IKE SIOUX C UHTT JOURNAL. I. J. SIMM O If R, Proprietor HARRISON, NEBRASKA, Faoad Cnllty. PAris, March 23. The jury in tho Panama cases rendered a verdict of guilty in the cases of Charles de Les seps, Baihaunt and BkaSn acquitted the others. Those not guilty were: Marcus Foa tane. Sans Leroy, Senator Beral and Deputies Dugue, De La Faucounera Gobron and Antonin Proust. The court after deliberation, sen tenced Baihaut to imprisonment for five years, to pay a fine of 759.0JO francs and to lose his civil rights. Blondin is sentenced to imprisonment for two years and Charles de Lesseps to imprisonment for one year, the one year to run currently with five years' sentence already imposed on him. All three of the convicted prisoners are condemned to pay the costs and dam ages demanded by civil parties to the proceedincs. The sentences of Charles De Lessees and Blondin are made comparatively light on the ground of extenuating cir cumstances in their cases. MUST RETURN THE MONEY. The court also orders De Lesseps, Blondin and Baihaut to pay Monichori the liquidator of the Panama Canal company, 375.00 J francs, the amount taken from the treasury of the company, and paid to Baihaut for influence in favor of the lottery loan bill. De Lesseps received his sentence calmly, although the strain of the trial has rendered him exceedingly haggard and nervous. When he rose before the retirement of the jury to reaffirm his innocence he spoke with difficulty and occasionally he was silent for almost a minute to compose his feelings When bis wife visited him in his eel! afterwards he broke down and wept like a child. Baihaut talked for an hour in his cell with his wife and two daughters. Despite the hopelessness of his case he was evidently unprepared to bear the full weight of his sentence, for during the interview with his family he sobbed repeatedly and begged for giveness for the disgrace he brought upon them. Blodin was hardly less affected when he bade good-bye to hia son and daughter. A Gattly Find. St Josepu, Mo., March 23. Com pton McCoy, a farmer residing a few miles south of this city, on the Missouri river banns, was duck hunting on a sandbar when he discovered a large dry goods box floating with the current. Be hauled the box to the shore and breaking it open was nearly over powered by a terrible stench which arose from the box. An investigation disclosed that the box was filled with dead bodies in an advanced state of de composition, the remains being so badly decomposed that indentification was impossible. Coioner Reynolds made an investigation and found the remains were those of four men and one woman, and appearances indicate that they have been murdered, the re mains placed in the box and then set adrift. The cornmntiity is in a terrible state of excitement. It is supposed the remains are those of a family of emigrants who disappeared in a mysterious manner from i ear Rnlo, Neb., forty miles north of this city last fall. The I'ope Speaks Rome, March 23. The pope con -mited his voice to the wax cylinder of a phonograph, in a message of good will, said he designed for the president of the United States. Having done this, he said to the American who was demonstrating the machine: "I hand yon this message. Guard it carefully, for it is the expression of my love for all the people of the United States and I wish you to deliver it with your own hand to the president." Held for Smuggling. New York, March 23 - Custom offi cials at this port believe they have dis covered an attempt to smuggle theatri cal costumes into the country. Itap pears a number of Itialian opera singers arrived here on the steamer New York Sunday. Each one bad from twenty to forty trunks and it is said declared to " the officers that they had nothing duti able. An examination of the trunks bowed that they were filled with new costumes, in all enough for 200 people. Mr. Abbey said he held bills showing each individual member of the com pany had purchased his or her cos tumes, and they were therefore entitled tinder the law to admission free of duty as "tools of trade." There were a few things, be said, belonging to the management, and on these be wanted to pay duty. He ssid he would sub nit satisfactory proof of all bis state- menta to the collector. Collector Hendricks says if the facts are Abbey states the trunks will be re- WUl VUltSeUrtU. St.Loum, Mo- March J3. A local naoer says. Information has leaked oat through Bishop Bonscum's friends bare that the Lincoln prelate passe throoaJ) Urs city on bis way to Baltl , saore to see Mgr. Satolll. It la also said tkattha Msbop went on a summons frea tin fapaleblsffata to an audience te iwfijfMWa M tt trouble In ike Llu- 'rtOu Uku to 4Cfee4s9 SdwTjg) et2ej . tSg9- j. -.1 Djum ne r"oeae! New Tory, March 21. The fact has just come to light that just before the 6hip Cyrus Wakefield sailed for an Francisco on Friday morning two dynamite bombs were found in her hold. In consequence of this two of ficers of the ship refuse 1 to sail on her and remained in New York, positive in the belief that tuere is some scheme afoot to sink the craft before she reaches San Francisco. The first case of bombs was found two weeks ago, when the ship was loading, between the limber streaks on the port side of the ship, with planking laid over it. The dynamite was in an iron cylinder, from the end of which protruded a bunch of matches. A piece of sandstone was suspended above the matches, in such a position tbat once at sea, the plunging and roll ing of the ship would cause the sand stone to sway against the matches, thus igniting them and causing the dyna mite to explode. This discovery caused no little apprehension among the of ficers and crew of the ship, but as there was no address on the case, or any clew as to how it came to be in the ship, apprehension was allayed and the work of loading continued and the in cident soon forgotten. Just one week after the first bomb was found consternation was created among those on board the Wakefield by the finding of a second bomb This was on Thursday last, the day before the ship was to sail. The bomb was like the first and was found iu about the same part of the siiip. On the finding of the second bomb, Captain Morton refused to go to sea on the Wakefield and another officer also refused. Another captian willing to take the ship out was found and on Friday she put to sea. Myiterloui Disappearance. Emporia, Kan., March 21. The town of Hartford is agitated over the mysterious disappearance of E. W. C. Walton, a young Englishman who had been visiting here and had started last month for Steele, Neb. The last seen of him was in Cansas City February 23. Foul play is suspected. He is discribed as being 5 feet 8 inches high and having a sandy com plexion. He was a member of several different societies, including the Odd Fellows, Masons and the Ancient or der of United JWorkmen. It ii not known whether or not he had much money on his person at the time of his disappearance. Searching the Cells. Boston, March 21. The work of searching the workshops and cells at the state prison is practically finished, and it is said that the convicts will ba put to work. No firearms have been found, but enougli other contraband articles have been found, it is said, to fill several bushel baskets. Among these are slungsliots, billies, steel saws, knives and a steel hook attached to a seven-inch wooden handle. I In Convict Booth's cell was found a complete plan of the north wing and wall facing the river and railroad trunk with riiatanraa nArefnllv rioted. Other evidence of colu3ion with friends on the outside has also been found, but the warden declines to dis close the nature of it. In a corner of the iron foundry scarcely twenty feet from the mouth of the tunnel through which several men, escaped through the sewer not long since, was found another tunnel in process of construction, its presence being concealed by a piece of sheet iron placed over the hole. Arretted for Embezzlement. Denver, Colo., March 21. J. D. Mordaunt was arrested yesterday on a telegram from inspector Ross of Chicago. Mordaunt is under indict ment for embezzlement. The arrest is a most important one, as the sum named is $53,000. Mordaunt is a young man, 23 years of age, with a boyish face. In Chicago he was employed as confidential book keeper by Smith & Webster, a big plumbing supply company. He stood high in the estimation of his employers and great was their surprise when he failed to appear at his accustomed desk on the morning of February 24. An examination or his books re vealed a shortage of nearly $25,000 and small amounts received by Mordaunt during the past year were unaccounted for. Mordaunt says he is innocent of the charge against him. He will be taken to Chicago. No money was on Mordaunt. The arrest of another Chicago crlmi nal has been made here. His name is Richard Sims alias Georgo Randolph, alias Colonel McDonald, a bunco steerer. The arrest was made at the instance of Inspector Ross, who stated that Sims was under indictment for conspiracy and swindliag. Sims has attempted to bunco several citizens os Denver by trying to get them to pay $2,000 for an alleged system of his to beat the game of faro. He la thought to have been unsuccessful as no victim has yet been heard from. The charge for which he was Indicted in Chicago is unknown here. Mgr. Satelll M Philadelphia. TVmwww tr wtiT i "Da ftsT awjati 9 I aaf Satolll, the papal delegate to the United States, will arrive in this city and will probably remain here several day . foi the purpose of exercising bis ministry In connection with a mission to be given at the etraroh of the S Mary Ilagdelene de Paul, the oldest ttaliao church in the ooantry. hml WaathMg Fight. Buffalo, N. Y Marob tt-Tbt eomrntsslowers Satarday atofctad not ta aiww ' Mitebeci-Cortea feat. In Hi favor. New York, March 22. There was a framatic scene in the court of general sessions when Carlyle W. Parris, the foung medical student, was called to the bar to receive sentence of death for poisoning his secretly wedded wife, Helen May Potts. Public sympathy aas been aroused to an unusual degree in behalf of the young man, and it went to the extent of holding amass meeting in his behalf in Madison Square garden, but all without avail to stay the action of the law. An im mense throng of people was around the ouilding in which Recorder Smyth sat. Admission was forbidden to all except those bearing cards from the district attorney, but in spite of this the court room was crowded before the time for sentence to be passe 1. Harris was fin Uy brought in, looking worn and hag gard, showing unmistkable signs of the terrible ordeal through which he has Been passing W hen court opened the recorder ;alled the prisoner to the bar, and he responded, walking unsteadily with evidences of extreme weakness. Asked if he had anything to say why teutence should not, ue passed upon him, he leaned heavily for support on the raii nd began in a voice inaudible except to those immediately at his elbow. Af ter one or two unintentional interrup tions by people coming in, the stillness f death came over the court room, but Ihe words of the doomed man were still inaudible, except once in a while, when lie reached some point in the case which moved him strongly, when he would utter a sentence or two with startling strength and distinctness and then gave way to evident weakness and talked in an undertone. At the close the recorder sentenced him to be electrocuted in the week be ginning May 8. There were wet eyes in the court room at times during Harris' speech and nameless sounds of throngs deeply moved. Among tha most dramatic points in the speech were where he de nounced Dilworth Choate, the news paper man, as a sneak, prejurer, out cast and ti e district attorney's tool; where he denounced Assistant District Attorney W'ellman as a liar, and where, with tears streaming from his eyes and sobs convulsing his frame, he turned to thank his counsel, Lawyer Howe, sayed lie was a poor man and could never repay his devotion. He ended by handing him an envelope which, he said, contained his dearest possession -Helen's last gift to him. Harris spoke for an hour and forty minutes. lie made no sign as the re corder hurriedly pronounced the date for the execution. At the close of the scene he was taken back to the' Tombs. The envelope which he handed his lawyer contained a pair of cuff buttons. A great throng ran after Harris as he walked from the general session to the Tombs. A remarkable feature was the applause that was given him. When he reached the Tombs there was a big crowd awaiting him. "Three cheers and a tiger for Harris," cried some one. They were given and Harris, still hand cuffed, walked inside with a smile on his face. Later he said: "Well, it's all over now, but I :im ready to die, although I declare solemnly that I am an innocent man. I feel like a man who has done a good day's work and is tired. Iam surprised at the way I held out, tor I was very sick. I am very happy now, for I have proved my case." Mr. Howe said that in accordance with the special request of Harris no mass meeting would be held in his be half. His lawyers believe that the de monstration indicates a general public sentiment in favor of giving Harris another chance, and are confident that the governor will be successful in averting the execution of the sertence of death. Tlie Behrnr 8a Arbitration. London, March 22. In the House I of Commons Mr. T. Gibson Bowels, conservative, called attention to the subject of the Behriog sea arbitration and urged that it involved the ques tion of the freedom of the high seas and ought not to be submitted to ar bitration. England, he continued, never succeeded under arbitration, be cause England had not a single friend among European powers. In view of the decision in the Alabama contro versy, and the San Juan and Delagoa bay disputes, no satisfactory result could be expected from Ben ring sea arbitration. There were advanta ges in war was as leading usually to lasting settlement, and war usually left sentiments of mutual respect be tween the combatants. If the country was unable to protect the high seas and had to coerce a great colony on such a matter, all the dispatches the foreign office could issue would not hide the fact that the greatness of England had gone. Sir. Edward Gray, parlimentary nnder secretary for the foreign office, replied that the remarks of the hon orable members were singularly Inopportune, seeing that the arbitration relating to Uehring sea was now pro ceeding. Sir Edward deprecated further discission. "Hear, Hear." Amputated hi Head. Basset, Neb., March 22. Fred Preller, living a few miles north of this place, while hunting geese yester morning was accldently shot in the band. ElfKt Miner' miled. London, March 22. Near Chester Aeld, Derbyshire, yesterday morning a fang of miners were descending Into a I pic when the cage broke froa Um sable and foil to the tottom ktl)tr Sight. A Terrific Cyeloae. Salsbcet, Mo., March 25. Just as day was breaking Thursday morning the farmers three miles east of here were suddenly aroused by a terrific roar. A cyclone of tremendous p.wer had swept down on them from the northwest and in a twiuklii:g boused, barns and outhouses were unroofed and some of them totally destroyed. Orchards were levelled to the ground and scores of gardens a id fields of spring crops are laid wa.-te. In one place a tract of forest embracing many acres of magnificent timber wai laid fl it to the ground. Trees were broken like straws and huge trunks wvre car ried for many hundred yards by the wind and strewu across roads and over fields. In this city the shock was n t feit so severely, but the thunder of tlu pass ing storm was something frightfu'. Many scattering fragments of wreck, flying branches of trees and other La Ms struck houses and shattered windows in this city. The residence of Mrs. Gunt, in the south western por tion of town, just caught the edge of the cyclone and was completely de stroyed. One gust of wind carried off the roof and deposited it in a pasture several hundred yards away, '''his gave the family time to get into th 'ir cell r and the next swoop of the storm tore the walls to the ground. Nearby was a stable containing eight horses and other stock, The live stock was killed and the structure scattered in all directions. The storm was fol lowed by a heavy rain. Nevada, Mo., also felt the cyclone, several houses being unroofed, and one corner of the state insane asylum was torn of, creating a panic among the in mates. Dozens of farm buildings were also destroyed and hundreds of head of stock killed. Frie I.i Prison Jeitkhsoxvillk, Ind., Marh 25. Fire broke out in the Claggett saddlery shop of the Southern Indiana prison here at 10:30 o'clock Thursday morning from a defective Hue. The discovery was not made until the lire had gained great headway, and many of the in mates had barely time enough to es cape without injury. The lire depart ment ot the pri?o:i was uimb e t chetk the flames and the lire rapiuly con sumed the building. The flames then communicated to that part of the prison in which are the dining hall, the tailor shop and the hospital, in the lat ter being the insane prisoners. All of the inmates were safely removed and the fire department of Louisville was telegraphed to for assistance. The Louisville firemen responded at 12 o'clock and, with the present force and that Of Ohio Falls car works, got the Ore under control. The tailor shop and the dining hall were ruined. Claggett, the contractor of the saddlery shop, estimated his loss at S20.000 and it is believed that the total loss will cot be less than 850,000. Claggett were in Bured for ?25,000 None of the pris oners tried to escape. A Fire Horror. Cleveland, March 25. A fire horror unprecedented in the history of Cleveland occured shortly afternoon yesterday when lour women and one child were burned to death in a fashion able boarding house at f.08 Prospect street. Just, at luncheon Mrs. J. H. miller, one of tlie boarders, discovered flames in the hall on the second floor. Escape by the stairway was out off, so Mrs. Miller jumped from a sceond story window to the ground and gave the alarm. The lire spread rapidly through the halls and . hundieds of neople congregated and attempted to rescue those who were in the building. Kobody thought, howevi"-, to turn in a fire alarm, and it was at ie;ist half an hour before a steamer arrived or a policeman were sent to the place. It was not until the llames were subdued tbat the ex ten , o the catastrophe was learned. As soon as the engines began wcrking many of the spectators assisted by ti e nren'"i in t-'-'inr to rescue the persons : the u d ng, u d several of them we r. .,u. as they were driven b.x by tlie llames. Five parsons perUI.e . in he hre. Fire started in me uasement, just how is not known, and swept up through the halls, cutting off all means of escape. The women who perished ran to the windows, but before any thing could be done to assist them they were driven back by smoke and flames and perished. The dead bodies were found on the third floor, burned to a crisp and uorriuiv uiacneneu ana disfigured. The two upper floors of the building were gutted and the contents of the house ruined. The building cost $30,OO and was insured, ihe loss on the contents is 812,000; uninsured. Leg tiator and the Governor Disagree oa Ihe Subject. Jefferson City, Mo., March 25. The thirty -tevjnth general assembly of the state of adjourned Thursday sine do The house joint and concurrent reso lutions, asking congress to pats legisla tion restraining the federal judiciary from encroaching upon states lights, was called up in the senate and de feated, only eight sena o .oting far it. Killed la a Railroad Aeeideot. Albuquerque, N. M., March 25. There was a coilission between paaeenger and a freight train last night at Fxeter, near Ash Fork, on the Atlantic & Pacific railroad, la whld Engineer Robert Young and a fire nan ware killed. Tlie wreck ceased by Irregalarlty. result big from the trouble between ih oompafl7 ml employee, who hi members of the Brotherhood of IU way Employes. A Subetitale for the rreatat Ta. New York, March 24. The jcial iommittee of the reform club of this city has completed a draft of a bill which, when perfected, will be urged upon congress as a substitute for the present tariff la ws, and as a f ulfillment of the pledges under which the demo cracy obtained control ol the national government. The general principles upon which a proper tariff should be formed in main are as follows: Crude material in general made free of duty. In taxing otlier articles the general object has been to fix such rates as would produce the largest amount of revenue in a series of years, consist ent with large importations. The pur pose of obtaining the largest revenue, ho sever, is limited lya consideration of the welfare and necessities ot tho people at large and especially the poorer classes. All duties are made strictly ad valorem, except some of those which are levied as compensatory lor internal revenue taxes upon similar articles pro duced at home. In order to insure a perfect administration of an ad valorem tariff it is essential that rates of duty upon the great mass of articles should be kept at very moderate figures. Up on other articles experience has shown that duties cannot be raised above 25 per cent without incurring dangerous incentives to fraud. A few articles ol luxury may be excepted from the oper ations of these general rules. LIQUOUS AND TOBACCO. Foreign articles which, if made sub ject to lowdut, must of course be subject to at least an equal tax. As to liquors and tobacco, duties upon them I should be made with a view of obtain ing the greatest possible amount of rev enue without any concern as to whether we give or withhold protection to the domestic producer. Yielding in part to popular opinion on the silk luxury we placed silk man ufactures generally at 20 per cent. .Silk yarns, thread and sewing silk wen placed at 20 per cent, and spun ant thrown silk at 15 per cent, leaving raw silk free. Bill forms of cruds metal, not merely ores, but pig iron, ingots and bars, witli the exception of iron and steel, are made free of duty. The duty upon woollens and worsted manufactures ol every description are placed at 25 pel cent Leather gloves and all othei gloves except silk are placed at a 2i per cent schedule. TAX UI'ON tin plates. Tin Dlate should not be taxed mort than 20 per cent, and perhaps not more than 15 per cent. Manufacturers o' wood In the most finished forms an placed in tho 20 per cent schedule, as also buttons, except metal or glass Most provisions made free of duty, bu' some which partatce in a mild degret of the nature of luxuries are put in th 20 per cent schedule, while breadstuff; are mostly mada free. Potatoes lefl si bject to a duty of 15 per cent. Domestic bo ks could not be admit ted without ne consent of domestii publishers, and foreign books copy righted here could not be admitted ai all. On the other hand, so long ai paper, binding materials, and machin ery are taxed, it is not just to makt competing books free. Demand foi revenue may turn the scale and 10 pel cent will probably be the revenue duty NO SPECIFIC FKEK LIST. Tt would be desirable to have nc specific free list, but make everything free which is not made expressly subject to duty. All articles upoi which the revenue collected is to; small to pay for collection, and upot wl ich it is not probable any more re du ion of rates would produce i substantial revenue, are placed on the free list. We are satisfied the proposed tar if) would produce an immediate revenut of $120,000,000, if not more. If tb existing duty of half a cent a pound on refined sugar should be retained it is suggested that a specific duty ol seven-sixteenths cent per pound might be imposed on raw sugar, which would produce an additional revenue ol probably (15,000,000, besides reducing the bounty by $2,000,000. To this, however, one of us is entirely opposed, and three express no opinion. Th amount of revenue which would b produced by a duty so large bas mad a full discussion of the piopriety ol the tax necessary. Destroyed by Fire. Mep.idan, Miss., March 24. Thi town of Purvis, Miss., on the New Or leans & Northeastern railroad, one hundred miles south of Meridan, wat destroyed by Incendiaries. Shortly af ter midnight Wednesday the torch was applied to five buildings in different portions of the town and within tw hours time almost every store and re- . aiitanna In tha n iuw m nrinari inf . r .. ., The people ran panic stricken into tht streets and the greatest excitement prevailed. The Western Union tele- graph oince was burned and particular! are meagre, but from the passenger! who passed Purvis on a north bound train; it was learned that the confla- gratlon was the result of a bitter eel- ing between the white people and the negroes, growing oui or. me arrest or a negro preacher. The negroes lire, the town in revenge. A posse of citizeni left for Purvis on a special train. Foand ''! arh the Blpper." New York, March 24 On. Sun day night a woman was ripped up tha side aud a big knife was left sticking in the wound. The knife bad been traced to an Italian barber named Frank Castellano and he has been arrested. The police have discovered vnttl recently he was a fireman on traard one of tlie Atlantic sb-amers Which wl'h rrthw rircimntiinci-s ma a I them twlleve i.e h i i 11 ioilJUi Jack XE13KASKA NEWS; A fatal case of diptberia occurred in Holdrege. Snvder people have been sorely amit eu witu the Oklahoma fever. Seven spans of the Columbus wagon bridge was carried away m the flood. W L Perry will be the next post master of Madison, if the s.nate con curs. , The citrus of Si-udder are in need of the services of a physician in the community. t,. i.:ii hrui?ers of lloidrege, x n J t - - -- fntifrlit fiir a stake of 1T Xo arrests WMfe" have been made. Reports from all parts of the state are that the ground is in excellent con dition for seeding. Loomis is enjoying a little boom. Five dwellings and a church are in pro cess of construction. It will cost $1.5'J0 lo repair the dam age done the Tlatte wagou bride at Fremont by tlie ice gorge. The performing bea' has strack Nor folk. This is taken by a local scribe as a certain indication of an early spring. The Wilsons have returned to Fre mont to finish their evangelistic work. There are still a lew stray sinners in that city. The four year old sou of Henry Cole man, a farmer living near Adams, died from the effects of a small quantity of concentrated lye. Atlee Hart and J. L. Lewis have secured change of venue and vvl.l be ined for blackmail in the district court at Le Mars instead ot Sioux City. A young Swede working for Charles Semke of Nuckolls couuty, was thrown from a horse and sustained injuries which the doctors fear will prove fatal. The York Foundry and Engine com pany is putting in a new ifci-inch engine i lathe that weighs H.00J touuds and is the best machine of tho kind in the state. Capt. Brown, U.S. Indian agent at i'iue Kidge, has secured the consent of your Uncle Sam, together with an ap propriation, tor sinking an artesian well Ihe high sheriff of Sheridan county captured a Fort Itobinson deserter at Hay Springs, and received S'iO for ser vices to the county in taking the poor fellow within reach ot the cruel cour! matrial. William Benson of Fullerton shipped .several canary birds to parties in Dead wood, but the goods, it seems, were not delivered, and in a suit for damages Mr. Benson recovered .$70 of the ex press company. Mike Casey, sr., became noisy Hurmg a religious mccti-ig in" Suubert. A warrant was issued for his arrest, but Mike stole a march on his opponents by appearing before Justice ahrader in advance of the hour of trial and the apaearance of the witnesses, plead guilty and paid his line and costs like a patriot. The rope ferry acros3 the channel of the Platte where the spans of the bride are missing was arranged and placed in operation and foot passen gers have been carried over since th t time without trouble People from Saunders comity drive to the south end of the bridge, leave their teams and come to town on foot to transact their business. Fremont Tribune. A curiosity in ll e 8'iape of 'a triolet of steers attracted considerable att i tion at the Sou h Omaha stock yaius. They were shipped in by I rmk Stei bert of Bennett, by whom they weie raised. A careful examination failed to discover any mark by which one could be told from the other and they weighed in exactly the same notch, 1,330 pounds. Thomas II. Farmer, of Lincoln, gen eral agent for the Equitable Life In suragce company, met with a serious accident at Hebron. a team ran away, throwii g wis. Farmer and James Elliott out wan rreat violence. Mr. Farmer narrowly escaped with his life. The buggy fell on top of him, breaking his right arm and otherwise severely bruising lum. .Mr, Elliott had his collar bone broken and was also badly bruised, The suit of Edwa d W Mason for a divorce from his wife, Anna U. Mason, will come up for trial this lerm of court in Hasting, it will be re membered lhat in January last Mrs. Mason confessed to t e murder of D. S. Colo on August I, hist, and pleading guilty to mauslauginer was sentenced to four years inprisonment in the penitentiary, n l.i generally under- stood that she cnni,Sn.0H i... k.k.-j with the case, claiming that he urged 1,,.. , .... , . . ? tt1 u a iurnisneu tier with the re- volver she used, shortly before the confession Mason .pplied for a divorce from hi. wife, , d implicating Z murdered man. Tins to ttoanU tha! comes to trial - Tim iiim. duced win TnL. i J .J V intr0" " ft , "' Drobably the order of the court ,n wntencing Mr. Mason for four fear,i the slate law providing that a wuieuce ior three years in the Denitnn tiary is a valid ground for a legal sen. sratmn ,eKal 8eP aration. Fullerton people have become so ac customed to water-drinklog that for ,"s,lturyceiiseor no license elecUon M 'MUe ia the muDU"Pal h."?, Chanoenor. Win B. Dale, iEfJP 0," debtor at Colnmbu. fi ?l 0 CNo from the effect, of difficulty. TheKnlghUof Pythlaa of Nebraska will feel the L. ' asHm.bu fami,. ne npprr , "J ' ,;',' ,''