The O’Neill Frontiei D. H. CRONIN, Publisher, O’NEILL, NEBRASKA Gravesend should prove of more than lommon Interest to any of our Amer ican sailor visitors who happen to pos It ss the historic sense. For its parish thurch ■ is believed to contain the re mains of the beautiful and ill-fated American Princess Pocahontas. On her visit to England in 1616 she was iccorded a most hospitable reception. Unfortunately, however, she contracted unallpox and died on her way back to Virginia. .Site was brought ashore at Sravesend. where she was burled. The precise pjace of sepulture is a matter of dispute among antiquarians, but ist. Seorgc's church claims the honor, and Its parish registry contains the follow ing entry: "Rebecca Wrotlie, Wyff of Thomas Wrothe, gent, a Virginia lady borne, here was buried In ye Cliaun eell.” _ Tile best form of splice for galvan ized iron wire, according to a writer In Electrical World, is one in which tbs wire Is twisted to form five complete turns In what is known os the neck of the splice, after which the splice is completed by means of four or five end turns, in which the end of each wire is turned in a close coil about a straight section of the other. Tests Of various splices show that the end turns have very little holding powrer, but that most of the holding power Is flue to the turns in the neck, and that a joint with five properly made turns In the neck will be as strong as the wire it is. made of, and will yield hut slightly at flrBt until it is set, after which there is practically no yield up to the breaking point. lieutenant colonel Muge, of the Swedish army, Is credited with the In vention of aerial torpedoes. These tor-' pedoes are very light and It is said that they will travel for a distance of about three mile*. They can be made to. explode either by contaot or by means of clockwork. They are launched by means of a special apparatus with ai\ explosive weighing rather over two and one-linlf pounds. When launched the torpedo travels at tho rate of BO meters the second, but the celerity Is soon In creased to 300 meters, tho meter being 39 inches. Experiments are shortly to be made with this engine of destruc tion at Krupp’s works, where there arf Waco, Neb., committed suicide yes terday afternoon by cutting an artery n his wrist and bleeding to death. Mr ftrellman was 86 years of age and had ieen suffering for some time with an Ittaek of grip. During the past fon lays he became despondent, saying that te knew he would not get well and it ia aelleved that this was the cause of his ^icide. Mr. Wellman was staying at the tome of Julius Bloom, where he com mitted suicide. He was found by a member of the Bloom family siting ir l chair in his room dead. CONVICTS GET AWAY FROM PH ON ICE Three Sing Sing Men Makd Daring and Sensational Es cape at Night, Ossining, N. Y. Jan. 23.—All nighl •earth for the three convicts who es tftped from Sing Sing prison last night ind were believed to have crossed the Hudson river on the iee, failed to re ^eal a trace of the fugitives. The escape of the trio, one of whom b a life cpnviet, was a sensational affair. It was effected after a rehears il of the prison orchestra, when Ralph Taylor, Charles McGinn and William flush, instruments in hand, stole intc he court yard passageway, beat down wo guards with blows over the head vith cornets and flutes, and slipped hrough an open space in the iron pili ngs by the river side. They w ere fired it by the guards, hut it is not believed Iny of the bullets took effect, and sight >f the fugitives was soon lost on tie \oggy surface of the ice-covered river INDIANA KILLS OFF COUNTY OPTION LAW Legislature Repeals It and Sub. stitutes Township Act In Its Place. Indianapolis, Ind.. Jan. 28.—The *ounty local option law will be supers eded by the Proctor-Keeney measure, •assed by the senate last .Tuesday and iy the house yesterday, when Governor Thomas R. Marshall today, affixes his rignature and makes it a law. v Under the Operation of the law S2 ountles held special elections on the Iquor question. 60 voting dry and 13 ret. The new law is a city and town* {hip local option act. JURLINGTON LUMBER MERCHANT IS DEAD Burlington. In.. Jan. 28.—T. G. Fos er, aged 63, a prominent Burlington umberman and administrator of many Btates, died today in Florida. FLIGHT POSTPONED. Key West, Fla., Jan. £s.—J. A. D. dcCurdy, thw aviator, again post oned bis flight to Havana this morn ng. High winds and a rough sea, in Hiich he fea.fed his pontoons would >e unable to s >Ve him, ware the causes. t — DEMOCRATS ATTACK GOVERNOR ALORIGh Accused of Injustice In Message Directed Against Omaha Election Frauds. Dlncoln, Neb., Jan. 27.—The first jreak between the republican governor aid the democratic legislature occurred oday. when the Douglas county dole ration Introduced a resolution severely •ensuring the governor, for the utter mces in his special message of yester* lay, on the election frauds in Omaha The resolution placed the governor di ■eetly in the Ananias club. It charged hat he had given utterances to the iharges simply to get them into print. An effort on the part of the repub ieans to sidetrack the resolution waS tefeated, and it was adopted, without .he preamble, in which the governor was attacked. As passed, the resolu :ion calls for a special committee of 3ve to investigate the truth or falsity 3f the message. In part it says: "The injustice to Omaha of thesd fulminations from the executive cliam 5er amounts almost to an outrage, be cause many of the charges have not :he slightest foundations, in fact; and further because there is unfortunately no constitutional provision against :hese tedious purification messages, which threaten to consume the valuable time of this house.” Capital Removal Proposed. A capital removal bill signed by 27 members of the house, was introduced ■his morning. It provides that all pities which shall desire to compete for ‘.he location of said capital shall file petitions with the secretary of state 60 lays before the next election, and the /ote shall be taken at that time. All such contestants shall be west of the 97th meridian. If a majority of votes past shall be In favor of removing said capital, it shall be declared removed, if any one city shall receive a majority pf all votes cast in favor of removal, It «hall be the site. If none receive a ma lority, the next election shall witness a, contest between the two receiving th* highest votes. VICTIM'S MOTHER HISSED IN CHURCH Norfolk People Bitter Toward Parents of Kuart Stehr— Sensation at Funeral. Norfolk, Neb., Jan. 27.—“Hang her lip,” cried a woman as Mrs. Henry Stehr, mother of little Kuart Stehr, entered the church here yesterday where the funeral of the dead Doy was held. The crowd hissed the mother of the boy as she appeared ana she hung her head as she passed up the aisle where she broke down and wept bitterly. Finally she fainted and was caught in the arms of August Braun, superintendent of the Sunday school of St. Johannes’ Lutheran church, where the funeral was being held. Pastor Otto Bergselder declared in his address that the little boy did not get the love of his mother and was whipped by his stepfather, and that it was better to go to heaven with both feet off than to hell with both of them on. The boy lost his feet as the result of freezing and later amputation when gangrene set in and caused the tlesh to drop from the bones. The step father, who is accused of criminal cruelty and neglect toward the boy is in jail at Madison and no effort will be made to bring him back here until the time of his trial, as the feeling of the community toward him is bitter and violence Is feared by the ofticers. INSTITUTE TO AWARD PRIZES FOR ESSAYS Lyons, Neb., Jan. 27.—Andrew Young, jr., secretary of the Burt County Farmers' Institute, which meets in Lyons, February (1 and 7, has personally offered a set of prizes to young people which is well calculated to interest them In the coming insti tute. It is to be a test in the five dif ferent high schools of the county for the best compositions. Each school determines for itself which is best among its own students and this one is to represent their school at the in stitute, receiving a prize of $1 cash for his effort, with railroad fare and expenses paid. On the evening of the second day of the institute the contest proper will be held, the winner to re ceive $2 cash. In order not to consume too much time the compositions are to be very short. VANDALS DISFIGURE HANDSOME RESIDENCE Wealthy Woman Who Wedded Former Policeman, Finds Her Home a Wreck. New York, Jan. 27.--“Elmhurst,” the wonder palace at Riverdale on the Hud son, was visited by vandals during th$ honeymoon trip of its chatelaine, Misa Julia Morosini, who returned yesterday* Miss Morosini was married January 12 tc Arthur M. Werner, a former policeman who saved her life while he was serving as a mounted officer on the speedway. Drawing room, library and the cele brated armory, a 100-foot wing of the* bouse, which contains the greatest pri rate collection of arms and armor in this country, were turned upside down. Fig ares were overturned, rugs trampled and •orn anti the celebrated Gobelin tapestried -ipped and mutilated. • Werner remained Jownstairs while his wife ran upstairs tc ind what damage had been done there. In her apartments ihe ruin was more tomplete than on the first floor. All of hei. nost treasured possessions had been scat ered about: her closets, which contained ler magnificent gowns and hats, had bee* Torced open. The damage is estimated at $60,000. DES MOINES BOWLER MAKES HIGHEST SCORE fit. Louis, Jan. 27.—The following in ftvidual scores were made yesterday n the American Bowling congress: II. G. Stiles, Des Moines, 639; F. Iser*> nan, Des Moines, 635; A. Root, To t-do, 613; W. Mattison, Toledo, 610; u. Tester. Madison, 608; W. Elwert, To edo, 590; J. McCormick. Toledo, 588; I . E. Aubuchon, Doerun. Mo., 586; R. ' Sizer. Madison. 584; J. Carver, Doerun, do.. 5S1. —- "~ .... SUDDEN DEATH OF HIGHMORE WOMAN Early Settler of Hyde County, S. I)., Was Mother of Sioux City Man. Higlimore, S. D., Jan. 26.—Mrs. G. B. Meigs died suddenly at her home in this city' last evening. Deceased was in good health until 10 minutes before she died. Heart failure was the cause of her death. She was one of the early solders of Hyde county. From The Sioux City Tribune. Mrs. Meigs was the mother of Syl vostor B. Meigs, a travelling man, who lives at 712 West Fourth st. F. S. Meigs, of Highmore, representing War-1 Held, Pratt, Howell company on the road, is another son. while tw*> daugh ters, Miss Bessie Meigs and Mrs. Ril 'ah Bancroft live at Highmore. The mother had visited here on several occasions, her latest visit being about ?. year ago. ROSEBUD LAND CASES UNDER INVESTIGATION Sioux Falls, S. D., Jan. 26.—The work of taking the testimony in the now famous Rosebud land cases, on for hearing in Sioux Falls for several days before Special Examiner Wallace, has not yet benn concluded, but an ad journment has been taken, and a fu ture hearing will be held for the pur pose of completing the work. The defendants in the action, which was instituted by the government, are E. J. De Bell, of West Point, Neb.; H. Butterfield, of Norfolk. Neb.; W. H. Lynn, of Dallas, S. D., and two res idents of LeMars, la., named Johnson and Moritz. The case involves a num ber of tracts of land in the ceded por tion of the Rosebud Indian reservation, which the defendants purchased from Individual Indians who at the time of tho transfer were the lawful owners of the land. The government alleges that the land was obtained by the defendants by misrepresentation and fraud, and that the Indians were paid a sum far below the real value of the land, and seeks to have the transfers set aside. FARMER’S DEAD BODY IS FOUND IN FIELD Watertown, S. D., Jan. 26.—The dead body of Frank Arnold, a farmer living three miles from Appleby, was discov ered after an all-day’s search lying in i field nine miles from Watertown. Saturday afternoon Arnold mounted a horse and rode to Appleby for some provisions, and In his usual good health end spirits started on the return ride to his home, which was the last seen of him by his friends. His horse was found at the stable the next morning, when his wife sent out an alarm, since which time parties have been scouring the country for the missing man. find ing his body late yesterday. The re mains were brought to this city where an autopsy will be held today to de termine the cause of death. COURTNEY’S CONDITION IS CONSIDERED CRITICAL Yankton, S. D., Jan. 26.—Persistent rumors are afloat here, although little as to facts are known, that the spring will see the big cement works open here, with C. J. Van Doren, a former super intendent, in charge. The same rumors have it that the original company, mostly Milwaukee stockholders, will still be in control and that big improve ments will be added. Alarming rumors come from the hos pital as to the real condition of Daniel Courtney, shot by George Itossteuscher last December. An injured kidney is leaking into the stomach and intestinal paralysis still prevails. The conviction is growing that Mr. Courtney’s condi tion is one of great gravity. —f TsJews Briefs of the Northwest '! i PORT DODGE. IA.—Mrs. J. E. Rum | sey was seriously burned in a gasoline explosion and her recovery is doubtful. KODOKA, S. D.—The Stanley county 3hort course is in session here with a / food attendance and an interesting pro- A ?ram. MITCHELL, S. D—Rev. Henry Sny der. of Woodstock, Minn., has accepted a call to the Presbyterian church of v.his city. MITCHELL. S. D.—-The state poultry show will be held here next week, this being the 12th annual session held at this point. MASON CITY. IA.—Mayor Ivirsch man. of this city, fractured a rib when he reached for the telephone and fell over a chair. LESLIE, S. D.—Harold Sechlor re ?ently killed a wolf which weight'd 217 pounds. Several calves and colts had been killed by the animal. CHARLES CITY, IA.—Patrons of the city schools joining with on. of the members of the board have succeeded ’n barring the introduction of ‘dancing. DES MOINES, IA.—Charles w. Miller, of Waverly, F. M. Hubbell. of this city, and W. \V. Marsh, of Water loo, are credited with a desire to start a morning democratic daily here. 4 STORM LAKE, IA.—An official no tice from Washington, D. C., gives the appointment of postmaster at Newell to A. F. Morse. Mr. Morse has served that office for two terms and has done well. STORM LAKE, IA.—Sunday occurred 'xj* the death of the oldest person in the county, Mrs. Ks.therine Kehlm. She lacked but two months of being a cen tenarian. having reached the age of 99 years and 10 months. She was born In Germany, March 1, 1 SI 1. WINNER, S. D.—The attorneys of Tripp county heH a meeting here and organized the Tripp County Bar asso ciation, with the following officers: President, L. B. Callender; vice presi dent, S. S. McAllister; secretary. Ta.v or E. Saxton; treasurer, Windsor Dougherty. ROSEBUD INDIAN AGENCY, S. D. -At his home on this reservation oc curred the death of Owl-Walks-In-The House, one of the best known and most influential Brule Sioux Indians of mod ern times. He was 5S years of age and s survived by a widow and two chil dren, a son and daughter. PRESIDENT WRITING A RECIPROCITY MESSAGE. Washington, Jan. 26.—President Taft today spent most of his time in prepar ing the special message which he will forward tomorrow to congress with the Canadian reciprocity treaty urging the adoption of the treaty and his reasons therefor. Ambassador Bryce, of Great Britain, ,nd Secretary of State Knox were with the president today in consultation over ihe matter.