THIS IN NEBRASKA EVENTS OF INTEREST OF MORE 1 ' OR LESS IMPORTANCE. Some Figures on the Corn Crop in Nebraska—Custer County First *■ in Production. Nebraska Corn Crop Figures. LINCOLN—According to statistics issued by the state labor bureau, the -total production of corn in Nebraska the present year is 241,383.537 bushels, as compared with 243,713,244 bushels In 1905, or a decrease this year of 2, 329,707 bushels. There was an in crease in the acreage of corn this year of 368,418 acres over 1905, but in spite of this the total production of the crop was lessened by hail in various sec tions, together with a period of dry weather at a critical time-in the crop’s growth. The average yield last year -of 37.65 bushels per acre was ex tremely high and the yield of 35.28 bushels is nearer normal, but a high yield also. This decrease in the pro duction decreases the total value $8, 173,388.92 from the value of the .1905 -crop, which reached a total of $79, ■485,297.60. The 1906 crop is valued at $89,311,908.92. l.ancaster county ranks first in acreage with 243.475 acres, and an average yield of 32.2 bushels per acre. Custer county ranks first in produc tion. with 8,251,158 bushels, and Lan caster county takes second place, with a production of 7,839,895 ^Bushels. Saunders county takes third place, with 7,434,003 bushels produced. Av. Yield Produc per Acre, tion. -v-uiiuj. nt-i AMISM. OIISII. Adams . 80,764 31.7 2,560.218 Antelope _ 115.58S 31.1 3,594.786 Banner . 2,927 18.3 53.564 Blaine . 5.515 28.7 158.280 Boone . 102,487 35.5 3,638.288 Box Butte... 4.108 27.5 112.970 Boyd . 60,009 36.S 2,208,331 Brown . 23,535 30.7 722,524 Buffalo . 181,267 39.0 7,069,413 Burt . * 77,564 43.7 3,389.546 • Butler . 121.581 35.1 4.267,493 Cass . 123.059 37.5 4.6S9.712 Cedar . 123,851 39.6 4.904,499 Chase . 30.1S4 23.8 718,379 Cherry . 24.223 28.1 680.666 Cheyenne ... 7.900 28.1 221,990 Clay . 109.877 38.3 4.208.289 Colfax . 74.379 40.o 2.975.160 Cuming . 102,448 42.1 4.313.060 Custer . 232,427 35.5 8,251.158 Dakota . 44,175 45.1 1,992.292 Dawes . 4.282 2S.0 119.896 Dawson . 131.947 40.8 5,383.437 Deuel . 16.491 33.8 557,395 Dixon . 72,375 40.2 2.909,475 Dodge . 99.775 37.1 3.701.652 Douglas .... 68.191 38.2 2,604.896 Dundy . 42.110 24.2 J,019,062 Fillmore _ 121,726 37.6 4.576.897 Franklin - 85,492 29.6 2.530.563 Frontier - 122.757 35.4 4.345.597 Furnas . 106,757 37.1 3.960.684 Cage . 188.531 33.5 6,315,788 Carfield . 19.018 30.5 580,049 Cosper . 87.105 35.0 3,048.675 Crant . 42 25.0 1,030 Creeley . 58,382 28.8 1.687,161 Hall . 80.242 33.6 2.696.131 Hamilton ... 113.173 38.3 4.334,525 Harlan . 129,873 42.0 5,454.750 Hayes . 52.494 25.0 1.312.350 Hitchcock ... 28.246 28.5 ' 805.011 Holt . 93.223 26.3 2,451,764 Hooker . 2,205 23.0 50,715 Howard . 78,690 37.6 2.958.714 Jefferson .... 112,922 26.2 2,958.556 Johnson . 79.013 32.8 2,591.626 Kearney .... 84.554 35.3 2,984.756 Keith . 12,308 32.5 400,010 Keya Paha... 28,775 29.2 S40.230 Kimball .... 828 17.5 14.490 Knox . 224,393 31.5 7.068,379 Lancaster ... 243.475 32.2 7.839,893 Lincoln . 50,710 29.1 1,475.661 Logan . 10,494 29.5 309.573 I lamp . 13,766 31.1 428,122 Madison . 96,580 31.0 2.993,980 McPherson. . Merrick . 57.306 31.0 1.776.486 Nance . 67.068 36.7 2,461.395 Nemaha _ 70,752 3S.2 2.702.726 Nuckolls _ 116.205 35.6 4.136,898 Ctoe .J. 143,568 37.0 5,312,016 Pawnee . 71,374 32.1 2,291,105 Perkins . 17.393 25.8 448,739 Phelps . 85,805 42.2 4.042.971 Pierce . 81.636 30.0 2.440.080 Platte . 136.020 38.2 5.195,964 Polk . 86.122 38.8 3.341,533 Red Willow.. 73,297 2S.6 2.096,294 Richardson .. 98.747 38.0 3.752.386 Rock . 15.028 28.4 426,795 Saline . 118,699 35.1 4,166.334 Sarpy . 52.865 36.8 1.945,432 Saunders .... 180.876 11.1 7,434,003 Scott's Bluff. 2.196 30.0 65,880 Seward . 119,901 37.0 4.436,337 Sheridan . 14.949 30.0 448,470 Sherman _ 58.502 34.5 2,018.319 Sioux . 2.006 19.3 38,715 Stanton . 78,290 34.5 2,701.005 Thayer . 114.599 29.7 3.403.590 Thomas . 1,925 25.0 48.125 Thurston _ 6G.7S9 38.4 2.564,697 Valiev . 72.301 35.7 2.581.145 Washington.. 78.490 36.8 2.888.432 Wavne . 92,664 37.2 3,447.100 Webster. 109.945 34.3 3,771.113 Wheeler . 13,780 29.5 406.5,10 York . 120.792 37.6 4,541.779 Totals _6,840.905 35.28 241,383.537 Consolidating Two Homes. An effort will be made this year to consolidate the Girls’ Industrial home at Milford with the Home for the Friendless at Lincoln, the united home to oe at Milford. This will leave the entire building now used for the Friendless and the Orthopedic hospital for the use of the latter. The Orthopedic hospital needs more room, and Superintendent Lord will recommend a large appropriation for a new building, but as a lot of legis lators will object to this expenditure, the consolidation likely will be ef fected. Change in the State .Normal. LINCOLN—A resolution will be of fered at the next meeting of the State Normal board which, if adopted, prob ably will make unnecessary the ap propriation asked for to increase the capacity of the Kearney Normal school. This resolution, which will be offered by State Treasurer Mortensen. will provide no students can be ad mitted to the normal school who have not passed the tenth grade. Nebraska Insurance Companies. Blanks asking for information in regard to the business of the last year are being sent out to all dur ance companies by Insurance Auditor John L. Pierce. Life companies re ceive blanks containing thirty-six pages. Minute explanations as to the manner of conducting business may be made by companies which have been in the state only one year. They must tell how their money is invested, give an itemized account of their gains and losses and show the exact cost of obtaining new business. The School (Jensus. The school census, as shown by the reports on file in the office of Super intendent McBrien. gives the number of children of school age In Nebraska as 371,885, and on this basis will the school apportionment be made. The amount to be divided among the va rious districts is $251,81)6.54, giving each district 67.7 cents for each child of school age. The census of this year and of last December shows a decrease of 5,013. This is because enumerators have probably kept closer to the rule than usyai. NEBRASKA BRIEFS. Geneva has purchased three trained bloodhounds to chase criminals. The series of religious meetings in Harvard were disappointing as to re sults. Butler county sim volng in the matter of organizing a county agricul tural society. - Della Clark, an employe of tbe Mor ton hotel, Nebraska City, attempted to commit suicide by taking laudanum. Doctors saved her with a stomach pump. William H. Bush was arrested by Sheriff Bauman of Dodge county on the'charge of stealing a horse from John Hebebrand, a farmer near Hooper. George Hill, who escaped from the Dodge county ■ sheriff, while being taken to jail to await trial on a charge of attempt to murder, was arrested In Council Bluffs, la. At Rulo, Melvin and Bill Foster were arrested and taken to the county jail in Falls City, being charged with burning the barn and corncrib on the Alois Dannecker farm. A man en route from New York to San Francisco attempted to commit suicide on train No. 5 east of Lexing ton. and was taken off the train and put in charge of a physician. Arthur Crerner. who has been in the vicinity of Ashland for several months, and has attracted much at tention by his queer actions, has re cently been adjudged insane. The Cass county mortgage record for November is as follows: Mortgages filed on farm property amounting to $20,654; released, $17,610. Amount of mortgages filed on city property, $4,100; released. $3,228. A Underwood, a Virginian, who had been in Dead wood. S. D.. several weeks, came to Alliance. He became intoxicated and while In a rooming house insulted Mrs. F. J. Dunn, who shot him. He will not die. Many contests on, land are being filed at the United States land office at North Platte. These contests are on land in Cheyenne and other western counties, where homesteads were taken and later abandoned. Miss Ella 5. Lawrence has started suit in district court of Platte county against the Monroe Independent Tel ephone company for $20,000 damages. She received a serious shack, and so will the company if she wins her case. Newspapers at Columbus have re ceived notice from the Burlington rail road that no more transportation will bo issued in payment for advertising and that whatever the papers print for them on their order will be paid for by the company in cash. Reports of cattle dying in the north east part of Antelope county from cornstalk disease are current, in one case a man losing five head. There is seldom danger after the middle of January and the presumption is that continued freezing removes the cause. A party of suveyors has recently looked over the territory from Octavia on west along the south side of the Platte river. They carefully surveyed the grounds, leaving stakes on several points along a line west from Octavia. Everybody is anxious to know the na ture of this survey. The case of Mrs. Sarah Young of David City against R. L. Berndg and the Metropolitan Mutual Bond and Surety company or Omaha for the sum of $5,000 damages for the exces sive sale and giving away of liquor to her husband. Lee Young, which caused his death on February 22. resulted in a verdict of $1,500 in her behalf. The West Point. Farmers’ Institute society has decided to hold a competi tive corn exhibit during the institute, which is to be held in West Point February 7 and 8. Ten prizes will be awarded, five on yellow and five on white corn. Twenty ears of corn must be shown by each exhibitor, the judg ing and scoring to be done by state experts. The stockholders of the Webster county fair association held their first annual meeting at Bladen. The man agement was highly pleased with the reports of the different departments. Premiums were all paid in full. Nearly $4,000 has been expended for Improve ments during the past season and the treasurer still shows a nic? balance on hand. Capt. W. S. Noyes, aged sixty-five years, a resident of Hastings for twentv-five years, dropped dead shortly after entering the Bostwick barber shop. Mr. Noyes asked Lou Egelhoff. a barber, to assist hirfi in removing his coat, and as Egelhoff turned to take the coat. Noyes said: “I might, as well give it up. I’m going to die.” He was caught in Egelhoff’s arms as he fell and soon expired. A draft for $7,067.25 was tendered to the county treasurer of Lincoln county, by the Burlington Railway company through its attorney. J. J. Halligan. iri payment of the company’s taxes for the year 1906. This tender was $3,815.43 less than the amount due and was therefore refused by the county treasurer until permission is given by a court of competent jurisdic tion to accept a partial payment with out invalidating the collection of the full amount. Tony Prebyl. a farmer living near Barneston, brought specimens to Beat rice. which were taken from the craw of a duck by Mrs. Prebyl while she was engaged in dressing the fowl. The, sample were pronounced a fine qual ity of placed gold. The new - government: road in Ne maha county is completed. Two miles of macadamized road now stretches to the east, from the foot of Central avenue in Auburn. This covers the strip of ground that has always been impassable in the spring when the water is high. Otoe county boast of the tallest and smallest officials in the state. Sheriff John Donovan stands six-feet and six inches in his stocking feet. John El rod, elected constable, is forty-,two inches in height and weighs seventy five pounds. A warrant has been issued and is now in the hands of the county sheriff of Adams county, which will in all probability result in the arrest and return to the county of William J. Ohlheiser, former county clerk of that county on the charge of wife deser tion THE PftESIOENT It NOW "SPEAKING GENTLY." PROOF OF BAILEY CHARGES! j DOCUMENTS IN CASE AGAINST SENATOR MADE PUBLIC. Attorney General of Texaa Show* How Former Received Money from Big Oil Magnate. Austin, Tex. — Attorney General Davidson issued a statement Fri day night in which he gives the doc umentary proof- of his charge that Senator Bailey had received money from the president of the Wateffe Pierce Oil company. The first voucher is dated at St. .Louis. June 30, 1900. and is on the Waters-Pierce Oil company to H. Clay Pierce, debtor, for demand loan of $3,000 to Joseph W. Bailey, and is' in dorsed “account Texas cases.” . Another is on Henry Stribbing. of Waco, Tex., for account of expense in trust civil case of the state of Texas versus Waters-Pierce Oil company at Waco. $1,500.” In connection with this voucher is the following: “Lake Lebagamon, Wis., June 12.— To Andrew, St. Louis: If Johnson ap proves Bailey to loan Stribbing on his note fifteen hundred. Bailey should quiet all Texas parties Tell him I will see him soon. "H. C. PIERCE.” The following notation was written on the telegram: “S.—Draft draw'n bv Bailey for $1,600.” Another voucher read: “Waters-Pierce Oil company, to H. C. Pierce, Dr. Amount paid J. W. Bailey account Texas cases, $200.” Among other documents made pub lic in the statement is a note signed by J. W. Dailey payable to the order of H. C. Pierce for $8,000 dated Wash ington,’ March 1, 1901, “for value re ceived;” a letter signed by J. W. Bailey addressed to H. C. Pierce ask ing him to send New York exchange for $1,700, and another addressed to J. P. Gruet, secretary and signed by H. C. Pierce, president. The letter follows: “Please send New York exchange for $1,760 for .Joseph W. Bailey, Gainesville. Tex., and. charge against legal expense, account of Texas leg islation. “I sent this amount personally to Mr. Bailey in response to his inclosed letter of March 28. Since then Mr. Bailey has returned the. amount to me, and it is now proper for the company to make this payment. “Attach Mr. Bailey’s letter to vour voucher and merely inclose the draft to him without the voucher. His in closed letter will be your voucher.” SHAW’S PLAN TO CHECK PANICS. Hi* Report Recommend* a Restricted ■«. Credit Currency. Washington. — In his report .to congress. Leslie M. Shaw, secretary of the treasury, reiterates his recom mendation of a restricted credit cur rency and suggests that if more pow er is granted the secretary panics can be prevented or their evil effects greatly reduced. He points out the danger of the “central bank" plan, and urges his own methods to increase- circulation when there is a stringency in the money market, and to contract the currency when money is redundant A taxed credit currency he considers the best method, supplemented by power granted the secretary to handle a $100,000,000 reserve fund, sending it into the market when needed and withdrawing it when not needed. Respite for Aggie Meyers. Jefferson City, Md.—Gov. Folk Thursday announced that he had granted a respite until January 10 for Mrs. Aggie Myers and Frank Hott man, of Kansas City, who were con victed of having murdered the hus band of Mrs. Myers, and were sen tenced to be hanged. Rear Admiral Asserson Dies. New York.—Rear Admiral Peter ; Asserson, U. S. N„ retired, died sud-' denly at his home ill Brooklyn Thurs- 1 day. , Girls Burned in Explosion. Indianapolis. Ind.—In a panic and fire that started from an explosion of thousands of paper matches at the fac tory of F. A. Rathbun & Co., West In dianapolis, Wednesday, eight young women were seriously burned. Elevator Fails; Three Killed. Chambersburg, Pa.—Three men were killed and one was fatally injured and five others-wens seriously hurt at Waynesboro Wednesday, by the fall of an elevator in the Geiser Manufactur ing company’s shops. § -•'V;./ > J,:‘ I • V , ' GILLETTE IS CONVICTED. Found Guilty of Murdering Hlo Sweet heart, Grace Brown. Herkimer, N. Y.—The jury In the trial of Chester E. Gillette for the murder of his sweetheart, Grace Brown, at Big Moose lake, on July 11 last. Tuesday night returned a verdict of guilty in the first degree. The jury, which had deliberated for five hours, sent word at 11 o’clock that a verdict had been reached. A moment later it filed into the court room and at 11:15 o'clock an officer who had been sent for Gillette, re turned with the prisoner. It was learned that the jury had some difficulty in reaching an agree ment and six ballots were taken be fore the 12 men agreed. Up to that time the jury had stood 11 for convic tion and one for acquittal. There are. and have been for some time, all kinds of rumors that Gilette has been overheard to make some kind of a confession that he killed Grace Brown. Some of these stories are that jail officials heard him con fess to his lawyers: others that he told a visitor who called on him that he had struck the girl and that the visitor told the district attorney. No body connected with the case in any way will confirm any of these stories. District Attorney Ward refused to confirm or deny the report that Gil lette was overheard to make a confes sion to his attorney that he struck Grace Brown at Big Moose lake. COUNT BONI 18 SNUBBED. Many French Deputies Leave Cham ber When He Speaks. Paris. — Count Boni de Castel lane spoke in the chamber of depu- . ties Thursday during the debate on the Algeciras treaty. Half the mem bers of the chamber of deputies ab ruptly left the house when the count ascended the tribune. The snub was given deliberately in the presence of the diplomatic corps and the entire cabinet. Count Boni stood, hands in trousers pockets, with a flippant smile on his face during the confusion occasioned by the withdrawal of more than 2p0 deputies. When quiet was restored Boni ad dressed the chamber, apparently not having been disconcerted by the re buke. He was jauntily attired, wear ing a lavender colored waistcoat, a red necktie, and he spoke easily, al most airily. He argued that France was continuing the policy of ex-For eign Minister Delcasse, which aimed at the conquest of Morocco. Then he took his seat, in the midst of almost deathlike silence in the chamber. No one applauded him or replied to him. He was treated with contemptuous indifference. The chamber ratified the Algeciras treaty by unanimous vote. Oil Magnates Are Subpoenaed. New York. — John D. Rockefel ler anti six associates who control the Standard Oil company, have been served with subpoenas to appear be fore the United States circuit court in St. Louis on Monday, January 7. United States Marshal William Hen kel served the papers. Besides Mr. Rockefeller subpoenas were served on Henry H. Rogers, ftenry M. Flagler, Charles M. Pratt, Oliver H. Payne, William Rockefeller and John D. Archbold. t Preacher and Negro Hanged. Valdosta, Ua.—Rev. J. O. Rawlins and Alf Moore, a negro, were hanged here Tuesday morning for the murder of Willie and Carrie Carter in July, 1905. Robbers Cremate Invalid. Zanesville, O.—Robbers are be lieved to have murdered Miss Sarah Wiley, a life-long invalid, and th^n set her home on fire to hide their crime. The house was burned and the woman’s body incinerated. Suit to Break Lybrand Will. Delaware, O.—Lucius Lybrand, of Terre Haute, Ind., one of the heirs of the late Edwin G. Lybrand, of this city, filed suit Friday to break the i will. The deceased left $25,000 to the Ohio Wesleyan university here. Seven Hurt in Railway Wreck. Salt Lake City.—East-bound pas senger train No. 4 (the Atlantic ex- 1 press on the Union Pacific railroad), was derailed Wednesday near Church Buttes, W'yo., 140 miles east of Ogden. Seven persons are reported injured. I Sent to Prison for Fraud. Toledo, 0.-»-0n a plea of guilty to the charge of using the United States I mails to promote a scheme to defraud, i Charles Whitney Norton was sen- .i tenced to the Ohio pentttentiary for 18 1 months and to pay a fine of 9100. i HORROR AT CORNELL TOUR STUDENTS AND THREE TOWNSMEN PERISH IN FIRE. CHI PSI HOUSE BURNED 3reat Heroism Is Displayed by the Boys and. Volunteer Firemen in the Work of ? Rescue. Ithaca, N. Y.—The $200,000 man sion of the Chi Psi fraternity at Cor lell university—the finest chapter louse in the world—burned early Frl lay, and seven persons perished in he conflagration. Of these four were students, and the others prominent townsmen who had responded to the ilarm in the capacity of volunteer Bremen. The bodies of the dead, with the sxceution of those of W. H. Nichols, if Chicago, and F. W. Greile, of East Orange, N. J., were recovered. Friday night it was decided to dynamite the ruins to facilitate the search for the missing bodies: The dead are: Attorney Alfred S. Robinson, hook »nd leader company No. 3. John C. Rumsey, hardware mer chant, hose company No. 6. E. J. Landon, salesman; hose com pany No. 4. F. W. Greile, of East Orange. N. J., 10. ^ O. L. Sclimuck, of Hanover, Pa„ 07. W. H. Nichols, of Chicago. ’07. James McCutcheon, Jr., of Pitts burg, Pa;, ’09. The injured are: H. S. Decamp, of New York, ’09. Henry M. Curry, of Pittsburg, Pa., 09. R. R. Powers, of Atlanta, Ga., ’10. W. W. Goetz, of Milwaukee. '09. H. A. Uihlein, of Milwaukee, ’07. G. R. Sailor, of Pittsburg, Pa., '07. C. J. Pope, of East Orange, N. J., 10. The heroism of the volunteer fire men who died attacking the fire was matched by the heroism of Schrauck, who reentered the burning building in a futile effort to save Nichols, his room-mate, and who died later from his injuries, and by the courage of McCutcheon, who remained in the flames until fatally burned, to assist bis comrades to escape. Pope, the freshman, received his injuries while seeking to rescue other members of the fraternity. Among thhse earliest oa the scene, and who contributed most of the work of rescue from the flames which had already converted the first floor of the doomed dormitory into an in ferno, were several Cornell football men. All did effective work. It has be^n declared that the work of Sam Halliday, the old fullback, and of Earle and Gibson, the halfbacks of the season ended, united with that of the Chi Psi men who risked their lives that their brothers might live, will be remembered long in the an nals of Cornell. The cause of the fire will proba.bly never be discovered. The building is an unsightly wreck, with no particle of its inner furniture remaining. Cor nell is deprived of one of its land marks, for the lodge was built in 1881 by Jennie McGraw Fiske, at a cost of $130,000. The daughter of the lumber king, John McGraw, who was one of Cornell’s early great benefac tors, never enjoyed her palace ,and entered it only after death. Around the house have clustered the memory of the great fight for the Fiske millions waged between Prof. Willard Fiske. the husband, and Judge Boardman. as the representa tive of Cornell, to which Mrs. Fiske had left the bulk of her estate. LYNN FACTORY BLOWN UP. Eleven Persons Are Injured and Many Buildings Burned. Lynn, Mass.—The explosion of a boiler Thursday in the four-story factory building of the P. J. Harney Shoe Manufacturing company on Alley 3treet and the fire which immediately followed destroyed 14 buildings in the West Lynn manufacturing district, causing a total loss estimated at about >520,000. Eleven persons were injured, me. Miss Celia Tradenbtirg, an opera tive in one of the burned factories, be ng in a critical condition at a hospital. In addition to the direct loss, the shoe manufacturers will suffer severely from the interruption to their Christ mas business. The fire swept over several acres, burning three other factory buildings, the Boston & Maine railroad station md a number of small dwellings. Kansas Grain Law Void. Kansas City. Mo.—The Kansas grain inspection and weighing law was declared void Thtfrsday by Judge 3. R. Peters, special master appointed by Judge Pollack of the United States circuit court. ___ ✓ Physician to Pope Dead. Rome.—Dr. Lapponi, physician to he pope, died at seven o’clock Fri lay morning. He had been ill for some time with cancer of the stom ich and. pneumonia setting in, he could not withstand its ravages. Four Killed in Collision. Lewiston, Me.—Four persons were tilled and three others seriously in ured in a head-on collision between a special and a regular train on the Uaine Central railroad near the small station of Annabessacook. Indians Near Starvation. Grand Marais, Minn.—Many of the Chippewa Indians at Grand Portage •eservation 'are on the verge of star vation. They expected the customary illowance of flour and pork from the jovernmerft, but did not get It. Six Year Term fbr President. Washington.—A term of six years or the president and vice president of he United States is proposed by Sen ator Cullom in a Joint resolution in roduced Thursday providing for an intendment to the constitution. INDICTED FORELAND FRAUDS TRUE BILLS RETURNED BY GRAND JURY IN UTAH. Railroads and Officials Charged with Discriminating Against Certain Shippers. Salt Lake City.—The federal grand jury that is investigating coal land frauds in Utah and charges that rail road corporations have discriminated against certain shippers made a par tial report Friday afternoon. Indict* ments were returned against the Union Pacific Railroad company, the Oregon Short Line Railroad company, the IJnion Pacific Coal company, the Utah Fuel Coal company and several of the highest officials representing the Harrlman and Gould corporation! in Utah. Bench warrants for the arrest of persons accused in the two indict ments were issued. Bonds in the case of each individual accused was fixed at $3,000. Fred R. Maynard, of Washington, assistant attorney general, who has been conducting the investigation be fore the grand jury, is authority for the statement that two other indict ments charging perjury before the grand jury have been returned. The lands were filed on in March, inns Assistant Attorney General Maynard stated that when the grand Jury recon venes after the holidays the inquisi tion will be resumed. The indictments returned Friday, he said, mark only the beginning of the government's probing operations in Utah and Wy oming, and the violations of laws a! leged in these indictments are only In, cidents of a gigantic system of fraud that has been in operation in the west for many years. The indictment against the Utah Fuel company and the six agents of that company is based on the methods used in acquiring about 1,400 acres of coal lands in Sevier county, Utah The two men indicted for perjury proved to be Theodore Schulte, ths employe of an insurance Arm, and Thomas A. Moore, abstractor in the county recorder's office. Both were arrested Friday night and released on $2,500 bail. The other defendants have not been formally arrested, but have, it is gtv en out, arranged to appear before Unit ed States Commissioner Baldwin to day. GREAT DISTRESS IN CLIFTON. Town Swept by Flood Is in a Most Deplorable Condition. Solomonville, Aria.—Late details of the Clifton flood disaster indicate a most deplorable condition among the inhabitants and tremendous loss ol property. Practically every building in the town is damaged. Many wer6 swept entirely away. Numerous es capes from death are reported. Twc men were swept through the streets and saved themselves by catching the awnings of a store and breaking through the plate glass front. Pa tients in the hospital were placed in a car and sent to higher ground before the flood reached the building. Monday night in Clifton was a night of terror, as practically the entire pop ulation stood upon the bills unshel tered. It is believed that many per sons in the Mexican quarter of whom no one has any record were drowned CONVICT-MADE GOODS HIT. House Passes Law That Permits States to Bar Them. Washington.—By a practically unanimous vote the house Friday passed the bill limiting the regulation of interstate commerce between the several states in articles manufac tured by convict labor or in any prison or reformatory. The law abrogates the interstate commerce law as at present applied to convict-made goods, thereby af fording to the different states and territories the right to inhibit ths shipping of convict-made goods with ing the confines of any state or terri tory. -Louisville Dairymen Plead Guilty. Louisville, Ky. — Aaron Kohn, representing 100 dairymen, againat whom charges were brought under the pure food law, of feeding swill to cattle, pleaded guilty for hil "lients Thursday, and accepted a sus pended sentence of $100 fine and a jail sentence of 50 days against each defendant. The fine and jail sentence will be annulled only on condition that they clean up their dairies by April 1 and quit feeding swill to cat tle. Six Miners Buried Alive. Bakersfield, Cal. — Six miners were entombed Friday morning by the caving in of a shaft leading to the big steel pipe conduit of the Edi son Power company’s plant, 18 miles from this city. Two weeks will be re quired to reach the bodies. Fifty Years in a Madhouae. New York.—“Aunt Becky" is dead at the age c.f 103, at the Long Island state hospital for the insane. She was Jeanette Rothschild. She was committed from Manhattan when she was 53 years old. Two Indian Boys Executed. Reno, Neb.—Johnny and Ibapah, Indian boys convicted of the murder of Fred Foie man, a white man, at Montello, Nev., on December 27, 1005, were executed Friday in the peniten tiary at Carson. Robber Beats a Qirl. Kansas City, Mo.—A robber early Thursday rendered Miss Zona Heck ert, night operator at De Soto, Kan., on the Santa Fe, unconscious with a blow from a wagon spoke and robbed the station .money drawer. Big Advance in Cost of Living. New York.—Figures giving the average cost of living on Dec.' 1, com piled by R. C. Dun & Co., show that there has l>een an advance in price as compared with November 1, from *106.68 to *108.17. I SHOT BY A WOMAN SHE ATTEMPTS TO KILL FORMER SENATOR BROWN. • - THERE IS NO JjOPE FOR VICTIM Woman Says Mr. Brown's Attentions Caused Her Husband to Get Divorce and that He 'Then Refused to Marry Her. WASHINGTON — Former United States Senator Arthur Brown of Utah tonight lies in a critical condi tion in Emergency hospital from a pis tol shot wound in the abdomen, in flicted by Mrs. Anna M. Bradley of Salt Lake City, who arrived here Saturday from that city. The shooting occurred In Senator Brown’s apartment, in the Raleigh hotel, where Mrs. Bradley had registered under the name of "A. B. Brown.” She was arrested. Senator Brown was conveyed to the hospital, where he was immediately put on the operating table. Two shots were fired, one grazing his left hand and the other entering the abdomen and lodging in the pelvic cavity. After working over him for nearly two hours the surgeons decided that for the pres ent at least they would make no fur ther attempt Xo find the bullet. It waa stated tonight that, while Senator Brown’s condition is critical, there is reason to believe that he may recover. Mrs. Bradley arrived shortly after soon. After being assigned to a room she immediately went to Senator Brown’s apartment. There were no witnesses to the shooting, but a maid heard the shots and at once notified the management. According to her statement tonight at the police station, where she talked freely with the newspaper men, Mrs. Bradley came to Washington to de mand that Senator Brown marry her. She said that their relations were well known in Salt Lake City. "I asked him if he was going to do the right thing by me,-’ she said, main taining a remarkable composure. "In reply he put on his overcoat and start ed to leave the room and I shot him. I abhor acts of this character, but in thia ease it was fully justified." While expressing no sorrow for her act. she declared that she was glad to know that Senator Brown might re cover. "I was practically penniless when I got here today." she said, “having only $1.25, and after paying the cabman, all the money I had 1n the world was $1." She said she urged Senator Brown to marry, her that he had been instru mental in the divorce between her hus band and herself, and, that as his wife was dead, he could “do the right thing” by her. This, she said, he refused to do. BROWN IN CRITICAL CONDITION. Former Utah Senator Has Little Chance of Recovery. WASHINGTON — f'ormer United States Senator Arthur Brown of Utah, who was shot by Mrs. Anna M. Brad ley of Salt lAke City in his apartments at the Hote' Raleigh. Saturday after non, lies in a critical condition at the Emergency hospital. The doctors an nounced Sunday night that he has a chance of recovery, but his friends ad mit there has been a change for the worse during the day and thought his necovery is extremely doubtful. There are symptoms of peritonitis, which the physicians fear may lead to blood poisoning. Mrs. Bradley is held without bail on the charge of assault with intent to kill. She will not be given a prelimin ary hearing until the extent of Mr. Brown's injuries are known. Ballooning Over the Alps. MILAN—The aeronauts, Usuelli and Crespi, who recently crossed the Alps in a balloon for the first time on rec ord, have just made public details con cerning their voyage across the moun tains. The distance from Milan to Aix-les-Bains. measured in a straight line. Is 160 miles, and this was covered in four hours and five minutes. The highest speed attained was sixty-two miles an hour. Al a height of 5,000 meters the aeronauts were compelled to have recourse to oxygen to enable them to breath. Peary Talks on Arctic Trip. NEW YORK—Commander Robert E. Peary gave a public lecture Sunday at the Museum of Natural History upon Ills latest attempt to reach the north pole. He said in the course of it that he was satisfied that there is a body of land somewhere about a hundred miles northwest of Orantland. His party, he said, found driftwood a hundred miles front Orantland in the open Polar sea, which he was convinced could only have come from rivers flowing through land not yet placed on any map. He believes the pole can be reached by sledges. Two-Cent Fare in Missouri. KANSAS CITY—According to the Star, Governor Polk, in his biennial message to the legislature, will recom mend that the railroads reduce their passenger rate to 2 cents a mile, ex cept on their branch lines. Grover Cleveland Is III. NEW YORK—Grover Cleveland Is ill at his home in Princeton of acute Indigestion. He has been sick a week and still remains unimproved. His physian said that he was not in a very serious condition, but was in pain. Sunday Closing Commended. WASHINGTON—Senator Burkett Is daily receiving letters from all sec tions of the country commending his suggestion that the postoffices should remain closed duriifg the entire day of Sunday. Italian Builds Airship. ROME—Count Armigho of Schio. who since 1874 has been experimenting with airships, believes he has found the solution of aerial navigation. Hia new machine, which is in the shape of a ship, contanis a fifty-horse motor and a rudder ten yards square. Cornell Is in Mourninij. ITHACA, N. Y.—Cornell university went Into formal mourning Sunday for the four students and three volunteer firemen who lost their lives when the Chi Psi fraternity house was burned.