i.;AimvSlU3ldS' A COUNTY fx DAI State Historical Society MOTI O All Tho Srwi TThen It Ii How. DAKOTA CITY, NKR, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17. 1909. NUMBER 3 VOLUME XVIII it LATEST BY TELEGRAPH SUMMARY OF THE NEWS OF THE WHOLE WORLD. iDUEL ENDS IN DEATH TWO CIIICA(M) AVOM12N KiAGE IN MOKTAIi tM)MHAT. Clash with rUloi and Knlfo One lnuid Dead ; Otlier's Injuries Prove Fatal Kvldeiioe of llloody Rattle guarrvU Had Iloon Frequent. Mrs. Julia Tripp was killed and Mrs. Jacob Silvers, of New Tork, received wounds which later proved fatal a." the result of a piBtol and knife battle between the two women in Mrs. Tripp's partmenta at 6609 Prairie ave nue, a fashionable reaidenoe district of Chicago, on Wednesday. Mrs. Stive r Is a sister-in-law of Mrs. Tripp. It I. said her husband left her about three months ago because of her curious actions. Mrs. Tripp is the wife of s superintendent of a manufacturing firm of Chicago. When the apartment was entered blood was found on the parlor curtain: and several pictures had been brok en and chairs had been overturned In a bedroom off the parlor Mrs. Trlpj was found lying on the floor full dressed. Her face and waist were cov ered with blood and a pool had form ed beneath her. She was duad whet found. Separated from this bedroom b portlers which had been drawn buck was another bedroom. Mrs. Sllven lay on the bed in her own nightgowi and covered with blood. Blood w:: BUHhing from a deep gash in her fore head and she was unconscious. Mrs. Silvers had been staying at tlx Tripp home for about a month and (he two women are said to have ha' frequent quurrels, principally over the division of the household duties. They had gone out about 1 o'clock in tho afternoon and returned shortly after ward. It had been Mrs. Silvers' cus tom to take a nap In the afternoon jnd it was evident she had prepared for this as usual. The appearance al most simultaneously of the two wom- on from different entrances to the apartment, each screaming for heir and the knife wounds suffered by both hastened the police to advance the 'theory that there was a third person in the tragedy instead of its belnn simply between the two women or ( .murderer and suicide. I STEM, STRIKE RENEWED. Men at SeliocnvLle Claim Com pan? Has Broken Faith with Tliem. The car workers' strike at th Pressed Steel Car company in Schoen v!lle. Pa., which as thought settle I'll Wednesday of last week, after cost ins nine lives and heavy financial loss es, began a:;ew Wednesday when be tween 3.000 and 4,000 employes of tlx car works walked from their work and quietly dispersed to their homes Thr workmeji now allege that the car crun pany officials have broken faith with them regarding the discharge of lm ported bosses brought there during the recent eight weeks' late labor dispute It was announced by the car planl officials that they probably would dis charge what imported workmen that :are yet in the plant and a second efforl will be made to resume business and kifep their plant running. JOHNSON YEHV IXV. (iotonior is Ojx-rated on at Roolicste for Abwess. Gov. John A. Johnson was operated on In St. Mary's hospital Wednesday at Rochester, Minn., by Dr. Wm. Mayo, assisted by Dr. Charles Mayo for a deep seated intestinal abscess It was a difficult and serious oper ation, according to the surgeons whe witnessed the work, and Gov. John on's condition is regarded as serious and the best they will suy is that they hope for an ultimate and speedy re covery. Gov. Johnson was somev hat lm proved at an early hour Thursday morning. Farmer 1 lobbed of $3,000. William Davis, a farmer of Benton Kan., was robbed of $3,000 at the .Mis sourl Pacific depot In Wichita, Kan Thursday by two men who Jostled hi In a crowd. He carried the mony a large pucariinjua in nig inside en: pocket. No HutxvHHor to Harrlman. No successor to E. H. Harrlman u a director of the New Tork Centr railroad was chosen at Wednesday meeting of the board of directors. Sioux City Live. Stock Marked. Wednesday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market follow: Choice feeders, $4.50CT6.28. Top hogs, $8 10. Gardner Defeuts English. Clarence English, of (Imuha, and Jitnmie" Gardner, of Ronton, fought ten rounds at Omaha Wednesday, Gardner having a distinct advantage throughout. No decision was an nounced. The crew of the battleship Mlnneso. ta. by defeating the crew of the Ver mont Thursday, won the champion ship of the Atlantic fleet for Clttter jrvwiug. HVB PAYS A TKIIUTE. fWt a Completion Guest at Boston Banquet. President Taft'a first nubile utter- tnce since congress adjourned wns nade Tuesday' night In Boston. Mass., jefore 2,000 persons, representing the lomblned Interests of Boston. The oc laslon was a banquet given In Mochan- hall, the largest auditorium in Boston, by the Hoston Chamber of ommerce, recently formed by a Merger of the Boston Merchants' asso liatlon and the Associated Board of frudn with the chamber, and It lnark- the beginning of the president's IJ, 000-mile trip through the country. The features of the president's ad- tress were his Indorsement of the proposition to establish a central bank connection with currency reform, his words of high praise of Senator Nelson W. Aldrtch, of Rhode Island, head the national monetary com mission, and his denunciation of any attempt to start sectional strife in the country. Among the guests were cabinet members, diplomats, congressmen. Clergymen and distinguished business leaders. The president was most heartily greeted and at a reception preceding the banquet many shook hands with him. Distinguished guests from national and state political life, from the Judl- lary of the nation and state, from army and navy, from congress and from local churches, civil and business circles were present. SOLDIER WOVNDS FIVE. Drunken Coaeack Runs Amuck in St. Petersburg. A drunken Cossack of Emneror Nicholas' body guard, enraged by the teasing of children, ran amuck through the streets of St. Petersburg Tuesday with a drawn saber. Before he was overpowered he had dangerously wounded five persons, two of whom probably will die. The man chased a 3-year-old child into the courtyard of a Jail, where he struck the boy down with his saber and wounded two men. He then Invaded the laundry of the jail and Inflicted a score of fright ful wounds upon a laundress. His fifth victim was a soldier, whom he struck down before he was finally dls. armed. FOREST FIRES CHECKED. Devastating Flames in California Woods Coder Control. Reports received in Los Angeles Tuesday from the fire swept forest areas of southern California' Indicate that the flames have been brought un der control and further great damage l not expected. Splendid work by the forest rangers in the San Gabriel wa tershed, on the Puente hills, and In the canyons near Oxnurd has resulted in diverting the lines of fire from heavi ly wooded tracts, and the flames are confined to the bushes in the moun tains. RECEIVER IS SOCGHT. Stockholder Begins Action AgnLnst a Chicago Company. Appointment of a receiver for the Chicago Railway Equipment company a $2,500,000 crporation, Is sought In li bill filed in Chicago Tuesday by Henry D. Laughlln, who claims to be a heavy stockholder. E. B. Leigh, president of the com pany, is accused of making personal use of money belonging to the com pany. It is alleged that the present rate of dividends and salaries if con tinued will ruin the company. ONE KILLED; SIX Hl'RT. VA'rok on the Milwaukee Bond In South Dakota. Clem G. Daley, of Aberdeen, aged 36, was killed and six others seriously Injured when a baggage car on the Orlent-Roscoe line of the Milwaukee road was derailed Wednesday. The In jured are: John Russell, of Redfield Arthur Melguard and Peter Johnson of Aberdeen, S. D. Marvin Payne, of Harding's Grove, Ky. Matt Hemmer schmldt, of Eureka, S. D. H. B. In gersoll, of Millard, S. D. A rotten rail was the cause of the accident. DismlsMtl for Inaptitude. Four cadets at the Annapolis naval academy have been stricken from the rolls by direction of President Taft because of inaptitude, which was said to have been demonstrated on the practice cruise of the corps this sum mer. The names of the dismissed ca dets Include C. M. Elett, second class, Larlmore, N. D. Mrs. CuNlle Is Cleared. The grand jury In New York Thurs day dismissed the charge of felonious assault against Mrs. Mary Scott Castle who on August 3 shot William It Craig, a New York lawyer, at the Wal dorf-Astoria. Victory for the street car men in .heir long drawn out negotiations with the traction companies in Chicago for increased wages was announced Tues. day. Audi Uio A Iclor. Abe Attell, of California, the feath erweight champion, was given the de cision over Tommy O'Toole, of Phila delphia, 111 twelve rounds by Referee Charles White, at Hoston, Mass., Tues. day night. Sir Ralph Penman Moore was found dead in bed in London Tuesday, it was learned that his death was due to poison, and it is believed he took hit own life. EXTH'ME THE XHPSE. iutsy Performed on lUnly of Iscut. Sutton. When the body of Lieut. J. N. Sut :on, Jr., the young marine officer who met his death two years ago at Ann apolis, wns exhumed at Arlington cem etery Monday afternoon and an autop sy performed by physicians represent ing the navy department and young Sutton's mother disclosed the fact that no bones were broken, although a con tusion was found over the right eye. It had been Mrs. Sutton's contention that her son's nrm had been broken In the fight which preceded his death, and that this being the case the shot which ended his life could not have been self-lnlllcled. Attorney Van Dyke, associate coun sel for Mrs. Sutton, "aid that he was convinced that the shot hail been fired at lenst five feet from the officer's head and that the would showed con clusively that It wns a physical impos sibility for Sutton to have fired the shot. Present at the rjrnvc when the body was disinterred were Mrs. Sutton, sev eral friends, her attorneys, several surgeons and a number of ncwspapei men. After the autopsy had been complet ed the body was placed In a new coffin provided by the government and wnf relnterred in the same grave after thf ground had been consecrated by Rev Father Alonzo Olds, of St. Augustine'i Catholic church, of Washington. FIGHT Dt'EI. AY IT 1 1 POLICE. One Fugitive Makes His Escape but the Other Is Captured. A running duel, in which fugitive and policemen participated, created wild excitement at Newport. Ky., Mon day. The trouble began when Detec tive Morton called at a hotel to ar rest A. W. Leroy and Isaac Brewer on harge of detaining 14-year-old Flor- nce Gray, daughter of a physician of Winchester, Ind. Both men are about 4 0 years old. The girl was taken Into custody at the hotel. The men fled. Leroy fired three shots from a revolver. One bul let grazed the head of Detective Jefl Morton. Another pierced the hats of Tony Gastright and James Taylor, spectators. Another pierced the ear of Chris Ebert, city jailer. A number of police officers JolnedH In pursuit and a running battle ensued. Many shots were fired at the fugitive? without effect. The free street attractions will be superior to those which you have of ten paid 50 cents and $1 to see. Leroy was finally captured .while eomnellliiir u fa mov J wife, at: uie point of a pistol, to give him a suit ol her husbund's clothing. Brewer es caped. Tragedy In Club Rooms. Thomas Dwyer, janitor of the Owl's Nest club, of Harrlsburg, Pa., was shot and killed at the club rooms early Monday by Wells Detweiler. The lat ter In a brother of the late Meade I) Detweiler, who was head of tfie Order of Elks In America. Twenty Horses Croinuted. About 1 o'clock Monday morning one of the large barns on the Atwell farm one-half mile north of River Sioux la., burned to the ground, and also twenty head of horses belonging to Tom Egan were burned. Lightning Is supposed to have caused the lire. AVIdow's Share of Estate. Judge Corey, of the probate court In San Francisco, Cal., made an order Tuesday distributing to Mrs. Anna Christina Spreckols, widow of the late Claus Spreckels, her share of the su gar king's estate, which Is estimated to be worth more than $3,000,000. Financier Ends Life. John AV. Castles, president of the t'nlon Trust company, of New York a. director of other well known corpo rations and prominent in club and so. cial life, committed suicide Monday by cutting his throat with a razor li the Grand Union hotel. Knire to He Vscd on Johnson. The condition of Gov. John A. John son, who arrived In Rochester, Minn., Monday to undergo another operation for appendicitis, wns somewhat better Tuesday morning. Gov. Johnson wa much fatigued when he arrived. Ship Roosevelt to Sleani. Commander Peary's steamer Roose. celt will leave Rattle Harbor on Thurs day or Friday for North Sydney, from where she will proceed to New York, In time, If possible, to take part In tho Hudson-Fulton celebration. Shot by Assassin. George AV. Sumincrvllle, a promi ient Minnesota lawyer and politician, Aas shot and perhaps fatally wounded while sitting In his law office at Sleepy Uye, Minn., Wednesd; ; by a man who tays his name is John Hayner. Hay ner was arrested. Fire practically destroyed the busi ness section of Monroe City, ten miles east of A'lncennes, Ind., Monday. Loss, $100,000. Increase of Two t'cius. The fee for registration of mail will lie Increased from S cenls lo 10 cents November 1, l'.HiH, according to an or der tinned by Postmaster General Hitchcock M lay. kcllcy-McGorly Eight. The West Side Athletic club, of New Orleans, La., announced Monday that Hugo Kelby and I'M MeGorty would meet In a twenty-round bout there on October 3. NEBRASKA STATE NEWS News of the Week r in Concise Form V .1, '. . ' '- ' v.- 7i F 5 V ' '' 7$ IIF.BKON FIRE. P.I11.0 (ialns llcr.dvtuy mid for Time Tliivatoiis Tovui. The worst tire Hebron has had for many years raged Saturday, and for a time It b '.;cd tiio;i)i tae .:.ro place was doomed, but owing to the plentiful supply of water and the ef fort of the tire boys the fire was gut under control. Tho tire started la Myers' livery sta ble and in a short time that building had burned to the ground. It soon spread to the lumber yard of the J. H. Yost company. Tho air was thick with smoke and 1 flying embers and several residences were on fire. Mr. Myers lost all his buildings, together with ten head of horses, bougies and other truck, the loss being estimated nf iiDunnlu nf CI riOO with nil ItiHiir- . anco of $2,200. The lumber yard's loss was about $30,000, with an Insur ance of $20,000. J. O. Wrlth, hardware merchant, lost 360 kegs of nails upon which there was no Insurance. Milton Myers, the owner of the barn, was smotherod in the fire and nearly ost his life, but Is now on the road to recovery. ADMITS STARTING THE FIRE Alnnager of Omaha 1-tortory Arrested on Charge of Arson. Guy Anderson, manager of the Ne braska cotton glove factory at Omaha, that Saturday night was damaged by fire to the extent of $10,000. con fessed to having rubbed the safe and then applying the match to the build ing. The police In going over the ruins discovered the safe unlocked. Then Anderson was sent for on the pretense that his assistance was needed. Cpon his arrival at the scene he was ar rested and accused of arson, lie also made a full confession, but would not say how much money he had taken, though he admitted that he had been robbing the business for more than a year. He said that Saturday he secured a quantity of fuse and laid it in a manner so that It would require several hours for It to do Its work. The he applied the match and locking the building took tho book and started home, hiding them hi a lumber yard, Ail ere they were found later. . AVORK FOR SUPREME COURT. Question of Liquor Selling in Lincoln AVI11 Re Kittled. The supreme court will meet Sep tember 21 and at that time It Is very probable the court will pass on the motion of the slate oil inspector for a rehearing In the non-partisan judl--laly case. Among the cases of great Impor tance to the city of Lincoln, which now serves Its people with all the liq uor they desire through the medium of clubs, though the town is dry, fig uratively speaking, Is that in which the right of a club to sell or serve booze in a dry town is to be tried out. When tho town first went dry the clubs at once stocked up heavily and then when there were rumors that the police were going to interfere they promptly got out injunctions to com pel the people to let them alone. So tho supreme court Is to pass upon the legality of thut injunction. Peculiar Accident lo Parmer. J. M. Maher, one of the best known farmers near Fremont, slipped whllo oiling a windmill on his farm, ono hand caught in the gearing, and he was suspended sixty feet In the air for some time until his calls for help brought men to the rescue. Missing Mini found. The stranger who Jumped from a car window Friday night about two miles from Dorchester, wandered about eight miles northeast, and is at the home of H. AVickerkamp. He gives his name as Frank Hums, and lives in Farnam. tint Off I'-usy. Jos. Rrabek, the Rarneston farm er who. It is charged, drove his child ren from home nnd then att-mpted to burn his barn, has been sentenced to serve thirty days In tho county Jail. Ho was tried on a chargo of drunk and disorderly conduct. State I'air 1'lnanoos. The total receipts for tho state fair were $55,S58.34; balance on hand from last year, $ 'J 4 . :1 i . 8 2 . making a total of $H0,0!I4.1C available for use of the board in paying expenses of the fair this year. ' A dung Man Dies Suddenly. Ross Ijorch, the 1 K-yi ar-nld son of H. H. Lerch. of Kearney, died sudden ly from what appears t thing that doctors hav spinal meningitis. lie the same been calling IU'.les Open for KiisIiicks. ThP grand neiie of the Fraternal Order of Kugles opened Monday in Omaha, at the Auditoi linn with more than 1,000 delegates present. (ieol'KC K. West, president of the local aerie, presided at the opening session, which was public. The uddresses of wel come tiy Mayor J. C. Dahlinau and PrcsiJent J. J. Ryder, of tho Nebraska state aerie, were responded to by tirand Worthy President Monaghan And o Vis.r vruni) oftlil -IV ' - v ' -i- :- . . . : .-.j.,. l- 7p ' V ' w NEBRASKA WRECK. Nino I'ci'M ns Injured, One Seriously, Near Lincoln. Passenger train No. S9 on tho Chi cago. Rurlinnlon and Qulncy, south bouiui. :iiici I'M--:: :'ock train No. 76 were in a head-on collision at the sta tion of l'urhar.i. four miles southwest of Lincoln, shortly before noon Sun day. Two men were killed outright and nine Inj.ired, one seriously. The dead W. I.. Kohrer, a eontiac tor, of Falls Cliy. Neb. William Grlf 1'cn, u e. hired cook. The injured: U'. K. Spohn, formet chief of police or Beatrice, leg brok en. S. Si nii'.an. business man of Beat rice. Injuries probably not fatal. J. J Powell, I'.urchanl. haeiy bruised. AV111- 11,m ' einple, Crete, leg hurt. Mrs. M. 111. Is, Llbei l y. bruises. H. G " r Warner, lfiall c'lerk. of Lincoln. The collision wa.- the result of a mis undeislanul ig of trainmen. AV. L. P.ohrcr, the young Falls Oil contractor who was killed, had bee to Lincoln to visit his sweetheart, i Miss Thompson. They were to havi been married in about two weeks. S. Seaman, the most seriously of tin Injured, is n leading business man o Beatrice. Two or three cars of the stock trul) were badly wrecked and R number o heud of cattle and hogs killed. TRAIN WRECK FRI STRATEH. Lineman Discovers Spikes placed oi Ro'-k Island Railway. An attempt tit wreck the southbound Rock Island passenger train near the town of Plymouth Saturday night was frustrated by the finding of seventeen spikes set on the rails In such a man ner as to derail the engine, A tele phone lineman came across the ob structions and removed them. He then notified division headquarters at Kalrbury. Th spikes had been re moved but a few minutes when tw sections of the heavily loaded state fair train from Lincoln passed over th' track. The only clew to the, possible wreckers Is that a number of foreign- era employed as track workers were discharged and . rw ived, their dir. ilaceini-lit with soino tfjlienny. - 1 TO DIE OX GA1.IA)AVS. .Man AA ho Starte d Omaha Riots Sen fenced io Hang. Judge Sutton Saturday sentenced John Masaurides, thei Greek who kill ed Orfleer Lowry, thus starting tin South Omaha riots, to be hanged Jan uary 10, lit 10. Masaurides killed Officer Edwarn I.jwiy while resisting arrest. He lalnied the poliei man began shootliiK first and that he shot to save his life Lincoln Man Commits Suicide. AVord was received In Lincoln thai Will C. Phillips, for eight years clers of the district court, had killed him self at the routes hotel In Kansas City, Some times ago Mrs. Phillips secured a divorce from her husband und th only reason that can be assigned foi his net Is family troubles. He lcavei three children. East Train Schedule. The fastest train schedule on fib with the railway commission has been filed by the I'uion Pacific, which showj - . i i ii a rale or nines an nour, luciuunij between Council RIuITh and Denver. This is train No. 11 and tho trip ll made In 14.16 hours. No. 16, the east, bound train, has a schedule of 38. i miles an hour, Including stops. l ire at Oakland. Klre was discovered In the residenci of Alfred Leckman, In the north part of Oakland. Prompt work of the fir department saved the house, but nol until considerable damage was don to the home and contents. Tho orlglr of the tire Is a mystery. No Deficit at l'a I r. Though the receipts of the stat fair this year amounted to $27,000 lesi than a year ago, all expenses of th fair will be paid and there will be no deficit. The receipts this year are es tlmuted at $52,1100, against $79,000 for 190S. The expenditures will tak about all of the receipts. Alan lumps from Train. Whllo coming home from the stub fair, a man, for some unknown rea son, crawled from the car window and dropped In the diteli while the train was running at a high speed neai Dorchester. The section men weut out In narcb of the man, To l.n force Compulsory liw. The West I'oltit school board hiu decided to enforce the compulsory at tendance law at once. Itim Down by Anlo. (bulge i:.iiier. a cigarmaker, collid I'd with an unto driven by Paul Ker nan at llintlngs. sustaining a broken nrm i nd leg and he Is believed to have lii ei: ; jiii ed Internally. I'.iirghirs Start lire. l'iie stalled by robbers put tho N'u braska Clove company, of Omaha, out of business temporarily Saturday night, destroying stock and datnagini; the inacl'.lnei y. HIGHER REGISTRY FEE ASKED. H Soon to Cost Ten Cents to Register a Letter Five Cents for Fackftg. After Nov. 1. lSOii, It will i ost 10 rents Instead of 8 cents, as at present, to register a piece of mail. An order to this effect was Issued by Postmas ter General Hitchcock Monday. The order Increases the maximum indemnity paid lo the owner of n lost or titled registered letter from f-' to $:i0, thus doubling the department's liability for valuable articles Intrust ed to Its registry brunch. This ndd! tlonnl Insurance or $25 for 2 cents is granted at. a much lower rate than is offered for a similar amount by any private concern. The changes ordered constitute the first move toward making the postal service Relf sustaining. The registry system is reported to be conducted .tt a loss, and hi order to make it pay its way radical measures are neces Bury. New feature being considered by t ho Postmaster General Include, the establishment of a parcel reglstnition system with a 5-eent fee mid a ism. ill Indemnity, nnd a preferred class of registered matter of high value with Increases in the fee and Indemnity up to 20 cents and $H!0, the limits fixed by law. It Is pointed out. that the parcel measure will meet, n public demand for a cheap and safe means of trans tuittlng Christinas packages and oth ers of like character, nnd that the graduating of the fee in accordance with the risk Involved and the amount of care necessary to insure s.ife traii-v mission is in accord with sound bust ness principles. It has been also sug gested that the Idea be carried a step further, by asking Congress to raise the limit of fee. and indemnity, In or der that the department niny assume full liability for all matter accepted for registration, and may impose an adequate charge for the responsibility undertaken. In addition to these changes affect ing the amount of fees and indenint tieB, the Postmaster General's commit tee of experts, which is still in session has under consideration Important modifications of the registry system that should lessen tho cost of opera t ion without any impolrment of th "fTlclency. TARIFF BOARD IS NAMED. Three Men Who Are to Assist In Enforcement of New Law. President Taft has appointed the new tariff commission or board, which Is to assist him in the execution o', tho new -tariff Uv, with especial refer ence to applying the maximum und minimum clauses to nations wlilcl. arc unfriendly or friendly in their rt latlons with the United States. The new hoard consists of three members Professor Henry C. Emery of Yale, chairman; James H. Reynolds of Massachusetts, now Assistant Sec relary or the Treasury, and Alvln H Sanders, of Chicago, at present editor and proprietor of the Breeder's Ga zette. In announcing the selection o: this new hoard, authorized by tho Payne tariff bill, the following stute meat was given out at the executive unices In Ueverly, Mass.: "The Presi dent and the Secretary of the Treat) ury have agreed upon the plan tha these gentlemen are to constitute the board and ure to he given authority to employ such special experts as may be needed In the Investigation of the for eign and domestic tariff." The announcement followed a con ference between the President and Secretary MaeVeagh. Mr. Taft had left entirely in the hands of the Sec retary the selection of the new com mission, and simply approved the men recommended by Mr. MaeVeagh. It had been a question as to whether the new board should consist of three or five members. FIRES PLANT TO HIDE ROBBERY. Omulia Factory Manager Confmnfii Araiin and Ilurglnr 1'lot. Guy Anderson, manager of the Ne braska cotton glove factory in Oma ha, which was damaged by Are Satur day night to the extent of $10,000, has confessed that he robbed the safe and set fire to the building. In going over the ruins the police discovered that the safe was unlocked. Anderson was sent for on the pretense that his as sistance wus needed, and upon his ar rival was arrested and accused of ar son, in nis coniession no wouiu not say how much money he had taken, though he admitted that he had been robbing the business for more than a year. lirruiHiiy Keeks Tar I IT Pact. Count von llerstorff, Oerinan am Imssiidor to the I'nlted States, explain ed the situation created by the new American tariff the other day In Her lin as It relates to Germany. Repre seiitatlves of all government deport ments Interested in the subject were present at the conference. The Ger man government is planning for' a new tariff agreement with the I'niied Stales. l our Held In "Incubator Cane." Mrs. J. (1. llarclay, Frank li. Tlllot son, J. N. Gentry, und David Gregg wire arraigned before Judge Simon in Topeka, Kan., on the churgo of kidnap ing Marian llleukley, the Incubator baby. All were bound over to the Dis trict Court. I. miner Uiirim lo Ileal Ii In llooiu George Brische was burned to death and Benjamin Sioikiiiau, a stranger. I believed to have perished in a lire which destroyed the Chamber of Com inerce Rulldlng In Sacramento, Cal Biische was a lodger in an upstair room. GO ES WAY 0 F ALL FLESH Napoleon of Traffic World Expire at Mis Residence in Arden Sur roiiiiiicJ by Family. tVORLD LOSES FINANCIAL POWER the Cause of His Suffering Is Mystery Which May Never Be Solved. Edward Henry Harrlman died at hi home at Arden. X. Y., some time be tween 1:30 and 3:35 o'clock Thursday afternoon. His end removes from tho railroad world of the day Its supreme DgurBL It leaves the greatest railroad systen In the world a system which he him self built up and welded together - without a head. It marks the cloulnc of a cureer unique in the financial hh- tory of this country. At H Mr. Har- rlniRn was an office boy; at 23 owner of a seat in the Stock Exchange of New York, and at 35 a millionaire. At 49,, though wevlthy, he was still a me diocrity and In the wider sense un known. In the ensuing twelve year occurred the meteoric rise that mad him the undisputed emperor of th railroad business of the nation. Ills death at CI is an event that will make Itself felt throughout the eutlre finan cial fabric of the world. AVhlle It has been known for wertc that Mr. Harrlman was a doomed mui tho greatest, mystery surround th nature of the disease from which lie suffered. Stomach trouble was. th Bame given to his illness by hia doc tors, hut during the last three or tamt weeks tho rumor gained wide circula tion thnt he had cancer. It has been Intimated by men who were in a posi tion to know that he was afflicted vitlk the same ailment that caused tb death of the late William Rainey Har per, president of the University of Chi cago. The death of Mr. Harrlman remove from the world Its greatest single raO rond aud financial power of moderm history.' Like a story from "The Ara bian Nights" reads the biography off this magician of steel rails and stock markets.' In forty years, from poverty and ' obscurity . to almost . fabulous wealth and colossal power, from bro ker's clerk to master of more than 75,000 miles of railroad and steamship KDWAUD II. 1TARBIMAN. lines, enough to belt the globe wltb- a triple girdle; from market "acalpet" to arbiter of more than $150,000,000 I cash and with nearly a billion dollar. in stocks and securities at his beck. and call such is a bird's-eye view ot the career of the "Napoleon of tb railroad world," as they call him, irl has just gone the way of all flesh. How Harrlman got his start has always been somewhat of a mystery to AVall street. The methods by which he bounded into command of the cap tains of Industry have always been an enigma to his rivals and associates alike. Taciturn, mysterious, sphinx like, but still wielding a wand that seemed to turn everything it touched into gold, Harrlman was the psycho logical puzzle of the "Btreet." MAJ. OEN. E. M. M'COOK DIES. O llleer lit Civil War Succumb ACtmr- llliifHa of Munlbi. Gen. Edward M. McCook, two timw Governor of Colorado when it waa-stilJ' a territory and a Major General la the army during the Civil War, died atttaa Chicago Baptist Hospital. Geru Mo Cook's home was in Denver, Colo. The bdlUy wus taken to the general's for mer home in Steubenville, Ohio. Air McCook ca.:ne to Chicago two months ago. He was suffering from JJrlghtV disease and went to the hospital for treatment. Gen. McCook was born iu Ohio on June 13. 18;;:. Followin-r his seivlng us Governor of the Territory of lolorado he was appointed United States Minister to Hawaii. Gen. Mo Cook was a member of the fumily f "liyhllng McCooks," almost, a score of whom have been military men of famet ll was active in the territorial legis lature of Kansas at the time the State of Kansas was formed. On the firs shot at Stur.ter he joined the Kansas legion unJ sustained the reputatl oa vS his family throughout the war. II wus eloquent as nn orator and on th death of Gen. Thomas delivered th., funeral oretloti. M