Tf 4 a in i; W M ' ?- w !..! tl Red Cloud Chief. Pnil.LsllUD WEEKLY red CI.OLM). NLHKAS.tA Tho purBiilt of happlnera doca not necessarily Imply tho pursuit of woalth. Itcnl happlncBs In a matter of Individual conscience entirely. Prof. n. 8. Woodward, of Columbia university, In n recent paper shows reasons for thinking that tho oarth'a atmosphere extends to n height vary ing with tho distance from tho equa tor. At tho equator ho estimates tho height to ho 20,000 miles, which dimin ishes to only 17,000 miles at tho poles. But of course, beyond a few hundred uilles nnovo thu ground, tho density of tho atmosphoro bccomcB so slight that the effects are Imperceptible. Tho Chlncso strenuously object to gambling on future prices of articles of consumption, such as rice, whoat and corn. Recently bIx members of a Chlneso bucket shop or board of trado rather, wcro summarily taken out and beheaded for making contracts to pay given prices as a given time without regard to tho Immutable laws of supply nnd demand. Tho Chlncso are ex treme In their methods, but are un doubtedly right ns to tho underlying principle. War, like tho dyer's hand, la subduod to what It works In. Tho general sees In It tho Victoria Cross or tho Legion of Honor; tho politician sees In It ro elcctlon; the manufacturer, n foreign market for his goods. "Do you tako nn Interest In tho war?" a London householder lately asked his cook, see ing a brightly colored map of South Africa In tho kitchen. "No, sir," was tho reply; "but I moan to 'avo a skirt llko that brown bit, and blouses llko these reds and greens and yellows. I am Just keepln' tho map to match tho patterns with when I got an ovonln' off, sir." Tho Immenso profits nmassed by various trusts havo been often talkod about In seemingly extravagant terms, but tho most extravagant oratory of tho anti-trust agitation has seldom, ir ever, oqualed tho representations inado In tho couits by Mr. Frlek. tho part ner of Mr. Cameglo In tho Carnoglo Steol Company of Pittsburg. Mr. Frlck'H action Ih brought to prevent Mr. Carneglo from "freezing him out" of his Interest In tho concern nnd In order to mako clear his ease it becomes necessary to exhibit tho prollts of tho company, thus In a sense "letting tho cat out of tho bag." According to Mr. Frick tho not profit of 1890 was $21, 000,000 nnd tho net profits for 1000 will amount to $I2,COO,000. Mr. Carneglo is said to consider this latter Bomowhat excessive and llxes tho prollts for 1000 nt tho modernto sum of ? 10,000,000. At tho annual dinner of tho Silk Association of America recently, tho chief guest was tho Chlneso minister to tho United States, Wu Ting Fang. Ho mado tho speech of tho evening. Ho contrasted tho friendly attitude of " tho United States toward China with tho aggressions of European nations, and said that so long as Americana wept on In their pacific policy of com morco nnd trade, they would bo wel como everywhere, not only in China, but in Japan as well. Trado statistics Indlcato that tho Chlneso minister Is right. China Is buying now of Ameri can goods from live to six times as much as It bought ten years ago. Last year it bought four million dollars' worth moro than tho year preceding. Tho gain was mostly in cotton goods, kerosene nnd Hour. Foreign trnde, of courso, Is not controlled by scntlmont. People buy what they llko best, vhero they can get it cheapest; but, other things being equal; they would rather buy of their friends than of thoso whom they mny regard as enemies. A dozen or moro yoars ago a farmor twisted a bit of Iron about a wiro fence, nnd notlcod that his cattlo avoided It. Thus originated tho uso of tho barbed-wlro fenco, which has cut tho great freo prairies Into ranches. It has lacerated and cut from watur countless numbers of tho wild animals that onco roamed tho prairies, and la now dossed as war matorlal by the nations. Both In Cuba nnd In South Africa tho demoralization wrought by tho doadly barbed-wlro fenco was greater than that of tho moBt Improved gunB and powder. Tho position of fence cutter has promoted tho drummer-boy Into tho forefront of danger. "When Lloutonnnt Ord led his men In a rush up San Juan hill, a boy private by his 8lde, foil, mortally wounded. Ord heard his faint cry nnd paused in his rush to say, "My poor follow, I can do nothing for you." "I did not call you back for that," was tho bravo ro ply. "I nm dono for; but tako my steel nlppors. There may bo another fenco beyond that hill, and I won't bo thero to cut It for you." Tho boy lived to hear tho shout of victory, but tho gallant leader, with tho boy's nlppors In his hand aad tho boy's devotion last In his heart, lay dead not many yards away. Thero aro a wholo lot of men who nre fond of telling you that "women aro not what they used to bo." Of courso they mean to convey tho Im pression that women aro deteriorating. It Is a curious fact, however, that nln out of ten of such philosophers aro bachelors. Hotty Green says her daughter Is not to becomo tho wlfo of tho Duko do la Torre. Tho duko may need tho money, but he ought nevertheless to find Bomo comfort In tho fact that Hot ty 1b not to bo his uioUier-lu-law. DfATHBYVIOLEN(E Cliaptcr of Accidents in Cedar County, Nebraska, PROSPEROUS GERMAN FARMER KILLED Falls From Wnon nnd the Wheel 1'iini Over Mm One Hotly In Fount! In Missouri Hirer nml Another In nn Oltl Corn Field, Henry Thocne, nn old and respected German farmer, was killed on his farm near How Valley, Cedar county. He was hauling n load of straw and his team started to run. In trying to hold them the straw slipped under him and he fell lu front of the wagon, which passed over his body, Injuring him in ternally, so that lie died. A drnd body was found In tho Mis souri river at St. Helena, In Cedar county. A tdlver watch and pocket book with homo money were found, but nothing by which the body could bo identified. Monday a telephone message came from Coleridge to Coroner Holfort stat ing that the dead hotly of Fred Koch hail been found in bis Held about seven miles northeast of that place. Tho coroner Immediately woift to Investi gate, but tho results of tho Inquest aro not known. MORE CHANGING CHARTERS Hlnlo IlnultN of Ntiliruulm llccumo Nn tlonnl Institutions. Comptroller Dawes has approved the applications of tho following Nebraska banks to convert to national banks: The St. Paul State bank of St. Paul to Farmers' National, with a capital of 825,000; IJartlngton State bank of Hart ington to the Hnrtington National, with a capital of S 10,001). and the Franklin County bank of Rlnonilngton to tho First National of lUooinlngton, with a capital of S'-'.I.OOO. The comp troller lias also approved the applica tion of U. ('. Million and other for authority to organize the First Na tlonal bank of F.lgin, Neb., with a capital of S25,0(IO. SHERIFF PERMITS LYNCHING Order Vlrj-lnlit MIIIMii Away nnd n Mob llc.ix ItH Work. The series of exciting events in Greenville county, Virginia, the past week euluminatetl in u double lynch ing at Emporia. Ituth Cotton', the negro, who according to his confession, killed Sanders and Welter, and O'Grady, the white man who was with him in tlie cabin when the murder oc curred, were hanged by (l lnob vari ously estimated at from 1, . 100 to 2,000 strong. Tim mUiliti protecting the prisoners wero ordered away by the sheriff and this gave the mob full sway. Armour Agfiitii Arrested. Edward II. Noble, cashier, and Den nis McG raw. salesman, in the beef de partment of Armour ,fc Co.'s branch in Albany, N. V., wero arrested on war rants charging them with grand lar ceny, second degree. The complain ant is a surety company. In one in stance it was shown that accounts had been juggled to the amount of SlO.uOO. The peculations wero made possible lv a system of false charges made on the bale tickets, kltink accounts, etc. The men wcio admitted to bail. TriinnruiiMl tit tin, Trust. A telegram from Nov York an nounces tho formal transfer of the Mlslantl steel works at Munice, Intl., to the sheet iron trust. The sale price was close to a million dollars, and orders for the lesumptiou of wtrk wero Issued. President It. J. Reatty will bo district manager for tho trust in Indiana. Well Itrt'HNfd Itnldicr. Fivo well dressed men entered Una ley's icstaurant at the corner of Sixty sixth street and Columbus avenue, New York, and while one of them engaged the cashier in conversation, ono of his companions went to the safe and got away with S3. 100. The robbery was not discovered for fully five minutes uftcrwnrd. Waluiuli Kirn (),r Traces. Notice has been served by the Wu 6ash railroad that it will no longer bo governed by rule 1 of tho western pas senger association concerning party rates. Passenger ngents say that It may lead to tho abolition of party rates by all western roads. lllotvn til I'lceCS, A tcrriliu explosion occurred at tho factory of Hand ,fc Co., fireworks man ufacturers, at Hamilton, Out. Walter Teale, a son-in-law of Professor Hand, was blown to atoms. The explosion occurred in ono of tho largest build ings. Half tho building was blown to fragments. Feel to (Iii On SIubp. A dispatch from Loudon says that Sir Hubert Peel has definitely decided to go on the stage. Ho will 'join the "llootles' Haby" company as Ilootles and play lu London anil tho provinces. (lunriiuteit Nearly ItiiUcd. Mayor Ashbrhlgo, of Philadelphia, has announced that tho third S25.000 to bo raised by that city for tho repub lican national convention is now in hand and will be forwarncd in n few days. Tho work of raising tho fourth and final 825,000 has been started. lloy Shot Dead, Ralph Uediuan, aged 17, a pupil nt the Farnhiiiii suhool at Omaha, was In stantly killed by tho accidental ills charge of his gun just as ho was start ing on a duck hunting expedition at Cut-Oil' lako. HUNT THE BANK ROBBERS No I'osltlte Clue lis" trn Secured Thus I'nr nt Ilurdy. Thero are no new developments of consequence in tho hunt for the thieves who blew the safe hi tho Hardy bank. The llcatrico hounds arrived promptly and took a trail to a farm house about threo.mlles southeast of town, and can not find any other trail. At tho farm house were three young men, compar ative strangers in tho community, two of whom claim to have come to the vi cinity a day or two before to hunt on the Republican. Tho three were in town the night before making some purchases of shells, lunch, etc., and it is probable the hounds took their trail home, but it is hardly thought the young fellows can be connected with the robbery. They are, howevor.under survclllnnco nnd some of their talk is disconnected. The best cluo is in tho fact that the dogs going from the bank to tho handcar house and other places where things had been disturbed In a way to Indicate some connection with the robbery. A reward of 82.10 and 10 per cent of the money recovered is of fered by the bank. Tho amount taken was 33,t00, 8100 of which was in silver dollars. Three men suspected of having rob bed tho Hardy bank wero arrested by Sheriff Moore five miles cast of Byron. Thoy had been tracked from liartly and the house, occupied by n widow, was guarded during1 the day. RELATIONS WITH MOREY Viola Horlockor Testifies In Her Own lleliuir. Supported by her attorneys, Judge Ragan anil It. A. Hatty, one on each side, Miss Viola Ilorloekcr was led to the witness stand Monday afternoon, March 2(1, and In answer to questions put to her by her own counsel and tho attorney for the state, told of her rela tions with Mr. Morey prior to and lending up to the time of the at tempt upon Mrs. Morey's life. She was greatly agitated and kept clutch ing at her throat, anil would occasion ally raise her hands and press them to her temples. The questions were answered falter Ingly and sometimes it would seem as though she would never speak. At last she broke down completely and began to cry, ami was led from the stand weeping piteously. For the rest of tho session she remained with her face burled in her hands. While she virtually accused Mr. Morey of having made love to her, sho exonerated him from anything of a moro serious na ture. VICTIM OF AWFUL MISTAKE. riitlvrtiiker l'liitlH IMdeiico of llurliil Allte. At Mttllica Hill, N. J., near Phila delphia, tho startling discovery lias been made that, a boy had been buried alive. An undertaker was exhuming bodies of the members of the Smlt.er family, who live at Mullleii Hill ubout twenty-live years ago, for final burial in tliis city. One collln contained the skeleton of a boy and Its condition bore evidences of an awful struggle, after the sup posedly dead body had been buried. The bones of the legs were drawn up and the arms were extended across the face. The glass of the casket which had been above the boy's head was broken. The position of the body and the condition of tho collln indicant! that the victim of a horrible mistake had died in horrible agony. KIIIn Wiro anil Himself. Charles Scott, a boilermaker em ployed in thu Ann Arbor Railroad car shop at Owosso, Mich., broke into the homo of Ids wife, from whom ho had been separated, ami furiously assaulted Mrs. Scott and her mother with a heavy chisel. He then drew a tcvolver and killed himself. l'liiuliiK .11111 Hunted. Tlie largo planing mill at Columbia, Pa., owned by the First National bunk of Columbus, was destroyed by tlie. There is no estimate of the loss beyond the statement that It will cost 7.1,000 to install the machinery, all of which was destroyed. Theic was no Insur ance. Nn in ed In Honor of Henry. Hy direction of tho president tho military at Cayey, Porto Rico, here after will be known and designated as Henry barracks in honor of the late llrlgtuller General Guy V. henry, who was military governor of Porto Rico from December 0, lsus, to May 8, 180'J, and who died on October ,'5, 1809. I'rltitflrft DIh or rtitlitsN. Among the points dwelt on at tho recent tuberculosis congress In Borlln were the facts that moro than 40 por cent of tho printers of Berlin who had died wero phthisical. Flildi'inlr of Pneumonia. An epidemic of pheumonlahasstruck St. Francis orphan asylum of Dubuque, In., and ono hundred Inmates and sev eral sisters are down with the disease. Frliitlng House Iliirucd. Tho printing establishment of Carl Hentemann, on Congress street, Bos ton, wns completely burned out. Los; 87.1,000. FAR fROMDEfEAT Recent Successes Making the Boers More Bold. THEY PROPOSE TO BE AGGRESSIVF Safn lint rent of Olivier tho Pent or tho War A I incut In tlm (Iriisp of tho llrltlsh, Hut Works Way Out Delay Huberts' Alliance. A London dispnteli of March 28 says: Tho Boers are having a little good luck and are showing some boldness again, ns a raiding party estimated at 400 Is believed by the British forces at War renton to have crossed the Kimberley Bloemfoutcln wagon road Monday and to have headed for Jncobsdal, with the Intention of cutting tlie railway ten miles west. Commandant Oliver nppears to have gotten his live thousand men and twenty-five miles of wagons into rugged country, wuere lie can make an easy rear guard defense. Charles Williams, the military expert, says: If this column gets through substan tially Commandant Olivier will have carried out the great feat of tho war, seeing that he run every chance of be ing ground between the upper mill stone of Lord Roberts' army and the nether millstone of the broken Hasuto frontier. He will have done It within fifty miles or bo of Lord Roberts' main strength. Certainly it looked for a week ns though Lord Roberts' held Ol ivler in the hollow of his hand. If Ol ivier gets through to Kroonstnd with even 3,000 men it will be an Important addition to tho Boer gathering there. His escape is attributed in tuirt t, !... worn-out condition of the British nav ulry horses. Lord Roberts' transport appears to have been badly dislocated by the loss nt Rlet river, before Cronje's surrender of the wagon train, and in addition to this the army with which lie proposes to advance toward Pretoria is nearly double that of the earlier rapid move ments." Ten thousand transport, cavalry and gun animals are due to arrive at Cape ports during this and next week. It is given out at Cape Town that Lord Roberts' advance may be delayed for months. Although 'such state ments should be received with reserve, it seems positive that he intends to go to Cape Town to meet Lady Roberts, who is due to arrive there in ten days. The war olllce has issued another table of British losses, showing an ag gregate of Hl,il.v, which does not in elude 1,001 who have been invalided home. WILLING TO STAND TRIAL I.i'gallty of Texas Autl-Trust I.uw .Soon To Ito Tested. Henry Clay Pierce, of tlie Waters Pierce Oil company of Waco, Tex., af ter a brief consultation with his law yers, called at Judge Scott's court room nnd stated to the judge that he came to Waco to answer to tlie indictment brought out of tho Texas laws against trusts which lie is accused of violating under an indictment returned six years ago. Tlie indictment is a noted one. among the defendants named therein being John I). Rockefeller. Henry M. Flagler, and all the other prominent ofiicers of the Standard Oil company. Mr. Pierce entered Into a recognisance in the sum of 8S,000 for his appearance at the next term of court. The Indict ment grew out of certain contracts nl Icgetl to have been made by represen tatives of tho Waters-Pierce OH com pany with local merchants, which, it is claimed, acted in restraint of com petition. Tlie offense under the Texas anti-trust law is a felony and punish able by both fine and Imprisonment. DECLARES LAW ILLEGAL Neusnancr Article Need Not Signed In California. A dispatch from San Francisco says: Judge Hunt decided that tho More house law passed by the last legisla ture and requiring nil newspaper ar ticles to bear the signature of the writers, has no place in law, as ono of its provisions Is that in case of nn award to an injured party a portion of the award must be placed In the hands of tlie state treasurer. Judge Hunt holds that this Is a penal provision and any prosecution must be Instituted by the people of the state and not by individuals. Nebraska IMItor Deud. W. I. Compton, editor of thu Utiea Sun, died at his homo lu Seward about 5 o'clock Tuesday morning, after n short Illness, from typhoid pneumonia, aged nearly thirty-two years. Mr. Compton has worked at the printing business about fourteen years, most of the tlmo in Seward county, and has been editor of the Sun several years. ne leaves a wife and little daughter four years old. Ho was n member of the M. W. A. camp at Utiea, and enr rlcd 82,000 Insurance, which goes to Ills little family. Ttklm Only I'nrtlul Credit. Tho Washington dispatch stating that Miss Helen M. Gould was practi cably paying the expenses of nlno or ten chaplains In the army lu the Phil ippines was shown to her aud sho said tho work referred to had been done, not by her, but by the Young .Men ' Christian association ami that bho had only helped a little In It. Ditto of Opening. At a cabinet council at Paris at which M, Loubet presided It was de cided to oillcially Inaugurate the Paris exposition Saturday, April 11. LIST OF CASUALTIES. (lenrrul Otis 1'ortiiirtU Nil in r of Sold dlern Who Hit mi Died. The war department received the following casualty report from General Otis: Manila, March 27. -Deaths, malarial fever, Samuel Grimes, company O, Eighteenth infantry. Johnston 11. Hay, company II, Thirty-seventh infantry; Chester Q. Dunn, company E, Thirty fourth Infantry, Charles Slelchcr, cor poral company M, Twenty-first infan try. Died from wounds received in action: Joseph W. Alphort, corporal company II, Forty-third infantry. Alcoholism: Alexander S. Bruce, company H, Twenty-ninth infantry. Drowned: John F. Lynch, company F, Thirty-seventh infantry. Typhoid fever: Frank Anson, com pany C, Forty-third infantry; William Knuckles, company E, Forty-second Infantry; Henry A. Sandman, company C, Forty-second infantry; Daniel Knight, company K, Forty-ninth In fantry. Dysentery. Charles W. Sutton, com pany F, Forty-second Infantry; Syl vester F. Rothwell, sergeant, company F, Thirty-seventh Infantry; Hugh Mc Call, company A, Eighteenth infantry; (ieorge E. Congo, company II, Twenty seventh infantry; Edward G. Roday, company I), Thirteenth infnntry; Cor nelius E. Carter, company E, Twenty fourth Infantry; Peter M. Fallon, company D, Sixth Infantry; Hurley B. ICcllog, troop I), Fourth cavalry. Peritonitis: Alfred L. Ross, com pany I, Thirty-Third Infantry Surgical operation: Depli Asarkcr, musician, company I, Forty-eighth In fantry. Variola: Clarence II. Thomas, cor poral, company F, signal corps;Gcorgo Xwer, company B, Twenty-fifth Infan try. Tuberculosis: Joseph Strickland, company II. Fourth infuniry. General arterclosis: William Lino ban, company F, Thirty-third infao try. FIGG WILL NOT PROSECUTE. Surpy County Victim Allows Cnso to He DImiuUiciI. A Papllllon, Neb., dispatch says: In county court Louis Figg announced that lie would not prosecute the two men, John Woods and William Brown ing, arrested on the charge of being star actors In chapter one, when the two leaders of the Figgites were given a coat of tar and feathers by irato neighbors. The cases were therefore dismissed. Tlie deputy sheriff of Fremont and a large number of witnesses for both sides were on hand. Woods bringing along friends and his two daughters, through whose testimony he claimed he could prove an alibi. After the dismissal of the case Louis Figg was asked why he did not leave (iretua aud what he expected to do. To the judge and the crowd In tho court room he said: 'I propose to stay in Gretna and will not give up my religion. I am a prop erty owner there and havellved in that community a good part of my life, As to my future course, lie added earnest ly, "I intend to go right on preaching my faith as I have done in tlie past. Threats will havo no effect and if my neighbors choose to lynch me for ad hering to my religious convictions, all well and gootl. But 1 wish to state that I will go right on in the good work, regardless of the consequences.'' Kxpert Testimony. The evidence heard Tuesday at Has tings in tlie trial of Miss Horlocker, charged with the attempted poisoning of her employer's wife, was entirely of an expert character and was in support of tlie theory of degeneracy and lack of will power on the part of the de fendant to resist the homicidal im pulse engendered by the mental shock occasioned by the breaking off of her relations with Mr. Morey. A number of physicians testified. Wreck of I'tint Mall Train. All Atlanta, Ga., special says: Tho fast mail on the Atlanta ,t West Point railway, which left Atlanta for .Mont gomery and New Orleans was wrecked between West Point and Opclika. Ala. Express Messenger Oslin was killed and Baggagemaster W. B. Blunt badly Injured. The baggage car, mall coach and two day coaches were thrown from the track, but tho Washington bleeper was not derailed. Hum Struck liy Lightning. A severe thunder and lightning storm swept over Hall county, Neb., bringing a fine rain. A strong wind and some hall also accompanied tho storm. The cow barn at the soldiers' home wns struck by lightning aud ono cow was killed and another badly In jured. The barn commenced burning but tho (Ire was extinguished with tho home's own lino of hose nnd provisions for lighting fire. THE NEWS IN BRIEF. Several stations on tlie Yukon river aro suffering a food shortage. Detroit is to get tho convention of tho supremo lodge of the Knights of Pythias. Charles M. Schwab has been re elected president of the Carneglo Steel Company. Ex-Senator John J. Coyle of Phila delphia, charged with bribery, has been ncqulttcd. A parcels post convention between he United States anil Nicaragua has been signed. A shipment of 81,393,030 has left tho New York sub-treasury to pay soldiers in thu Philippines. A premature explosion of a blast of dynamite killed one mau aud seriously wounded two atVaterloo, N. J, A (OAUF TAR Mr and Mrs, L. Figg, of Grct naf Victims of a Mob FEATHERS WERE USED LIBERALLY find Caused Sorcrnl Separations and Much Trouble Citizens lleconia Incensed ami Moto Out Sum mary I'uulshuicut. At Gretna, Neb., n mob, masked and otherwise disguised, went to the resi dence of L. Figg, took Mr. nnd Mrs. Figg nnd tarred and feathered them and then quietly dispersed. For some time feeling has been intense against the Flggs, who hold very queer ideas regarding religion, persuading women, it is charged, to leave their husbands to be better able to serve tho Lord. Thus they were Instrumental, it Is al leged, in separating Mr. nnd Mrs. W. V. Browning und Mr. and Mrs. Bort Donohoc; nlso Mr. and Mrs. Woods, all nmong the best people and highly re spected. One of tho women, Mrs. Donohoc, it is charged, even refused to go to her home to sec her deserted child when sick and almost at death'fl door. The matter Is being discussed upon tho streets, somo favoring the treat ment inflicted, while others boy that it was not the right thing to do, nnd that tho law should have been al lowed to take Its course. No ono 6cems to know anything about tlie u flair, but it is stated that warrants arc in tho hands of Sheriff McAvoy, and It is hinted that some sensational develop ments will bo divulged within a day or two. Fourteen lending men of the town, it la asserted, took part in the affair. The intruders broke down the door to the Bleeping apartment of tho Figgs nnd told them to get up. On refusing, the covers were stripped down and they were pulled out Into the middle of tlie floor. Their night clothes wcro stripped off and tnen commenced tlie application of tlie tar. A notice was served on the Figgs to lcavo town or buffer a repetition of tho punishment. LAWYERS GET ANGRY Sensation rurnlshrd lu Trial of Vlohv Horlocker. When the state rested its caso in tho florloc'ker-Moroy poisoning trial Thurs day afternoon, the prosecution had woven about tlie defendant a strong fabric of circumstantial evidence. The testimony of witnesses wus till of a most damaging character, and tho dc- fense wns unable to choke any of It on cross-examination. The court room was crowded almost to suffocation, and tlie day was not without Its sensational incidents. While Mr. Morey was on the stand, tho defense persisted in n line of ques-' tions to which lie was not permitted to reply, as they were not proper in cross examination. When court adjourned at the noon hour ho approached Mr. Hatty, and after a few words relative to the hitter's course applied ad epithet which the attorney resented by at tempting to strike him. Several per sons stepped In between them and an encounter was prevented. Cull OIT tho Suits. A Pittsburg, Pa., dispatch of March 23, says: The Carnegie Steel company, limited, becomes a btock comany,i with n capital variously estimated atl from 8200,000,000 to 8250,000,000, tho famous "Ironclad agreement" is wiped out, all litigation between tho part, ncrs in tlie Carnegie company is dropped, and II. C. Frick, the former president of tho company, virtually se cures all he has contended for. Tlieso facts aro embodied in nn authorized' statement issued tonight bv tlie Car neglo Steel company, limited. Farmer Lose hy Fire. Setting fire to somo weeds near his barn and going to his housu to read, caused a fire by which .T. S. Sanborn, a farmer near Rising City, Neb., lost a $500 .barn, corn cribs wortli S150, 000) bushels of oats, 1,250 bushels of corn and agricultural Implements worth about 8300, besides severel tons of hay and straw, and 1,250 bushels of corn belonging to his neighbor, Otto Hoff man. In all about 81,b00 worth of property was burned. Tho barn was Insured for nbout 8100. Arraigned no ClinrKii or Murder. Mrs. Etta Hortou was urraigned bS foro Justice 1). W. Nelll, at Humboldt, on a charge of murdering her newly born child, which was found in a well in tho north part of town on Tuesday morning. Her interests wero looked after by Lawyers E. A. Tucker and I. 13. Smith, upon whose request a coni tlnuanco was granted until Tuesday, March 27. Two Men llloun to Atoms, Tho scperating house at the Hercules powder works at Lamotte, ten miles, north of Louisiana, Mo., blew up aud Peter Bucks and Edmond Carter wero blown to atoms. Fnrinur Acrldi-utitlly Hhot. A serious aud perhaps fatal accident occurred southwest of Albion, Neb. U. B. Hnhu, a farmer who was bailing hay, went to a wagon to get n polo, and in some manner, discharged a shot- gun that was In tho wugon. The shot took effect in his side and it is impos-, slblo to tell hov berious his injuries are. Dies on AVIfo's Grave. Emll Corson, member of tho largcab business Arm In Gayvllle, S. I)., shot and killed himself on tlie gravo of hia wlfo and child. tosRsri