The Valentine Bemotasrt VALENTINE , NEB. L M. RICE , BabMxker FIBEIN INDIANAPOLIS MOST SPECTACULAR BLAZE IN CITY'S HISTORY Estimated at Over One Mill- , ion Dollars , with the Usual Pro- 1 portion ol' insurance General News ol' Interest. , For four hours Sunday night the whole sale district , bounded by Georgia and Meridian Streets , Jackson place and the union depot sheds at Indianapolis , Ind. , was menaced by a fire which started in the wholesale warcrooms of the Fahnley & McCrea Millinery Company. At O.vJO o'clock three general alarms brought into .action every department in the city and .suburbs. When the fire was brought under control eight buildings , among -which were three , hotels , had been com pletely destroyed , causing n loss estimat ed at nearly $1.500.000. One of the fire men was hurt by falling walls. Fire brands fell in a perfect storm over the business portion of the city , and on every building were stationed compa nies of men equipped with fire apparatus , and their united efforts succeeded in pre venting a general conflagration. In the A. Kiefer ' Drug Company's warerooms , fcwherc many barrels of oils and explo sives wen ; stored , and in the Delmet.sch Company's wholesale house , where a sea- 'son's stock of fireworks was located , sev- eral serious explosions occurred. The. west wall of the Fahnley & McCrea mil linery house , which faces on Jackson place , across from the union station , fell -within thirty minutes after the lira .started. 1 One fireman sustained a broken leg. and in the rush to escape from their peril ous position near the falling walls hun dreds of spectators who thronged tho space in front of the union station nar rowly escaped death or serious injury. Within a few minutes the east wal i fell across Meridian Street , completely blocking the street , but no one was in 13 jured. The flames , which spread across Lou isiana Street , were communicated to the roof of the union station train sheds , and for several minutes the efforts of the firemen were centered in that direc tion. tion.The The fire , which was one of the most spectacular in the history of the city , was under full headway before an alarm was sounded. A spark from the fire in the wholesale district several blocks away set fire to the roof of the Grand Hotel. An alarm again summoned all available depart ments. All of the guests were aroused , am ) on account of the damage by water were compelled to seek other lodgings. The total loss is estimated at $1.100- 000. STRIKE MAY BE AVERTED. Trouble or ; Xe\v Haven and Hart ford Road May Be Settled. A New Haven. Conn. , dispatch says that no strike of the firemen on the New JIaveu and Hartford Railroad will be declared except as the weapon of last resort. This in effect was the statement made by Second Vice Grand Master Timothy Shea Sunday night at the close of what was practically an all day ses sion of the adjustment committee of the Brotherhood. The committee was called to discuss the situation and count the ballots recently cast on the question of giving the committee full power to act. 1 _ According to Mr. Shea the ballot was the larft'esL over east ofi any question ny the Brotherhood of this system , and it is overwhelmingly in favor of giving the 'committee full authority to act as it sees ifJt. The figures are not given out. ' Mr. Shea in an interview snid it was a determined fact that there would be no strike this week. CHICAGO BUILDING FALLS. One Person Killed and Two Others Injured. At Chicago one person was killed , two others were injured and several narrow ly escaped as Ihe result of the collapse of a ruined building at . " ! ' . ) West Four teenth Street Sunday afternoon. The structure , which was wrecked by fire two years ago. fell while some boys were searching in it for wood for fuel. One of the youngsters had chopped through one of the main supports when the wall suddenly collapsed. Harry Goldberg , a zed 17. was caught l > y a falling timber and probably instant ly killed. Ilis body was pulled out by firemen. Poison Story False. The story in circulation to the effect that an attempt was recently made to ( poison Mrs. Jane Stanford in San Fran cisco is characterized by .Mrs. Stanford's 'friends as sensational and without foun dation. Sioux City Stock Market. Saturday's quotations on the Sioux iCif.v slock market follows : Butcher steers. $ : j.2r.ff4.00. Top hogs , ? -l.7.'i. Bishop 31tjireii J > cud. The III. Rev. William E. McLaren , JVoteslant Episcopal bishop of Chicago , died at New York Sunday night. Death was due to heart failure. The bishop had been ill for something more than a month. British Steamer Captured. , The navy department at Tokio an nounces the seizure of the British steam er Silviana. bound for Vladivostok with Cardiff coal. The place where the seiz ure was made is not stated. GRAND DUKE SERGIUS KILLED The "Evil Genius" of Russia Slain by n Ilomh in Moscow. Moscow advices state that the Grand Duke Sergius , uncle and brother-in-law of the czar , was assassinated Friday. While the duke was driving from the Nicholas palace through the senate quar ter his carriage was followed by two cabs. At the law courts a sleigh in which were two men , one dressed as a workman , went quickly ahead of the duke's carriage. The sleigh then slowed up to allow the carriage to pass , and at that moment a bomb was thrown be neath the carriage. The force of the explosion broke all rhe windows of the law courts. The re port was heard outside the city. The carriage was blown to pieces. The horses were not hurt. The duke was instantly killed. His head was blown off and actually separat ed from his. body , which was frightfully mangled. The coachman ws also killed. On arrest , of the murderers , neither jf whom was known to the police , one of them coolly said : "I don't care. I have done my job. " An immense crowd gathered at the spot nid made a demonstration against a number of students who commenced scat tering revolutionary proclamations. Within a few minutes after the explo sion people might have been seen gather ing up pieces of wood and clothing as mementos of the tragedy. Sergius was a brother-in-law as well as 311 uncle of the emperor and had exer cised an immense influence at court. As governor general of .Moscow he was in- iensely unpopular. POISON IN HER STOMACH. Mrs. Marie Hoch V/as Killed AVith Arsenic Murder Theory Kijjht. Chicago physicians and chemists , who nave been analyzing the stomach and liv er of Mrs. Marie Welcker Hoch. an al leged victim of Johann Hoch. the accused bigamist and murderer , declared definite ly Friday that the woman's death was due to arsenical poisoninir. Dr. Lewke. coroner's physician , said : ' 'With the evidence of four analyses be fore us there is no doubt left that Mrs. Welcker died as the result of work which would have done credit to a Bor gia. ' ' CZAR TALKS PEACE. Ending of the War is Considered in St. J'etershur"- . A St. Petersburg special says : The Associated Press learns on unexception able authority that the question of peace was formally considered by the empe ror and his ministers at a conference held at Tsarskoe Seo ! Thursday. No particulars are obtainable , as be fore the discussion began the emperor exacted from each one present a soloniu promise not to divuUe the slightest hint as to what transpired. NEW VENEZUELAN CRISIS. Asphalt How Reaches a Xery Criti cal StJi ; e. The state department at Washington , D. C. , Thursday received a cablegram from Minister Bowen stating that the Venezuelan supreme court had confirmed its former decree sequestrating the prop erty in Venezuela of the American As phalt Company. The action of the court brings the as phalt dispute to a critical point , for it is now incumbent upon the government at Washington to make the next move. To Operate on Dr. Harper. Dr. William R. Harper , president of the University of Chicago , will undergo another operation within a week. Ilis case has been studied by Drs. Senn. Se van , .Koktoen and Le Count , and it has been decided that it is necessary for Dr. Harper to arrange his affairs with a view to nu absence from his post for some lime. Cold in California. Californiaus are complaining of cold weather. For several days past the ther mometer in San Francisco has fallen as low as 42 degrees above zero early in the morning and some frost has been seen. There has been neither rain nor snow , and in the afternoon , witli the mercury above 00. overcoats are unnecessary and silk waists are worn hi the shopping dis tricts. Duchess in Great Peril. At a fancy dress ball given in Dublin by Lord Grenville thoNluehess of Marl- borough narrowly ocaped a perilous ac cident. A burning cigarette which had been dropped upon the floor came in con tact with the duchess' Huffy skirt and in a moment her clothing was in flames. Nan Patterson's Case. District Attorney Jerome Friday sent a notification to the counsel for Nan Pat terson , accused of the murder of Hook- maker Caesar Voting at New York , that a new trial of her case would be begun March 0. Plague in Australia. Mail advices have been received from Australia by the steamer ? iloana of the outbreak of bubonic plague in Sydney and Graflon. In consequence a war on rates is being waged in Australian cities. Kqual SuflVaue 15ill Killed. At Helena , Mont. , the woman suffrage 1)511 defeated i-i the house of ) , was - repre sentatives YVcdiwlay . * ! 0 to . ' 58. Nejfro SI > ot to Death. At Smithville. Tex. , a negro charged with criminally assaulting Mrs. Powell Tiffany was captured late Thursday night and shot to pieces by a mob. He made a confes/ implicating three oth ers. All HopAbandoned. . A Wallace. Idaho , dispatch says : All fiope of finding Walter Salusberry , who was lout in the Couer d'Alene Moun tains , has been buried in snowdrifts on the Idaho-Montana divide. THE NATION'S DUTY. President Roosevelt's Message on the Dominican Situation. President Roosevelt's message trans mitting to the senate the new Dominican protocol of an agreement providing for the collection and disbursement by the United States of the customs revenues of San Domingo for the adjustment of all the obligations of that government was Thursday made public by order of the senate in executive session. The document includes the new agree ment , as well as the original protocol and j award of the commission of arbitration , for the settlement of the claims of the San Domingo Improvement Company , under which agents of the United States are already collecting the revenues at cer tain of the ports of the Dominican gov ernment. Few documents that have come to the senate in relation to many of the South or Central American or West India re publics have attracted so much attention. Because of the controversy that has aris en as to the right of the executive to en ter into treaty arrangement with any for eign government without advice and con sent of the senate , extraordinary interest has been aroused. The message of the president out-iucd the policy of the administration in rela- tion to the Monroe doctrine , holding that it demanded this government take charge of the customs of American states whet ' it is manifest they are unable to maintain their own integrity. In addition to the president's discussion of the Monroe dictrine in the case of San Domingo the protocol itself makes a specitic declaration of its application and in that respect is unusual in treaty making. The declaration occurs in the second paragraph , which recites that the government of the United States views "any attempt on the part of gov ernments outside of this hemisphere to oppress the destiny of the Dominican re public as a manifestation of the unfriend ly disposition towards the United States. WAR OF MILLIONS. Financial Giants Hngngcd in Great The crucial point in a contest involving the control of $400,000.000 will soon be reached , as the direc tors of the Equitable Life Assurance Society met Thursday to consider the question of changing the association from a stock to a mutual company. The tight in the Equitable Life Assur ance Society , the greatest single financial power in the United States , exceeds in bitterness any struggle that has ever developed among kings of finance in this country. The demand made by James W. Alexander , president of the society , that James II. Hyde , its vice president and owner of a majority of the capital stock , shall consent lo a change in tin- voting plan by which the 500.000 policy- holders of the company shall have a voico in the election of its directors is only a small part of the real struggle. The company has assets of $418.000,000 and outstanding policies for . ? 1.00,000- 000. ! DARING HIGHWAY ROBBERY. A Minneapolis Physician is Held Up , and His Coachman Shot. A Minneapolis special says : Three masked highwaymen lying in wait upon the front veranda of the residence of Dr. Philip Mueller leveled revolvers at the returning physician and his coachman , Emil Roggatz , fatally shot the latter through the abdomen , robbed the doctor and coachman of $50. The robbers then ransacked the house , and after securing booty jumped into the doctor's cutter and drove away. Death on Iron Spike. i At Duluth , Minn. . Claude S. Snively , young attorney , aged 21 years , eyiploj'- ed in the office \Vashburn , Bailey & Mitchell , fell from the fifth story ot the Lansdale building in the main busi ness district of Duluth Thursday and was instantly killed.Ilis head struck a iron railing covered with spikes. Train is Stalled. Passengers on a westbound Illinois Central train were compelled to walk nearly two miles into Farmington , 111. , Wednesday evening to escape spending the night in a cold passenger coach at tached to a "dead" train. Owing to the excessive cold the engine refused tt steam. A Royal Betrothal. The betrothal is announced at Colnirg of the duke of Saxe-CoJnirg and Gotha to Princess Victoria , driest daughter of Duke Frederick of Schlcswig-ILolstein- Samlerhurg-Glucksburg. The princess is a niece of the German empress , and the bridegroom-fleet is a nephew of the king of England. Osteopaths Liable. The Missouri supreme court at Jeffer son City lia.s rendered an opinion in which it holds that while osteopaths are not phyiscians and surgeons under the laws of the state , they are liable for damages resulting from injuries .sustain ed by persons whom they treat. One Woman Perishes in Fire. One woman was burned to death and fifteen men and women narrowly escaped in a lire which damaged the Hotel Win- ton , corner of One Hundredth and Tenth Street and Park Avenue , New York. Fri day. Drunken Indian Kills Four. A drunken Indian Thursday went on the warpath thirty miles south of Tono- pah. Nev. He killed three squaws and a fellow Indian anfl then fled to the ' mountains. He is still at large , though ! ( a posse of Indians is now chasing him. ' ; Reduction on Grain. The Chicago and Northwestern Rail road has announced a reduction on grain from Iowa points to Chicago. The former rates ran between 10 and T2 cents and the new rate is 0 cents. ' 1 STATE OP NEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON DENSED FORM. State Suffers from the Most Severe Storm in Yenrs Stiff Winds Drift the Snow Live Stock Suffers and Railroad TralHc Demoralized. No storm in twenty-five years has re- Mil ted more disastrously to railroad traf fic and business in general than that which raged over Nebraska , eastern Wy oming , western Iowa. South Dakota and up the Missouri valley. With nearly two feet of snow covering this entire terri tory an additional four to six inches fell Saturday , and was accompanied in yiany instances by a high wind which caused much drifting. Sunday night the ther mometer registered from 10 to 20 de grees below zero over the foregoing men tioned territory. Railroads have suffered severely. Freight traflic was nearly at a standstill and passenger trains moved with the I greatest dilliculty , and many were en i tirely abandoned. j In Omaha the streets were well nigh j impassable , except in the down town dis trict , where a large force is employed re moving the drifts. Street sweepers were kept busy almost night and day clear ing street car tracks. At Lincoln , zero temperature and a heavy fall of snow formed a weather combination Saturday night in southeast I Nebraska , probably the worst experi enced this winter. At no time was the j temperature above zero. and.at . times the storm had the proportions of a blizzard. Street car schedules were abandoned and cars run with difficulty. WIFE PASSES AS BROTHER. H'oman Assists Husband in Driving AVn * oii and Shoveling Coal. The case of a young woman masquer ading as a young man and assisting her husband in shoveling coal and doing a teamster's work has been unearthed by the police at Grand Island. The hus band. .Jacob Hansen. frankly admitted that his wife had disguised herself in the manner rumored , lie showed his mar riage certificate and said that when he was compelled to leave Iowa to come to Nebraska for his health lie desired to leave his wife in that state. She re fused and preferred to accompany him dressed as a man. Together they came to Nebraska and worked several months among the beet fields at Ames without being discovered. Mr. Hansen convinced the police that there were no seriously wrong motives in his wife's action. No action will be brought against the couple. I FATAL RAILROAD WRECK. Missouri Pacific Fireman Caught Under Engine as It Turns Over. A wreck on the Missouri Pacific Rail road Thursday morning resulted in the instantaneous death of Fireman Rowe and slight injury to Engineer "Daisy" Dean and Brakeman Charles Campbell. The only passenger seriously injured was , Miss Nellie Johnson , of Syracuse , but j others were seriously shaken. The in- ; j tired trainmen all live at Auburn. ; The train was the regular passenger j from Auburn to Omaha. It struck a | broken rail and left the track one and one- half miles south of Avoca. The engine turned over twice and three cars fell on their sides. The fireman was caught under the engine. It was his first trip over the road , he taking the place of the regular fireman , who was ill. Mrs. Mary Warner Hurt. Mrs. Mary Warner , who for a number of years resided in Dakota City at the home of her son-in-law , John Robertson , , and who was known by all as "Grandma I Jay , " but who lately has resided at Lin coln with her son. Will S. Jay , recently met with an accident on her S7th birth day which will likely result in her death. She had arose in the night for some purpose and accidentally fell , break ing her hij ) bone. She has been confined to her bed since , with but little hopes of her recovery. Find Valuable 31inerals. Great excitement prevails around Ainsworth , it having been reported that Lee Johnson , residing on the river , eigh teen miles north of that town , has struck j valuable minerals at considerable depth. t Mr. Johnson had been of the belief for some time that mineral deposits existed in his vicinity , but before going to the expense of prospecting engaged Mr. 1 Howard , of Omaha , a geologist , to come j 1 and inspect the land , who reported favori { i ably , with results as stated. I t l , Cruel Father Hound Over. | In the case of the state of Nebraska ! 1 against Joseph Michal. tried at Table { ( Rock Thursday before Justice M. II i ( Marble , the prisoner was linedS0 and j costs of $ . ' ! S.7. ) . making a total of $5S.7. , j which he paid. Peace proceedings were { also had against him and he was held to the district court under bond of $100. This is the Bohemian who drove his fam ily out in the cold Saturday night. "Com Special" Train. 1 A "corn special" train will be in Da-j kota City on the morning of the U5rh j inst. , at which time a free lecture on j pure seed corn will be given by members j of the state university. Free transpor-j tation will be furnished farmers from Vista Jackson and Cobtirn Junction. liVmiinn Identifies Picture. j , Mrs. Day , the proprietor of the North j ( Mend Hotel. Wednesday positively iden- j I i tied the picture of the man found dead j near the Ames depot last month as the j man who left two grips at her hotel two j j. days before the body was found and who ) I irave his name as J. E. Albee. i i Child Drinks Acid. j At Grand Island , theyearold son oft W. S. Everhardt in some manner came j a in possession of a bottle of carbolic acid ' t and drank therefrom. Theccident at , : i once came to the attention of the moth- < ] er and physicians were promptly on i hand. It is hoped that the little life can be saved , but the child is in a very se rious condition. Much Sickness at Beatrice. Probably no less than 100 residents of Beatrice are confined to their homes by the prevailing disease , the grippe. THE BOESE TRIAL , Father on Trial at Nebraska City tor Killing His Son. John B. Boese was put on trial in the district court at Nebraska City Wednes day morning for the murder of. his son , John P. . Boese. Jr. . in that city last fall. Boese and his son had a quarrel at their home , which ended in the shooting of the son by his father. The defense will try to prove that 'the father shot in self- defense. The case of the state against Stein- kuhler was commenced in court Tuesday , but after securing a jury aiid hearing part of the evidence the jury was dis missed without prejudice to the filing of another information against the defend- ant. The information under which the defendant was being tried , charging him with the illegal sale of intoxicating ii- quors. was defective and he was bound over to appear at the next term of court. John D. Boese , on trial at Nebraska City for the killing of his son. was ac quitted Thursday by the jury. The kill ing was the culmination of a family quarrel and the father pleaded self-de fense. CULVER REAPPOINTED. Names of Other Members of Gov ernor's Stair Given Out. Gov. Mickey has rcappointcd J. II. Culver adjutant general and to the per sons directly interested he has announced the names of the members of Iiis official stalV. The order issued by him as com mander in chief of the National Guard naming his staff is dated Jan. < > . but was ? not given out til ! Thursday. It follows : Having been re-elected and inaugurat ed as governor , I resume command of the militia of the state as commander in chief and announce the following staff appointments : P.riir. ( Jen. J. II. Culver , adjutant gen eral : Col. George E. Jenkins , quarter master and commissary general : Col. Charles J. Bills , inspector general : Col. Carroll D. Evans , surgeon general : Col. J. A. E.irhaidt , judne advocate general. Aides-de-camp : Col. Clarendon E. Ad ams. Col : Clarence J. Miles. Col. Jacob S. Dew.Col. . . Samuel M. Melick.Col , Jo seph W . Thomas. Col. Herbert i' . Slmin. way. Col. Charles W. Kaley , Col. T. W McCnllougi. : SERVED HIS TIME. Frank 3J. Dorsey , Former Pouca Han leer. Released I'rnm Prison. Frank M. Dorsey. former president of the First National flank of Ponca. Neb. , has just linislied his six years' term in the federal penitentiary at Sioux Falls. S. I ) . , for improper conduct of the Ponca bank , resulting in its failure , and was released. There was much effort at the peniten tiary to prevent publicity of the fact that Dorsey had been released , and for a time it was denied. Later it was learned , however , that he had been released , and had left town by the Milwaukee trail/ for the south. FIRE AT PAWNEE CITY. Firemen Fiirht a Ijosinj ; linttle in Coldest Weather of the Year. Hindered by the biting cold the fire company at Pawnee City Monday was defeated by a raging fire in the Bugle block , and the loss is estimated at.7. . - 000. 000.The The fire seemed to have started in flic- basement of the P.ugle building , owned by Masonic lodire. The'property of tlie j order was a total loss , valued at $15.000. ! Bugle Bros. " loss is a stock of goods valued at 'Jl.'i.OOO. Jas. Laughton lost 7.000 in property in the store rooms , with no insurance. Stabbinif Affray at Hartin-jton. At Hartinirton. Howard Osborne , fa miliarly known as "Toots" Osborne , in a rage stabbed Jim Stanton in the upper back part of the leg near the hip joint with a jack-knife , inflicting an ugly wound. The stabbing occurred in the bowling alley chop house , where Osborne was cook , and was the result of a quari rel between the boys over the pay men/ for Stanton's supper. May Be Case or Bunco. About thirty Fremont business men are wondering whether they have been buncoed or not by a couple of young ! men who were there last week. They . had literature from the P.ooklovers'and Tabard Inn libraries , but solicited sub scribers at $1.5U each. Later they went around and collected from a part of these ! and left town without having completed ' their arrangements. Grip at West Point. I A large number of cases of grip , or f Russian influenza. are reported in West ' l Point and surrounding districts , in some ! instances whole families being down at j ' the same time. Physicians ascribe the cause to the present severe weather. La rire numbers of children are affected. but up to this time no fatalities have occurred. The disease has become almost I epidemic. t Fire is Stubborn. r At Pawnee City lire is still smoulder ( ing in tlie ruins of the O'Laughlin build- t in ir. whicli was destroyed Monday morn ( ing. Wi'dnc.-day afternoon it was again necessary to get the hose out and USD considerable water to keep the fiame.- from bectimim : too high. Several of the insurance companies have already ad justed the claims for loss. J Corn Slid lor Victim. f Another M-rious corn shcllcr accident iiti is reported from We.-t Point. A 20- tir year-old son of August Gardels. a prom r inent farmer , had his hand badly mutilat 5 ed by being drawn into a machine. Tin.- . . ntire hand will have to be amputated. Fatal Shooting at Whitman. j As the result of a quarrel-over a card game ( I. P. . Phillips shot and instantly killed J. Roehiiie in the depot at Whit man. Smallpox at Beatrice. Several cases of smallpox have devel oped in Beatrice the last few days and t ; the authorities are wondering when they ' D are going to succeed in stamping out the [ disease. One or two cases of piieuu monia are reported. Hen Fruit is fiiirh. Eggs are selling for H5 and . ' * ( cents per dozen at Beatrice and butter is scarce i. nt any price. On account of the severe t ( storm , which has blockaded the wagon ' roads , farmers find it 'impossible to come to town witli their irv.Ii.c. y Attorney General Brown and his dep uty , AV. T. Thompson , demand that tho sentence of hanging imposed on Frank Barber , the Red Cloud murderer , be car j ried out. The answering brief of the state in the appeal of the man from tho judgment of the Webster County district court was filed in the supreme court Sat | urday. Barker , who had been sentenced to hang in September , was granted a stay by the supreme court until a final decision can be rendered in the case. Au argument in the effort to save the lifo of Barker was that the evidence did not warrant a verdict of murder in the first degree , taking the view that there i nothing in the evidence to shovy malice , lint only a purpose to kill , which it id claimed would warrant a verdict of mur der in the second degree. Inference i * made to the section of tho code which provides that the court shall render such judgment in the case as the evidence warrants. # * * The house finance ways and means committee has completed the salaries ap propriation bill , which carries a total of $ l,0)5.nO. ! ) ) as compared with $ iK : ; .54 < > of SlOli.r.-lO two years ago. The incivvsc is accounted for by Chairman Wilson , of Pawnee , in this way : Tin. university gets nn increase of $50.000 ; the Peru nor mal about $10.000. and the first appro priation is made for the new normal at Kearney. This is approximately $ o8.000. This school at Kearney is not yet com pleted but will be very soon. The com mittee finds a greater increase in at tendance at the Peru normal than ever before and feels that in view of thisjind the entirely new appropriation for Kear ney the total is as low as could consist ent Iv be made. * * * Notwithstanding Gov. Mickey has re- appointed R. E. Stewart superintendent of the institution for the deaf and dumb at Omaha , after the board of trustees had exonerated Stewart from the charges made by J. W. Robinson , a former eni- nloye of the institution. Mr. Robinson . does not want the matter dropped. In stead Mr. Robinson is clamoring for a legislative ? investigation and has so in formed Gov. Mickey. Mr. Robinson was formerly bookkeeper and clerk at the in stitution. and according to the report of the trustees. John W. Steinhart and Charles Nownes. the charges were filed in an effort on the part of Robinson to get even for imagined grievances. s * * The visit insr committee of the State Prison Association met at Lincoln Sat urday and discussed work for the ensu ing year. Eleven cases of prisoners dis charged from the penitentiary who are- now in destitute circumstances were re ported and six of them were supplied with warm clothing. A communication was sent to the Omaha membership of the Prison Association to keep a sharp lookout for the men discharged from the jails to see that they did not wantfor overcoats. By doing this it is the opin ion of the committee that much of the- petty thieving going on would be stopped. The appointment of Judge Tucker , of Humboldt , Richardson County , as asso- viate justice of the supreme court of Ari- * nna came as a surprise Saturday. He Mas been an applicant for the place for some time and has had the indorsement of the Nebraska delegation. The unex pected resignation of an associate jus tice of the court gave the president nit opportunity to favor the Nebraska dele gation. Mr. Tucker is a well known law yer in the First district and a member of. the present legislature. * * * The supreme court Friday morning granted a supersedeas to the Lincoln Traction Company and issued an order that | the property now held in construct ive i possession by the receiver , L. .f. Dunn , be turned back into the hands ot" in j rie second floor issued throughout the days of a $100.000 bond , conditioned that the corporation will abide by the final de cision of the court should it uphold the decision of the district court calling for the payment of the city's third lien foi 40,000 taxes. * * * Gilligan. of Holt County , wants school neld in his county whether the school trustees vote a levy to pay the expenses- > ! not. Forthat - rwison he has intro- luced a bill which provides that when n < levy has been voted it shall be the duty of the county superintendent to make an- estimate of expenses for a term of school and file the same with the county clerk by the first Monday in August. It then becomes the duty of the county clerk to- levy the tax on the district affected. * * * Elmer Gibson , of Thomas County , who Tor eleven years has been an inmate of the state penitentiary satisfyingtlie de mands of justice for a murder committed in Thomas County , is now a free man. Gov. Mickey Saturday signed his pardon , , taking from his sentence thirteen years. Gibson will at once go to Iowa , where he- lias been promised employment. Gibson killed Oflicer William Deaii. who wa ; trying to arrest him. State Treasurer Mortensen has been Joing business these days , having can celled $200,000 worth of warrants. He has two more calls out , one for the 20th ml one for the 2. > th. The tirst call will retire 00.000 worth of warrants and the- second probsrbly ยง 00.000 or more. At this time the treasurer has in the trust funds isS4,000. and in the general fund $110.- fXJO. This money is coming from the an- jual settlement of county treasurers. * * * The University of Nebraska is asking the legislature for appropriations for the Ijiennium aggregating $842,470. * * * The executive mansion was the scene Friday night of a brilliant social func tion. Gov. and Mrs. Mickey gave a for mal reception to the members of the leg islature , many of whom were accompa nied by their wives. The beautiful home was handsomely decorated with palms and flowers and strains of music from an jrchestra concealed behind a floral bower sthers asked for a new trial , alleging liouse. The reception was largely at tended and characterized by a spirit of genuine felicity. Grave matters of state ivere for the time being forgotten and pleasure reigned. * * - # * * 9fX > -