IRebraska tflotee i Rushville now has a curfew ordinance in force. An athletic club has been organised t Crete. The Burnett Maacott baa commenced its tenth year. The McCock Courier bu started on volume nineteen. The CUrki Leader bM changed it nam to the Enterprise. Pilger people are taking slept to build and operate a creamery. J. 0. Guilinger bag sold the Burcbard Times to J. T. and J. B. Pope. Four hundred and fifty bushels of pop corn were marketed at Hebron before the holidays. The wife of L. H. Thorn burg, editor of the Alexandria Argus, presented him with twins. The output of sugar from tha Grand Island factory last season was equivalent to 33,750 parrels. B. B. Smith, a well known newspaper man, baa purchased and assumed con trol of '.be Long Pine Journal. Thus far the weather during the month of January has been as exceptionally fine as that of December waa rough H. Hoffat of Plainvew was so badly injured in a runaway accident that am putation of one band was necessary, The outgoing treasurer of Cuming county turned $25,000 over to his suc cessor and turned it over in cold cash The editor of (be Mead Advocate threshed a young man for insulting his sister, but had to liquidate with a fine, The newspapers at Schuyler are en gained in a perpetual personal warfare that must be very weariog to the gen eral public. The Schuyler council proposes to take steps to discourage tinhorn gambling that is carried on in various placet about town. Z. M. Baird has sold the Hartington Leader to Ezra Boad well, and will here' after exercise his lungs crying auction sales. "Joseph Mullen of Pender took a shot t a rabbit but instead put thirty-nine of the leaden pellets in the legs of his brother Mike. The Presbyterians of York subscribed almost a thousand dollars in asingleday to pay off a debt accrued in building their parsonage. Stock on the western Nebraska range is now apparently none the worse for the early storms and is in fair order for the time of the year. The Wymore Arbor State which ha completed ita twenty-third volume, has been edited by Colonel Dodds for the past sixteen years. The village board ol Gibbon has or dered fifteen-horse power gasoline en fine, which will be placed in the fire house for use in time of fire. The annual meeting of the Interstate flwine Breeders' association at Red Cloud has been postponed from Janu ary 11 to February I and 2. A special agent of the land office has been in Kimball county investigating complaints that private parties havt been fencing in government land. An e-timate of the number of cattle sow being fed in Am elope county made by men thoroughly informed upon th whole subject, places the total at 5,000, The Logan county farmer whose repu tation for morality need repairs, was lately made a target for rifle practice at long range and barely minded getting a bullet pat through his neck. Clinton Grant a 9-year-old boy of Hayes Center, was seriously injured by horse falling on blm. When found he was unconscious and is supposed to be lying in tbat condition for several hours. The number of marriage licenses in Dixon county during 1897 increased over hatoflH06. In 189(1 there were fifty live licenses issued by Judge Rose, while in the year just cloied there were sixty tour. There is some talk of calling a grand jury for the next term of court in Nuck folia county. It is believed there is much ' Illegitimate business going on through out the county that cannot be reached In any other way. Firm Ransom of Minden is gathering ap a load of draft hoJses which he in tends to ship to Chicago. He has on hand now nearly a carload af them, which are said to be tha best bunch of horses over gathered together in tha country. Frank Fisher, jr., of Norden lost sev enty bushels of wheat in the Niobraia river. Bsveral teams had crossed safely head f him, but his load waa so great that it caused the ice to give way, upset ting the wagon and spilling the contents In the river. The wheat belonged to M. P. Meholin who waa the loser. Receiver McDonald of the United State land office at North Platte states that the entries for government land had been one per day during the last weak. There still remain ronalderabl ' In the county which is subject to entry, bat by the way business I starting in this year it will not long remain vacant. The Baptist at Halting hare de cided to bnild new house of worship. Hon. Frank Bacon, better known as Alfalfa Bacon, say the Gothenburg In- ependent, tbrehsd 360 bushels ol al lib Mtd last week that will bring $1,000 He ha loft tht hay which will lewd 100 haad of cattle, and hi hog are thriving to lu roughness. That iMalfa I a good paying crop needs no better demonstra tion than the above (bowing. Thl was m eighty acrtti ! land three mile oath t Ik ur. GLADSTONE IS SICK ENGLISH PRESS SHOWS ANXIETY AS TO HIS HEALTH. Report m to Ilia Critical Conditio,!! Be lieved to be Over IJruwn The Grand Old Man HuftVnt Tuln From Facial J'eu-ralg-la but U Hound OthnrwUe. London, Jan. 20. The Pall Mall Ga sette yesteiday afternoon makes the fol owing announcement in big type: "With deep regret we learn on most jxce lent authority that Mr. Gladstone's health causes the gravest anxiety to thote about him. His sojourn at Can nes has not bad the effect of fortifying bis strength as anticipated." The news placards of tbe Pall Mall Gazette reads: "Critical condition of Mr. Gladstone." The announcement is causing muci excitement. The publication caused numbers of inquiries at the residence of Henry Gladstone, the aged statesman's son, Mrs. Henry Gladstone and George Ar mi stead, an intimate friend of the fam ily, both said there waa nothing in the' latest information -.ey had received to justify the alarmist reports. M-. Gladstone has been suffering from a return of bin neuralgia, but a letter received said he was better. A dispatch from Cannes says; "The health of Mr. Gladstone is fairly satis factory. He went out for a drive yee terday." 1113 AGR AGAINST HIM. The Westminister Gazette, though minimizing the alarming reports con cerning the health f Mr. Gladstone, is "constrained to admit the fact that Mr. Gladstone has suffered great pain most of the time he has been at Cannes, be ing unable to leave iia Bofa. So far the vital organs are concerned, however, he is no worse. On the other hand, con tinuous pain in a man of Mr. Glad stone's age is undoubtedly a symptom to cause anxiety. , An official medical statement issued last night reasserts that there is no cause for alarm as to Mr. Gladstone's health, although it i not benefitted as much as has been hoped at Cannes. The facial neuralgia pains persist with daily fluctuations owing to the cold winds and wet weather, but tht complaint is quite local, His pbysica powers have not suffered ; his strength is good ; his ap petite excellent; ' joins the family 1 1 meals and takes rear drives, weath. r permitting. Lord Stuart Rendel, with whom Mr Gladstone is visiting, telegraphed last night at H-A) that Mr. Gladstone' b ,'alth waa unchanged. IVn.ialii-tit Gold Field. Seattle, Jan. 20 The !news brought Dy the treasure laden miners who have arrived from the Klondike on the steatn- er Corona ii important chiefly in that it U confirmatory of the discovery of the great mother lode. Welch, Coffin and Burt are authority for the statement that the original strike was made at the upper end of claim No. 30, Eldorado, while two st' inner, one at-No. 27 and another yet lower down, were subse quently located Throughout the din- tr.ct tne discovery is accepted as insur ance of the permanency of the district ss a rich gold mining field. As to the placer diggings, tbey continue rich. Powder creek, an aflluent of Quartz creek, has bean having a boom, p xu of 13.75 and $4 being a common thing. Of course the stream was located as soon as the first important discovery was made. All Gold creek shows pans of 10 to $100 while the miners on flanker creek, Hen derson, Dominion, the big Salmon and the Stewart all declare themselves satis fied with I he prospect. One of the first men to strike ground on the Eldorado and the very last man out of tho Klon dike country is Andrew Olsen, better known as "The Big Swede." He is no table as beinc; the owner of the claim on which the biggest Klondike nugget has yet been found. The lump was valued at 58(5. In answer to a request for an estimate of tbe winter's gold dust output of the camp, Joe Campbell, one of the return ing miners, said: "We bave done a great deal of figuring on that and it now appears thai the output notwithstand ing the scarcity of food and light, will be from 112,000,000 to $15,000,000." Molw Mllll llitve I'arU. Paris, Jan. 20. Two hundred stu dent parade the Boulevard des Ca put: bines with the intention of making a demonstration before the military club, but were dispersed. A thousand students took part in a demonstration before the Pantheon, The students shouted against Zola and the Hebrews. They were driven away by the police, who split the mob up in to noisy groups, wbicii then began para ding the various parts of the Latin Quar ter, where there waa much excitement. as a precaution to prevent disturb ances the bridges of the Latin Quaker were ytslerday guarded by police, a also were toe In uses of Mattbieii Drey lus and Kmilo Zola guarded. There have been renewed demonstra tion at Marseilles and other provincial towns. Vlrlnrjr For rx mM'l-. Dg.svKM, Colo.. Jan. 20 Tne fight be tween the Denver newspapers and th large department store of the city' re tarding advertising rates, which began nine daya ag", ended tonight with th unconstitutional surrender of tbe mer chant' association. Since th merchant withdrew their advertisement the pro prietors of the paper have agreed npon new icale somewhat higher than tha previon one and this bu been accepted by tha me-rbtnt,, - ,-- - COTTOxN MILLS CLOSED GREAT STRIKE OF COTTON WEAV ERS IS NOW ON. Reduction In Wijw )la Opened the Gap and l!iS, OOO Kffiiliyt go Out- Hi run to Areept Reduction and Mill Kow Staud Idle No KeriouM KIoIb Vet. Boston, Mas., Jan. -18. Reduction in the wages of ab-ut '25,000 operative employed in the cotton mills of Ken- England, which the manufacturers d cided on as a temporary cure for the depression in the cotto.: industry in the north, went into effect tod y. In sev eral mill centres, namely New Bed ford, Mass., and B.ii.loford, 8aco and Lewiston, Me., dissatisfaction among the mill hands is intense and strikos are on. The eighteen mills of tbe 1st ter city, which give employment to about 9,000, have been shut down, be cause the operat:ves have refused to ac cept the reduction, and the contest thus inaugurated promises to be one of tbe most stubborn in the history of tbe textile industry. Tne situation in New Bedford is very gloomy. Business there had not recovered from the depression which lollowed the failure of six mill corporations last spring. The 3,500 employes at the Lacon and Pepperhill mills in Biddeford refuse to go to work yesterday morning under the new schedule, and it is thought the strike there will not be easily settled. Some of the employes of the York mills, Saco, also joined the Biddeford move nitnt. The Androscoggin mills in Boston and the King Philip plant, in Fa'I River were handicapi-d by a strike of a number of hands and tbe Queen City mills in Bur lington, Vt., closed on account of a strike which followed the posting of notices of reduction. FIRST OVERT ACTS. An incident at tht Acushnet mills in New Bedford, in which dirt and stones were thrown at the managers without doing any harm, was the nearest ap. proach to serious trouble. Yesterday afternoon quiet prevailed in all sections and the stores and streets were almost deserted. On January 3, the reduction took ef- lect in mills employing about 35,000 hands. The reduction today affected the cotton mills of Maine, Mhode Island, Connecticut, tho mills d iN'ew Bedford, Lowell and a numb of other smaller places in this state d New Hampshire. Tne Atlantic and Pac.fi corporation of Lawrence and the ither cotton mills there and in one or two places elsewhere will make a cut next Monday. Ti e cut amounts t i about 10 per cent in many places, bu'. in sev ral centres it is II 1-! per cent and even higher, while in a f w small mills it is only 5 per cent. The New lied ford strikers will be supported financially by the opera tives in o:he' centres and it is said they are prepared to hold out until spring. The national organization of textile un ions has also voted to support the New I Jed ford strike. It is estimated tiiat the reduction means a loss of between $75,P00and $85 000 a week to the wage-eariieis in the hi states and the additional loss to strikers in the various centres if they remain idle even for a short time wi 1 swell the amount to a much larger figure. Whole Family Killed. New York, Jun. 18. John Matthews, a ptitail grocer, come time between last .Saturday night ai d Monday morning murdered his wii'e and two children, a b 'V ten years old and a uirl of twelve. by backing them to death with a lalchet Matthews then committed suicide by shooting himself in the head. Before shooting bim-elf Matthews turned on the gas witli the intention that asphyxiation should complete his murderous work. ' he crime was com mitted in a small bedroom in the rear of the store kept by Matthews, It in supposed that Matthews had becot despondent from pecuniary dllliculties Tbe tragedy was discovered through the odor of escaping gas, which prompt ed a milkman to call a policeman. On the floor of the sleeping room the offiier found the corpse of Matthews. In h a hand was a revolver and there was a bullet hole just above his mouth. There were two beds in the room. On one of them lay Matthews' wife. Her head was chopped and mangled beyond recog nition. On the other the two children lay side by side. Their faces, too, were frightfully cut and backed. That the murder and suicide wir premeditated was evident, as Matthews had waited until his wife and children were asleep. Then he striped himself to the waist, took the haihet and brain id his wife. After that he attacked his children. From a letter left it waa ascertained that for some time Matthew had in tended to end his own life. He had lxr, in the dry goods business further up town and had failed. A few months ago he opened the grocey store and had met with Utile success. His wife a pretly little woman, had recently under gone a severe operation. It was these tilings, evidently, that prompted Mat thew to do the horrible deed. A Mob Mrnmnslratlra. Viesha, Jan. 18 Five thousand so cialist workmen made a demonstration here today in front of the ralhaus, be cause Dr. Luegei, the burgomaster, had forbidden them to hold a meeting in th building. The police dispersed them end made several arrest. There are omin on tumor of trouble In Hungary and Bohemia. Tho agrarian socialist move ment in Hungary I serious, especially In lb Ssabolobe diitriet, when th land 0nor A e menaced. EX-SENATOR'S DAUGHTER MAY DIE the Knot Henelf lu her Boom at Wash lngUm. Washington, Jan. 17. Mrs. Lucile Lane, youngest daughter of ex-Senator Blackburn of Kentucky, shot herself in her apartments at the Wellington hotel last night about midnight, just as she was preparing for bed. The statement iven out by the family is that the shoot ing was accidental and was caused by a imall pistol, which, catching in same aces in the drawer, fell as she lifted hem and fxplcded by the hammer striking the edge of the drawer. The sound is in the left breast and is prob tbly fatal. Mrs. Lane is suffering from he shock so severely tbat tbe physi cians have not yot made any attempt to ocate the bullet. The most precise statement that the physicians would make last night was '.hat Mr. Lane would probably live till morning. At tbe request of the family the block in which tne hotel is situated tias been roped off. Senator Blackburn is deeply affected "y the occurrence. Lucile was the younger of Senator Blackburn's two (laughters. She was married in 18115 to Thomas F. Lane, a prominent business man and politic' n if Summit, N. S. The Lanes bed appar iutly always an abundance of money, which they spent treely, living at a fashionable ho'el and seeming to lack none of tbe good things of life. Mr. and Mrs. Lane, according to those who saw them every day, were unvarying affec tionate and attentive to each other, and 'he, while of slight physique, was in excellent health. Mrs. Blackburn, who is not In the :ity, has been telegraphed for. Murders a Baby. Philadelphia, Jan. 17. A case was reported to tbe central police headquar ters yesterday which bears every indica tion of subsequent developments, show ing that a five-year-old boy has been murdered by a youth of fifteen years. Percy Lockyear, aged five, who resid ed in the outskirts of West Philadelphia did not return home Friday evening and vigilant search failed to discover his whereabouts. Saturday it was learned that Samuel Henderson, aged fifteen, had been seen in the woods with little Percy. He at first denied having seen the child, but an being closely questioned by the police be admitted that while he was whittling i stick with a large knife, Percy had ac cidently fallen against the blade and the child fell dead. Fearing he would be arrested Henderson said he threw the body into a creek which nova through the woods. In coi.fi rmation of his story he lead the searchers to where the boy's hat and coat had been hidden. They were identified by the parents. He also pointed out the place in the creek where he had thrown tbe body. The creek was dragged for quite a distance, but tbe body waa not fouud. The police believes the story of the child's death and are of the opinion tbat the killing waa the deliberate act of Henderson. Hender son is in custody and tbe search is be ing prosecuted. Z- Swindle tbe Hants Fe. St. Josei h, Mo., Jan. 17. A long aer ies of railroad tickets forgers have come to light here, which are believed to bave been carried on a number of years. The alleged forged tickets were over the At chison & Santa Fe road and connecting line. A warrant ha been issued here fer the arrest of August , Arabs of St. Louis, who, until two years ago, was engaged in the ticket scalping business hire. The fraudulent tickets were sold while Walter Young was city ticket agent for the Santa Fe in this city. Young com mitted suicide nearly four years ago, and left nothing to explain the act. It is thought he may have known some thing about the forged tickets. After Ambs become financially embar rassed he deposited the tickets as col att ral in the National bank of St Jos eph. He was unable to redeem thorn and they were placed on sale by another broker. The sale of the tickets was slow and that is tbe reason that fraud was so long In being discovered. The loss rep resented by i he tickets runs up into the thousands, although it is not known how many of them were disposed of Matt r reeumn in Free. GiTHHiK, Okl., Jan. 17. Matt Free man, the oldest oi the Zipp Wyatt gang of outlaws, escaped from jail at Taolga Friday night, it was learned Saturday, for the second time in a year. Freeman and wife formerly conducted a gang in the Glass mountains, and it was the headquarters for the gang. Mrs. Free man waa Wyatt's most trusty lieuten ant. One time the gang was heseiged for a week by deputy marshals. Hhe rode the gauntlet of their bullets and escaped to bring reinforcements and ammunition. Later h was captured and spent a year in the federal jail here. She was converted while in jail and s now travelling as an evangelist. Hteamer a Wretik. Nw Yokk, Jan. 17. On board the steamer Antilia. which arrived here last evening from Nassau, were the mate and nine seamen of the crew of the Ital ian brisantine Celestinn. which was lost on the south side of Watlina's Island while on a voyage from Venice to Sa vannah. Tha vessel was a total loss, No lives were lost. Ohio Hlver Rtai,K, Oincumati, Jan. 17. The Ohio river at this point at 10 o'clock Sundae . forty-two feet ton inchns and rising one inch per hour. It may roach the gov ernment danger line of forty-five feet before it recedes. The danger at forty-flve feet and even at fifty feat is meiely nominal. At the latter stage a few cellars will be inun dated, but navigation will not ho em harassed In the least. Not th alight Mt damage has bean done h"r. . . FIGHT OVER M'KJfiSflA SENATE IS NOT WILLING TO RATIFY HIS NOMINATION. Keaator A'len Ladn the Opponltlon to Hla Confirmation Kellgloue Matters are Mixed up With the DiKcugKiou and thf A. k, A. lit liouudly Scored. Wakington, Jan. 16. Almost the en tire four hours of the executive session of the senate yesterday were devoted to the indirect consideration of the nomination of Hon. Joseph McKenna, now attorn' y-general, to be associate justice of tbe supreme court. The dis cussion wrs the result of hn effort on the part of Senator Allen of Nebraska tc secure a postponement for two weeks. In the end a compromise was reached, de:erring consideration until a week from today on condition that the Ne braska senator should agree to allow a vote to be taken on that day. The Hawaiian treaty was not touched upon during the session. The debate upon Mr. McKenna's nomination was participated by Sena tor Hoar, chairman of the judiciary committee, who called up the nomina tion in accordance with his notice of yesterday and asked for immediate ac tion. In doing this Mr. Hoar spoke briefly of the opposition to Mr. M Kenna, saying that the judiciary com mittee had investigated the mo t of ti e charges made and had reached the con clusion that they were without founda tion. He said that the greater number of charges had been made by the mem tiers of the American Protective associ ation, and as they had been founded solely upon tbe fact that Mr. McKenna was a Catholic in religion they had not been deemed worthy of serious consider ation. Mr. Hoar dwelt at length upon this point, excoriating any man who would attempt to inject a qui st cn of i e ligion into a controversy over a man's fitne-s for office He said tbat such an effort was entirely un-American and unpatriotic and should not for a mo ment receive the consideration of fair minded men. Times ar Tightening In Havana. Havana, Jan. 15 A decree has been published prohibiting the publication in daily newspapers cf cable dispatches without previous censorship and with out twelve hours notice of their receipt. In addition, in future, the postoffice here will detain national and foreign news papers not having been previously cen sored. Publishers are warned that they are under military jurisdiction. Anoth er edict will be issued forbidding the gathering in groups of more than four persons either in the streets or in the stores. New Y'okk, Jan. 15 A dispatch to the World from Tampa, Fla., says: Among tha passengers from Havana was W. L. Fulton, a cattle dealer. When tbe riot started in Havana he was near the first newspaper office attacked. He says the mob was led by officers of tbe Spanish volunteers who had become en raged over the autonomist articles in the papers. They attacked the officers of La Discus sion and La Dairo de la Marina, totally wrecking them. News of the riot reached Blanco and he sent officers from his per sonal staff to quell the mob. There was a platoon of regulars in charge of a Spanish colonel, and as soon as he spoke the mob recognized him and made a demonstration against bim. Words en sued and some of the volunteers slapped the colonel's face. He was then seized and his badge torn off and trampled on the ground, the crowd all the time cry ing, "Vive Spain." The colonel's uni form was torn off. The crowd then pro ceeded to the office of La Lucba, a eemi government organ, smashed its presses and threw the type into the street. El Reconcentrados suffered the same fate a few moments Inter. This was all done because tin ee papers tavired autonomy, About three minutes before the Olivette on which Fulton sailed, left, a patsenger was brought aboard who said as he was leaving he heard that an American wo man had been shot during the riot. Madrid, Jan. 15 The police precau tions have been redoubled in the vicini ty of the United States legation and around the residence of tho United S?at" minister, General Stewart L, Woodford. Would IIOl tiMHIlt JtefjulMltion. Jkfkkrson City, Mo., Jan. 15. Gov ernor Steptiens yesterday refused to honor the -equisition of Governor Tan ner of Illinois for the extradition of Dr. William Smith for the school of osteo pathy at Kirksville, wanted in connec tion with the body-stealing charge. The papers presented charged Smith with stealing four sheets worth $4, a petit larceny charge. l(ol l.clli r Ito-tes. Nkw York, .'an. 15. The banks of this city were notified that a large num ber of checks had been stolen from let ter boxes in Detroit, Bulfalo, Minnea polis, St. Pa- 1, Toledo, Cleveland, Kan sas City snd Milwaukee, by an organ ized gang af thieves, some of the checks having been raised and altered by means of acids. In several instances thieves have been successful in getting the checks cashed. Organi-H for Culm. Nkw York, Jan. 15. The Culmn American lergue has sent out a rin-nla s requesting the mayor of ev;y city in the United States and the sheriff or ranking oilier in every county to at once appoint a committee from each ward in the city and each township of the county to organise a local branch of the Cuban-American league, in order to arouse public opinion to demand the in stant passage of the senate's vlliger ency resolution now pending. STORM OVER CUBA. If embers of tho i tempt to Override tbe Kolas. Washington, Jan. 19. Cuba bad a hearing ia tbe house yesterday and for a time it looked as if parliamentary pre cedent would be set aside and the sen ate resolution recogn'zing the insur gents as belligerents would be attached as a rider to tbe diplomatic and consu lar appropriation bill. Mr. DeArmond appealed. He urged the republicans who had professed friendship for tbe struggling Cubans to override the de blOlUU III IIIC UllMt HQ L.11C CUIUUO U of securing action on the proposition. Mr. Bailey, the leader of the minority, and other democrats joined in tbe ap peal. The excitement became intense, but tbe appeals of Mr. Dingley, the floor leader of tbe majority, as well as other republican leaders, to their associates not to join in the program, succeeded. Mr. Colson, rep., Ky., warned his side that unless he was toon given an oppor tunity to vote his sentiments on the Cuban question he would co-operate in any revolutionary method to secure a tion. The republican tactics kept to tbe front the point that the minority were seeking to override t he rules of the house and they got every republican vote, sus tained the chair by a vote of 152 to 114. One democrat, Mr. Fleming of Georgia, voted with them on the ground tbat he could not violate his oath by voting against upholding the rules. During the debate Mr. Bailey challenged Mr. Hitt to give tbe house any assurance that an opportunity would be offered to vote on the resolution passed by the sen ato at the last session, but he received n reply. Before the diplomatic, bill came up ti e army bill was paesed. A Kace for 20O,()OO. Tacoma, Jan. 19 With the ther mometer 30 degrees below rero a mid night race over thirty-five miles of rough m untain country in the heart of the Klondike has earned for George Gra ham, a Shelton logger, the first prize of staking off overlooked and unregistered placer claims valued at $200,000. Gra ham was at the Canadian register' office on the afternoon of November 15, when a man ruBhed in and filed a claim on French Pete creek, which adjoins the richest part of Eldorado. He had discovered that in the rush to stake the Klondike district five claims on French Pete cteek bad been overlooked. Gra ham rushed to locat tbe others, having given the tip to thrje of hie friends. Tbey were followed in a wild race by 200 other miners, bin succeeded in get 'ing on the coveted ground first. New l'lan Unpopular. Chicago, Jan. 19. The executive c timittee of the century road club has r used to approve tbe new rule pro posed by A. O. McGarrett, chairman of the road record'e committee relative to the checking of century riding. This action was taken at a meeting of t e committee held at 'he Great Northein hotel and at which President Skinkle and Second Vice President Bentley were present. Tbe rule v ich is thus made inoperative provided that century riders must get the signati re at least every twenty-five miles oi the ride of some one who saw tbem making tbe century. The executive committee refused to give it approval, mainly because it would in terfere with night centuries and with fast records, , Twelve .lull ltlnl Kitrape. Sioam Si'RiNGH, Ark., Jan. 19. Through a wholesale jail delivery at Bentonville, a dozen prisoners gained their liberty. Among them waa the notorious Dick Brandt, supposed train robber, burglar, house thief and mur derer. He is wanted in Texas and In dian territory. Two other prisoners with criminal records were Jim Merrill and Lum Carter. They battered down one of the prison doors and made good their escape. Brandt stole a horse just outside the town limits and made for tbe Indian territory. He is a desperate man and is supposed to belong to a gang of territory train robbers. Officers sp in pursuit. Suicide Invalidates Insurance. Washington, Jan. 19. In the su preme court yesterday Justice Harlan handed down in an opinion in the case, Howard Ritter, executor of William M. R'inke, vs. the Mutual Life Insurance company of New York, involving the ques'ion of whether the heirs of a man who commits suicide when in sound mind can recover an insurance policy. The court held they could not. Ills Wife I iiiiim Hark. Ciik'aoo, Jan. 10 A special from tbe VallevView, Ky., s.iyu Dora Richardson Olav, bespattered ith mud, her hair dishevelled and sc;- ely able to stand, has returned to Whitehall. She was met at the yard g by Jim L ttrell, who let her in. Littrell says the old man held his wife l close embrace for several minutes and then led her into the house. He tiling General Ciay will not allow Dora to le ) Whitehall again It is generally both i d that the gener 1 a , 11 have Clem Richardson arrested for shooting at liora. To Furl her I Html Project. Kansas City, Jai. 19 A con ventioa living for its objeui the .'iirth ranee of the Nicaragua can, project convemd h'-re. About 100 delegates, the appoin tees of governors, mayorof the cities and commercial bodies of the south and west were in attendance. Kx-Governor Kishbsck of Arkansas was made chair man. Tne leal ure ( the day's proceed ing was an address on the Nicaragua canal by A. K. Stli well, yreidntof the Pittsburg A Gulf road. -J" ',!, '.i . ...... iy 1 . ; ri :LiiJJi I ' -aL fi'iif 4jVV-tV ' 4 r :?lWM; IS.-"'..- J :. '!' W.:: i.O. 'i'.rAV .. tl If "