit by at least three feet. The flames came first from a closet below the stairway at the east entrance; the closet contained lime and sawdust. There was but one fire escape, and that its -use was nevar taught as a part of the Are drill. Survivors among the teachers esti mate that only two or three minutes passed between the time of the alarm until all escape was cut off. The building was a-falr sample of the kind of school construction in use In small towns. The halls and stairways were Inclosed -between interior brick walls forming a huge flue through which the flames shot up with great rapid ity. On the question, much discussed, whether the doors opened Inward or outward. Fire Marshals Brocket and Feighenbaum examined the doorways und stated that they were convinced that they opened outward. Whether they were locked they have not been able to determine. They have testi mony on both sides. ' Janitor Herter t-till Insists that the doors were opei I FATALLY SHOT. Mystery In Cass of SHiely Man of Dillon, Mont. A sensation was caused at Dillon, Mont., Thursday when It was disclosed that Emery Ptilver, a well known so ciety man of that city, had been shot and fatally wounded early that morn ing. Dr. Bond was awakened and found Pulver prostrate at his door, where he had been carried by friends. The police are Investigating what connection, of any. Pulver's condition has with the holdup of Henry Cahlll, a saloon man. early Thursday. Cahill was going home when he was accosted by two men and dragged Into an alley, Cahill shot one of the men through the stomach. The other robber felled Cahill and robbed him after beating" him into insensibility. 1WMC IS AY EKTKD. Vlrv Drill Proves Effective When an4 Alarm is Sounded. Thursday fire broke out In the la boratory of the Central high school at Grand Rapids, Mich., while 1,200 pupils were in the midst of their morn, lug work. The signal for the Are drill was given, and the children marched out In perfect order, the building be ing emptied in two and a half min utes. The school Is over-crowded, stair ways are Inadequate and fears of a possible panic long had been felt, but the fire drill proved effective. The Jire did comparatively little damag.. Itcleused by Chicago Police. Itosle Stern and Olga Averbuch, a flster of the man killed by Chief Snip py, of Chlcugo. who were arrested In connection with the police Investiga tion of the attempted assassination of Shlppy, were released from custody at noon Thursday. Sioux I'll) Live Stork Market. Thursday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market follow: Tup beeves, $5.15. Top hogs. $4.35. Many IUmIIcm Cue lulincd. Firemen and voluntary assistants are still probing among the smoulder, lug ruins of the Coljinwood school at Clevelund O. Arrangements for H great public funeral are being perfect, ed. Many bodies are still unidentl. lied. King Kdward Takes Holiday. A I.ondon speclul says:. King Ed ward left London Thursday for liar lit for a month's holiday. M) Ql A1U VAX TO HtTS. I'nclo Sam Joins In Hunt for Allen Anarchists. The secretary of commerce and la bor Tuesday Issued a sweeping orde to all commissioners of Immigration and Immigration inspector In rhurge, directing them to confer with the po lice In their respective Jurisdiction with a view to securing the co-operation of police and detective forces In an effort ,to rid the country of alien anarchists and criminals falling withlni the law relulive to deportation. The order of Secretary Straus fol lows: "To All Commissioners of Immigra tion and Immigrant Inspectors in Charge: , It Is hereby directed that, with a view to promptly obtaining definite Information in regard to all alien anarchists and criminals located In the United States, you shall confer fully with the chiefs of police or th chief of the secret service of the city in which you are located, furnishing such official with detailed Informa tion with regard to the meaning of the term 'anarchist' as used In the Im migration act of Feb. L'0, 1907. and with regard to the Inhibition of thnt statute against aliens of the criminal classes, explaining the powers and limitations imposed by said statute upon the Immigration officials, with respect to such persons. "Tou shall call to the attention of the chief of police or chief of the secret service the definition of 'anarch ist,' contained In sections 2 and 38 of the act of Feb. 20, 1S07, and the provi sions of section 2, placing'' within the excluded classes persons who have been convicted of or admit having committed a felony or other crime or misdemeanor. Involving moral turpi tude, pointing out that if any sucn person Is found within the United States within three years after landing or entry therein lie Is amenable to de portation under the provisions of sec tion 21 of the act" LIXJAL OPINION Will LI'. ASLEEP. Judge Condemned a Mun to lH-u'li and Didn't Know It. A remarkable stty has Just come to light at Chattanooga, Tenn., of an opinion of the supreme court of Ten nessee affirming the death sentence ol Andrew Smith, colored. In 1870. The opinion was written by the, chief jus tice of the supreme court when he was in a somnambulistic state, and th .? remarkable thing was that his opinion was thoroughly sound, both as to the law and the facts, and Is one of the reported opinions, being printed as an authority to this day on the technical law points Involved. Justice Nicholson was the man who wrote the. opinion and Peter Turney. afterward governor of Tennessee, saw him arise from his bed, write the lengthy document and again retire. Next day Justice Nicholson had no rec. ollectlon of the incident. The elaborate opinion covered all the facts cited and ended with an affirmation of the couit below. Letters from the late Gov. Turney, In the possession of one of Chuttunoogu's attorneys, corroborat; the foregoing story. A SCAItLKT CKVKH SEIU'M. New York Physicians Ising Hcnu'dv with Much Success. Hypodermic Injections of a serum similar to that used In the treatment of diphtheiiu are being successfully employed in scarlet fever cases In New York, according to doctors in hospi tals on the east side, where the dis ease is unusually prevalent now, the last report of the board of health showing 797 cases, more than six times as many as on Dec. 1, and the great majority of them in the populous section which Includes most of the foreign settlements. Dr. Henry O. Robinson, of the Post Gruduute hospital, said, In commenl iiyj on the tests of this treatment, tint although little used in tills country, it Is not new by uny means, having been employed with gratifying results in both Germany and France. Kxper! ments with It here are said to hav.i been almost uniformly successful. I toad Pays $15,000 Death Claim. Claim agents for the Southern Pa cific railway company in Hlnghamton, N. Y., made a settlement with the ex ecutor of the estates of Mr. and Mrs. John V. Cutler whereby It was agreed to pay $ IS. 000 for the deutll of Mr. and Mrs. Cutler, who were killed in the wreck of the Shiiners' train in southern California last spring. Wrecked by Wast. A cargo of powder carried by u HP; Four freight train exploded Tuesday while the train was running at full speed ten miles from Litehfleld. III. Two men are reported fatally injured The train was badly wrecked, and scv eral cars were burned. .Many Offices Are Closed. The nine-hour law affecting rail road telegraphers caused about 2." per . flit of the Southern PueiJic tclcgrup'i offices in Louisiana to lie closed Wed nesday. Itosslter Public Primer. It is understood the president has decided to appoint W. S. UnssUer, ol New York, to be public printer to sue. ceed Charles S. Htllllugs, of Mussachu. setts. Itossiter lias been for H'veial years chief clerk in the Census olli i. More Troops to Morocco. The French cabinet Tue-ili.y vot M ormully to semi 4,0uu additional , I dlers to Morocco with th" object of continuing the ugvressivc policy of th.: government in that countiy. IN WOK CNKPKAKAHLR. Nearly 200 Utile Children Perish In School. , Death In. one of Its most terrible forms claimed between 160 and 170 school children in the Colllnwood school, In the village of Colllnwood, an astern suburb of Cleveland, O., Wed nesday, when the school building, catching fire from a defective fur nace In the basement, was gutted In the space of half an hour. The building being Inadequately protected by fire escapes the chlldrer were unable to make their way to the lower floors In time to escape th flames as they shot up from the base ment and cut off egress. Starting about 9:30 o'clock In the basemen from the overheated furnace the flit gained tremendous headway before iti presence was learned. The fire drill was Inaugurated a; once and those In the rooms of th lower floor quickly moved out of th building, but when the panlc-strickei little ones In the upper rooms at tempted to make, their way to th stairway the jam of uncontrolled unt fear stricken children grew until but few were abje to extricate themselves and they perished almost within reach of safety. The school was a two-story and attic brick building, constructed about six years ago. It was overcrowded with pupils and It was found necessary t utilise the attic for those of the ages between .6 and 8. Nearly all the children were killed j the mass at the first floor door, I hleh flniw . r,.,i h frm1 In which Anally was opened by men from the Lake Shore railway shops, who hurried to the scene. A wall of flame had formed across It and most of the children already were dead by the time, the doors swung open. Approximately 300 children attend ed this school, which had nine room CATHOLIC KPITOIl WAHXKD. Head of Monthly Publication in lcn. ver CietM Threatening Letter. Arthur il Callopy, of Denver, Colo., editor of the Western Home Journal, a Catholic monthly, received through the mail Wednesday a postal card on which was written the following threat: "If you don't stop trying to hurt the working man byNvritlng against him In your magazine you will find yourself where the priest Is. This Is a warning. M." Mr. Callopy believes that the threat was called out by an article in the Western Home Journal which de nounced anarhy in all its forms. R IDG ELY TO HE PRESIDENT. Comptroller Will He Head of Kuiwi City Hunk. 1 It Is announced that the National Bank of Commerce, of Kansas City, Mo., will reopen its doors on Monday. March 30, In Its own quarters In the new Commerce building, with $fi.tioo,. 000 capita! In its vaults. W. H..KIdge ly, comptroller of the currency, ac cording'to the announcement, will be president of the bank; Edward Ridge, ly, his brother, will be the cashier, and George T. Cutts, the government receiver now in charge, will be Hist Vice president. The board of diiec tors will Include many local men. A NEW YORK SENSATION. Deputy State Atorney V Ida ver is Ac cused of Taking lliibe. Nathan VIdaver, of New York, spe tlal deputy state attorney general, was arrested Wednesday by detectives from District Attorney Jerome's of fice, charged with accepting $500 In marked bills from Wm. R. Montgom ery, former president of the Hamilton bank. VIdaver had a prominent part In the recent banking investigation in that city and recently was a candidate fi.. election to the court of general sew. slona. A. llartje Is Acquit led. The Hartje conspiracy case at Pitts burf. Pa., was brought to an abrupt end Wednesday when Judge McFar lane instructed the jury to acquit Hartje, Welshons and Hone, the three defendants, and place the charges up on the county. The conspiracy case was the sequel of the famous Hurtj., divorce case. Convicted of Killing Wire. Henry Wolf, of Waucau, Wis., wm round guilty Wednesday of manslaugh ter In the third degree.' He killed hii wife wliile ln an Insane frenzy on Jun 13, 1907. He dashed out her bralnf with a kingbolt from his cattle wagon Wolf pleaded Insanity. Revokes Salary Ri'iliietion. The Nashville, (,'hattannogu and St louls Railroad company announce. Wednesday that It lias rescinded If recent order reducing s:il:ri-s of a i employes receiving more than $.j0 month. The salary scale will tain unchanged. " Ma vara Falls Sulelie. A dispatch from Niagara Fa IN, . Y., suys a man believe 1 to have hi ei Grover C. Hohen, of 1'uffuln, ienpc. from the Lua island bridge Into tlu river ond his body was carried ovei the falls. Cracksmen Secure $:.00I, Safe crackers early' Wedinula) robbed the Mt. rab bank In Mt Orab, O., forty miles east of Cincin nati, of $3,00u ami escaped. I Nebraska ij i State News MOVKTO MAKF.I.IXCOIA ItllV. (License Issue Will He Submitted to Vote of Hie Pooplo. The first definite "move looking to prohibition In Lincoln was taken Tues day evening when the I'nltet: Civic, league presented to the excise board a petition bearing 2.000 signatures to amend Its rules so that no liquor II censes shall be granted. The petition required but" 1.200 signatures to make it effective. The question will be put to a vote, and with it k rule pro posed by the excise bourd. making the limit of saloons twenty-five and permitting them to retrain open onli ne! ween the hous of 7 u. m and 7. p. itl., with the minimum license, $1,500. IMICIIK IS COXVICTVCD. The Jury nt Noifolk Finds Him Guilty of Manslaughter. Herman I'i.elic, accused of the mur der of Frcnk farmer.-was found guilty of manslaughter at Norfolk Tuesday Afternoon. The Jury" was out sixteen hours. The penalty for the crime Is one to ten years In the penitentiary. A motion for a new trial was made. Boche shot and killed Jarmer on the night of May 1, 1907. The killing followed a nuurrel 'after a night spent ln dunking a Norfolk resort. The men nU be" friends and lodge brothers. Kdmlstoii Will Return. Attorneys for J. H. Ed ml? ton, who i failed to appear ln Hie federal court Omaha to ansewr to the charge of perjury and complicity In land frauds, declare that their client will return next week. They assert that Kdmlston went south on business und Is now suf fering a severe attack of nervous pros tration. . ' Puss Holders Are Hound Over. At Columbus Dr. C. D. Evans and Dr. D. T. Martyn are held under bonds for their appearance in district court to answer to the charge of violating the anti-pass law by accepting passes from the Union Puclflc. County At torney Hensley is pushing the 'case. against the physicians, and the cuses will be a test or the anti-puss law. Ami -Saloon I'IrIii In Hastings. A campaign to drive saloons frfm Hastings was started Sunday at a mass meeting under the auspices of the evangelistic union of seven church es. The politlcul put ties will be asked to make no nominations for the coun cil next spring so that the saloon ques tion may be settled in a square contest on license und no license tickets. Find for "Licking- the .Mayor. Bert Leddy, of Elm Creek, against whom a wurrant was sworn out several weeks ago for nsvault on Mayor Guss. of that town, and who left tliut vicin ity for purts unknoT. returned to Kearney und gave himself up to Slier, iff Summons, who took him before Judge Hoge, where he was lined $." and costs, amounting to $12.75. Consolation for Small Hoy. Consolation for the smull boy was found In Juvenile court at Omaha Monday morning, when It was an nounced the administration of the truancy law would have to be suspend ed temporarily becouse of the order requiring the vaccinutlon Of school children. Several cases curiv up, but as none of the truants hud been vac cinated the judge could not older them to go buck to school. Thirty Curlonds of i Fence Posts. Richard C. Jordan, superintendent of the United States Indian warehous-.i ut Omaha, placed an order Monday with the Chicago Lumber company lor thirty carloads of fence poi-fi to bo shipped to the Rosebud Indian agency. These posts, secured by competitive bids, will be used in fencing Indian lands on the reservation. Nicholas Kcjicidi'Kcr Dead. Nicholas Schelilegger, cine of the earliest settlers of southeastern Ne braska, died ut the family home, sev eral miles southwest of Humboldt, us the result of on attack of paresis, rrom which he has been suffering for months. Deceased was a native of Switzerland, having been born Heme,' and was in his 79th year, came to this country In 18fi4. ut He Electric Lights for Oxford. Mr. Sturdevuiit. a Chicago capital ist, has made application to the city council at Oxford for u franchise to put in a system of electric lights in that city. The proposition, it Is ex pected, will come before the city bot.rd at Its next mteting. No SaliHin I ne at Kearney. The city council ut Kearney tied on a vote on the petition presented by th Anti-Saloon league for permission to submit the que.' lion f lieevs... or no li cense. The muyor cast the deciding vote against the league. Hank President Has Smallpox. J. D. Clarke, president of the Pa pillion bant:, was taken down with lit. sniullpox the other morning. is plac. has been quarantined. Hum-roll Woman Ends Her I. 'IV. Mrs. C. E. Robinson, an old ri-lde u of Hanrroft, eonimltled suicide Mon day, taking carbolic arid. Mic had been living with her daughter. Mrs W. F. Presser, and while the latter down town shopping. she drank th ' acid. Mrs. Robinson leaver two ilauh ters and one son. New Telephone l.hic. The Burlington lias completed n telephone line from Lincoln to Wy inore, for company use. The luw con. lieclioiis were nu.de t'atur.lay. KSCATINO ITUSOV3KH CArGIIT. Already Borvlnir Time mm Remit of Previous Attempt. Charles Ford nd Juhn Kuhl, serv ing ninety days each In' the county Jail at Beatrice for resisting an officer, escaped Saturday evening from Depu ty Sheriff Hurke while they were at work In the yard. The officers fired three shots at the fleeing prisoners, but they did not take effect. Kuhl wm captured about three blocks from the Jail and Fold was rounded up by the olhcers In Glenover soon after his escape. ljist full Ford was sentenced by Judge Keillgur to sixty days In Jail f'-r assaulting a young man with a revolver, and Kuhl was later sent up 'or thirty days for assisting In the theft of lap robes and whips from sev ers! farmers In Sicily township. Short ly heroic their terms had expired both men escaped from jail and were captured by officer Spahan after . brutal fight, iluy were given ninety days each ror resisting an officer and huve thirty duy.i yet to serve. TIMES TWICE IX) END LIFE. Omuliu V. t limn Taken Laudanum and AcUl Without Success. ' Mrs. Iyormn Casslday, daughter of Dr. J. O. Werner, of Boston. Mass., and a licro or Geoige Werner, head of the Werner Publishing company, tried twice within the present week to n her" life at Omaha. Monday evening she tok u draught or luudsnum, which failed to accomplish Its purpose, und Tuesday Fhe tried to swallow car bolic acid. The. burning llulsh stran gled her and none went Into her stom ach. Her throat and mouth were ter ribly burned, but she will recover. She sey her wealthy father disin herited her hei-nlipe she married Ber nard CuKl-y, the famous outfielder of the New England league, from whom the sepurntH.1 last October. She1 came to Omaha t.) secure a divorce, and when her money was exhausted se cured cmph ynient ns u domestic. She became despondent and attempted to take her lire. Her father has tele Rinphed money ror her reller. bcchi: ix ins owx defense. Three Tin:e lets Out Death Strugglu ( n Wiinixs stand. Herman Poehe testified In his own behalf In tils murder trial at Madison fiilurilay, and during his testimony three times druniatluully acted out the death struggle In which he said he was engaged Just before he shot and killed Jarmer. lie said he took $840 to the Jarmer rulonn to loan it to Jar mer for license morey, needed the next day. He remembers being thrown into a hack by Jarmer and recalls waking up next morning with two men on top of him, digging their hands ln. to Ills pockets, -lie fought them off. They curie back and he shot. He woke up that night In a hog pen, he says, und his money was gone. once before that, he says, Jarmer kept him in the saloon all night and nearly all the next day. When he woke up on lhat occasion his money wos gone. The defense rested Its case. IIWIvl i: IIARTOX GOES FREE. Perjury C:isc Is Nolle Prosscd b County Attorney Moore. County Attorney J. C. Moore has nolle prossed the case against W. R Tutton. of Tecumseh, in the district court. Mi', f'r.rtun, who was presi dent of lh.' failed Chamberlain bank ing house, i f Tecumseh. . w as accused of giving contradictory evidence In cases hinging on the bunk fuilure and was prosecuted ror perjury. At a trial the jui y was hung. This w eek a similar cuse, that of the stute ugainst F. A. Taylor, who was vice president of the bunk, resulted in a verdict of acquittal. The similarity of the eases entered Into Mr. Moore's action. Movlnvc Starch Plant Machinery. The niachineiy from the Argo starch plant at Nebrusku City Is to be taken to a new town to be named Ar go, In Illinois, wnich is being laid out by the (Torn Product company. The town Is to be erected In Marshall county, Illinois, and $."..000,000 ex pended in it plant und the laying out or the town, similar to the one erect ed by the Bessemer Steel company. I.lllle Held lor Trlul. Jaiiiei I.lllle wus given his prelimi nary healing ut Beatrice Wednesday on the charge or robbing Thomas Mai tin on the highway or $75 more than a year ago. Judge Spafford bound him over to the district court and In default of $.'.i)00 bonds he was re manded to the county jail. I, locus- Up to Kearney Council. The A ntl-S.'iloon league will pre ;ient u petition Monday night to thl mayor and council requestjiig the sub mhsinn of the question of license or no II cine. Opposition is expected in the council. If :;o, u referendum will be presented ly 15 per cent or the voteis, which will compel submission, Sir iri'iH Steal (Hereout. At Oulriro two strungers entered Voui lu.an' t clothing store Friday and were iv.i:g!it In the act or steullug two overcoj't . They ran out or the store j"d ( JCMpci. olllcer spuhu later ar retted ne i f the men. The ofllcers be lieve tin ic is an orguiiivscd gang of thieves operating In th: vicinity. Sti :i (Quarry Resumes Work. '.. 11. Davis started his stone crush r Mid i.nuriy ut Wymote lust Monday fi :i I i it thirty men. Lust year ..Ir. l.sui employed un average or tlf y men, ut one time for a considerable pei jod :.lIn, w ork to eighty men. !N I. I -tTmiil Cre.,s:r Accident. Ea-ibntiml tiain No. ti. near Muu .h i:. li ! ut'-.er .jfteii ocn, struck a, tin in and wai;on cro.-: iiijf the track, '.iliiiig cue occupant or the wagon nnd wounding two others, one so bad 'y that Ir.: was brought to Fulrbury in an unconscious condition. The par. ties Injured were Kolu inluns. Xi-v lllli School for Wayne. The Wayne Cornineclul club has luken i-teps toward securing In the :icnr future a liamlsi'ine $50,000 high s liol builUinj. 0. IE Commandant Hoyt, of the soldletV home at Grand Island, was In Lincoln Monday and called at the state house to .tee the members of the state board of public lands and buildings. Mr. Hoyt said there would be no deficiency In the maintenance fund of his Insti tution or In other funds except the burial fund. During the last few months there has been a tarsV num ber or deaths 42 since September, and In many Instances the state has had to pay the expenses of the burial. In the maimer of the report of the state accountant that unless expenses were cut down the Institution would have a deficiency, Mr. Hoyt said his ex penses for the next two months would be much lighter than for the winter months and that he had on hand suf ficient coal, groceries and clothing to last until the end of the quarter, and therefore the expenses for March would be very light. While the report of the accountant was true, he said. Insofar us the figures went, th report did not go far enough and show that the expenses made in' January covered supplies for the quarter. The ex penses of the six months, he said, could not be taken as a criterion of what ' the expenses would be In the next six months. In the matter of per mits mentioned In the report Mr. Hoyt said Ms appropriation was such that he had to get permits to buy and fre quently the. state was saved money. Superintendent Hay, of the Insane hospitul at Lincoln, receives $2,fi00 annually, his living expenses for him self and family and $300 for acting us postmaster of the Institution, so the report of the state accountant says. This institution hus a balance In its maintenance fund of $65, 70S. 93, and during the last six months Its average expenditures have been $4,929 month ly. At this rate it will run short at the end of the bienuium $3,296, In ad dition to- its unpaid bills. Steward Gllmore said Monday, however, there wotfld be no shortage and by April 1 the institution would be even ln all funds. An average of $1,000 a month cash receipts will eliminate any defi ciency, said the report of the account ant. Col. John J. Ryder, deputy laboi commissioner, is going to pull up some of the property owners In Lincoln with a short Jerk In the next few days be cause they have not supplied their buildings with fire escapes. In a round of the town he discovered it least twenty-five buildings whlon,-under the la-, should have been equip ped with fire escapes, but which were not. One proprietor said he had been notified some two or three years ago to erect a Are escpe, but had paid no attention to the notice. Mr. Ryder expects to have the courts do his work for him. The Mason City and Fort Dodge Rullrnud company is the first to file a report of taxable property under tho terminal tax law, under which rail road property is assessed for city puv. poses, for the first time ln Nebraska this year. This report wasVlled Friday with Secretary George D. Bennett, of the stute bourd of assessment. The law provides also thut a description of railroad property located in cities and villages he filed with the local assess or. .The law requires that these re ports be filed with the state board of tween Feb. 1 and March 1. Some of the roads which have a great deal of property ln the state assert they can not get their repo'rts ready by the first of the month. Brown county Is the first county In the state to notify the state treasurer that it is going to vote on the proposi tion of erecting a county high school building. The county clerk wrote to Treasurer Brian to see whether the state could buy the bonds, the ques tion being whether the bonds were school bonds or county. Mr. Brian held inasmuch as the bonds will be signed by the county clerk and the chairman of the board or county commissioners the bonds are certainly an obligation or the county and can be bought by the state. He notified the county clerk to have the bonds pay 8 per cent. The proposition to be voted on Is to be an Issue of from $ IR, 000 to $20,000. The railway commission has been asked to see whether the Burlington railroad and the Ensign Transfer com pany are In a combine to prevent other transfer companies from getting busi ness at the station at Lincoln. A hackman came to the state house Tuesduy morning und complained to the commission thut the Ensign people were given the best of everything at the depot. The receipts of the office of the sec retary of stute for the month of Feb ruray were as follows: For filing arti cles of Incorporation, $2,222.90; notary commissions, $70: motor vehicles, $67.10; brands, $K4.G0; certificates and transcripts, $36.60; lubels and trade marks, $4; all other sources, $21. $0; totul. $2,373.80. The stute board of purchase and supplies met formally Tuesday after noon and passed upon the estimates ror the various state institutions for the next quurter, beginning April 1. The estimates were all tubulated by the state accountant and will be ready for the bidders as soon as they ;. be mailed out. Among the bills filed by the board of regents or the 1'nlversity or Nebras. kit ror'Jaiiuaiy with the state auditor was one for $11)0.28 for butter fat sold by the Beatrice Creamery com pany ut 31 cents a pound. The but ter fat was sold to the dairy depart ment at the state f irm. Owing to tho large number of students ut the farm tho dairy herd does not supply suffi cient milk for demonstrations, and It U necesuury to buy milk. The butter made from the milk Is sold and the money goes Into the cash fund of the university. SCORES OF CHILDREN MEET DEATH 111 FIRE. School Building at Colliawae-!, O. Barns and One Hundred and Fifty Pupils Cremated. CROWDED FLOOR COLLAPSES. Victims Are Trapped and Their Dead. Bodies Are Trodden Orer la. the Mad Bush. At least ir school childreu were killed and score injured, mauy prob ably fatally, lii the fire which attacked and burned ilown the Lnkeylew Ptiblle School at North Colllnwood, Ohio, a Cleveland suburb, Wednesday. Not bins; but the four charred walls of the build ing remain standing. The lire broke out so auddeuly that the children were trapped In their rooms. In the terrible panic which fol lowed the little ones were knocked down and mauy were trumped to death and others Injured so that all chances of their esciK were taken from tbetn. The lire wus started by. an overheat ed furnace. The flumes quickly npiviuL A panic ensued when- the ; building tilled with smoke and tho 400 children attempted to em-ape. There were only two exits In the building that were ovuiloble. One of these exits wm used' freely by the children, but the other soon became choked with the children, who dashed mildly for the open air. ' Those who foil in the doorway wer trnuipk-d upon by those behind, and soou the doorway was impawuble. The' frightened and panlc-atrleken children turned to escape by window and any other means that could be found. Em-ape was cut off by the flames which, by thin time, had spread! throughout the rooms. (The bulldlnn was of brick, yet this did not retard the fl utiles. . The Colllnwood fire department hint no extension ladders and could not reach the entrapped children on the third floor of the building. Some of the , children Juiitied. Their fate was us .terrible an the little students who went flown envelojied in flumes. - PaplU In Punic Forget Flwm Drill. ' At the first alarm of Are the high school pupils on the lower floor were uiinle-stiickeii ttuil fought for a menus iif egress, many being trampled at the Joot'H. Hoys fought with their weaker :-lussinutrti In an effort to clamber oyer their shoulders to the light showing ' through the doors above the stropglliut muss of a nns and legs as the children fought for freedom. The crush ut the exits was appalling. The lire drill instruction which the ciill- , j dren had received was forgotten as the . flu nies licked the stairs and the draft from alsa-e carried the smoke and flame after the fleeing pupils, driving them in panic to the street. Many em-niwd the flumes only to tie injured in a mod rush for snfety. When they ran to the head of the stulrs they were beaten buck by the flames. They were caught like rats la a trap. Many dashed in wild frenzy Into the bunk of lire, only, to stagger back exhausted. Above, as the firemen battled with, the fire-fringed frame without, the cull--dren, little, weak five-year-olds and' . their larger brothers and Bisters and: ' playmates, appalled, terror-stricken, j wept and seretiHted In a frantic appeal, for aid. Krantlo I'arenta Fight for Bodies. As the news of the fire spread' through the town frenzied purenta, hat- Jess, their hair waving free as they ran, rushed for the fire scene. Frun- ticully the agonized parents fought j with the jHillce and firemen in their ef I fort to make their war luto the struc ture immediately the fire hud ceased to be a barrier to their entrance. Tear Ht ulncd, wild-eyed mothers fought with the police, futliers mounlng quietly but nobbing always, their hearts torn by the picture of death before them, strug gling to throw themselves into the? flames In a inad rush to save their offsprings or tile with them iu the fiery tomb. J Houses In the neighborhood were converted luto morgues und the bodies) of the children were urrungt-d in rows us fust us they were removed from the wrecked building. j In their frantic state, mot hers sorted over IsHlies. one after another, trying to find their missing children. In most instances Identification was Impossible, us the ImhIIcs were burned and tram pled beyond recognition. The building was of brick, yet this did not retard the progress of the flumes. In a few minutes the lower floor fell, precipitating scores of chil dren to the basement, among the burn ing embers. The scene about the building was heartrending. (Jniekly the news of the terrible ciitasl raphe spread throughout the village and hundreds of parents were crowding about the building lu search of their girls and boys. Plainly the writhing of stilled forms of dozens of others could be seen iu the base ment. Xear-by factories dismissed tuelr men and Instructed them to assist in the rescue. They braved the fire ami made heroic efforts to save those wh were not dead.