NEBRASKA IH BRIEF I M 1 n "-Mi ij A 1 "... ..I NEWS NOTES OF INTEREST FROM VARIOUS SECTION8. ALL SUBJECTS TOUGHED UPON Religious, Social, Agricultural, Pollt leal and Other Matters Given Due Consideration. tit r 4. Tho Ainorlcnn Surety company haa Hied a petition In fcdoral court asking for an Injunction against tho Btato bonding board to prevent It making rates surety companies chargo In Nebraska. Timothy Greene, aged C3 years, a farmer living nt tho edgo or Sownrd, dropped dead or heart dlscaso whllo '.ceding tho stock at his barn. Ho had Hvort thero twenty-flvo years and leaves a widow and a son nnd dnugh tor both or whom nro married. Mr. nnd Mrs. J. D. Hunted or Dor chester celebrated tholr firtloth wed ding anniversary at tholr homo horo. Tho golden wedding ceremony was rend by tho Rov. C. L. Myers or tho MothodlBt Episcopal church, the pas tor or tho brldo and groom. Artor congratulations tho guosta prcsontqd to Mr. nnd Mrs. Hunter numerous gold presents. Walter Bergor, tho 18-year-old fnrmor lad who Is In Jail In Crawrord In connection with tho attempted -wrecking or tho Darlington train near that placo, according to officials, has conresscd. Ho now tolls tho ofllcors thnt ho nlono did all tho work or pil ing rails on tho trnck which might liavo put tho heavy Burlington train Into tho ditch. George Moycrs, a former resident or Beatrice was killed at Palmor, Kas., -where ho hts been employed tho Inst few weeks with a threshing outfit. Tho members of tho crew with whom Moyors was working had finished threshing at n farm In tho Palmer vicinity and woro on their way to an other farm when tho accident oc curred. Tho police department of Grand Isl and is making diligent effort to ascer tain tho identity or a man, woman and child who passed through that city In an nutomobllo, presumably from tho eastern part of tho stato and bound for Kearney. When tho machlno ap proached tho canning factory it ran into nnd killed a horse. Tho auto moblllsts put on speed and disappear ed In a cloud of dust Mrs. John Singleton of North Platto has received a pockctbook containing ?.'t5 in money from tho matron of tho Union dopot at Omaha. A year ago sho found this pocketboqk in tho Union depot and turned It over to tho matron of tho dopot and was nd vised that if tho owner wns not found within a year it wpuld bo returned to tho finder. Tho owner was not found nnd tho matron kept her word. Civil service examinations will bo hold at North Platte on tho 25th and 2Cth of this month to secure ollglbles for nppolntmont of a translator In tho United States patent ofllco aixl In spector or electric light plante. These will bo tho first civil service exami nations held In North Platto, a recent order having placed North Platto on tho list or places' for holding of civil scrvlco examinations. Railroad nttornoys appeared beforo tho railway commission and asked that tho hearing of proposed classifi cation of freight rates bo postponed until after tho federal court has heard nud passed on tho ovldonco In tho cases now on , lllo thoro. It was argued by tho attorneys that tho rates In effect in 1907 nnd filed with tho commission woro not compensatory nnd that tho rates proposed by tho commission are not compensatory. Tho stato fair management has ar ranged for a series of lectures to bo delivered during tho fair which it is believed will bo of interest nnd ben efit to tho rnrmors of tho state. Tues day, during tho rnlr week, 1). F. Kings ley will deliver a lecture on draft horses. E. W. Hunt will lecture on tho conservation or tho natural resources on Wednesday and Prof. O. G. Holden will loqturo on Thursday to tho farm ers. Tho board of directors of tho 'state Odd Fellows' homo met in Fremont and voted to erect a $50,000 two-story brick building at York. It will bo a thoroughly modern Btructuro with all conveniences nnd havo accommoda tions for fifty inmatos. Judgo Loomls, -who Is chairman of tho board, was directed to havo plans and specifica tions prepared and bids submitted which will, como beforo tho grand lodge nt tho October meeting. Henry Seymour, secretary to tho Stato Board of Equalization, has writ ten letters to a number or county nsscssors regarding tho bank stock listed on a number of abstracts of as. sessment. Gngo county last year re turned bank stock, both stato and na tional, at an assessed valuation of $12,000 and this year bank .stock was reported at an assessed-Yaluo of $151. Mr. Seymour reels satisfied that a mistake has been mado by the as sessor. Prcsldont William H. Tnft will visit Omaha Monday, Soptember 20, arriv ing at 4:30 in tho afternoon and re maining until 11 o'clock that" evening This word camo to Omaha in tele grams from Sonatora Burkott and Brown. Stephon Starling, s for thirty yenrs a resident of Gngo county, was found dead nt tho homo of G. H. Kolloy ' whoro ho had been living. A coro ner's inquest was hold mid tho Jury returned a verdict thnt fienth was duo to natural causes. Mr. Starlln? wnH 51 years old and leaves a widow la tho hospital at Lincoln. HAVE attempted to vary theso stories or o 1 r cumstantlnl ov 1 d o n c o," a a 1 d Judgo Sturgls at the weekly meeting or tho CaU Skin club, "by putting in my little contribu tion to this sym posium in tho style or fiction. Tho facts, howover, are drawn rrom my own oxperlencc. As It is my first at tempt at anything outsldo tho paths of legal lltcraturo I cravo tho indul gence -of you all. With your permis sion I will rend my story." Tho Judgo then road tho following nnrrattvo In a manner that showed ho had not, during his yenrs on tho bench, forgot ten his early skill beforo a Jury. Jim Dlsmukos snt in muto reslgna tlon nud stared into tho rnco of tho Judgo: that storn yet sometimes kind ly old fnco that meant so much to Jim. Ho wondered In his simple way why thoro should bo so much of troublo and bo much or solemnity about so unimportant a member or tho community as hlmseir. Ho won dorcd more than all why that torrlble, unknown thing called tho law had seen fit to drag him rrom his little log homo and keep him through those long months shut up behind tho barred windows or tho modest county Jnll while, oxcept for tho doubtful at lentlon of "Bill," his half-grown boy, the llttlo ten-ncro patch might bo growing up in ragweed and cockle bur. Or course Jim know that one dark nnd forbidding night a travclor tramp Ing homownrd along tho llttlo fre quented hlghwny that' ran Into the timber Just beyond his placo bad stumbled over tho body of young Ar thur Ballard. Jim know people said Ballard had been murdorod. Ho knew when ho went witli tho crowd to look at. tho body by the dim, early morn ing light, ho bad seen that reeking, horrible gunshot wound In his breast, nnd ho bad trembled nnd grown pale. Ho know ho was charged with firing tho sholthat mudo that wound. And Jim also know, deep down In his own heart, whether -or not this chnrgo was true. Jim know, and this knowledge it wns now tho duty of a Judge, twelve men and a stnto's attorney to drag forth. - As Jim snt beforo thoso terrible Inquisitors nud watched tho changing play upon tho countennnco of tho Judgo a tow-headed, stubby-nosed baby "slid from his mothor'B lnpnego tlnted the distance to Jim upon all fours, and begun tho perilous ascent or his long and awkward legs. Jim bent over and patted the little head, but Sally Ann grnbbod tho child to her lap again with tho whispered In junction: "There now, Buddy mustn't botherd pappy. Pappy's busy." "Pappy" was Indeed busy. Tho last man or tho panel had Just been accepted by both slde3. "I wish 1 had 11 moro just Hko him," thought Clay Shoppnrd, tho young and ambitious state's attorney, as ho passed tho veniremen ovor to tho defense. "I can trust him at least to glvo Jim a square deal," thought old Tom Robinson who hnd . volunteered to savo Jim, if possible, simply because ho couldn't help doing kind deeds any moro than ho could help living. . Tho twelfth man truly was an Ideal Juryman. In a small commu nity tho questioning of a vonlremnn is largely a matter of form. Either tho state or tho dofonso can tell long beforo tho trial by looking over the list of veniremen what men they would like to have on the Jury. Amos Watson was ono of thoso who would havo been picked in ndvanco byjjolh sides. A farmer of expansive acTes, which lay In tho high priced prnlrlo beyond tho timber of which Jim's placo was a clearing, he was Identified with nil that was progressive In tho commu nity, llo wns a deacon In tho church, a director In tho bank, nn ofllcer In tho county fair association, and, In fact, held most of thoso honors which, beyond tho city, nro the capstones of success. Ho was Indeed an Ideal Jury man. In tho city ho would lfnvo been challenged for cause, for, with all tho rest of his good qualities, he wns Intolllgont.- The attorney for tho stato then nroso for bis opening. An ho de scribed with tho minutest detail Jim's movements upon the fatal night, Jim writhed and would havo given all tho world, yes, oven his precious ten acres, to have escaped tho stares that seemed to burn Into tho bnck of his wrinkled neck. At tho same tlmo ho vaguely wondered how tho stato's at torney knew things about him that he didn't know hlnisolf. Then old Tom Robinson brought tenrs to Jim's oyos ns ho referred cas ually to Jim's "dovotod wlfo, bis hon est faced boy, soon to grow Into man hood nnd tho llttlo Innocent babothat prattled at Its father's knee." Oldor and sterner eyes than Jlin'B would bo bathed In tears when Old Tom Rob. , Inson roturncd to tills motir in his closing appeal. And the evldcnco began to nllo up that sent Jim farther and farther nwuy from tho llttlo log home and tho ten acre patch. Circumstantial all of It, but each link forged nnd pol ished Into a porfect chain thnt It would tako a stronger band than Jim's to break. Thero was tho quar rel over tho sucking pig that young Ballard killed whllo driving over tho big prairio farm In hlu light top buggy to hit It up with tho boys In town. Thero was tho story of Jim'a way laying him, as with a companion, ho dashed back again lato in tho night, and much tho worso for his evening's "fun," of Jim's catching his, horse's bridlo and demanding payment for the worthless runt; and then of tho cruel, stinging back-handed cut across tho faco with Ballard's buggy whip and Jim's sullen throat "to git oven with the damned stuck-up of ho had to fill him full of buckshot." And thoro wbb tho evidence of Bnl lard'B orton wnlklng homo past Jim's house and through tho timber, when, with tho opon-lieartedncsfl that, was ono of his many weaknesses, ho had loaned tho marc nnd buggy to some ono or his cherished town compan ions; of tho finding or tho body just beyond tho Dlsmukes fenco corner; yes, oven tho ninrks of feet that Jim's boots fitted so exactly. Thon tho state's attornoy sprung tho star witness, n mute ono but with u story so plain that duller Jurymen than theso 12- could have read It from afnr. It was but a circular bit of newspapor probod by tho doctor from the wound In Arthur Ballard's breast. Alone It meant nothing. Fitted Into tho nowspnper found un der tho Dlsmukes family bed, with every Indonturo Interlacing with a nicety that could never havo boon ac cidental, It was as damning ns tho warrant of death Itself, Then there wns tho muzzlo loading shotgun be hind tho door, freshly fired, according to tho firm opinion of well qualified exports in tho person of locnl sports men and tho vlllago gunsmith. What had Jim Dlsmukos to offer to all this crushing weight of ovldonco? What mattered it though ho declared In an uggrloved tono to tho Judgo, whom ho persisted In addressing in stead of tho Jury: "Jedgo, I found thnt paper tho mornln I wont to look nt tho corpse I fetched It homo fer Bill's jest learn In' f read an' I thought ns how ho mought spoil out somo o' the iiowb V mo nn' his ma. I Jest shoved It under tho bed nn' forgot nil about It. Ab for shootln' tho gun, I reckon that part's kerrcct. I shot hor ena moBt ovory day, an' wo hod rabbit tbot ovonln' by roason of mo shootln' it. But I ain't never kilt nothln' but critters an' varmints 'Ith thot gun. Honest, I nln't Jedico." Or what avail weh tho ovldonco or young Bill that on tho night in ques tion his rather had not loft tho houao hut had sat up nearly all tho night blowing tobacco eiuoko into young Bill's car for .tho ear ache. But then what match was young Bill for nn ns tuto nnd nmbltlouB stato's attornoy. It might hnvo been somo other night that young Bill hud tho ear ache. Ho had it ninny times, nnd Young Bill wasn't very strong on tho calendar, anyway. Tho ovldonco of Sally Ann might hnvo corroborated that of her first born, but a wlso and benqflcont lnw holds such evidence prejudicial to tho minds of Jurymen, nnd a wlfo cannot come to her husband's aid In such n dlro oxtromlty. Tho usual chnracter witnesses, the last ditch or a toltorlng cause, put In the usual ovldonco that Jim Dls mukes hnd always homo a good rep utation In his neighborhood for pcucoablcnesB and quiet, und this ovl donco was' duly torn to pieces under tho cross fire of tho prosecution. When tho urgumcnts camo at last Jim again sank down as far ns pos sible In his enno-bottomed chair and stared In wonder nnd ndmlratlon at tho ambitious young Btnto's attornoy as he writhed nnd perspired In a burst of oratory that painted Jim Dlsmukes n terrible, blood-sucking monster go ing up nnd down tho earth seeking whom ho might devour; as ho throw bnck his long black hair and ralsod his trembling hands to tho cracked colling and called down tho ven geance of high honven upon tho foul mnrdoror of Arthur Ballard. Jim wondered If God could seo tho stato's attornoy through the cracks In tho plaster. Sally Ann hugged Bud-, dy to her breast and wept softly. Old Tom Robinson hopod tho Jury saw hor. And thon ovorybody wept whon old Tom roso and got his foot on tho soft pedal. Even tho judgo burled his head In tho record boforo him nnd blow his nose tunefully, The state's attorney began to wondor If being tho storn nvongor of nn out raged luw was such an honor, aftor nll.- .11 in listened Intontly to tho judgo's instructions, but could mako nolthor hend nor tall of them. Something about mallets, ho thought, but ho couldn't romomber anything about mullets, nnd ho had understood nil along It was a shotgun. But tho Judgo know better than ho did, perhaps. When tho Jury filed off Into tho Jlttlo, room back of tho Judgo'n ros "trutn, tho tenslou broke and tho court room hummed Hko a hlvo of been. Above tho hum could bo heard tho scratch, scratch, scratch of tho Judge's pen as ho wroto up tho chancery record. " Jim felt Hko a shipwrecked sailor who had a breathing, spell In his light for life during n lull In tho storm. Ho plnycd with tho crowing and Btronu nun Buddy and whou ho thought no body was looking seized nnd prossed Sally Ann's work-worn hnnd. "Kt's all right, Sally," ho whispered. "Mr, Robinson, ho fetched 'em, I reckon." Tho minutes dragged Into hours, and tho Jury bad not returned. Tho Judgo fidgeted nnd finally sent n bailiff to lnqutro ir tho Jury wished nny for thor explanation or tho lnw. As tho shadows through tho small paned win down lengthened into evening tho word ovmq thnt tho 12 wero in hope less disagreement. Something nt tho Judgo's waistband reminded him thnt his suppor wns gottlng cold nnd ho ordered tho Jury In. Tho whisper went round thnt thoy stood 11 for conviction nnd ono for acquittal. Only montnl tolopathy can explain how nows like this flics through n crowded court room. Tho judgo was angry. Ho hnd two powerful motives for nngor, his spoiled and sodden suppor and tho doublo cost to tho county In another trlnl. He mentioned only ono or those, howevor, in his scathing robiiko to the 12 mon that stood before him. Ho reminded them that they had failed In their sworn duty nnd woro un worthy lo bear tho nanio of citizen. Then stood forth Amos Watson, tho ldoal Juryman. "Mny I hnvo tho permission of tho court to sny n few words," ift be gan. "Elovcn mon on thin Jury aro not deserving of this robuko. One man deserves It all and moro. 1 am thnt man. 1 havo hold out In this case for ncqulttnl nud ns my follow jurymen labored with mo to bring mn to tholr way of thinking I hnvo fought nut u battle with myself nud my maker, It has been u fight that hub extonded beyond this court room back hIx months to tho tlmo of tho death of young Arthur Ballard. It has boon' with mo waking nnd sleeping. " But now, thnnk (Jod, I havo won tho vic tory and 1 um ready to toll this court why I could not consent, to tho con viction of Jim Dlsmukes for murder. It 1b only becnuso ho Is Innncont, I killed Arthur Ballard'" Thero was a hus, and thon a m ir niur and thou n roar which It took tho combined rapilngs or tho sheriff and all his deputh-a to quell. "Go on, Mr. Watson, toll what you have to toll," stonily coninndcd the Judge, ns tho "ldoal Juryman" stood nnd mopped his brow. "Yes, Judge, I will toll it nil, 1 killed Uallatd. I waited for him In tho bushes by tho sldo or tho road whoro 1 know ho would pass, nnd 1 shot 111 in down. So certnln did I seek to mnko good my work that when I recalled that my shotgun had been loaded for some time. I drew tho load as I waited and put In a Trcsh one,' wadding It with a plcco or nowspnpor. Tho rest of tho newspaper I throw Into tho" bushes, and Jim told tho truth when ho snld ho found It thoro. It Is truo thnt Jim's boots fitted la tho tracks, and I wonder thnt Tom Robinson did not Inquire whoro Jim got his boots. Well. I gavo them to him." "WJien Jim was arrested I wanted to tell, hut I could not. I put tho torrlblo truth off from day to dny. Always tomorrow I wns going to lift tho weight from my mind, but I look, cd at my position in tho community, nt my family and nt all tho things thnt mean so much to a man and I could not. "When I found myself drawn on tho Jury tho dovll tempted mo to ac cept nnd Becuro Jim's tTCqulttnl. Thon ho would bo free and no ono Mfould over know. But the ovldonco was bo strong that my arguments woro wenk ngalnBt my follow Jurymen. I know then thnt tho truth had to como out. 1 know that nnnlher Jury would hang Jim. And then, -thank God, tho victory was glvon to mo nnd If you know tho load of reniorso and ngony tbut the tolling has lifted from my shouldciB you would not wondor at my coolness." "But, Mr. Watson, you had a mo tive, a strong motlvo?" queried tho Judge. "Yes, Judgo, I had a motlvo, n strong motlvoi You have a daughter, judge. So huvo I. , You would not want lo hco your daughter's namo drugged In tho mire of a cubo Hko this. Nolthor do I. But I had a strong motlvo." "James Dlsmukes Is discharged from tho bar of this court, and tho court regrets the Injustice thnt has bCuii put upon him. Tho shorlff will tako Amos Watson Into custody. I'm Borry tor you Amos. I'm glad for you, Jim," said tho Judge, hnstlly. "I know Mr. Robinson would fotch 'oni," cried Jim Dlsmukos, loyal to tho last as ho lifted Buddy In his big strong hands and kissed tho dirty, chubb faco. It would not bo becoming in tho author of thouo narratives to mention tin reception nccordod by tho Calf Skin club to Judge Sturgls' story. "And woro you tho judgo?" quer ied hair a dozon momborH In unison. "No, gentlemen," answered Judgo Sturgls. "I wns tho ambitious young stato's attorney." (Copyilght, 1W0, by W. G. Chapiniiti;)