IK f m K i - McKilt Bros P O Brownlee Xcb Bight or left Mdo Horses same on left shoulder i i Earmark Swal low tail clip right or left car Range Big Creek r 3 J W I Hi John H Ham an IBMgVM Brownlec Neb Also and AE be s Horses on left shoulder Range Goose Creek and Rorth Louo Marshall Wolfenden Kennedy Neb Some s on the left liin Horses Son left shoulder Krand is small Karmark Quarter clip behind half cir cle forward on leit ear Range Lone Tree Lake Jfc fen Louis F Richards yB I Mcrinmn Xeb i ea i TilTi irilfi m mi iir iFr Charles Richard iMcrrimnii Neb Rosebud S D Horses Cattle hole in each ear Range Big and W R Kissel Brownlee Neb Also some below lett Inn AlSO J right hip Range Kissels Runch Thomas Farren Rosebud S D ID 1183 either left 3ide or hip F onlert Horses sll0uler Range head of Antelope TcF I Mi fl iLMPnMfBi Wheeler Bros IB I BKi Cody Neb Range on the Snake River and Chamber lain flat Louis J liichards Merrimau Neb f n I Charles H Faulhaber S Paul Didier Little white Rivers Brownlee Nebr Either right or left side on cattle Horses same on left shoulder Left ear cut off of cattle Range Loup river IDGJ Charles C Tackett 7 I Rosebud 5 D Range head of An telope near 3t Marys mission Horses brandpd on left thigh William F Schmidt Rosebud S D On left side Horses branded same on left hip or shoulder Range on Horse Creek s TBI mi JV John DeCory JXD 111 Rosebud S D Some branded ID 417 on left side Horses JD on left hip hange in Meyer Co ou Antelope Creek - S H Kimmel Rosebud S D Also B4U on left side Cattle undercut on both ears Horses branded 4 on left shoulder Range on Antelope ndHprinc Creeks f U4U1 JURY FAILS TO AGftEE FAMOUS LUETGERT MURDER CASE ENDS IN A MISTRIAL Jury Was Out Sixty six Hours and Stood on Last Ballot Nine to Three for Conviction Isew Trial Will Be Necessary End of the IrOng Sicee The great Luetgert trial in Chicago the most absorbing criminal prosecution of the century ended in a disagreement of the jury For sixty six hours the jury tried in vain to reach a verdict For thirty-eight hours the vote was 9 to 3 for conviction and at 1040 oclock Thursday forenoon the twelve men announced an irreconcilable disagreement and Judge Tuthill being convinced that it was use less and inhuman to attempt to force a verdict reluctantly ordered its discharge The twenty second and last ballot stood nine for conviction and three for acquit tal This was irrespective of any ques tion of the penalty which had to wait on the jurys decision as to the guilt or inno cence of the prisoner The big sausage maker the center of a series of the most dramatic episodes in the annals of crim inal procedure will have to go through this experience a second time for he will be put on trial again for the murder of his wife The closing events of the famous trial made up a scene of not more than eleven minutes duration But a tense feverish emotion was packed into every one of these minutes and even Luetgert with his iron nerve felt the strain His face was bloodless as he entered the court room and a tangle of deep furrows extended across his brow A keen swift look shot from beneath his shaggy gray eyebrows and his glance seemed to take in at a Hash that the supreme moment in his fate had arriv ed As he came in from the jail a battery of eyes threw at him looks whose signifi cance expressed all degrees of curiosity In his walk his manner his mien con straint was there and the anxiety that sent the blood from his cheek and put a purple tinge on his lips was visibly shared in by his counsel Coiut was opened and the jurors noti fied to appear Nearly three days of wrangling loss of sleep and the close con finement had worked a wonderful trans formation on them They entered the room with lagging steps and sank into their chairs a woe begone looking crowd ADOLPHT LUETGERT i i In response to command from Judge Tut hill Foreman Heichhold arose in his place and announced as his positive belief that no verdict could be reached The judge interrogated the jurymen individually and each positively declared that no influence or argument could change his opinion The attorneys for both sides agreed that the jury be discharged and it was done Thus ended the first trial of what must be regarded as one of the most remarka ble criminal cases of the century The trial was in progress nearly nine weeks and cost the State of Illinois over 15 000 Of the disagreement it can frankly be said that the division in the jury fair ly represents the division of opinion in the great world outside the jury box where every fact and incident of the trial has been followed with engrossing scrutiny It is probable that a poll of all those who have given intelligent consideration to the testimony and the law as laid down by the court would present a division of three to one in favor of a conviction The proportion of those who believe in the prisoners guilt is probably much greater But belief in guilt and convicting a pris oner on circumstantial evidence such as that produced for the State in this case are two very different things Ready for a New Trial States Attorney Deneen said he vould press for another trial but when he did not know ITe said it would be on the same theory as the one finished was pros ecuted The vat theory the boiling of the body of his wife in crude potash and again the convincing part of the evidence of the heinous murder would be the rings It was the rings that fortified the ma jority in the jury in its demand for the conviction of Luetgert Attorneys Vin cent and Phalen said they were ready for the new trial whenever it might be held They said they would present a far strong er defense than before Luetgert said he was anxious for another trial and con fident it would be ended in his acquittal lie charged the failure of securing a ver dict that would exonerate him from the fearful charge to the fact that Juror Shaw was accepted The next time he asserts he will take the stand in his own defense with or without the consent of his counsel Judge Tuthill said that he believed it would be impossible to select i competent jury in Cook County on of the publicity given to the pro ceedings of the trial just ended It is therefore possible that Luetgert may uev r be tried again Luetgert said he was not surprised that Ill jury disagreed and that he was confi ijmi no verdict would be made tweuty rrr hour before He was not taken by surprise when he heard Foreman Heich hold announce that no verdict had been ihide and none was likely to follow NeUher was it a surprise to him when vely man hi the jury box said the same thing in response to the questions of Judge Tuthill as he polled the jury No objection was made to the discharge of the jury Judge Tuthill asked Attorneys Vincent and Phalen what they were dis posed to do and they said it seenied as if the discharge of the jury was the only thing justified by the situation Luetgert was tni n asked the same question by Judge Tuthill and he agreed with his at torneys States Attorney Deneen said JURORS IN THE LUETGERT TRIAL Jy l Bibbv n T E Fowler Jr 2 Henry Franzer G S S Barber 8 J S Shaw 7 Jame Ilosmer 4 J Mahoney Secretary S J ii Boyd he thought it was apparent that the jury could not agree Not once however did the jurors ask to be discharged They were a determined set of fighters and they looked for no interference on the part of the judge in whose discretion they might have been released at any time In the interviews given by members of the jury they said they paid little atten tion to the bones Although the battle of the osteologists was the great feature of the trial the sesamoid femur and other bones which were introduced in evi dence as portions of Mrs Luetgert and over which the battle was fought were not considered by the jurors They were cast aside as having no weight in prov ing guilt To the way of thinking em ployed by several of the jurors the work of impeaching the Schimpke girls and Nick Faber was fruitless There were those in the jury who gave credence to their testimony that they saw Mrs Luet gert with her husband going toward the engine room of the factory that night Greater however than all of the evi dence was that of the rings The ab sence from the smaller ring of any mill ing was the point that did most to keep the three jurors strong in their assertion that Luetgert was innocent Nearly all of the witnesses said the small ring had a milled edge when they saw it with Mrs Luetgert while the one in evidence had a smooth outer surface And when it was all ended an encomium of Inspector Schaacks methods issued from the jury room With the exception of Foreman Heichhold who wrote this peculiar docu ment in w hich Schaacks manner of secur ing evidence was commended most of the jurors denied any knowledge of signing such a document They admitted hav ing signed resolutions of thanks to Judge Tuthill and the court officers but exhibit ed no knowledge of the last paragraph which sounded approval of the north side police inspector Were it not for Juror Harlev it is as serted by many of the other jurors a ver dict of guilty Avould have been rendered Harlev was convinced of Luetgerts in nocence and he voted for acquittal on every ballot His positiveness was a prop and support to Holabird and Barber who voted with him on every ballot When he left the court building he was cheered by the crowds in the street who distin guished him as the one who was immova ble in his belief of the prisoners inno cence After nearly two months of legal con tention the case goes upon the records to be cited as another of the historic mur der trials of the century The celebrity of this sensational case has been partly due to the extraordinary character of the alleged crime as described by the State and partly to the unusual developments of the trial itself The State had before it tlje difficult task of evoking the image of Mrs Luetgert from a few bones and two gold rings To connect the dead woman with the accused it then had to present to the jurors a story which naturally wouid seem hard to believe and in proof of which it had only circumstantial evidence msmm IlifMHri W Mis TUETGEKT to offer Experts were called in to iden tify bones and debris and then these gen tlemen were promptly met by experts for the defense who were able to deny the possibility of such an identification This feature of the case more even than the length of time consumed and the endless technical discussions will call attention again to the marked inferiority of Amer ican criminal procedure as compared with that abroad There was a waste of time and money and there was an unconscion able waste of words There were times during the testimony of the experts when the recondite investigations into science becametalmost farcical and made this 9 William narlev 10 James H Holchold Foreman 31 J P Behmlller 32 Louis Holabird grave case a subject of jocular mention throughout the country As a result of all this the jury when it retired for a consideration of the law and the evidence found it impossible to unite ou any verdict satisfactory to all of the twelve men After spending sixty six hours in heated discussion a majority numbering nine men gave up the attempt to persuade the other three that Luetgert should be convicted and Judge Tuthill let them all go home While the majority of the public may believe that Luetgert was guilty of the terrible crime laid to his charge there has always been room for a lingering doubt in many minds that would operate powerfully on a jurors mind to prevent conviction But for this lurking fear of doing an irreparable injustice to an inno cent man the circumstances of this case would have placed Luetgert bejond the pale of human sympathy The trial with its disagreement has blasted his life for ever a wrong beyond repair if he is in nocent a righteous retribution if the cir cumstantial testimony of the deserted fac tory and its hideous evidences of criinf told the truth MKINLEYS IMAGE IN BRONZE Medals Now Beinp Struck Off the Philadelphia Mint Bronze medals bearing the likeness of President McKinley are being rapidly struck off by the mint and soon the whole issue will have been finished This work is being done in accordance with an an cient custom that has prevailed ever since the time of Washington The medals are very valuable inasmuch as the supply is 1 JlWmi THE MKIXTKY MEDAT I limited and the demand is large Some collectors have complete collections of these medals from that showing the pro file of Washington to that showing the profile of Cleveland Several of the med als already struck off have been sent to the President for himself and the mem bers of his cabinet The profile of the President is an excellent likeness On the reverse side is the date of the inau guration Large orders for the medals are expected and the receipts are for the ben efit of the mint earnings Sparks from the Wires Weyler it seems drew a blank and Spain a Blanco The Central railroad buildings at Ma con Ga were destroyed by fire Loss i7r000 A C Deuel aged 75 for forty years superintendent of the public schools of Lrbana Ohio was killed by a freight train President Gompers has issued a call for the seventeenth annual convention of the American Federation of Labor at Nash ville Tenn to begin Dec 13 The auxiliary yacht Utowana has been sold to Allison V Armour of Chicago a member of the iNow lork lacnt Club who has for years owned the steam yacht Ituna The coroners jury in the inqueset upon the death of Cashier Struble of Shepherd Mich rendered a verdict of suicide The verdict was reached after eighteen hours deliberation Forest fires near Austin Pa are under control after burning 200000 worth of timber The northern part of Cayuga County N Y is ablaze and great dam age has been done The complaint of Mortimer Hendricks of New York City against the Manhat tan Railway Company alleging that its directors had unlawfully paid out 3000 000 has bees dismissed United SUies Commissioner Tunison decided to hold Karl A Karlsehn who shipped as carpenter on the British ship Favonius to Rio Janeiro from Pensacola Fla charged with the burning of the ship at sea John Harris shot and killed George Kebo an escaped convict at- Keokuk Iowa Kebo is Harris son-in-law but was not living with hi3 wife Kebo broie into the house and fired at Harris who killed him The Cleveland express on the Cleveland and Pittsburg Railroad ran into a shift ing engine in the West Park Allegheny Pa Ross Griffin fireman was fatally hurt and a number of passengers were cut and bruised PLAIN OR FANCY P RINTINQ JOO X X XXff fefo wwm QUICKLY 3i CPECIALTIES o BILL HEADS LETTER HEADS NOTB HEADS STATEMENTS - ENVELOPES INVITATIONS PROGRAMMES MBmfSk LAROB POSTERS BUSINESS CARDS SMALL POSTERS CALUNQ CARDfj SALE BILLS ETC CHROMO GARDSi Notary Publi 1 W E HALEY Eeal Estate ABSTRACTER Valentine Nebraska 1000000 Bond Filed Office in P O Building J The DONOHER Has recently been refurnished and thoroughly renovated making it now more than ever worthy of the reputation it has always borne of being THE MOST COMPLETE AND COMFORTABLE HOTEL IN THE NORTHWEST Hot and Cold Water Excellent Bath Room Good Sample Room M JT nONOHEU Proprietor Qherry Qounty Bank Valentine Nebraska - Every facility extended customers consistent withTconservative banking Exchange bought and sold Loans upon good security solicited at reasonabls rates County depository E SPAEKS President CHABLES SPARKS Cashier B ANK OF VALENTINE C B CORNELL Freaidmnt JU V NICHOLSON Caahier Valentine Nebraska A General Banking Business Transacted Buys and Sells Domestic and Foreign Exchange Correspondents Chemical National Bank Now York First National Sank Osaataa CITIZENS - MEAT - MARKET GEO G SCHWALM PROP This market always keeps a supply of FISH AND GAME In addition to a first class line of Steaks Roasts Dry Salt Meats Smoked Hams Breakfast Bacon and Vegetables At StsttersOld Stand on Main Street VALENTINE NEBRASKA THE PALACE SALOON HEADQUARTERS WINES LIQUORS and CIGARS Ol the Choicest Brandi Valentine Nebraska Remember that this office is fully prepared at all times to turn out on the shortest notice in the most artistic and workmanlike manner all kinds of s vJob Print injp