It 4 t DAKOTA COUNTY' HERALD, VOLUHE XV DAKOTA CITY, NEB., FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1907. NUMBEB 30. LATEST BY TELEGRAPH SUSUtARY OP TMB NEW5 Of THE WtlOLB WORLD. BOISE FEARS ORDEAL lAKRYOUS DHKAH OP TRAGEDY WRING MIXERS' TRIAL. TredJctiona Are Freely Made Uiat Man Who Confessed lie Won Hired to Kill Kx-Govovcrnor Will Be At tacked In Witness Ciialr. Counsel for the prosecution and de fense in the Steunenberg murder case at Boise, Idaho, have settled down to their final preparation work and there is every reason for believing that the trial of William Haywood, first of the accused, will be commenced on Thurs day next. Various reports as to moves tend ing to further delay the trial are In circulation, but the attitude of both ides indicates thut they are ready to go to the, bar for trial. The only preliminary proceedings pending is a motion by the di-fenso for a bill of particulars of the evidence from which the state hopes to show that Haywood conspired in the murder of Steunenberg. Violence Is the ever present fear. The position of the prisoners and their activity through years of bitter labor warfare, the dissension over their ar rest In Colardo and removal to Idaho, the rallying of thousands of working men to their support and the radical propaganda undertaken in their be half, together with the. Intense feel ing against the Mine Owners' associa tion and other Incidents have served, rightly or wrongly. to make the case in the minds and Attitude of thouv sunda a -contest between the classed raTher than a trial for ' the alleged crime of murder. . ' In few minds' is there belief that Haywood, Moyer mid Pcttibone. their friends or the men iifflltated with them in labor union circles would ap- prove, much less encourage, any act ,' of violence at this time, because such .'act, it is believed, would be a fatal error. . . ' llONOU "LITTf,K MACK? M'Clcllaii Statue Unveiled In Yolilng ton. . ' President Roosevelt, cabinet ofllcers, army ana navy ottlccrs ana men prominent in civil life participated Thursday afUrnoon in the ceremonies attending the unveiling of the statue to Clen. George B. McClellan, which has been erected in Washington by the Society of the Army of the Poto mac. Hundreds of old soldiers attend ed the ceremonies. Addresses Were made by President Roosevelt and MaJ. Gens. Sickles, Howard and Dodge. The statue Is the. work of Sculptor MacMonnies. When Mr. MacMonnics first made his model for the statue In his studio In Olvcrny. near Paris, many artists admired its vigorous treatment. The figure of the general had been modeled from photographs busts and articles worn by him during war times, furnished to the sculptor by relatives and comrades of Oen. McClellan. roit hlowinj; a oiicuch. fuse Against nil Alleged Pennsylvania Dynamiter ;ivcn Ut Jury, All the evidence in the case of Jo- , eph Ohunowsky. charged with dyna miting the Welsh Congregational nt Edwardsville, Pa., two years ago. was given to the Jury Thursday. Sensational evidence was Introduc ed In this ease when a man named Stephen Savage confessed on the stand that ho and Ohnnowsky had been promised $125 If they blew up the church, the money to be paid by a rertain saloonkeeper who had been refused a. liquor license by the court Kavage implicated a prominent bu:d ness man of Edwardsville as being the one who was ready to pay the monev This man was on haid Thursday to take the stafd and deny the statement made by Stvage. but the court said It was not necessaiy. us there wus no di rect evidence to show he had anything o do with the deed. - Attempt to Wreck Train. ' An attempt was made Wednesday night towrecka passenger train on the Chicago and Northwestern railway heavily loaded with passengers bound from Milwaukee nfid Rucine for Chi cago, but fortunately an extra freight train struck the obstruction placed on the track and only the locomotive left the rails. Sioux City Live Stock Market. Thursday's quotations on the Sioux City live stcck market follow: Butch er steers, t4.SSfSS.lS. Top hogs. .S0. Examining Range Fences. - Under, the direction of the depart mnt of the interior a corps of special agnU bfn work Thursday examln Ing fencen and titles to public lunds li Wyoming. Break Immigrant Record Ten trans-Atlantic liners brought more than 15,000 aliens to New York Wednesday, which is the record the number f Immigrants for day." in one PARIS HOIt IX RIOT. Officer Wounded by American Citizen. The expectation that May day woald pass off In Paris without vlo lenee was not realized. The day be ran calm, but toward evening the working center In the vicinity of the trades unions' headquarters ' became the scene of serious disturbances. In which many persons were Injured. Th precautions taken by the au thorities and the stern determination to repress disorders, however, brought tranquillity before midnight. Over 1,000 arrests were made dur ing the day. Twenty persons were badly injured and a great number of others are suffering from contusions or from being trampled. During the afternoon Jacob Law, who la a naturalised American, from the top of an omnibus passing the Place de la Republlque, fired Ave shots, by which two cuirassiers were wounded. . The crowd attempted to lynch Law, who was dragged from the omnibus. He was rescued by the police after he had been severely beaten. After a meeting at the Labor ex change 5,000 men proceeded to the headquarters of the labor federation, hooting the police meanwhile. Charges were made by the police and a woman flred, the bullet striking a member of the bicycle patrol. The squad of po lice, drew their sabers and revolver and' a lively melee followed, lasting half an hour. The police pressed the crowd to' the banks of St Parten'f canal, during which 200 arrests were made and many persons hurt. CHICAGO FIRE' CAUSES PANIC. 109 Women In Mad Hindi to lapt Flames. About forty women were Injured Wednesday in a Arc In a building at 66 Wabash avenue, Chicago. The first floor was occupied by the Stor & Clark Piano Company, and the three upper floors by the Lotus Lunch club, which is patronized exclusively by women. When the flames were discovered fully 100 women, including the. em ployes,' were in the place, and nt the first 'cry of fire an Immediate panic ensued. A number of women leaned from the windows of the second and third stories to the streef below. The greater number, however, rushed to the fire escape. This was filled th few seconds with a struggling mass of women, making desperate efforts to climb down. A number lost their holds and fell to the street, and others wero pr.shed off. i The flames, which started In the basement Van' up the elevator shaft at terrific speed, and cut off a number of women in the front part of the building. About a third of these, de spite the warnings of spectators, leap ed to the ground. Others were taken out by firemen without being Injured MUS. YERKES ARKS DIVORCE. xjve of the Widow for Wilson Mlner Soon ;rovs Cold. A suit, believed to be for a divorce has been begun by Mrs. Mary Adelaide Mlzner against Wilson Mtssner. of New York, and Louis B. Hasbrouck was Wednesday appointed referee to take testimony. Mrs. Mlzner was the widow of ("has. T. Yerkes, the traction and subwav promoter. me marriage of Mrs. Yerkes to Wilson Mlzner occurred a few months after the death of her husband, over a year ago. Several weeks after the marriage the pair separated, and since then all sorts of reports have been afloat regarding them.' RACE RIOT IV INDIANA. A .Mob of 500 Whites Attacks Negroes at f.reeiiHhiirg. A bitter teeling against the negroes as the result of an assault on an aged white woman last Saturday caused u race riot at Greensburg, Ind., Mon day night. Six AiegroeB were badly beaten, one of whom may die. Th mob numbered 500. All the saloon und other places frequented by lie nivr inucn iiequeiueu oy lie Were visited und furniture and 8 Idemollshed. The negroes in the places were beaten and d to leave town. The author!- groes were visited und furniture and fixtures found warned ties finally Induced the crowd to dls perse after promising that all negroes of bad character would be compelled to leave. 0 Brownsville Raises Fund. a movement nas Deen Btarted a Brownsville, Tex.,' towards raising by popular subscription $10,000 to be paid as a reward to any soldier or of tlcer of the Twenty-fifth Infantry wh will confess to having participated in the raid on Brownsville in August last, or will give the names or produce the necessary evidence to convlc those who are guilty. Moors Hide Murderers. It is said the Moorish authorities are keeping secret the whereabouts of the murderers of Dr. Mauchamps, French subject, who was killed some weeks ago, being, afraid to have the truth as to the cause of the murder known. Requisition from Illinois Honored A requisition from the governor of Illinois for the return to that state of Fred C. Stanley, who was arrested In Sacramento, Cal., on a charge of grand larceny, was honored by the governor of California. i Labor Troubles In Japan. Owing to the discharge of 600 workmen from the ship yards at Ku raga, Japan, disorders have broken out there and parts of 'he works have been destroyed. Troopahav been sent RESCVK IMPRlSOAfcU MINERS. Heroic Struggle at Johnstown la Suc cessful. After being entombed since last Frl- y noon In the Berwlnd-Whlte Coal company mine No. J 8 at Foustwell, near Johnstown, Pa., the seven min ers who were shut off from the world by a sudden rush of wateV caused by the breaklngof uwall of an abandoned mine, were rescued at 10 o'clock Tuesv day night. The men were greatly ex hausted. Owing to their weakened condition It was decided not to bring them out until after the mine had been drained. The men were reached at 10 o'clock by Stiney Roden and Charles Ream, who made a dash through fifty feet of water which filled the heading. Earlier In the day John Holya, a brother of one of the Imprisoned min ers, and three comrades made a futile ttempt, to reach the men. They oamo back half drowned and reported that portions of the heading were still completely filled With water and that more pumping would have to be done befWe. the Imprisoned men could be reached. The efforts t pumping were then redoubled. At 10 o'clock the water had so far gone down that it was resolved to make one more at- empt to break through to the over cast, where It was believed the unfor tunate men were still 'uilvo. Stiney Kodon ud Charles Heum volunteered for (he service. Over an hour elapsed before either man was heard from, and then Ream came swimming back through the heading bringing the first news from the im prisoned seven. The effort had near ly exhausted Ream. Ho reported that the seven men were alive and all In good shape, hut until more pumping was done the passage to the place where they had taken refuge was im passable to those who could not swim. Then it was resolved to let them re main where they are until the head- ing had been pumped out. SLAV CRISIS IS AVERTED. lhe Recruiting Hill Is Passed by the Duma. The lower house nt the Russians parliament Tuesday adopted the gov ernment's recruiting bill. ( With the exception of the Novoe Vremya, which holds Itself outside the ordinary press restrictions, not one of the morning papers Tuesday ventured to report Monday's debate on the gov ernment recruiting bill in the lower house of parliament,' fearing suspen sion, and In their accounts of the ex- executive session of the house refer red only guardedly to the conflict be tween the house and government. President'- Cilovln Is quoted in an interview as saying: "Conditions are now so changed there is no prospect of an early dissolution of parliament, and there Is ground for the hope that the lower house will display creative activity resulting in the enactment of necessary reforms." HITS MOTHER: ENDS HIS LIKE. St. IjuiIs Painter Kills Himself He- . cause of Remorse. At the Inquest Tuesday Into, the death of Edward Linte, of St. Louis, Mo., aged 24, who committed suicide Monday night by shooting, it develop ed that Linte had taken his life be cause of remorse In having struck his mother A'ith his first. He had been out of work as a painter for some time, and. Monday his mother chlded him for not making further efforts to procure employment. In a rage he struck her in the face,, but later he returned and .. weeplngly begged forgiveness, which she freely granted. Then he went Into the cellar and shot himself. Killed Man with a Blow. The coroner's jury ut London Tuesday found "Pedlar" Palmer, the English Pugilist, guilty of manslaugh ter in causing the death of Robert Choat, a gas house stoker. Pulmer struck Choat In a railroad car . be cause the man refusesd to stop singing' when requested by Palmer to do so. Prisoners ;o on a Strike. Eight stalwart prisoners In the city jail at Alton, 111., who, In default of police court fines, are required to sweep the streets, were put on a diet of bread and water Wednesday be cause they went on strike and declared they would not work. An Insurance Scandal. Jacob Frank, an agent for the New York Life Insurance company, was arrested Tuesday charged with forg ery In the third degree In connection with the recent election of the dlrec troB of the company. A' ESTER N LEAGUE BASEBALL. Schedule of Games to lie Played at Sioux City, la. Following Is a schedule of the West ern League games to be played at Sioux City in the Immediate future Des Moines , ...May I, 7, , Lincoln May 11, 12, It, 14, 15 Omaha May 29, 10, 10, SI Aged Woman Burns to Death. Mrs. A. J. Elliott, aged 70, of Ever ett, Wash., was burned to death at the home of her daughter, Mrs. R. J. Russell, of La Crosse, Wis. The acct dent was caused by the overturning of an alcohol lamp. lire Causes $200,000 I am. A fire Monday night destroyed the plant of the National Stove company at Lorain, O. The loss Is 1200.000. Four hundred men are idle. of A SPREE ENDS IN TRAGEDY. Norfolk Saloon Man hlaln by Prosper ous Furmer. Within . one week of the dsy when eighteen years ago he killed (leorge Ives, of.TIIden, with an ax for tres passing, Herman Boche. of Nor folk, wh " was acquitted of that killing, shot and killed Frank Jarmer, a Norfolk saloonkeeper. The trsgedy occurred In front of an ill-famed re port. ' Boche Immediately disappeared, and has hot been found. He. Is n prosperous farmer,- living four miles southeast of Norfolk, and has a Urge family. The two men were members of the same fraternal order. Boche and Jarmer were warm friends, and went to the brothel at o'clock In the morning. After a night Of dissipation they were departing to gether, at G o'clock. Jarmer Insisted that Boche enter a waiting cab, and at once forced him Inside Boche lunged out and fired three bullets Into Jarmer's body. The cabman did hot Interfere, but climbed onto his box and drove to town. Jarmer succumbed on the floor of the resort's parlor, an hour utter the shooting. His wife was taken to the place to see him die. Sheriff Clements and u poi--se are searching tor nocne. Both men were married. Boche having a family of six children. Up until a late hour not the slight est clew had been received regard ing the whereabouts of Boche. Boche's farm and the river banks have been searched and a man hunt still con tinues. A warrant for Boche's arrest containing second degree murder und manslaughter counts was tiled by County Attorney Koenlgsle'.n. No cor oner's Inquest was held over Jarmer as there was- no conflicting evidence. "Red," the hack driver who saw the shooting, tells of Jarmer, when wounded, pleading In Vain for mercy from Boche, who continued firing. MAKES EFFORT TO END LIFE. Grand Island Painter Cuts Wrists iukI Stabs Himself While In Jail. ' ,W. A. Womack, a painter by trade. made a desperate attempt ut suicide while In the city lall at Grand Island, to which he had applied at midnight for lodging. .He made two vicious stabs with a pocket knife Into his side. close to the abdominal region and sev ered the main arteries In his wrist. -' Womack was discovered by the Jail er at 9:30, on his usual half-hour round, lying In a pool of blood In one corner of the jail. The Jailer Iromi dlately summoned help and the man's wrists were bound and the city physl clan summoned. When discovered by the jailer the man was still goug ing his wrists with the knife In order to make the blood How more freely. He resisted the efforts to'stop the flow of blood and begged to be permitted to die. He repeatedly attempted to tear away the bondages. Upon ex amination the physician found th two Jabs in the abdominal region. They were as deep as the knife blade would go and It Is feared entered the abdominal cavity. He was finally put beyond danger , of further harming himself and taken to the St. Fraiu is hospital. ' Womack has frequently been lakeii up by the olllcers and four month ago was sent to Lincoln to the institu tion for the cure of Inebriates. The attending physician does not expect him to recover. MAN KILLED BY A CAVE-IN. Scott Minor Loses HU Lire While Working In a Ditch. Scott Minor, of Tekamah, was killed seven grilles north of town Wednesday. He was enaaged In laying tils In a ditch eight feet deep on the J. P. Lutta ranch, when a cave-In caught him. HU only helper was a young buy named Palmanteer, who ran for help to extricate him, but on his return could not locate the exact spot where the cave-In occurred, which caused much delay, and It was nearly an hour before the body was discovered under two feet of dirt. The deceased was an upright, hard working young man, and leaves a wife f and three children, who were dependent on him for support. Wife Hit with Oranue Asks Divorce. Alleging among other acts of cruel ty that he hit her with on orange and disfigured her face for over ti week, Mary E. Kenrlck has filed suit In dis trict court at Omaha for a divorce from Richard Kenrlck. She also soy he told her to leave homo and get a divorce. Too Cold for Court. On account of a break In the heat ing apparatus in the court house the April term of the district court for Adams county was continued until next week and the case against Barney Pearson, charged with the murder of Walter McCulla, was assigned for trial Monday. Money for Educational Exhibit. The state fair board met recently at Lincoln and appropriated S200 for the educational exhibit and turned down a proposition for an athletic meet. Th matter of constructing the new cattle barn was left to Chairman Rudg and Members Mellor and Cook. Driver Hues Car Company. Suit for 15,000 was begun In district oourt In Omaha by Nela A. Nelson against th Omaha and Council Bluffs 8trt Railway company for injuries he OtVlim to have received by being struck by a street car at Twenty Ightft and Farnam streets Jan. 4. Accident Delays Train. Unlc Puclrtc truln No. 11 escape I serio'ls wreck hi earney recently. As It was bulling Into Kearney the rta,' axle of the front truck gave a way, tearing np the truck for COO feet. 9 Mraslta JOHN HAM lIN lVND GITLTY. Hall County Jury lHx'Idr that Con victed Murderer MtiMt Hang. The Jury In the cas-e of John Ham lin at Grand Island at 4:30 o'clock Tuesday morning returned a verdict of murder In the first degree and de cided thi'.t Hsmltn shall suffer death. Hamlin nas tried for the murder of Rachel Engle. a 1 -year-old girl, who was shot In Auftust. 1906. und linger ed until Januaiy. 1907, before she 2 led. Hamlin Is about 40 years old. The cu.ne went to the Jury at 9:20 Monday night. l.'pon t'lcclln.g A. U. Edwards as foreman, the juiy took a ballot on Ttillly or .not guilty of murder In the P.rt degree and 11 were for guilty and 1 for not guilty. Three formal and nine Infonml ballots were taken on this question. It developed that this was itv.coinpllK)ied before the Jury took supper nt 1 o clock In the morning. Upon Its iitjm the quostion of penal ty wus butloted upon, the same Juror who si.md out fur not guilty, standing out against the death p- ntence and his main point of argument was that the breokJns t the cttheter and resultant opetation In favor of the defend ant. At 3:40.- unanimity was reached. Ihiiii'in fciin depievsvd and says only, I'm cone. tnoush he took the sen- t( nee julti? stoically. Mart Kent, father of the girl says, "Justice ha. j hem done; but for the extensive uce of the pardoning pow er, a life sentence might have been Just U3 HuJilule'.it." " r;.vnii:j:iG for land opening, Mii.ij- Settlers Coining Into the North Platte District. The iiif-re, tlon land opening at' the land office In North Platte occurred Mey 1, scores of homesteaders arrived during the lat few days to find out the loci.tion of laud and make selec tions, ftome. who expected much, af ter looking over the land returned to their homes, refusing to enter land Others . who understand conditions better, make selection, and only hop they will be fortunate enough to get their choices. ' An has been usual at the land open ings, a few grafters are working. On persistent sinner represents himself to be fumlliar with vacant lands and hires rigs ar..1 takes parties out and shows them deeded land and prepares their papers to file upon vacant lands many miles from that which he show ed thini. -Of course, deeded land ap pears .much better. For this he de mands J100 to locate" them, and he finds a few stickers. There are sev eral of these frauds and curbstone lo cators who know the land' no better than tl.e strangers whom they dupe. COLLAPSE OF BRIDGE IS FATAL Buby Fa'.; to S i nil Pnr and Is Trani- p'.cd by Horses. Some timbers In the bridge across '.lie finite tt North Jiend gave away recently v.hlic Mis. Thomas Lnngdon, her t'Vo children und Miss Jennie Ru dekn were driving across it and the Mooring tipped down. The horses vent Into the river and the buggy hung tui the bridge. Mrs. Langdon was cariyiiig her baby boy, who Is 1 y.'isrs old, l:i her lap. and in reaching to catch hold of the little girl the baby ft II to a sandbur anh wos tram pled to ttc-ath by the horses. His head nid bex'y was fearfully crushed by the horses' hoofs. The bridge was sup posed to he safe for travel and the ac i. hienl came without warning. Bullet Pierces Hat. While working at a telegraph In slruinetit In th'J office of the Associat ed Pres at Sixteenth and. Farnam streets. Omuha, R. I.. Huntley had a narrow escape from being accidental ly shot. He was working near an open window when a bullet whizzed through ihe loeni, pausing through his hat. N Pov S!irt While Hunting. ' (jforrce Harrington, son of M. F. llnyilnctoii, uccldentally shot and kill ed Joseph o'Donnell, brother of Jas. F. O'Domiell, of the O'Neill National bank, while huntli-g south of O'Neill. The buys, both aged ubout 15 years, were creeping upon game when young Han Inton's gnu was dlHt harged. KS.-rsiin'.iiK Poui'd Visits Peru. The new examining board for nor cunHlrtlii;; of Superintendent E. H, Shciiuun, of the Columbus schools; Mupci'intciidcut ('. A. Fulmer, of Beat I lee. lir.il MlywX'orn.Met'oiinel!, of the Ashlnr.d hU'.h school, arrived In Peru to Ik! t trie nornuil and examine all Its 't part nients. K!il!itHl Hoy Returned. IViiMnole t'iiok has returned from Brcckciirirfcc. Minn., to Fremont with little Ov.ald K'leppen. who had bn taken a v. ay by ids father, F. Koeppen, of hriydtr, after being given into th custody of his mother. It Is doubtful If Koeppen Is prosecuted. Th officer left him at Hrcckcniidge. 11 n t Kuch ProMVittiou. Ji.:iu" llilliaii, Munderson Hieij. Oi:iahu. wus arrested Tuesday enargej with breuklng quarantine. aid to ue the first I ns tu nee of a prose. eutton under the ordinance In Omaha, tjllliah's wife and children are III from knihII pox und he left hom and Cot drunk. Woman livim Saloon License. - During the regular meeting of th city council In Plattsmouth Monday evening cnv-nuif of the city, "dad voiki to grtn.t a I'uloou license to Mrs. ura tew io iuii a suloon and th otner ni.ir voted "no." then th may. tr tr.si ino (icchiing vote "yes." rUlKT Kldlll.DH His Itov. Frl iloeppeii. u resident of Hnyder, ' i""'. r ui.e.i n; it'tkcii ridge, Minn,, on t.-e e'.i.'.ije of kidnaping his 5-year, old j a OxvcM, Mr-!. Koeppen obtain- tallied u illviiMi from her husband A general shake up of passenger rates In Nebraska is promised as one result of the Inauguration of the l cent fare law. Last week the North western Railroad applied to the State Railway commission and waa given permission to Install the short line rate between Lincoln and Omaha, In order that It might compete for bus iness with the Burlington, which has th short hall and has been capturing practically all of the business. The Burlington fare between the metropo lis and the capital city Is 11.10. It is now stated that the Rock Island Is to go before the commission with notice that It will meet the Burlington rate. The Rock Island mileage between the two points Is sixty miles, compared to fifty-five on the Burlington, while the Northwestern ha ninety miles. With the Rock Island and North- estern collecting, only 11.10 for the Omaha-Lincoln Journey, the fare for that trip will be cut considerably be low the 2-cent basis. That the railroads of the stat are still contemplating resistance to the t-cerit passenger rate law was mani fested by a letter received from a Un ion Pacific official bv the railway commission wrote to the various rail roads asking why Nebraska people were) not given the benefit of the 2- cent rale on Interstate travel. In the letter received the Union Pacific offi cial states that the attorneys of his road and others are seriously contem plating attacking the validity of the law In the courts. Another reason for not rearranging the passenger sched ules Is that the 2-cent laws In Iowa and Missouri do not go into effect for two or three months yet, and to make up new Interstate schedules now, for the benefit of Nebraska people only. would Involve a great deal of trouble and expense, all of which would have to he gone over aguln In a short time Failure of Its constitution and by laws to pass muster has led to the ex clusion of the Colorado Mutual Bene fit association from Nebraska. In a letter -to Its head office In Denver In surance Deputy J. L. Pierce calls at tention to several weak point In the charter,- One of these Is that no mini mum age limit Is fixed for members as th laws of Nebraska require. An other fault found with the articles Is that they provide for permanent offl- t vers wno snail nave votes in ma meet. Ings of the association. This feature Is contrary to the Insurance coda of Nebraska, as the law specifies that all ofllcers of mutual concerns must be elected. 1 Further objection is made because the association ha not pro vided for distinct eScpense and motu ary funds, the bylaws permitting any funds to be used for other purposes. The records of the state treasurer' office disclose that the permanent school fund, all of which Is Invested In stute bonds and other gilt-edge se curities, now exceeds $7,000,000. This money ha been derived from the sale of and Income from lands set aside early In the history of the state for the permanent endowment of the pub lic schools. The Increase In the value ef these lands and the steady growth of the fund Itself Is bringing In each year a greater Income for th regular smt-annual apportlonmen of the tem porary funds, and In future years this growth may become so pretentious and the semi-annual apportionments so liberal that the schools may be al most entirely -maintained by the In come from the state fund. I I Lincoln lodge No. 80 of th Benevo lent Protective Order of Elks is plan- ' ntng to occupy Its new lodge building at Thirteenth and P streets before the end of six weeks. The Lincoln lodge will be the first branch of that popular order In the state to own Its own building, and the example set by the capital city lodge Is expected to in- , duce several other Nebraska Elk lodges to Inaugurate building fund schemes, chief of which are Omaha and York. The Lincoln Elks are plan ing to hold an Elks' reunion, lasting two or three days, upon the occasion of the opening of their building, and Invitations are to be extended to all of the Elks' lodges In the state. Educational work In the district was the chief topic of discussion at tho Swedish Lutheran conference. Re ports on the different homes re read and discussed and new plans for this year a work were rorinuiateu. A coinpleto normal course is to be estab lished at one of the schools, making It possible for the graduates to receive certificates to teuch. Only one firm belonging to the Ne braska Lumber Dealers' association (eels dissatisfied with the findings mad by Referee A. M. Post, of Co lumbus, in which he held that the Hjate had failed to establish the exist ence of a general conspiracy In re- strait of trade. This firm la th Bar nett Lumber company, of McCook. - . ...,- Th "square deal" program, as ap plied to th present administration of state affairs, Is accomplishing results of genuine orth to the taxpayers of the commonwealth of Nebraska. An era of real, not sl.am, reform has been ushered in and manifestations that the treasury grafters are being prtsd loose are becoming a matter of almost vry-day occurrence. In connection with th purchase of th Idaho bonds by Treasurer Brian It Is stated that th ordinary commis sion on a block of bonds aggregating 27t,000 would approximate 15,600, which amount Is saved for the school children of Nebraska rather than go ing to line th pockets of a broker. . Th Pacific Coast Casuality com pany of Fraiiclsco, a concern handling employers' liability and bur glary risks, has applied for admis sion to Nebrusku GATES QUITS MARKET. A Merles' JMoat Bpeetaealar 11 Retires from Wall Street. John W. On ten, America' most spec tacular financial plunger, hog resolved to plunge no more. He bas gone out of business. Wall street says John W. Gate Is "down and out," that he tins "lost his nerve," nnd Is fleeing from the scene of his disaster. 'Gate says he- hasn't time to "discus funny dreams. Ills son, "Charley," gnys that the heat! of the house la Just going to France for a year or so for a good time, and that he will return. A Cblcnga partner de clares thut nil the "broke" stories arc "plain rot;" "that the 'old ninii got cold feet nnd quit when thestacW In front of him won high enough" using hlie vernacular that Mr. Oates use when he used to."bet n million." There is one fact in the conflicting: report concerning the multi-millionaire seculator. lie has quit business. Wall street knows that fact, for the' fornix! notice of the dissolution of tbe Ann of ' Charles t. (.Sates & Co. wus given out. Admittedly .lo the Gates, father and sou, are going abroad for a year. Wall 1 JOHN W. CITES. street rejoices over those facts. Wall street Insist that the father and son are quitting loser In a sliding sum of from $10,000,000 to S40.000.000. The notice of the dissolution of th firm of Charles Q. Gates & Co. started all the reports about the financial de cline of the family.- That was the firm, through which -' the great plunger traded, and it was brought Into exist- enco to enable him to plunge as he pleased. Son "Charley" headed it b.ut father was In reality the fliW ' ,; 4 The so-called "rich man's panto" that reached Its clluinx March J5 was de- dared to have been the cause , of the downfall of the Gateses. " Consistent " bulls always, tliey are reported to have f been caught heavily in. that, ten-lb! lluuip of stocks. . ' ' .' ' , rfiaL:. ...i-rfc Th Pennsylvania House passed th bill placing 3 cents tax a ton on anthra cite cos I, it being argued that the burden would fall largely on consumers outside tlie State. , i Chairman Knapp of tBo interstate com merce commission annouueed its purpose to ask the Circuit Court at New York to order E. II. ilurriman to answer cer-. tain - question concerning transfers sod sales of Union Pacific stock which he re fused to answer i erectly when he was a witness before the commission. The commission thus seeks to ' establish Its right to inquire into such transactions. B. F. Yoakum, chairman of th Rock Island system. In a newspaper interview said that a railroad bad no more business to he at tho mercy of stock jobbers than- . a savings bauk or a life Insurance com pany, and that American railroads should be as much a public trust as those institu tions, lie said the people were not with oiH justification in their belief that the railroads had been systematically robbing tlirm, and that uo one was to blame for the present anti-railroad sentiment but tbe managers theaiselves. As an offset to the raie Jn grain rate by the Union Patllic between Omaha and Council Bluffs the Chicago Great West ern railroad begun hauling grain free from Council Bluffs into Omaha when destined to elevators ou tho tracks of the Chicago Great Western and charging only ' $'J per cor when d.-stined to elevators oa other tracks. The Union Pacific cliarge $5 pr car for the same service. The Great Western's set ion VfiU have a far reaching effect ou Iowa grain destined to Omaha and places the Omaha market o a parity with the Chicago market. Two more attempts have been made to wreck trains on the Pennsylvania rail road in western Pennsylvania and Ohio, and President McCrea has called a con ference of the vice presidents and varlou division ofliclals to take extraordinary measures for the suppression of what ia believed to be a desisrate band of wreck ers. Th detectives y that tbe motive of these crimes is robbery end not th veageance of discliarged employes. A re ward of $5,500 for Information leading to the conviction and a much larger secret reward to employes, bt been offered.. Counsel for the Great Northern railroad at St. Paul gav' notice that the tin of $15,000 Imposed by Judge Morris for giving rebate on grain shipment would be appealed. The judge jsnposed $1,000 on each count, this being th minimum line. The 2-cent railroad fare bill passed by the Pennsylvania I.UIuture and signed by Gov. Sfuart Is to go iuto effect Sept. 110, but the letter from President McCrea of the Peuusylvaiiiu railroad to the Gov eruor requesting n veto served notice that the law would be tested through the courts as to its couslil uiioimlity.