i DiffiOTA COUNTY ERA X M0TT0--A11 Tho News When It Is News. VOLUME XVII DAKOTA CITY, NEB., FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1901). NUMBER !) T Tv V if" v.: CURRENT HAPPEHIHGS FAITHFUL CHRONICLE OF ALL IMPORTANT ITEMS. BATTLE MANY HOURS twenty imrnirs and ioo ne grols in an encointeh. lo Blacks Art- Killed, Scores Wound ed mid Forty Taken lrisoiiers Scene Laid at Creek Indian Uprising in Oklahoma Last Year. On the scene of tho famous Creek Indian uprising of last year at Hickory ttlement In Oklahoma, two negroes were killed, many wounded und forty captured in a battle between twenty deputy sheriff and 100 negroes. The lighting began late Wednesday and continued Aithnut interruption until 10 o'clock Thursday. Five deputies went from Henrietta, eighteen miles north of Guthrie, to the negro settlement to arrest cattle thieves thought to bo concealed in the house of one of the negroes. They were met at the outer edge of the Camp by a party of armed negroes, who refused to allow them to enter. The deputies pet sifted and were fired upon. Outnumbered, the five lied. A few hours after the first clash a larger potse, heavily armed, reached the settlement. Home one llred a shot and the rioting was on. When night fell the excitment increased and negroes roann-d through the. woods firing and yelling. The fight continued us a series of duels throughout the nisht, the negroes retreating gradually from tree to tree as the deputies ad vanced, firing btcadily. Reaching the .settlement, the negroes barricaded themselves In their huts and could not i be dislodged. At daybreak firing ceased and neither party made another move un til 10 o'clock, when the deputies re newed the attack on the negroes, who now numbered 100, against twnety de puties. About 300 shots were fired in the last encounter, when two negroes were killed and Deputy Sheriff Fowler injured. At the first onslaught the negrogs were dislodged and fled. The deputies' pursued and captured forty. RIVKR JT'XD IN DOVHT. Prospective l'lgiil Over the Big Im provement Appropriation. With the announcement from Wash ington that a united effort was about to be made by senators and represen tatives from Iowa, Nebraska, South Dak'ota and Xorth Dakota to relocate in Sioux City, Iowa, an office for an en gineer in charge of the Missouri river, it has become known that the cam paign is the outgrowth of the domina tion of the lower river influence with the war department and the peculiar provision of the recent rivers and har bors bill for the improvement of the Missouri river. The movement to bring to Sioux' City a government engineer's office had its inception with George C. Call, of Sioux City, secretary-treasurer of of the Missouri Hiver Navigation cop gress. The agitation commenced im mediately after tho passage of the rivers and harbors bill, and is yet scarcely under way. The plan of the up-river men is not to remove the office of Capt. K. II. Schultz from Kansas City, but to provide an Inde pendent engineering headquarters and to divide the unties In regard to river improvements between the two offi cials. Soon after the passage of the rivers and harbors bill, which was approved on March 3, it was found that the usual custom of. designating the divi sions of the appropriation between the various sections of the river had been changed, the amount being set apart in a lump sum. From the wording of the appropriation it gave rise to the belief that the greater portion of the 1555,000 for Improvements would be spent in the Kansas City district with practically no expenditure except a little snagging in the upper part of the stream. WOMAN'S TRAGIC END. Wife or Pierre Lorlllurd, Jr., r:nds lilfe by Inhaling ;us. Weary of the gay whirl of society nd face to face, as she believed, with years of physic-la! suffering, Mrs. Pierre Lorillard, jr., aged 4 9, wife of the tobacco magnate, committed suicide by asphyxiation at her home near the fashionable Dupotit circle In Washing ton, V. C, Thursday. Her tragic death has shocked the first social circles of the capital as nothing else in years. In spite of the coroner's certificate of death by suicide, members of the family declare that Mrs. Ioiillai d died pf heart failure. lionet flight to Throne. George, crown prince of Servla, has renounce, I his right of succession to the Servian throne. Th, action is the result of a bitter press campaign In which the crown prince Is accused of the death of one of his servants. Moil City Live St4iek Muikei. Thursday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market folhw: TVp fceeves, $6. 10; top hogs, $6.75. KIRNAITKRS AT i'lTTKIU'RO. Officers Feared to Take the Couple to Sharon, Willie Whitla Wednesday identified the man and woman held on suspicion by the Cleveland police as the persons who kidnaped him from the school at Sharon, I'a., last Thursday, und held him for the $10,000 ransom which was paid by his father. Attorney James P. Vhltla, Monday. Willie said the man who gave the name of James II. Hoyle, was the one who took him from school and carried him through a tortuous route to Cleveland, then to Ashtabula, buck to Cleveland, then to placed him in the house in the eaBt end, where he was held until thA money was puld. Willie also declared the woman was tho one who cured for him at the house where he was detained, and who ucted the part of a nurse. The Cuyahoga county grand jury has returned an Indictment against Jaraej It. Boyle and Helen Boyle, alias Helen Faulkner, charging them with blackmail. The charge is based in the payment of a $10,000 ransom by J. P. Whitla for the recovery of his son, Willie Whitla. Fearing for the safety of their pris oners if taken to Sharon or the county seat of Mercer county, officers Thurs day night brought Boyle and his wife to the Allegheny county jail at Pitts burg In a special cor from Cleveland. The prisoners were guarded by sixteen detectives and officers. A woman known as Mary Dencr, who, the police wiy, may have been an associate of the kidnapers, or was implicated in the plot, committed sui cide Wednesday by drinking morphine. The woman drank the poison while standing in front of a drug store in tho east end not far from the house In which Willie Whitla was detained. She died in the ambMlance while being taken to the hospital. DEATH IN TEXAS TOitXADO. Twelve IVoj.le liose Lives and Mnny Ioro Are Injured. Twelve dead, property loss reaching into thousands of dollars and possibly a score Injured was the result of a tornado which swept over the north eastern part of Wise county late Tues day night. Several small towns suf fered serious damage. The general course of the tornado seems to have been from the south east. The greatest loss of life oc curred In the country districts. The destruction of one farm house alone caused the death of eight persons. This single tragedy of the .storm ,o,fts etirred , nsar Slldell "where the farm house of Ira Rice was crushed in by the furious wind and the family of eight members ploned beneath the wreckage. A light in the house at the time of the disaster caused the ruins to become Ignited, and, fanned by the furious wind, the flames Bnuffed out the lives of the helplesB victims. The towns of Sanger and Green Wood were hit and a number of houses moved from their foundations. SEVERE FIX) III DA STORM. Terrllie iule Does Heavy Damage to Property One mun Killed. A severe windstorm passed over Lakeland, Fla , and vicinity early Thursday, tearing down several houses uprooting trees and doing other dam p.ge. One man was asleep when the storm blew his house down and he was instantly killed. Another wan blown from his wagon and badly In jured. At Kathleen eight buildings were blown down, including a commissary. The wires between Kathleen and Lake land are down and It is impossible to get authentic information of thi ' storm. George Cheever Arraigned George Cheever, son of former chief of police of Andover, Mass., who has been posing as a Yale man, was ar raigned In court in New York Thurs day and held In $2,000 bail for trial on a charge of forgery. Cheever is Kuld to have obtained nearly $20,000 In the last six months by forged checks Falling Wall Kills Seven. Seven men were killed and five seri ously injured in Chicago Thursday when part of a thirty-five foot wall, left standing after a fire, crashed down on them without warning. Forinor Trouble Recurs. A Bectlon of the embankment 300 feet long of the Panama railway line at Gatun hus again settled about thirty feet at the same spot where the last movement occurred In November. To Moet In Kansas city. A call has been Issued for a meet ing of Missouri river valley shippers to be held In Kansas City to discuss the recent ruling of ' the Interstate commerce commission on rates to western points, which it is said Is In the Interest of Chicago and St. Louis at the expense of Missouri river points 'lull man Hunk Act Signed. Gov. Dickersoii of Nevada Wednes day signed the Tullman banking act. This bill, though nut including the guaranty feature, Is almost the same In effect. Damage by Snow In IVnver. Eight inches of wet, clinging snow, following several hours of steady rain, did damage In Denver Tuesday night estimated at from $200,000 to $800, 000 and cut off all comp-.unlcatlon with the outside world fcr sometime. Twenty-Two Death Sentences. Twenty-two deuth sentences passed upon political piiH.jii.-rn at St. Peters burg, Russia, were confirmed Thurs day byHhe supreme military court., rOUTO HICANS KICK Chairman 15Ivti Infolds a long lule of Woe. That Porto Klco was governed bet ter under Spanish rule than under the American administration; that the Spanish-American wht and the conse quent occupation of the Island by the United Slutes has ruined the coffffee industry, the most Important In the island, and that the executive council, composed largely of Americans, Is re sponsible entirely for tho present crisis, were the declarations made Wednesday by Luis Munuz IMvera chairman of the commission now in Washington. The commission was ap pointed by the house of delegates to lay before President Tuft, congress and th American people the reasons for the existing conditions In the Island, and to ask for concessions from this country, both !n regard to the form of government for the island and on the tariff proposition. Commissioner Rivera claims that all the Porto Rleans ask for Is Justice, and that the Ann rleans are not giving them this. l'EAH CHEAT LOSS IN KEVENUES. Officials In Philippines Alarmed by Provisions of Payne Tariff. Officials of the insular government, members of the Philippine assembly and others in done touch with the af fairs of the Philippine government are seriously concerned over the loss in revenue which will result from the establishment, of reciprocal free trade between the Islands and the United tates under tho provisions of the Payne tariff bill. It -feared that the deficit for the first year, due to the de crease In revenue customs, will approx imate 5,00,000 pesos ($2,500,000) nnd that it will increase from yenr to year with the growth of American Imports. If the closer trade relations with the United States restore tho Islands to prosperity it will become possible later to Impose direct taxation to cover the deficiency. In the meantime It in feared that the Philippines will suffer seriously during the readjustment pe riod and that the government will be forced,- In all probability, to abandon many of the Important public works MISSING AERONAUTS SAFE. Traveled Aimlessly About for Twenty Four Hours. After one of the most harrowing ex periences in the history of ballooning Capt. A. E. Muellerand his five com paions vylm esoewrted in the big Ferris facing balloon, America, at Pasadena, Cal., last Saturday afternoon and be came lost In the Sierra Madre moun tains, arrived on foot at Swltzer's camp, on the slopes of Mount Wilson Tuesday afternoon, unharmed. The men passed through a series of hard ships the details of which have not as yet been learned. They were pro vided with horses at Switzer's camp and began the descent to Pasadena over a slippery and dangerous trail. A single telephone wire across the .mountains brought tho first word of their arrival at the cump to relatives in Pasadena and shortly afterward this wire failed so but little Informa tion regarding their hazradous trip was obtained. STARTS FOR EAST AFRICA. Roosevelt Sails From New York on tho Steamer Hamburg. Theodore Roosevelt and son Kermit sailed at 11:06 Tuesday morning, on the steamer Hamburg, on the first stage of their long Journey to East Africa in search of the big game In which the region abounds. From his home at Oyster Hay, which he left at 7 o'clock, to the steamship dock at Hoboken the ex-presldent's route re sembled a triumphal murch, the greet ings of the crowds which had gathered to wish him good luck being express ed along the way in enthusiastic cheers. The feature of the trip was that Roosevelt rode for the first tjme In the tunnel under the Hudson rive from New York to Jersey City. Hun on CorrcKKniIents. Judge Ellis Wednesday afternoon Is sued peremptory orders forbidding representatives of newspapers sending out, either verbatim, or In substance, the testimony of witnesses In the trial of Avery Blount at Amite, Lu., for the killing of Benjamin Hreelund, his wife and stepdaughter. Brownsville Riot Inquiry. Secretary of War Dickinson Wednes day announced the retired army offi cers who have been appointed mem bers of the court of Inquiry to Investi gate the discharge of the battalion of the Twenty-fifth infantry, colored, for alleged complicity In the affair at Brownsville in 1906. Storm Severe In Run sit a. The storm of snow and sleet which iwept ixross Colorado and western Kansus Tuesday night assume.! the proportions of u tornado near Kdsou, Sherman county and nine curs of a Rock Island freight train were blown from the truck and many houses un roofed. Wade Ellis lo Reniuln. The attorney general hus asked Wude II. Ellis, of Ohio, to continue In his present position of assistant to the attorney general, and it was offi cially announced 7'ucsduy afternoon that Mr. Ellis hud ugreed to do so. Columbus Duy In New York. Gov. Hughes of New York, signed a bill Tuesday night designating October 12 as a legal holiday to be known as "Columbus duy." T ! NEBRASKA NEWS t HOUSE CONORS. I .V"cepts Senate Amendments to Hie Dunking Act. The house Tuesday concurred in the senate amendments to the bank bill. Taylor, of Custer, Aided by republican votes, made a hard tight on three sec tions but was finally beaten by a vote of 43 to 63. The senate nmendme tits were adopted with only twenty votes agnlnst them, one of the se a democrat. The Lincoln charter was recommit ted to the committee of the whole for the specific amendment of providing for a special election following Its passage w ithout the en.e;gepey clause. The senate killed all oast off bi.nk gnu runt y bills In view of the action of the senate In accepting its amend ments to the joint committee bill. Trading stamps were attacked In tho senate. The senate devoted the greater part of Tuesday afternoon to passing bills. The following wore passed: Hy Klllen For the appointment of tne additional oil Inspector and pro viding for both a flash and gruvlty test for illuminating oil. I'.y Kvons Started as a bill to re quire rullroads to deliver the full amount of grain louded on a car but as it came from the two houses says nothing about weighing but required railroad companies to receive grain for shipment without discrimination. By Uuvtos Giving hotel keepers a lien ou baggage and valuables of guests and d fining their liu-dUty fol lows of valuables. J'y Ollls To rc-oi'lte gasoline mo tors on railroads to be equipped with two closets und separate smoking rooms. By Dlers For the garnishment of 25 per cent of the wages of a head of a lamlly for debU Incurred for the necessities of life. By Raymond For the publication of the proceedings of irrigation boards. l'y McVleker For the filing of cam paign contributions fifteen days be fore election. By Bowman Making it unlawful for an employer to intimidate em ployes by threatening to discharge them or to close his place of business If any particular candidate Is elected. By Burtos To make It unlawful for an Insurance company to print a state ment on its policies that such policies are secured by bonds or securities de posited with the state. By Miller, by request To require accident companies to deposit with the state auditor 50 pivent, of the yalue of existing policies, the policies to bo vulued annually. Hy Howell Coroners to receive $5 for viewing a body and $5 for sending it to a morgue. By Miller To placy the home for the friendless under the control of three commissioners appointed by the ifjvsrr.or, the commissioners to em ploy one agent at $1,500 a year und to make the home merely a tempo rary home while the commissioners are finding permanent homes for them. By Committee on Education Child ren living in u joint district to be given leave to apply for permission to attend a nearer nehool in the county of their residence. By Raymond School districts hav ing 150 pupils to be ullowed to In crease the tux levy from 25 to 40 mills. The committee on finance, ways und means reported for the general file eight of the appropriation bills, offer ing amendments to none of them. They are as follows: By Gates, $3,000 for cement walls for the fish ponds at South Bend. By Blystone $1,000 for furniture, etc., for the G. A. U. room at the state house. By Skeen $40,000 to complete and eoulp the administration building and omplete the library building ut the Peru normal. r By the Committee on Fish and Game $2,000 for the Cherry county fish hatchery. By Taylor of Hitchcock $525 for surveying the Fifth guide meiidlun through Dundy county. By Bushee, et ul. $75,000 to as sist weak school districts to mulntaln five months' school. By Begele $70,000 for two build ings at the Beatrice institute for l'ce blo minded. By Annstrong $50,000 for a wing for the Kearney normal building. The committee of the whole recom mended for passage S. F. No. 36, by Miller, to require 80 per cent quvlty In linseed oil; H. F. No. 353,, by 1-av-erty, defining the lights of two or more li-rigutlon ditches, intended to appor tion the cost of the Suit creek drainage ditch along the entire ditch; S. F. No. 267 by (Jills, providing that when the license In question is submitted to ' vote of the people of a city the prop ositions to be voted upon shall be "For license," and "Against license." The senate which ucted upon II. R. No. 144 last Salurduy Tuesday found that the bill was ut that time In the house. The work had to b done over agnln and wus performed. On motion of King it was amended to provide that no Judgment shall be revived un less action to revive the same be com menced within ten years after such J.idgment became dormant. The emergency clause was stricken mil und in this form the bill was recommended to pass. The commitete on education report ed out 11 it. No. 2X0. a bill to place Junior normal and noruinl training In high schools under control of the state board of education t.i be ap pointed by the governor. In Critical Condition. Mrs. Henry Paul, of Superior, u for mer resident of West Point, was taken to u hospital Salurduy and underwent a serious operation on Sunday. But Blight hopes arc entertained for her ecovery. Man Refused mi Office. In the nominations for couniilnn-n in Weeping Water Turner .Ink re fused the nomination on one of the tickets and his place wus filled by E. F. Murshull. Theie will be no coutei-t rxcept for clerk. T .MAY AIMOl KN I'UIDAY. NcluilsWn Solen-i Growing Restless and l.cs'.re to (,o I Ionic. Adjournment and the question of getting away from the capital agitated members of both houses Tuesday night. The J. .Int committee of the house ai..l senate remained In s. s:iloii until late wrangling over thi . time when the senate files and house rolls not yet through the house ot their origin should die automatically. There was an ugie. inent that this date should be Friday, e'thougli the matter was not definitely settled. Clitics of tiie bank guaranty act al lege that it is fatally defective and has some of the weaknesses of the South Dakota act. The section com manding private banking concerns to reorganise Is believed to be uncon stitutional. In the senate Ned Brown created an uproar. While the members were nodding In their seats he slipped an amendment throvh the committee of the whole striking tho word "male" fro mtho statutes in the privileges and elections acts. This, of course, grant ed femade suffrage. The amendni'.nt was ordered engrossed by a tie Vote, but was afterward killed on trie roll call In the senate by a majority of wne. In the bpecial message to the legis lature Gov. Shullenberger Tuesday af ternoon urged the passage of a law restricting the stock Issues of public service coi potations. H argued that the stock watering methods in vogue wero vicious in the extreme and legis lation was needed to make the com panies spends hard cash for develop ments und rei.uict stock Issues to act ual cash investment. PI LLS TRIGGER WITH HER TOE. Mrs. .lesepli Kramer, of Nelson, Com mits SuUiile with Shotgun. News was received at Nelson Mon day of the death by suicide of Mrs. Joseph Kramer, who lived five miles southwest of that place. She shot her self with a shotgun, the charge tear ing away the greater part of her face. Mrs. Kramer sat in a chair near her bed, and, taking oil' her shoe, pulled the trigger with her toe. The front purt of her head was literally torn to pieces A piece of her skull ns large as a mun's hand wus found lying on the floor back of the chair. The walls of the room were bespattered with blood. The gun waH so heavily charged the load made a hole two Inches in diameter in the celling. No reason Is assigned for1 ,t) ,PCt. Mrs. Krumer was in Nelson the duy before the tragedy. Besides her hus band she leaves rive children, four be ing at home. The other one is mar- lied and does not live here. SIRS. I1ANNER NOT GUILTY. Unwritten Law Plays Part In Omaha M urder Cuse. Mrs. Atta Banner, on trial for the murder of her brotherlnlnw, who had blasted that he had ruined her daugh ter, Murjorle King, was given a ver dict of not guilty. Tho outcome of the trial was a victory for the un written law, which was invoked in be half of the' distracted woman, whom experts declared to have been suf fering from hysterical Insanity at the time she fired the fatal shot. Pleading for a verdict "which will be a tribute to mother love," Matthew Gerlng, for the defense, delivered one ftf the most remarkable appeals ever heard in a criminal court. Fred Ban ner, the dead man, was characterized by tho. attorney as "this reptile who robs this young girl of everything which mude her beautiful in the eyes of her devoted mother." He spoke of the bullet "speeding on Its mission of love," and declared "It Is the luw of God and man which prompted this woman to launch Fred Banner on the road to hell." In his reply on behalf of the state County Attorney English usserted that Gerlng hud devoted one hour and a half to the unwritten law and fifteen minutes to the ostensible defense of insanity. ROAD SURVEYORS START TALK. New Lino Prnjivled from Huntings to Keurney. It Is believed In Hastings that work will be htarted early lu the summer from Hastings to Kearney or to some point ou the Union Pacific a short dla- tunce east of that place. Announce ment of the plans for building the roud us a short connection for north and south truffle over the Hariiman system, Joining the west end of tho Union Pacific with the St. Joseph and Grand Island rullroud and eliminating some twenty miles of travel necessury with the connection at Grand Island, has come to Hustings from sources which are regarded as thoroughly re- lluble. The route for the projected line was completely surveyed over a year ago und Friduy a group of surveyors be gun going ov r the Hue about where It will Join the St. Joseph and-Grand Islund roud, n the eastern part of Hastings. The latter roud has recent ly purchused sufficient property along its right of way In the northeast part of that town to accommodate the new line of truck. I 'm her Gluulier Expires. Father George J. Glauber, pastor lu ehuige of Holy Trinity church, ut llartington, suffered a nccoud uttack of paralysis Monday morning which lie survived out u lew hours. Dropped Dead on Street. '. E. Wells, of Fairmont, uged 7( years, dropped deud Saturday ufter noon ul 3 o'clock while working on the street. He had been In apparent good health up to the time of his deulh. He was u carpenter, and hud he. 'ii working on a small burn in the euily part of the duy. Pioneer Woman Dead. Mrs. Patrick I'ouneully, one of tho oldest pioneer citizens of Burt county died ut her home eust of Lyons Mun duy. She wus 84 years old. NO SAIJONS AT I'Ol'i' CKOOK. Gov. Slmth ulx rr.or Vetoes Guten Rill Passed liy Assembly. Tho county optlonlsts in Lincoln won n decided victory Saturday when Gov. Shullenberger vetoed tho flutes bill allowing saloons at Fort Crook. The tlaies lilil was the only piece of auti-.ialoon legislation which emerged from the legislative mill during the present session. The margin was nar ri .. in each house, and the bill was fought with extreme bitterness. When tho governor's veto was transmitted to the house, an attempt was made to pass the measure deaplto the execu tive's disapproval but this failed. The bank guaranty bill has been pi luted und the house members are furious. The radicals declare that they will never concur In the senate ameiidment-i. The emergency clause wus stricken out by the senate and the guarantee deposit cut from one-half to one-fourth of one ier cent. Tho senate killed the Seattle ex position appropriation. ALLEN HAS COMMERCIAL CLUII. luterurbiiu Line Among; the IroJt't rf Body. Mien citizens have organized a com mercial club with the following of ficers: President, E. E. Shackelford; first vice president. Rev. F. M. Denl mer; second vice president. W. F. Fil ey; secretary, A. It. Wilson; treasur- r. V. W. McDonald. Atnnnur other good things they propose for Aallen Is a Y. M. C. A. T.ere also Is strong talk of bulldlnpr nn Interurban line from Allen to Wakefield, a dlstu.ice of leven mile. The line would connect Allen with the Chicago, St. Paul, Min neapolis nnd Omaha rallrond, making direct communication with. Omaha. Such a line could also be extended on to Hartlngton by way of the old Dally postofflce, thereby tapping a rich farming country. I'OUl 5 -YEAR-OLD ROY DROWNED Followed Hut Into Stream Too Deep for Him. Mr. and Mrs. J. C Vanl-eer arrived nt Tecumeh from Sheridan, Wyo.; unilay with the remains of their 4- year-old son, Ben VenLeer. The re mains were taken to the home of Mrs. Venl-eer'B parents, Mr. nnd Mrs. B. P. Hunt, In Vesta, nnd the funeral was held there Monday afternoon, and In terment made in the Vesta cemetery. Little Ben was walking near a rtieam, near his home in Wyoming, when a gust of wind blew his hat from his head anil into the water. He went right into the stream niter the hat, and the water being quite deep, the child was drowned beforo help could reach him. BRISK DEMAND FOR HOGS. reut Number Marketed Inst Fall Hit Cause. Owing to something of a shortage In feed many Johnson county farmers, as well as farmers all over the state, rushed their hogs off to market last fall, paying little attention to the char acter of tho stuff they were selling. or how low they were letting their stock get. The result Is going to be a brisk hog market this year. R. F. Miner, a breeder of thoroughbred hogs of Tecumaeh, says that he has raised more hogs than ever before and yet he Is going to be able to supply but a small per cent of tho demand upon hl:i breeding stock. He received twenty one inquiries fur stock in one day lust week. DILLON'S SLAYERS CONFESS. Mero Hoys Murder Wealthy Earnier for 11 Is Money. Trailed by bloodhounds, George Crltzer and Ben Hattendorf, aged 16 and 18, respectively, were arrested Sat urday evening and have confessed that they murdered William Dillon, a farm er near Alma, who was found dead at his supper table Friday evening. Dil lon leaves an estate worth $20,000. The boys secured only a watch and about $20 in cash.' Cliaiiiberlulii Suits Hang On, One of the cases of the state vs CharlCB M. Chamberlain, of Tecumseh, will come up In the Gage county dis trict court ut Beatrice on April 6. Mr. Chamberlain, as cashier of the fulled Chamberlain bank of Tecumseh, is ac cu.ted of having accepted money on deposit after he knew his bunk to be insolvent. I'uil to Crack a Safe. When the .ofilco of O. A. Cooper & Son, millers at Humboldt, was opened Monday morning the safo fcitve evidence of an unsuccessful attempt to "cruck" It during the previous night. The work wus evidently that of tui amateur, probubly home talent. An Old Settler Dies. James A. Hood, one of the old set tlers In the hills near St. l'aul. died Tuesduy after a llngt'rlng Illness of lieu rly a year's duration. He was born In Culpepper county, Virginia, seven ty- elxht years ugo, und came to this slate in 188(1 and hud been engaged in funning ever since. Horse Sulc Wmm Successful. Some recurd-breuklng prices foi horseflesh were reached at the James Suyers-Wulter Church sule held at Leigh. One spun of black horses reudlly brought $490, while one other horses went for $230. Senator's Daughter Tukes Husband. The murrlage of Miss Alma O. Ful ler, to Eaiie R. I Urge, occurred at thj home of the bride near Seward Sun day. Rev. George Williams, of the Presbyterian church, performed tho ceremony. Triplet In Bin i rice Homo. Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Talk, of Heat rice, are the proud parents of triplets. three boys, born Sunday afternoon The babies are healthy and well formed and weigh eight, seven and six pounds, respectively. FIND COOPERS GUILTY; 20 years iii pnisori Jurors Bring In Verdict ef Second Degree Murder for Kill ing of Carsnack. BAIL IS IMMEDIATELY GVTER. Friends of Convicted Men Bush to Sign Bonds Tending Argument for Now TriaL Guilty r.r murder In thr nerond de cree, with twenty jvrV Inapt Imminent us the penalty, was tft verdict brought In by the Jury hi Nashville BntTirdrjr morning In the ensi; apiitist tiihn.'e! Duncan n. Cooper :irid lii wm. Rohiii Cooicr. e!nirp-l witli the uiurder of former United St a fen Senator II W. Cat-mack. The Jury Eie previous dar acquit leu John R. Ktiar. a conU'feiMl nut. Immediately the defense moved to pet aside the verdict hevuusw of the ver dict of dlsiigL'evment Friday and asked COL. DUNCAN CUuIY.1. tho court to derlar It a mistrial. Jndg Ilnrt said lie would listen to arguments on this motion later. Ut then flsiil the defeK.lants' , boiul Hi F-5jbtX neta, . which, wiib accept ii lite to both aides. The verdict, coming It did upon the heels of Uonmnm Eurko'a declara tion, "tluit we nre fiofielcssly tied up ns to the Coopers," was a decided ur- prlse. The defendants took It coolly. almost without emotion, lira. Burtit nnd Mrs. Wilson, t'o daughters of Colonel Cooper, restrained their emo tion gamely. Mrs. Itttrch ant with her arm around her brother Robin's nhoul der nnd Mrs. Wilson was at her fath er's right. After fi!mjr n bond totaling nearly n million nnd a htiff. Colonel Cooper nnd ills son retired to the home of Judge J. C. Bradford to dlwiiM the- next move In the case. Although Judge Hart fixed the bond at $25,000 for each defend n tit, tlrcre wn a rnah to algn it no u nt cooraL on the purt of wealthy clUsetta of Nashville, which fairly awamped tin clerk In the Criminal Court. It seemed ns If every friend of the Ompera "'H sldered It Incumbent upou blot to aigti the bond. When there waa no moro room for names nt the foot of the doc ument the new bondsmen Indorsed It across the face until it was ditflcnlt t leelplier the signature. GREAT BRIDGE DTVAXXTED. lUuHund and Iiullaaa M , Ia Hhakea hr K srfaatssu One-half million dollars worth of prop erty wns destroyed, hundreds of livn were iuqieriled and the rilies of Ham mond and Indiana Hurt tor. IsxL, wero shaken from end to end by an ezphwlou of nitroglycerin (hat completely wrecked, t lie steel couKtructiini work of tho nv Lake IShore Railroad bridge that ia oting built at Indiana Harbor. The exploniou) Is declared to have bero the raiult of la bor troubles between union wokmeu aud the l'ituburg CouxtriM-tioa Company of l'lttsburg, which is building tho bridge. FRAT BRANDS BOY WITH ACID. HlKh Schol Inlttatlw mt Daaklrk, S. V., Mnjr l)aH(an far LIU. Complaint wus tiled the other day with George Itichuioiul. president of the board of education hi Dunkirk, N. Y, of al leged cruelties inflicted upon tiireo candi dates for membership iu a hirh acbool se cret society. The initial of tho oociety were brauded on the i-berka of three young men with acid. They ara Nail Ef. lis, Frank J. Murphy and Ferdinand Van dervoort. KltU' cheeks usy ba disfigured jC '' w v "V, stllln ifttwwiMii'ftrn .iliiiii 111 liiMiTlilliiliillrS i permanently. i