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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1909)
KISS ETHTL'5 Di-ETJT. All Parts of the Country Represented at White' House B1L Miss Klhel Roosevelt, daughter of the President, v.:,! formally presented to socles Mondnv, night at a small dance given la the historic east room f the White House. Id this tame room her half Bister, Mra. Alice Roosevelt Lon (worth, made bcr debut on the right ( January 3, 11)02. This auspicious event, which has teea ao eagerly anticipated by society, was attended by COO debutante and beaux of the season, guests being pres ent from every section of the country. Only one member of a family was la rked and Invariably the youngest cue. Ho married people were present sare the matrons of MIm Roosevelt Imme diate family. At 10 o'clock Miss Roosevelt bok her place la the blue room beside her other aad received her guests. She looked very girlish and handsome, gowned Is sort white satin trimmed with crystsla. Her hair was la an effective coiffure and caught through the tawny brawn tresses was a narrow Grecian fillet. Mrs. Roosevelt was gowned la dark blue natln. The room was tastefully deoorsted with palms and &Jt flowers. A notaole feature of the evening was the number of Harvard and other col lege students present. Besides the col lege boys, unmarried attaches of for eign legations and army officers in their gay uniforms made up the bulk f the male contingent Among the onlookers were Mrs. Wil liam Sheffield Oowlea, Mrs. Douglas Robinson, sisters of the President ; Representative and Mrs. Nicholas Lengwortb, Mrs. J. Kllen Roosevelt, the entire Kean family, Mrs. Nat Slra klns, Mrs. Robert Bacon, Mrs. Charles A. Munn, Mrs. Richard Wayne Parker aad Mrs. Herbert Wadsworth. Presi dent Roosevelt viewed the dancing for some time and; then returned to his work. Miss Ethel's two brothers, The odore and Kernilt Roosevelt, ' were among the dancers.' N PRESIDENT OF -ATTACKED III STREET Man Throws Arms About Fallleres Neck and Tries to Pull His Beard. EOTALIST PLOT IS SCENTED. Insult Generally Believed to Be Act of Vainglorious Seeker After Notoriety. While Armand Fallleres, the Presi dent of France, accompanied by M. Ramoudou. his secretary, and Colonel Lasson, military attache at the Elysee palace, was taking a morning stroll near the Rue de l'EtolJe In Paris, a poorly clad Individual, who evidently had been lying in wait, suddenly Jump ed upon the President from behind and threw hfs arms about M. Fallleres' neck In an effort to seize his benrd. Colonel Lasson and Secretary Ramon dou sprang to the assistance of the President dragged off his assailant and turned him over to two special detec tives who had been following the party on bicycles. President Fnll lores' cane was broken in the struggle, but beyond a scratch on the ear he was not In jured and Insisted on continuing his walk. As the detectives slipped the hand cuffs on the roan he cried : "I am un armed. I simply wanted to pull the President's beard." At the station TEASE OF WORLD FALLS OFF. United States Not Alone with De creased Exports and Imports. The United States Is not alone In the record of smaller Imports and smaller exports thnt will characterise the his tory of our foreign commorce In the year 1908. Of the twenty-five principal countries of the world all but four show n falling off In exports, and near ly two-thirds show a falling off In im ports, f Every country with the excep tion of Argentina, Spain, Greece and Sweden show exports of 1003 below those of 11)07. It will thus t seen that the falling off of approximately fnOO.OOO.OOO In im- ports and perhaps $150,000,000 In ex ports In the commerce of the United States during 1008 is part of a general ' condition which prevailed the world over. An analysis of our foreign com- merce this year shows that the princi pal decrease ea the Import sido oc- curred in trade with Europe and on the . export side In the trade with North America. f M v JpS ' Jim" "il saJLhCtite! IBES1MCNT rAUJKKLB. WITCHCRAFT AFFECT3 WILL. Chlldraa TnUfr AgFl Father ffu ' laaaaaeed y atraaaro Bollef. ' Tbs will of Jacob Schonacker was set .aside by a jury in Common Picas Court In Norwalk, Ohio, for t'be reason that the testator-was insane at the time the In strument was drawn, In his elchty-third . year. It is the first time in the history of the county that a will has been brok en. The will disposed of an estate val ued at about $10,000. The balk of the pioperty, two farms, was left to two sons, Joseph and Frederick. One son was cut off entirely; a daughter was be qneathed 3 ; the cars of another son was provided for, and five daughters were left $400 each. The suit to break the will was t Instituted by the daughter to whom $3 -was bequeathed. ' The children testified that their father believed in witchcraft and frequently complained, in his younj1 . er days, that be was under the spell pj witches. Physicians were put upon the stand to show that b?!ivf In witchcraft I wis form of insanity, , house the President's assailant proved to bo Jean Mattls, a cafe waiter, 24 years old and a native of the depart ment of Savole. Medals of General Mercler, the former Minister of War; stamps bearing the hend of the Duke of Orleans, a card of membership la the Patrle Francaise nnd other Royal ist documents were found on his per son. During the examination Mattls boasted of being a Royalist nnd talked confusedly of having done his "duty" and obeyed the dictates of his "con science." Quantities of Royalist reac tlonary literature were found by the police when they ransacked his resl dence. The Investigation reveals the fact that Mattls was In close relation with .the Royalist organization, and this gives color to rumors thnt he was the instrument of a Royalist plot. Serious evidence in this direction, however, is lacking up to the present time. raw NATIONS. President 2otl vclt A-7cs Canada and Mexico to Aid i:i Conservation. liiiniiinrcin.-nt liiis lrn imide at the White IIoi!-'- ill Wiislin ctoii or a pro posed plan fir n eoi.ference looking toward the taniservntloii of the natu ral resources of North America, to be held St the White House Feb. IS next Letters suctr'stlng the plan have been addressed by President Roosevelt to the Governor General nnd to the Premier of Canada and to President Diss of Mexico. They will be deliv ered to the ofilclnls In person by Glf- ford Plnchot. chairman of the Nation al Conservation Commission and chief forester of the United States whom President Roonevelt has chosen as his personal representative to convey the Invitations and to confer with the au thorities of the two governments. Mr. Flnchot first will visit Canada. He then will carry tho Invitation to President Diaz at the City of Mexico. The proposed North American confer ence Is the outgrowth of the two con serration conferences held In Washing ton, In which the governors of the States and Territories were the princi pal conferees. The representatives des ignated by the Canadian and Mexican governments will, under the proposed plan, consult with representatives of the State and other departments of this government nnd with the National Conservation Commission. The main object of the eoiiforenee, as announced, will be to point out that natural re sources are not limited by the bound ary lines which separate nations, to de velop a better knowledge of the natural resources of each nation on the part of the others, and to Invite suggestions for concurrent action for the protection of mutual interests related to conser vation. WORLD'S GREATEST DISASTER ALLITALY STUNNED BY EXTENT OF Province of Calabria Scene of Aw ful Engulfing Seismic Disturbance. MANY THOUSANDS MEET DEATH WILL GIVE UP CUBA JAN 28. Provisional Government of Island to Terminate on That Bate. : Answering Governor Magoon's re quest for authority to convene the Cuban Congress and give formal pos session to tho Cuban government on Jan. 28, the following was received the other day from WaslUngton : Magoon, Havana : Pursuant to in structions from the Promdent, the Secre tary of War directs: 1. That you asnemble the Cuban, con gress on a convenient dnte, to be selected by you, to act on the credentials of members-elect of the hennte and House of Representatives. 2. That, having passed on the creden tials of members-elect nnd completed their organization, they ns:emhle in joint ses sion to canvass and deelnre the result of the vote of the electoral college for Presi dent and Vice President, and thereafter be in recess until reassembled by you for the purposes specified in the following paragraphs : 3. That tlio terms of office of the Sicily in Ruins and Entire Kingdom Terrorised, Fearing- Greater Disaster May Come. One hundred and fifty tluflisnnd per sons of n population of l,"."i0.C0 In the Italian departments of Calabria and Sicily devastated by the earthquake one in every twelve inhabitants are dead in tho most disastrous catastrophe of modern times, In which Uegx'o, a city of 50,000, vanished from the face of the eurtb, leaving but live mad sur vivors. Another city was almost en tirely washed Into the sea and the whole fuce of a nation was chuuged in the space of thirty-two seconds. Tho measure of havoc cannot accurately be estimated. No accurate figures on the death list are obtainable, but apparent ly reliable estimates place the fatalities as high as 1. ",0,000. ,The calamity Is the greatest In the history of the world. From several towns near the center of the disturbance no word rame, and there seemed reason lo fear that there ure no survivors to describe their fate. The destruction of FIRST AID TO THE STRICKEN. 1 Chicago Tribune. violence of the (shock scents to have been unprecedented except by volcanic eruptions within a limited area. The buildings of Messimi were not merely shaken down their foundations liter ally were yanked from beneath thein to one side or to the other, until they toppled from the perpendicular and fell lo ruins alongside their original bites. That was the experience of Mes sina. That of Regglo, on the opposite side of the strait, must have been more violent for scarcely ono stone remains on another in thnt once flourishing city. Chaotic Rock Ilrplnce City. Warships ordered to relieve the Biir vlvors were unable to approach the const, owing to the changed configura tion of the straits of Messina. Ulti mately a torpedo boat ran close to the coat-t, but was unable to discover a trace of the city. Where a few days before stood the homes and works of men and busy strets there was found nothing but chaotic rocks and earth. The city had vanished as completely ns Aladdin's palace under the magi cian's spell. Observations Indicate that Rcgglo was completely swallowed by the earth's collapsing beneath It and the yawning Bite was filled by the sea which advanced In a huge wave there, ns nt Messina. Only five of the city's fiO.OOO inhabitants have been account ed for. These unhappy wretches reach ed Cnttanzaro and . Talml half de mented by fright One of these was TOWNS WRECKED BY THE QUAXB The towns In Sicily nnd southern Italy reported wrecked by the earth quake are as follows : Messina, Sicily Population, 1D0.0O0; wrecked by earthquake and swept by tidal wave; loss ef life enormous. Catania Third largest town In Sicily, in ruins. Paterno, Sicily Ten miles northwest of Catania, 15,000; a heap of smoldering ruins. Vlttoria, Sicily Town of 17,000, od the Camarine river? wrecked. Naro, Sicily Population, 11,000; half deatioyed. All Fifteen miles southwest of Mes sina, one of the most ancient towns In Island; population, 2,000; badly dam aged. Mlneo, Sicily Ninety-six miles north west of Catania; badly damnged. Pattl On the north const of Sicily ; wrecked. Castoreal Population, 7,000; twelve miles southwest of Milazzo; badly wrecked. Pa 1ml, Calabria On the sonthwest coast; population, 11,00; In ruins. Reggio, Calabria Population, 4,.r00; across the Strait of Messina from the city of Messina ; reported completely de stroyed. Scilla, Calabria' Reported destroyed. Bagnara Sixteen miles northeast of Reggio; populution, 7,000; reported wiped out an army officer who telegraphed Home that the city lind been entirely destroyed and that the dead were num berless. The ministry of marine at Rome re ceived wireless reports of the obstruc tion of the strait of Messina, showing Its safe navigation to be Impossible until It Is recharted, whije Its future navigation is likely to be extremely difficult The tidal wave wrecked the lighthouses in the strait, Including Faro beacon, and they crashed Into the sea. The news caused a deep impres sion in Rome, for its N consequences from commercial and military points of vlew will be Incalculable, Other towns nnd villages on both sides of the strait of Messina have been leveled to the ground and nothing to ilr TYPICAL ITALIAN CITY AND MAP OF EARTHQUAKE REGION WHERE THOUSANDS MET AWFUL DEATH. 4, lf'Jt-v was SENDS, or PASTOB ttlDh tiFB WITH RA.Z0B ioaeli,'r"'ws Mlalatos Dead la Apartmeata. ' ' Failing to arrive at ehurek where his " congregation bad assembled for worship,. a searching party wajlermea to searca for Uev. Robert C. Dougherty pastor of .the Congregational church at Buchanan, K. D. Visiting his apartments over tbs . Buchanan State Bank, the minister was. found lying In a pool of blood, with the razor with which he had cut his throat ' grlppod in his band. A' rambling note was found on a table. This note was evi dently written Dec. 23, on which day ha . borrowed a revolver from a neighbor, but his courage failed him then. Mr. Dough- .' orty was formerly in Kansas City. n M I mail lllllll iiannLiL.awia. ... ki V i t . . !wiiiaw. ' i . j. t . , ?; of Cuba shall begin on the 28th of Janu fV- r V V V. A. $ , 1 '," v. - - V 1 ary, on which day they shall ba W - , v 'Wf- & r f? m I T Inaugurated;- that congress rhall be as- feV .1 J ' ifrT i Jf; ' : ' ! 1 1 " J-vS??). gK i sembled daring the forenoon of Jan. .S. j f. 10O0, the call therefor specifying the m ETJ:,rt f f -v. )"7T '.I TVt , L'f i5--Sli!S AY Rial duty'of congrew to be the induct.on i$n 'J fAfcC Into office of the President and the L. IV S' ? t il ? J 1 rPmm X - President, and thereafter the-considera- i . - . Qr.S 5- i Wears Fas Coall Killed aa Bear. Mistaking a drunken man, clad in a long buffalo overcoat, for a bear, Thomas Deckmar, a farmer, shot ' and killed ; Thomas Andrews near Lafayette, Teun. Andrews had been in jail, but was pa roled that be might go home. Instead, he got drunk ami sat down to sleep in a tioorway. ' CUBBEHT NEWS NOTES. Cardinal Victor Luclao Sulpice Lecot arohbumop of Bordeaux, died at Oham bery, France. Date culture in the ' Imperial vajlty, California, is declared to be a success by J. W. Jennings, an experimenter. Justices of the Court of Special Ses sions In New York sat almost all Bight lo efforts to catch up on cases. I Forty-two steam and thirteen sailing vessels were uum in in united States and officially cumbered during Nevsmber. A special commiutlon from Porto Rico la in Washington for the purpos of Indue ;lng CongrtM to Impoae a duty of S cants ,a pound ou foreign coffee, lbs principal industry of tbs island. A brldgs three miles la length will b feullt by the Pennsylvania road ovtr 1111 Oate, from Port Morris, a suburb of Nw York, to Long Island. Tbs center arch will ba 1.000 feet long. Tht Rev. John P. MeClokey, assistant pastor of rha Church of the Immaculate Conception, Toledo, In the pulpit anooune od that bis days were numbered, accord ing to doctors, but be would hbor to tht jUst. ; . , . No football game will be played be tween Iowa and Minnesota next fall and negotiations bave been practically ended, as tbs Gophers insist that the game be played at Minneapolis and Iowa insists tt U be played at Iowa City or not at all. Alfredo De Oro of Cuba is the three cushion billiard champion of the world, having won the third block of the match with Thomas A. Ilueston of St. Louis by the score of DO to 33. The final score for the three blocks game is, De Oro 150, Ilueston 107. Now that Do nm rest and some of the other stars are out of amateur billiards, owing to the showing up In Chicago, It should be possible to arrange an unusu ally interesting amateur tourney, for the lesser players wifl have a chance now they did not have before. Negotiations are on to take the Cornell, Tale and Harvard rowing crews to Seat tle during the Alaska-Yukon-Paciftc ex position next summer. It is planned to bold at least one regatts on Lake Wash ington each month during the exposition, which t pens June l and closes Oct. 10. The State board of control of high school athletics will not decide on the phice for the annual meet of the Iowa blgh schools, but the different Institutions will be given an opportunity to choose the location of the big yearly event. Dea Moines expects to capture the meet. A fine row has been stirred up In base ball circles by statements from Umpire Klem and Johnstone that an attempt was made to bribe them at the decidiug game between New York and Chicago at the New York Polo ground. Na tional League officials are Inveutiguting and prosecutions may follow. Harry Pulllam was unanimously elect. ed president of tbs National Baseball League at the annual meeting of the as sociation. John Heidler wu re-elected to the secretaryship. Freeport wants to stay in the Wiscon. ain-Illinois League. A committee la now busy in the Illinois city raising the dif ference between $1,K) already subscrlb- td and the total r..r00 deficit. The crowds v attending football games are increasing every year. An attendance of 30.000 or more at big game Is not un common this year. Tbt smaller college games are drawiug proportionately arg crowds. tion of all matters within the Jurisdiction of congress nt its regular sessions; that the President bo inaugurated and the provisional government terminated at 13 o'clock noon on said Jan. i!M, 15X10. This means the complete approval of the plan submitted by you. EDWARDS. GROSS-EAKNINGS TAZ IS LEGAL. Minnesota Wins Casea Aaalnat Great Northern and the Maple Leaf. The State of Minnesota won a dorublt victory in the Supreme Court in St. Paul when that court, by Justice C. L. Brown, filed opinions in its favor in vbotb tin Chicago Great Western and the Great Northern railways tax cases. The courl upholds the validity of the law increasing the railroad gross-earnings tax from 3 t 4 per cent, which the roads attacked nt unconstitutional. Attorney General E. T. Young personally fonpht the roads' con tention that they could not be made t pay a gross-earnings tax larger than thi 3 per cent, which was provided for in their territorial charters. 'flie Great Northern case nominally involves $120,. 737.38 for 1005 taxes. The Gre.it West ern case Involved about $2.",0K). Th amount at stake, however, is really mora than f 150,000 a year to the State treas ury, if the decision is sustained by tht United Spates Supreme Court, to which It will undoubtedly he appealed. a' ?t JALE-RMO- OK THE. KOCRTti eQAyT-Of Jl typical. eoAyT ' tOwav RIVALS FIGHT DUEL TO DEATH. property could not be as great aa at San Francisco, for Messina and Reg gio, the two principal cities destroyed, were not rich or mngulflcent from the metropolitan point of vleyv. , Faee of Connlrr la Altered. As a great cataclysm of nature, how- ' ever, this disaster is ou a far vaster scale than the California phenomenon. I The whole face of the country and the I const line have been altered. Even ' Bcylla and Cliarybdls linve changed the j positions they have occupied since I Aenns' legendary voyage. The three ' provinces where the greatest damage was done were Messlnn nnd Catania, tilrl UeJeHa tlotb, t hnllena-a Follows and One la Killed. RcoaUss Julia Pico, ajjed 14, would ao .. ..ft . . . , . l. V?, cent neuner as ner nusnanu, i oweu ror mlch and Michael Milanovitch fought I duel with short knives In a darkened room, in Cleveland. , Formlch was killed after he had buried his kuife In tha neck of his opponent. During the fray ring about the contestants. - Repeatedly , P8 nd much damage the girl for whom the men fonght at-1 wns done outside of these provinces, tempted to Interfere. Not until thej . but within them tho devastation was paused long enough to knock her sense- , so complete that scarcely u uuuinn less did she desist In her attempts al , habitation remains &m-mMnmwmmMmwm mat In Sicily, and Reggio ill Calabria, on the mainland. They comprise about , 4,400 square miles. The rock of Cha : rybdls now blocks the entrance to the ' Btrnlt of Messlnn. Several hundred peacemaking. Both men loved the girl Both proposed marriage to her. She re -fused both, saying tluit the man she loved was far away. Milanovitch supiioscd thai Formicb was the lucky man and chnh leased him to a duel. Milanovitch wa taken to a hospital ufter he had beeq barged with murder. Upheaval Lasts 32 Seconds. All accounts agree that the time oc cupled by nature's gigantic spasms was but thirty-two seconds. Some minutes later a great wave completed the havoc In the 111 fated coast towns. The t -. M AT OP SJieiLY.AHD UOWEJS- ITLV. iiiOWlK(j r sei I QGAhE IK 1906.THE. AMl 3Y ITALIAX. HILITI., but ruins are left to Indicate wbero they formerly stood. Messina 'Warned Often. Messina experienced a similar dls- nster in 1788. She had then the same preliminary warnings during the pre vlous four or five years that she had recently In 15K)5 and 1007. Both Mes sina and Reggio are on the seismic line of contact or boundary between the primary and secondary formations which separate Mount Etna and Mount Vesuvius. Jt Is a veritable storm cen ter of earthquakes, yet Messina stayed for this last lesson lu the light of mod ern scientific knowledge. Messina prob ably will not rise again from her ruins and ashes. This last overwhelming calamity will alter the future history of Sicily and southern Italy. It will be regarded as certain that a conslderoble portion of the population of this fair land will bow before the wrath of the goda and seek homes elsewhere. Next to Italy Itself, America will feel the effect of this calamity more thau any otner country, for a large proportion of the stricken population will seek refuge there as soon as the means of flight can be secured. 4 Low Water Delays t'oal Ship. A ablpmcut of l.iHsMKH) bushels of coai left the Kanawha ilvcr the other day foi Cincinnati and Louisville. The river al dam No. U lacked one foot of enough water to start the Pittsburg 8eet of ovet H.1,000,000 bushels for the South on Tuesday. havea Maa Kills Self with Raior. Taking the raxor with which he baa just finished ahaviug man In the Port Jervis, N. Y barber shitp where he wui employed, Paul Graff, 31 years old, cut his own throat, dying Instantly. Extra Kara Law Held Valid. The Ohio Supreme Court has upheld the validity of the Uw enacted by the Leg islature last winter, giving railroad coin. panles authority tq charge an extra 10 MANY HURT IN THEATER TANIQ. Plro a Stasia at Altouaa, Pa., Kuata Spectators ia llurrjr. Following the close of an act at tht Keith Theater In Altoona, I'a., where a nioving picture show was being presented, fire started on the stage. There was a maA rush for the exits by the panlc stricfien spectators and many received painful bruises. While the firemen wer responding to an alarm tbs names spread rapidly, consuming the stage nad much of the Interior. , BURGLAB GETS $29,000. Baa Theft Da to Fanltr Repair - Work But for the reversing of a spring in the vault time lock a burglar could not cents for tickets puMiased on trains. The hav, earrl(Hi ,w f20,700 from the First tjuesuon came up in a case irom Mgani v.tlon.i iao). 0f Monrovia. Cal. Four county, brought by Marion Miller ogalust tha Toledo and Ohio Central At Frankfort, Ky Justice leasing, is the Court of Appeals, rendered a decision giving horsemen a sweeping victory, hold ing that betting or wagering on a bene race is not gaming oud cannot be cos strued as a felouy. days before the robbery an expert lock smith from Los Angeles overhauled the lock. He did bis work faultily and left the lock outwardly in good shape, but actually useless. Tbe fact that the burg lar bad still to open an ordinary combi nation lock baa caused the belief that he was skilled la the handling of locks. Commits Suicide In a Tab. Despondent from a long illneas, caused by a caucer of the throat, uaviu.nari, SO, a Civil War veteran, committed sui cide by drowning hlmsell ma oataiuu in the hospital ai m Dayton. Ohio, f At Frankfort, Ky., Justice leasing, in the Court of Appeals, rendered a decision giving horsemen a sweeping victory, hold ing that betting or' wagering on a horse race is not gaming aud cannot be con strued as a felony. i Eatra Faro Law Held Valid. - The Ohio Supreme Court has upheld the validity of the law enacted by the Leg islature last winter, giving railroad com panies authority to charge an extra 10 cents for tickets purchased on trains. The question came up in a case from Logan county, brought by Marion Miller against the Toledo and Ohio Central. ' Shares Maal Kills Self with Raaor. Taking the razor with which he had just finished shaving a man in the Port Jervis, N. Y barber shop where he was employed, Paul Graff, 31 years old, cht bis own throat, dying Instantly. ' CURRENT NEWS NOTES. Cardinal Victor Lucian Sulpice Lecot, archbishop of Bordeaux, died at Cham bery, France. Date culture In the Imperial valley, California, is declared to be a success by J. W. Jennings, an experimenter. Justices of the Court of Special Ses sions in New York sat almost all night in efforts to catch up on cases. Forty-two steam and thirteen sailing vessels were built In the United States aud officially numbered during November. A special commission from Porto Rico is In Washington for the purpos of Induc ing Congress, to impose a duty of 0 cent a pound -on foreign coffee, the principal Industry of the Uland. A bridge three miles in length will be built by the Pennsylvania road over Hell Gate, from Port Morris, a suburb of Now York, to lug island. 4 ne center area will be 1,000 feet long. The Rev. John P. McCloskey, assistant pastor of the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Toledo, in the pulpit announc ed that bis days wer numbered, accord' ing to doctors, but he would labor to tb lust. Beaten, Robbed, Cremated. J. A. Gollahon, 75 year old, of Broad- ford. Vs., was beaten, robbed and incin erated in his own house, which was set afire by tramps, who are thought to have known that the old man bad money around the premise. Entombed Miners Found Dead. Entombed in the Pennsylvania colliery V at Mount Carmel, Pa., by an avalanche . of coal, the bodies of Frank Logan and l Stanislaus Mortsvsge were found in a ' tnanway by a rescuing party. Blaek Uaad Wraoka Hooao. 1 Bacaus be refused to pay $1,000 de- tnandedS the Black Hand is believed to4 have attempted to kill Joseph Cacolici and; his family In Cleveland. Dynamite vwaa erploded at a corner of his house and -nii-wlerahle dane ras done, but ao one I was hurt, Disbarred Attorney Loses 0le. Judge Jones of the Circuit Court in Sioux Falls. S. D., has decided' that George W. Egan, who was elected State's Attorney after his disbarment by tbe Su preme Court, Is not eligible to held the office.