TARIFF OCCUPIES BOTHBRANCIIES Revision Measures Will Come Up in Senate and House. FINANCE COMMITTEE IS READY Senate Committee Will Vote on Lorl mer Report Saturday and on Steph son Election Case Next Monday. Appropriations Are Waiting. "Washington, March 18. Tariff re vision will continue to occupy both houses of congress this week. When the house passes the excise income tax Mil tomorrow and submits a woolen schedule revision to the Democratic caucus, possibly by the end of the week, the revision program there will have been ended. Democratic revision measures are piling up on the senate. The finance committee's adverse report on the house Iron and steel bill will be made this week. Chairman Penrose and his Republican colleagues will make an elaborate statement of their atti tude on the revision bills. The finance committee will hear Chairman Emery of the tariff board to morrow on the house chemical tariff bill, hearings on which propably will occupy the week. Hearings on the free sugar bill, passed by the house, will follow the chemical bill. Meanwhile the Democrats and pro gressive Republicans are no nearer an understanding, though some of them express confidence that the talked of common ground might be reached on come tariff legislation. Democratic leaders In the house are determined to speed up legislation. Some members of the ways and means committee and many other Democrats are Insisting upon free wool, to which Democratic Trader Underwood is as much opposed as he was originally to free sugar. Mr. Underwood's Idea is to report a schedule wnich would con form to the conference report on schedule K of the present law last summer, which proposed a 27 per cent ad valorem tariff on raw wool. Disposition of the excise bill in the house will open the way for further consideration of appropriation bills. The postofflce bill, which would estab lish a parcels post system, will be considered under a special rule. Op ponents of a parcels post have op posed the bill on the ground that it bears new legislation, a point the new rule Is designed to meet. The senate on March 25 will vote on the Stephenson election case. The Wisconsin senator has been exoner ated of allegations of bribery and cor ruption by one senate elections com mittee and condemned by another. On Saturday the special senate com mittee which Investigated Senator Lorimer's election will vote on its re port. There is no hope of unanimous action. PLANS FOR ALASKAN ROAD Taft Approves Project to Use Panama Canal Equipment for Purpose. Washington, March 18. Secretary Walter I Fishei of the interior de partment conferred with President Taft about his plan for utilization in the construction of a government rail road hi Alaska of equipment and force soon to be released from work on the Panama cajial. The secretary con ceived the plan while in Alaska last K'uvnter rt. Prudent Ta t omovt-d it. Mr. Fisher returned to Washington no.u -4. (...lUiineu s.uiii.iiai.uu o. i..c equipment now in use on the canal and brought with him a complete list of the machinery and rolling stock bo lieved to be available, together with the probable dates on which it could be released. He also talked with army engineers who soon will bo ready for other assignment and found them ager to undertake railroad building in Alaska. General W. L. Marshall, the engi neering adviser of Secretary Fisher, will begin at once the outline of a scheme designed to show congress the feasibility of the transfer of men and material by water from Panama to Alaska. It will contain an estimate of the value of the road now building from Seward, Alnska, to the Matr.n uska coal fields, which probably will be taken over by the government, h the proposition originated by Mr. Fisher Is adopted. Rear Admiral Melville Dead. Philadelphia, March 18. Rear Ad miral Ooorge Wallace Melville, U. S N., retiiec', died at his home here from paralysis. He was national command er of the l.oynl Legion at the time o 1ms death and was a noted authority on Arctic explorations as well as engl neering and naval affairs. Switchman Elected Speaker, rhoenix, Ariz., March 18. Samuel B. Bradner, a switchman In the yards of the Southern Pacific tt Benson, was selected as speaker of the house oi Arizona's first state legislature by a caucus of Democratic members, who control the house, 35 to 4. Mulal Hafld Is III. Tangier, March 18. It Is announced that the sultan, Mulal Hafld, who has been suffering from a severe nervoua affection, recently announced his In tention to abdicate and leave the pal ace. He was persuaded, however, ti reconsider his decision. NEBRASKA'S FIRSTSONTALKs Samuel P. Merrill in Pulpit at Cal vary Baptist Church, Omaha. Omaha, March 18. At Calvary Bap tist church the pulpit was occupied by Rev. Samuel P. Merrill of Rochester, N. Y., the first white man born in Ne braska. Rev. Mr. Merrill is In the city, the guest of Dr. and Mrs. Milroy, and being a Baptist clergyman, he was induced to talk to the Calvary I'oople. His address was brief, deal ing to a large extent with his recollec tions of incidents in connection with the early days when Nebraska was a wilderness, inhabited only by wild beasts and still wilder men. Rev. Mr. Merrill recounted the fact that he was born at Bellevue in 1835 and at a time when his father and mother were both missionaries among the Indians. Rev. Mr. Merrill stated that at the time Bellevue was 230 miles from any white settlement and that in order to reach it, It was neces sary to pas3 through a country inhab ited only by Indians. At the time there were some boats on the Missouri river, but they were few and passed Bellevue nt irregular Intervals. EMBALMERS PLAN INSURANCE Auditor Tells Them They May Form One If They Desire. Lincoln, March 18. The State Em balmers' association has asked the state auditor if It can organize within its membership a life insurance com pany on the assessment plan and the auditor has replied that they may. A. E. Howard, attorney for Albert Prince, the colored convict who killed Deputy Warden Davis, asked that a compulsory process be issued to take the testimony of Charles Burns, James Sullivan, John McAdaw, Edward Stoge man and Mike Berry, convicts recently discharged from the penitentiary, by whom he hopes to prove that Prince had been mistreated by Davis and other prison officials. TRIBUTE TO MEMORY OF GROVERGLEVELAND Public Meetlag In New York Com memorating 7511) Birthday. New York, March 18. Stephen Gro ver Cleveland's memory was honored at a public meeting in the city college, commemorating his seventy-fifth birth day anniversary. Tributes from Presi dent Taft, Governor Dix of New York and Governor Harmon of Ohio were read and eulogistic addresses delivered by men with whom Mr. Cleveland was associated.. The exercises were attend ed by Mr3. Frances Folsom Cleveland, widow of the former president, and Mrs. Daniel S. Lamont, widow of the secretary of war in Cleveland's cabinet. Valuable Animals Dead in Transit. Sidney, Neb., March 18. A valuable carload of emigrant movables arrived here on a Union Pacific freight train, the property of W. C. Brown, president of the New York Central railroad. It contained a lot of Jersey cattle on their way to the ranch of Mr. Brown at Gooding, Ida. When the car was opened here they found a Jersey bull, valued at $3,000, and a high priced cow dead. The car was In charge of W. C. Callaway, who claims that rough handling of the train between North Platte and Sidney was responsible fcr the loss sustained. Nebraska Woman Testifies. St. Louis, March 18. Mrs. Ellaabeth A. Webster of Emerson, Neb., testify ing in the trial of E. G. Lewis In the United States district court on charges of using them ails to defraud, said she invested $1,210 In the Lewis Publish ing company's 7 per cent nates.. Of these $000 were of the unsecured Is Rue. She also bought $130 of the pre ferred stock. All she ever received In return, she said, was $3. William McLaughlin Dead. Lincoln, March 18. William Mc Laughlin, formerly treasurer of Lan caster county and resident of Lincoln since 1SG7, died at his home hero. He retired from office Jan. 1, but during the last year of his term had been unable to perform any of the duties of the office. He was ono of the best known and most popular residents of Lincoln. Western Nebraska to Have Baseball. North Platte. Neb., March 18. Plans are nenring completion for the forming of a central Nebraska base ball league, to Include Lexington, Gothenburg, Cozad, Julesburg, Oga Ialla anJ North Platte. It Is the In tention to play a short schedule and give the people of this section some semi-professional ball. Presiding Elders Given Assignments. Kearney, Neb., March 18. Ilev. M. T. Maze, presiding elder of the Kear ney district of the United Evangelical chinch, was elacted to the Lincoln dis trict with residence In IJncoln. Bev. ,T II Williams of the IJncoln district will move here and will have charge of the Kearney district. Nebraska Liundrymen Meet in Omaha Omaha, March 18. The Nebraska Launderymen's association will meet In annual convention at the Rome ho tel tomorrow. About 120 to 130 laun drymen are expected. George M. Strain of the Kimball Laundry com pany is president of the association. BOMB MYSTERY BAFFLES POLICE Rosalsky and Taylor Infernal Machines Are Alike. THREATENING LETTERS SENT. Police Inspectors Busily Engaged In Searching for Postman Who Deliv ered Package Inspector Egan Has Narrow Escape. New York, March 18. The home of Judge Otto A. Rosalsky of the court of general sessions, where a bomb deliv ered to him exploded, was the scene af renewed excitement, caused by the appearance of a man who wildly kicked at the door and demanded ad mittance. The stranger was a shabbily dressed man, who forced his way past the hall attendants In the apartment building on Riverside drive and climbed six flights of stairs to see Judge Rosalsky about some fancied grievance of "per secution by the tobacco trust." Police were called and the man was taken to Bellevue for observation as to his san ity. He gave his name as Wolf Her man and ills business as that of a clgarmaker. The police believed him to be ln Rane. but harmless, and In nowise con nected with the attempt made on Judge Rosalsky's life with the bomb. Inspector Owen Egan of the bu reau of combustibles who was injured while examining the bomb in the judge's library, insisted on leaving the hospital, although he suffered pain from a mangled hand and torn face. With face and hands bandaged, he joined a score of the best detectives In the police department in Investigat ing the bomb mystery. It was Inti mated that the detectives were work ing on Important clues suggested by further talks with Judge Rosalsky. Judrje Will Not Talk. To newspaper men the Judge de clared he had no particular suspicion of any one, but admitted that he had received many threatening letters, one at the time he sentenced CarlessI, a forger, to twelve years In prison two weeks ago. This threat was to blow up the criminal courts building. As to any suggestion that the bomb sending might have any connection with the Folke E. Brandt case, In which Rosalsky sentenced the former valet of Mortimer I Schlff to the thir ty-year term, over which there has lately been such a controversy, the J-irige would say nothing. Postal Inspectors have joined detec tives in the search for the letter car rier who delivered the bomb. Another feature of the Investigation was a comparison of the Rosalsky bomb with one which killed Helen Taylor In her home on Feb. 3. The police never cleared up that mystery. Similarity in the construction of the wo bombs !s said to be remarkable '.a some particulars. Both bombs bore typewritten fid dresses on white paper pasted onto a manllla paper wrapper. The boxes were about of the same size and each contained two tiny electric batteries and a spring arrangement designed to produce an electric spark when the rover was removed. That this did not work when Judge Rosalsky opened the box Is believed to have been due to small particles of dirt which had accumulated about the spring. Inspector Egan. who was examining the bomb when It exploded, believes he owes his life to the fact that the inside pockets of his coat were stuffed with heavy documents. Without this protection he believes some of the slugs from the bomb would have torn Into his body. His coat was torn and several slugs were found lodged "gainst the papers. EXPORTiTtO MEXICO DECLINE Trade Falling Off Materially Due to Disorders In South. Washington, March 18. Trade of the United States with Mexico la showing the effect of the disturbed business conditions In that country. This Is especially true with reference to exports, which show a much greater decline than Imports. Exports to Mex ico during the last year show a fall of About 20 per cent when compared with the Immediately preceding year, while imporO show also a slight de cline, but less than that of exports. The to;al value of exports to Mexico during the twelve months ending with January, 1012, Is $52,271,987, against $04,671 iF,9 In the corresponding months of the Immediately preceding year, a decline of about $12,000,000, er an average falling off of a little more than a million dollars a month during the same period. Imports from Mexico during the same period amounted to $r9.227,51C, against $59, 981,890 during the corresponding pe riod of the preceding year, being less than $1,000,000 decrease. Socrates of Broadway Dies. New York, March 18. George Arms, known by his many literary friends as "The Socrates of Broadway," is dead at the aged of eighty-two years. He had made his home in a Broadway ho tel for thirty-seven years. During the civil war Arms made a fortune manu facturing swords. He later traveled all over the world. Of late years he has entertained literary friends almost daily at the hotel. Mark Twain used to be a frequent caller. JUDGE AND COURTHOUSE Judge Thornton L. Massie, Who Was Killed on Bench; Courthouse. Scene of Crime. I! -o : f "'"r 'V ' Photos by American I'reii Association. ALIENS CONTINUE TO ELUDE POSSE Hillsvllle Assassins Barricaded in Wilds of Blue Ridge. Hillsvllle, Va., March 18. Two thou sand feet above sea level among the cralgs of the Blue Ridge mountains, the Allen gang, who demonstrated their contempt of constituted law by a massacre of the judge, the prosecutor and sheriff of the Carroll county court, continue to defy capture. The search by a posse of seventy five detectives and citizen volunteers demonstrated that unless the militia Is sent here to begin a systematic siege of the hiding places of the out laws, they may never be brought to answer to the Indictments for murder returned here. For such a plan a campaign site was selected by repre sentatives of Governor Mann. C0LCNELT0 TAKE THE STUMP Will Start In New York and Go South to St. Louis. Oyster Day, March 18. First Infor mation of the plan.of campaign mapped out by Roosevelt leaders at their con ferenees at New York, was given by Colonel Roosevelt. Ho said he had do elded definitely to make a number of speeches In various parts of the coun try In the near future. His speech before the Civic Forum in New York Wednesday night Is first on the program. Later this week Col onel Roosevelt will talk somewhere on the East Side In New York If a hall can be obtained. Early next week he will start on a short tour of the middle west. Three speeches have been do elded upon to be made at Chicago, St, Paul and St. Louis. In the week beginning March 31, Mr. Roosevelt will go Into New England. The colonel said that he did not be lieve the Roosevelt forces would have control of the Republican national committee and that all he wanted from the committee was a square deal. Three Cruisers Sent to Philippines. Washington, March 18. Significant orders were Issued from the navy de partment directing three of the big armored cruisers of the Pacific fleet to proceed at once to the Philippine Islands for an Indefinite stay. The navy department will not admit that the big vessels are to be attached to the Asiatic fleet, but their arrival In the Orient will give the United States the most powerful foreign fleet, ex cepting that of Japan, In touch with Chinese waters. The vessels crdered to the Philippines are the flagship Cal Ifornla, the South Dakota and Colo rado, now at Honolulu. Girls Take Boys' Places In Choirs, Chicago, March 18. Positions as olngers In motion picture shows are attracting so many choir boys that churches here are considering- Install Ing choir girls. One church, the Trin Ity Episcopal, already has substituted girls In the choir for the boys. The girls sing at two services a day more willingly than did the boys. Wife of Lorillard Hangs Herself. New York. March 18. Mrs. Kath leen Leslie Doyle Lorillard, wlfo of Heekman Lorillard of Ashevllle, N. C committed suicide by hanging herself In the bathroom of the apartments she and her husband had occupied at the Holland house for the last four or five days. C -it r (A ; V' - "I WILEY CHARGES ARE TO BE AIRED Inquiry of Department of Agri culture Will Be Reopened. MORE FRICTION PREOICTEO. Party Leaders Believe Too Many Men Pass on Pure Food Laws President Not Satisfied With Conditions in the Department. Washington, March 18. The resig nation of Dr Harvey W. Wiley as chief chemist of the department of ag- iculmre has caused an Immediate re opening of the congressional Inquiry Into that department. Chairman Moss ol the house committee on expedltures In the department announced that his committee intended, in view of Dr. Wiley's charges, to resume its investi gation. "The complete lack of harmony," continued Mr. Moss, "and consequent lack of efficiency In the chemical bu reau never has been satisfactorily ex plained to the committee. We have Dli. HAHVEY W... WILEY AND Ml. 11E5RY E. HAHNAItl), 1118 CHOICE FOH 8UCCE8 8C-H (UK. HAn.NARI) AnoVK). been unable to obtain a record of the abatement of Dr. Wiley's decisions, tiiid orders by these two boards had re sulted in the waste to the government of $1,190,000." Hope for Less Friction. The president is not satisfied with conditions In the department of agr! culture, but. Is hopeful now that Dr. Wiley has gone there will be a cessa tion of friction and a consequent In crease In efficiency of the service. From ail thnt can be learned he has no intention of dismissing Solicitor McCahe or Dr. Dunlap, the two officials of whose supervision and espionage Dr. Wiley especially complained. It has been the claim of these offl clals that Dr. Wiley was the trouble maker, and It will bo for them now to demonstrate whether or not this was the case. It Is the view of members of both parties In congress that there Is real need of a reorganization of the depart ment of agriculture. Dr. Henry E. Barnard, state chemist of Indiana, Is favored by Dr. Wiley as his successor. DEMAND RANSOM OF $100,000 Chinese Bandits Capture Son of Mil Honaire OH Magnate. Shanghai, March 18. Bandits kid naped the young son of Sheng Kung Pas, the millionaire oil magnate. A note received by Mb father several hours later said that If $100,000 ran som wap not paid the boy would be murdered. General Sheng Yun, with his army of 10,000 troops from the province of Kansu, who was reported a few days ago to be marching on Peking after defeating a republican army, confines his advance In the capital in spite of the appeals of President Yuan Shi Kai. A telegram from Mukden says that General Chang Tsao Lin Is expected to march on Peking at any moment with an army from Manchuria to co operate with General Sheng Yun. Rev. McFarland Found Guilty. Pittsburgh, March 18.--Rev. Dr. T. D. McFiuland, minister and educator, former head of the Pittsburgh Central high school, hut later connected with United Presbyterian mission work at Greenville, Tenn., was convicted by a Jury In the criminal court here of causing the death of his former secre tary, Elsie Dodds Coe, last January. Co-operative Bakery Opens. Minneapolis. March 18. The fl:; co-operative huslnes enterprise ever undertaken by labor unions In Minne apolis for organized labor wns started today. It la a bakery Incorporated for $50,000 and stock Is held only by mem bers of organized labor. A number of local unions BubRcrlbed for stock from their treasuries. Mm. PUBLIC SALE The undersigned will sell at Public Auction at bis late livery an it back barn, corner Sixth and Vine streets, Plattsmouth, Neb., SATURDAY, MARCH 30th, the following described property to-wit: One team driving horses, weight 1,900. One team of work horses, weight 2,400. One team of work horses, weight 2,500. One good work horse, weight 1,200. Two single drivers, weight 900 each. Three sels of work harness. Three sets of buggy harness. Two sets of single harness. Two backs and one coupe hack. One pall-bearer hack. One Ililcy bus. Two carriages and three single buggies. One wagon and hay rack. One wagon and one trunk wagon. Numerous other articles. Terms of Sale: All sums of $10 and under. cash in hand; over $10 a credit of twelve months will be given if de sired, purchaser giving good bankable paper bearing 8 per cent interest from date. All property must be set I led for before being removed. Sale to commence, at 1 o'clock I M. sharp. C. L. MARTIN. Mold. Wilkinson, Auctioneer. T. M. Patterson, Clerk. THE "CfUGRER y Annual Engagement of the Show That Invariably Packs the Gayety, Omaha. Once again Hob Manchester's Cracker Jacks come for a week's stay at the popular fiaycty, Oma ha, and it is always a welcome feature, for never has it appeared without giving the greatest of entertainments, and this season promises wonders in I he way of novelties. The comedians are six in number, headed by that funny fellow, Johnny Jess, and also in cludes John Williams, Harvey Urooks and Charles Ascot. The first part is Ihe best the "Cracker Jacks" has ever had. It was built for laughing purposes only and brings out a coterio of twenty-five pretty girls in elegant ensembles. It is inlerspersed'with many ridiculous complications, finishing with a unique melange entitled "Past, Present and Future,"- something entirely out of the ordinary. The olio is in a class by itself. Hob Manchester presents Mollie Williams and company in a spectacular ex travaganza, "La Danse P'Entice ment," something entirely out of the ordinary and a world-beater; Williams and Hrooks in a great laugh-maker, "The New Cadet,' and Ascot and Eddie, the acro batic dancers. The show is headed by two prime favorites, the queens of the travesty stage, Mollie Williams, the great, Anna Held entertainer, and Ruby Leoni, the Model Venus. Tlio closing skit is a satire on New York's latest craze and in troduces all that is good in songs and dances, poses and ensembles, and embraces tuneful melanges and local hits, with girls who know how to sing and how to dress with effect. A sumptuous array of elegant costumes, beauti ful scenery, bewildering electrical contrivances and everything necessary to make the most com plete show on the road may he ex pected. All in all Ihe "Cracker Jacks" are to the fore for laugh ing purposes only. Ladies' dime matinee every week day. TAKE NOTICE! 10 Per Cent Discount for This Week. HENRY'S NOTION STORE. With every purchase amount ing to One Dollar we will return to you 10c. All this week only. Come in and gel some bargains. The latter part of this month wo will move our slock of goods to the Hiley Work, first door south of old poslolllce, formerly oc cupied by Nemelz & Co. We ex pect to be ready for business at Ihe new stand about April 1st. We have added a soda fountain to our line ami will handle ice cream and soda; otherwise will carry about the same line as heretofore A. L. Henry, Proprietor. Try a sack of Forest Ros Flour the next time you need flour. Ask your dealer what he thinks of it. t