OF A GENERAL RESUME OF THE HAPPENINGS OF A WEEK. ITALIAN MUST STAND TRIAL Pasqual Chrlstlano Charged With Murder of Geneva at Fremont Others Held In Bond to Appear as Witnesses. Pabqunl Chrlstlano muni stand trial In district court on tlx: charge or mur dering Tonn Geneva, tin -.Italian who was killed in u light, tit Fremont not long go. .lunU'c; Dame Wednesday morning bound Chrlstlano oyer to the district court and fixed his IioiiiI at $!!,000, which ho was unable to give. All of the Italians who testified at the preliminary hearing and at. the coronerV. Inquest, won ordered hehl hy County Attorney Graham and Jits tire Dame announced that, they would have to put up security of $101) each. hu only three or the witnesses were ainu i to give bond. The others are locked up in jail. The story brought out In Justice Dame's court was similar to the one whleli the authorities with a good deal of "trouble developed at, the In quest. A big knife and two crude stilettos, made from Illes or other pleres of steel to which the Italians hud access, were exhibited to tlie eouil". These weapons were found In the vicinity of the fight anil are the . ones It is presumed that were used. Two of them ate still bloodstained. Christluno's defense will be that the tight, was a general one and that while he was Injured, he took no part In 11 with a weapon. Chrlstlano claims that he was unarmed. MAY HAVE CLUE TO MURDER. Verdict In Fritz King Case at Ne braska City. The coroner'e Jury which heard the evidence of a large number of wit nesses over the remains of Frit?. King, whose dead body was round on the Missouri Pacific tracks at Nebraska City last. Thursday morning, returned a verdict that lie came to his death from cnuHes unknowu to the Jury. The officers were urged to further inves tigate, an the evidence was not siifil eleni, to hold anyone on the charge of murder, but the Jury were satisfied that the deceased had been killed and throvyn upon the track. His skull wnH crushed and his money all gone. He was known to have had a large sum of money on his peiBon the night, be fore he wiifl killed. The officers are working upon a clue which they are eonlldent -will result. In their being able to arrest one or more of the guilty parties in a few days. Big Reward Offered. The board of supervisors of John- soli county have offered a reward of $500 for the capture of the man or men who took the books in the Cham berlain bunk cae o tcsrhornfffioe of beilalu bank case from the office of the sheriff in tho court, house at Te cumseh one night last week, and an additional $50 for the return of (he- books. Every effort possible hai been made to find aome clue which might lead to the apprehension of tho parties who purloined the books. The local officers have been hard at work and a detective from Lincoln has heeu in that vicinity and at Beatrice, where Chamberlain Is said U have been most, of the time since the books were taken, watching closely for something that would throw light on the mysterious affair. Arrested U. P. Brakemn. Thursday morning a brakeman named Pollock was arrested at (Iraud Island and taken to Omnhn to answer to the charge of stealing goods from Union Pacific cars. From the reports oflbers of the' compuny found some of the misting goods at Pollock's home. Seven men will be placed mule 1 arrest, some of them said to live hi Grand Island and others are scattered aloug the line between Omahu and Grand Island. It. Is ex peeled that discoveries will be made which will show where a largo amount of mlBslng goods of (hu com pany bag been placed. Waterworks at Sutton Burn, At about ono o'clock Wednesday morning the wntorworkn building at Sutton was discovered to be on lire. Prompt action was taken by tho lire company, but without avail. In "0 minutes the entire building containing tho pumps and machinery, and uluo the coal sheds adjoining, worn iu ruliw. The Ions is estimated at $-00,-000 with uo Insurance. It la generally bel'uvfd that tho fire was of Incea diary origin, NEWS NEBRASKA OUTRAGE IN ANTELOPE COUNTY. Enraged Citizens Scouring Country for Strange Man. Oakdalo and the entile community Ik Indignantly astir In nn effort to capture the man who made an attempt lo either asauult or kidnap the seven-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs Alva Monro, who live on a farm ten miles Houth of that place. II tho guilty person Ik found he may be handily dealt with. No description ran be had of the man, iih he wore a mask, and the child Is unable lo give any further Information than thai his skin wan while, and that the only apparel worn by him at tho time wan a suit of un derwear. From what the little girl 1! able to tell ol tho Incident it is be lieved that the man was demented or temporal lly deranged, at bin actions, , as described by her, are not those of I a sane person. The attack upon the child was made about fi o'clock Tuesday when she wna returning to her home from achool, n dlslnnce of a mile and a half. She say ! (he man came upon he suddenly, accosted her and then without warn ing picked her up in his arms and hurried her through a nearby corn flel i. toward the Moore home. She inaiir.ged to make her escape after a struggle with the fellow and succeeded caching the house In an exhausted cniiclSlloii. bordering almost on uncon BenusucKs. The man made -his es cape and has not been seen since. Hotel Burned at Sterling. About eight o'clock Thursday even ing fire destroyed the Commercial hotel at .Sterling, burning the struc- turn completely to the ground. Most of the contents, however, were saved with .light damage by water. Tho building was the property of Joseph Swa'low. He considered It worth $2, 50(1, and bad $1,500 insurance? A de fective Hue wub tho cause of the blaze, and the Hie had quite n little start before discovery. Tho most urgent effort were required to save tho store of Charles Klrkwood adjoining, and two residences noarby, owned by Mrs. Benjamin Haker. Robbers Secure Valuable Furs. At the Western Fur Company, Mi! South Sixteenth street, Omaha, bur glars Thursday night stole $1,200 worth of furs and $14.r0 in money. The. police think that the burglars broke in the vear Tvlndow, but. the proj rletor thlnkH that one of them who came up as a customer Wednes day afternoon, hid iu the establish ment and broke Into the fur storage j looms al ter closing hours. The fur company was robed of $700 worth of furs last December. Seventy-five Years Wed. Mr. and Mrs. William Jones, who reside near Ilulo, are supposed to be the eldest married couple in. the nlate. Mr. Jones Is 97 years of age and Jils wife Is two years older. They -were married in Jackson county, Ohio, and a few days ago celebrated their seventy-fifth wedding anniversary They have throe sons living, aged respectively 08, CO and G7 years. The recent disastrous storms liar emphasized the necessity of protection hgatnst Are; lightning and tornado. A good company for farmers to Insure in Is the Farmers & Merchants of Lin coln. Their policies are easy to un derstand and prompt settlements arc made after adjustment of claims. Thousands of satisfied customer) have received benefits. Farmers should all have telephones Write to us and learn how to get tun best servlco for the least raonoy. Ne braska Telephone Company, 18th and Douglas streets, Omaha. "Use the Bell." Nebraska Notes. Cuming county Is getting out. a new atlas, Two feet, of snow roportcd during the week nt points wost of Chadron, A flue new school house Is nearlng completion at Irwin, Cherry county, The Farmers' Stato bank has boon incorporated at Altoona, Wayne Co. The Winside Tribune figures that I he primary election cost Wayne court y $llu a vote, O. W. Cutnhall raised COO bushels of potatoes on three acres up In Cherry county. The Nebraska Telephone Company ha reduced Its rates between Norfolk and Madison. II ButtlnguuH of Valentino lost 11 stacks of grain by lire. Sparks from a isi h slug euglue. A revival meeting at Central City gathered In during the past, week about lift converts. (V-usldorablo diphtheria prevails in the country about Winner. Two or three deaths are roporteul. Dealers at Plattu Center are paying Ifi cenls for now ear corn. They are offering a little more for now shelled. William Bolls and Henry Martens uve having the gas light hystem In stalled In their places of business at Scrllmcr. Douglas, down lu Otoe county, I wis quite crimped up over tho little tornado that Min4 that place during the pl w THE PRE-ELECTION SUFFRA6ETEES AT IT AGAIN CAUSE ANOTHER SENSATION IN BRITISH HOUSE OF COMMONS. Portions of Grille in Ladies' Gallery Had to be Removed. With Women Disturbers. London, ISng. Suffragette disturb ances havo driven the government to the unusual course of temporarily closing the strangers' and ladles' gal- lorieH In the house of commons. This was announced by the speaker iu re sponse to a question from Premier Asquith and Mr. Balfour, the loader of the opposition, as parliament was ad journing Wednesday night. During the evening, while the house ;was discussing tho licensing bill, a sensation was caused by the display of a placard and sudden shrill cries from the ladles' gallery, demanding votes for women, while simultaneous ly a bundle of handbills fluttered down from the strangers' gallery at the op posite end of the chamber, and a man shouted protests against "Injustice to women." Attendants hurried to the galleries and tho male offender was uncere moniously ejected, but from tho ladles' gallery sounds wore heard of a des perate struggle. Two suffrasettes had firmly chained themselves to the grille and resisted for a time all efforts at removal. The scene was watched with amaze- nient from the floor of the house, but finally the suffragettes were dragged from their posts, but only after por tions of the grille were removed with them. Ten minutes later there was an other dramatic scene, a man in the 'strangers' gallery flinging another bundle of bills down upon the house and shouting "Why don't you give women votes and relieve the unem ployed?" Attendants rushod upon him but he .resisted fiercely an nttompt to carry him bodily from tho gallery. After a desperate struggle, the attendants succeeded in ejecting tho man. About the same time a large body of suf fragettes made a demonstration out side the parliament building and 15 were arrested. Missouri River Rate Case Up. Chicago. Arguments In the Missouri river Jobbers' rato case woro begun here Friday before United Statos Cir cuit Judges Grossoup, Baker and Sea man. Tho cause of tho petition of the railroads Is the ordor of the Interstate? Commerce commission, which be comes effective on November 10, un less set asido, granted sovcral month? ago, following a petition of tho Mis souri river jobbers for a reduction of tho through rates iu existence from the Atlantic seaboard to the Missouri rivor. After Insurance Combine. Llttlo Rock, Ark.- Seventeon Insur mice compnnles aro named as defeu dnnts Iu a suit tiled In the circuit court bore Friday by Attorney Gon- oral Klrby sucking the cancellation of licenses and the assessment of pen tittles aggregating $1,190,000. It is al loguil hy tho attorney general that tho companies named have violated a legislative act prohibiting the forma tlou of a combine to tlx and maintain rates or the couiuiIshIoiih to bo paid agents. ' Hoffman House Manager Dead. New York, John P Cuddnguii, lessee and manager of the Hoffman house ulncn ltt, died horo Thursday ullht after an lllnudri of noverul utenth, ROAD AGENT. WOULD SEE THE BALLOTS. St. Louis primary Fraud Case Before Supreme Court. Jefferson City, Mo. There was a great array of legal talent in the su preme court Friday to argue the pro ceedings involving the right of the St. Louis grand Jury to open the ballot boxes' containing ballots cast nt the August primary In a search for evi dence of fraud. Originally the su premo court Issued a temporary writ of prohibition restraining Judge Tay lor of the court of criminal correction from issuing an order directing the election commissioners to deliver the ballot boxes to the grand Jury. Attorney General Hadley, Circuit At torney Sager of St. Lguis, David A Ball and Fred W. Lehman of St. Louis all presented legal arguments asking that, the writ of prohibition be dls missed to tho end that the grand jury may proceed with its investigation. The opposition was represented by Judge C. Orrtck Bishop and Hugh C. Brady of St. louls. The legal point involved Is whether the primary election law Is an qlec Hon law under tho memimgi-of. tht pniiwMfntlnn Nn r.nlninn In Bin case. Is oxpwted under two or three tfeeks. Kansas Murderers Sentenced. Independence, Kun. Henry Beliner, couvlcted of the murder of Tobias Sawyer while Inflamed with the belief that Sawyer had ruined his daughter, was Thursday sentenced to life Im prisonment. A similar sontence was pronounced on William Llpsey, who went with Beliner to Sawyer's home when the shooting occurred. Llpsey served a term in the Kansas peniten tiary whon a youug man. A Senatorial Primary Void. Blsmurk, N. D. Members of the leg islature will not be compelled to carry out their pledge to vote for the suc cessful candidnte at the primary sen atorial election next Tuesday. The supreme court Thursday decided as unconstitutional tho Pledge feature of the primary law as It relates to tho popular election of United States sen ators, but upholds the law providing for the vote. St. Louis Terminal Hearing. St. Louis. Interstate Commerce Commissioner Harlan Friday con cluded the hearing on the terminal situation in St. Louis and announced that before coming to a decision tho commission would receive briefs on the 'matter involved from any shipper after which it would recommend what ever changes may be necessary. Washington Burying Ground Restored. Richmond, Va. The old Washington burying ground at Wakefield, in West moreland county, has been completely restored, according to u report mado at a meeting of the Society of Colonial Dames of Virginia, held bore Thurs day. The graveyard is now inclosed by a concroto wall with Iron gates and Is iu charge of a caretaker. American Dentist Oead in China. at. Louis, Mo. A cablegram was received hero Thursday announcing the death lu Shnnghal. China, of Or, J. Ward Hall, ono of the most noted dentists in tho Orient. Dr. Hall wnu a brother of Dr. Willis Hall and a hdii of Dr. William Terry Hall of Plqua, O. Tho doath of the dentist was causej by hydrophobia. A Dishonest Lawyer Sentenced.. Now York, William Fllctner, a law yer with olllcoH lu Wall street, wns sentenced Friday to ohe year's Impris onment In the penitentiary for grand larceny, Fllctner Is tit years old and hart boon ptoiulnout as a churchman, HIS PRESTIGE GONE POSITION OF CHANCELLOR VON BUELOW UNTENABLE. MAY BE FORGED TO RETIRE Cannot Forgive Incident In Which Ha" Figures, and Which Has Made Country Something of Laughing Stock. Chancellor von Buelow's position ap pears to be almost untenable. Far and wide throughout the German em pire the newspapers of all parlies dis cuss with varying degrees of mock ery, amazement and regret, the gov ernment's explanation of how what purported to he enormously important utterances of the emperor affecting; three great powers, passed through the hands or tne chancellor and. a long line of foreign people without seemingly having been considered by any of them or read by most of those responsible for the delicate for. elgn relations. The emperoc fully coudoues Prince von Buelow's part iu the affair, but the chancellor's authority and pres tige with the country have beeen so shaken that he may again ask the em- porer lo relieve him. The radical lib eral and socialist journals utilize the event to urge upon the country a de mand for a ministry responsible to the parliament p.nd the people. THE WOMAN IN BLACK ASTIR Tecumseh Nervously Inclined Women. Are Terrorized. Nervously inclined women and children of Tecumseh, Neb., have been terrorized of late by a "woman in black," who is reputed lo have fol lowed, or chased, them to their homes. Friday night. Olden Beatty, son of John Beatty, shot twice at what ho supposed to be the strange creature, using a revolver Young Beatty says as soon as he shot the "woman," who had been following him, -dropped to the ground. He ways there is in doubt but that the party is a man masquerading iu foinlnlne attire and " , -- -" ,u, " 8cl ouc 01 After the shooting the character arose from the walk and ran away, and cung Beatty says he could see men's clothing below " the skirts that were held up to allow the fellow to run. The people are won dering what fellow is doing the mas querading, and are -wondering if he will care to continue the work and take chances at getting a dose of cold lead. NIGHT WATCHMAN MURDERED. C. A. Ralston of Weeping Water Shot by Tramps. C. A. Ralston, night watchman at Weeping Water, Neb., was shot and Instuntly killed shortly before o'clock Sunduy evening by one of two men whom he vas trying to arrest. The men, strangers, and supposedly tramps, escaped. Ralston was an oi l residents there and highly regarded. The suspicious actions of the two men was called to the attention of Watchman Ralston while they were In a restaurant. When they left the placo he followed them lo the Mis- ourl Pacific yard and asked thorn their business. As far as can bo learned they refused to give any sat isfactory uccouut, of themselves and moved toward the coal chutes of Him Missouri Pacific railroad. Ralston at tempted to arrest them, but ono drow a revolver and shot the watchmau, death resulting almost instantly. Tomato Crop Was Hummer. Grandpa Dougherty or Brownville precinct, near Auburn, after losing nearly all of his first planting of to matoes, sold 80 bushels and would have sold 800 bushels more had the frost .held off a little longer. He puts out but five acres and though he Is 70 years of age ho did the work all alone. James Flanigau, who farms iu Glen Rock precinct, finished market ing his crop of squashes and found that he had a little over S2 per aero for bis work. Political Quarrel Fatal. In a political quarrel nt Foraker, Okla., Sunday Frank S. Seward, a prominent merchant and local demo cratic committeeman, shot and iu ctantl.v; killed John Milam, a well known farmer of Pawliuska, Okla. The shooting occunv I In Seward's store, Milam was a republican, The men became engaged in a heated political debate, Suddenly Sowuvd drew hbi revolver ami fired live shots Into Mb inin's head. Milam had been prominent lu 0ugo Indian uffnlrs,