The Democrat 1. M. RICE , Publisher ORDER RUSSIANS OFF CHINESE CRUISERS AT SHANG HAI CLEARED FOR ACTION. St. Petersburg Not Disturbed Pro- 1'eHHCH to Believe that ItojestvenHky Has IV'ot Divided or Weakened His Main Squadron. It is rumored at Tokio that the Japan- t'Ke and Russian fleets under Vice Ad- .miral Rojcstxvi'-'kv have eiiage ; i it : the Korean strai - - . The Shanghai correspondent of tin London Daily Express says : "All the Chinese cruisers iu these wa- .ters cleared for acn-Mi Friday , and tin laoati went to the Russian consulate am. demanded that 1'ie ' Russiaships : se.ivi within twenty-four hour.-- . " Cabling from Sh-tngh.ii the correspond ( Out of the London Daiiy Mail says h < jlelievcs ) the vessels of the Russian Hal- hie squadron off the Saddle islands havi , proceeded on their voyage , and gives a jrumor that the Kus.-iiu il.-t is in im { neighborhood of Fuchan , province o : Shantung. The correspondent says that Presides' "Roosevelt has wired the viceroy and tao * lai commending their steps to present ( Chinese neutrality. i The Russian warships that were oE ft he Saddle islands left Friday night. 1 The Chinese authorities ordered tin ( Vessels of the Russian volunteer fleet which were anchored off Woosung. tc Heave within twenty-four hours. Tin Russians thus far have ; entirely ignored the order. t While a flying raid of one or two tor pedo destroyers in the eastern sea is ad mitted as a possibility by the naval au thorities at St. Petersburg , these author ities are loath to believe that any divi sion of Rojet-tvcnsky's squadron in an important sense has taken place as re- Jported from Shanghai. They prefer to .assume that the specified Russian ships ( reported to be outside Shanghai , like the itiix which entered the port of Woosung. were units of the fleet without special { lighting value , and perhaps they have Jbeen sent thither to confuse the scent for Togo. MORE RIOTING. A Fresh Outbreak Occurs in the Windy City. t AVith the fiftieth day of the Chicago teamsters' strike Friday came increasing ly serious apprehensions of a huge spread of industrial disorder. Vigorous enforcement of the police or der to clear out saloons in the lumber district and the movement of considera ble lumber under guard Friday brought out several riotous disturbances. Shots were fired and many arrests made. Mayor Dunne , however , after a review of the situation , said the condition did Slot warrant a call for soldiers , j Strike riots have been begun in the neighborhood of the lumber district at phirty-fifth and Morgan Streets. Twen ty lumber and shaving wagons , guarded Iby forty police , were attacked by 400 fitrike sympathizers with bricks and stones. The police drew revolvers and jcharged the crowd , which fired. No ar ] tests werT'made. ! H.EADED FOR oVver California Sfffge Robber Ldkely to be Caught. A dispatch from Enseiiada , Lower Cal ifornia , Friday says that Rurale Estrada , who shot the driver of the San Quentiii .ptage Tuesday night and escaped with over 9700 government money , stole a Jiorse near Ensenada and is heading for the United States. Reports from tho posse on his trail were to the effect that { Estrada would be probably overtaken be fore reaching the boundary line. Th < ? .border is being patroled to prevent his escape into this country. I Arans , the driver who was shot and badly beaten , may recover. Dies in Railway Station. r 5 Mrs. Cecilia Altage , aged 02 years , ol St. Louis , Mo. , died suddenly at the ( Union station at Columbus. O. , while { waiting to board a train on her returi : come. She had been visiting relatives ir. jColumbus and was taking leave of them ? at the station , when she was stricken anc expired within half an hour. Johnson Must Hang. The jury in the case of J. H. Johnson who on April 8 shot and killed John II I iFox in the lobby of the postotflce at Trin- 5dad , Colo. , Friday returned a verdict jof murder in the first degree. The dealt 'penalty ' applies. One Killed and Fifty Hurt. AVilliam Stomler was killed and fifty men and women injured , several of them seriously , in a collision between two trol- jley cars returning to Baltimore. Md. , from AVestport. a suburb , soon after mid night Thursday night. Sioux City Stock Market. Friday's quotations on the Sioux City stock market follow : Butcher steers , Jjy.OO&S.I. * . Top hogs. $ .1 > . Died of His Injuries. J. O. Pat tee , for several years master mechanic of the Great Northern and Mil ; waukee roads , is dead from the effects of ( cellar of his resi si fall down .the steps dence at St. Paul , Minn. Pattee recent- Oy came to St. Paul from St. Louis. Ohio Bank Goes Under. The First National Bank of Barberton , O. , has been ordered closed by the comp troller of the currency at Washington Ion the ground that it is insolvent. The stock is $50,000. RICH MAN'S SUICIDE. Pnlford , Suspected Savanna , 111. , Assassin , Shoots Himself. Another sensational chapter was add ed Thursday to the mysterious assassina tion at Savanna , III. , of Attorney Dan iel Berry , a former leading Illinois law maker , who was murdered on Monday. Bothwell Pulford , reputed to be the wealthiest citizen of Savanna , commit ted suicide Thursday , a few moments af ter being questioned by a newspaper man regarding the whereabouts of a re volver with which he was suspected of having slain Attorney Daniel S. Berry. Pulford had denied any knowledge of the killing of Berry , but became agitated when questioned concerning the revolver. Pulfoid on arriving at his store Thurs day found a reporter waiting for him with queries as to the revolvei. As soon as the interviewer had left Pulford hur ried home , and , going to the hay loft of his barn , shot himself dead. For two months Pulford has shown signs of mental strain. When Berry was killed in Pulford's opera house last Mon day and the authorities began to ques tion Pulford. it was evident to those who knew him best that Pulford's mind w.is giving awjay. Pulfords death ends the life of a man who rose from a poor boy to the position of one of the wealthiest men in that sec tion of Illinois. Besides owning much valuable real estate in Savanna , he was president of the Commercial Bank and owner of the electric light system. The reason assigned for believing that Pulford killed Berry is that gossip has had it for several years that the relations between Berry and the wife of the drug gist were not what they should be. There have been strollings together , car riage rides , and clandestine meetings , all of which were properly embellished by the interpretations of the village gossips. Mrs. Pulford is a woman of about10 years of age , and is said to be such a woman as would naturally attract a man like Berry. At the same time the rela tions between Berry anl his own wife have been harmonious and their home life happy. On the contrary , it is said that Pulford and his wife have not had pleasant domestic sailing for the last five years and that their relations seemed at times to be strained to the breaking point. Then the town gossip grows more definite in its insinuations , aud says that for time time Berry had gone armed , and that the reason for this precaution was a warning received from Pulford. AA'hat the warning was can be surmised from the nature of the precaution. MAYOR WEAVER SCORES. Supreme Court Upholds His Action in Removing Oflicials A writ of special supersedeas was granted Thursday by the supreme court to Judge Gordon , counsel for Mayor AVeaver , of Philalelphia. The writ removes the injunction grant ed by Judge Ralston AVednesday and allows the mayor's new appointees to as sume their duties as director of public safety and director of public works. In the meantime the supreme court will investigate the matter. Mayor AVeaver Thursday took forcible possession of the offices of thedirector of public safety and director of public- works. Neither Smyth nor Costello of fered serious resistance. Four detectives now guard the offices. It AV.IS rumored that the Republican "organization" leaders intend to impeach Mayor AVeaver on the ground of malfea- * sance in office1. HEAVY RAINS IN KANSAS. Considerable Damage Done to Rail- I I roads. Benefit to Wheat. Advices from Topeka , Kan. , say that heavy rains throughout Kansas hav < ? done much damage on railroads. At Broughton , the first station east of Clay Center , on the Rock Island , more than a mile and a half of track has been wash ed out. The Denver main line of tlie Rock Island is tied up. The Concordia branch of the Union Pacific was put out of business by several small washouts. The Santa Fe reported heavy rains east and north of Toneka. No serious damage was done to the tracks of the road. All to * . . " streams are full. $ - AA'heat in central Kansas needed rain and will be greatly helped by the down pour. Pope Approves Decision. Advices from Rome say that Pope Pius X. has approved the decision of the congregation of the propaganda to annul the marriage of Marie Jenning Reid , of New Orleans and Washington , D. * C. , who is now Princess Jus Rospiglioxe. to Col. F. H. Parkhurfit. of Bangor. Me. The decision of the pope will now permit the prince and princess to contract a re ligious marriage. Trolley Cars Collide. AA'm. Stembler is dead and fifty per sons are injured as a result of the colli sion of two trolley cars returning from AVestport , a suburb resort center near Baltimore , Md. . early Thursday morn ing. Others of the victims of the acci dent are expected to die. Black Hills Mill Burns. The Horseshoe mill at Deadwool , S. D. . was completely destroyed by a lire which started in the lime bins , Thursday morning. The mill was the largest wet crushing cyanide plant in the world. It L-ost SUfiO.OOO. The loss is covered by insurance. It will be rebuilt immediately. Floods in New Mexico. An Albuquerque. N. M. . dispatch of he 2th says : The Rio Gramh is almost i mile wide and is flowing through the rillage of Tomo. twenty miles south of Albuquerque , while < > 00 inhabitants are i-amping on the hills watching their homes being swept away. The entire property of the villages was destroyed. A Big Boston Bank Fails. Burnett , Cummins & Co. , bankers , of Boston , failed Thursday. Their liabili ties are § 1,700,000. CHICAGO.S DISTRESS. Lumber Trade Almost Completely Tied Up. Final rejection of union demands , espe cially those of the express drivers , w.is officially announced at Chicago AVednos- day by the Employers' Association. They demanded practic&lly unconditional sur render. Neither sitfe in the strike made a direct step towards peace and each was apparently waiting the next move of its opponent. The employers sent their goods all over the city under police protection without encountering violence. There was one peace effort Wednesday and it was enveloped i. * mystery. It was that a "prominent business man" was making efforts to induce the managers of the ex press companies to. make terms satisfac tory to the striking drivers and that he had promised them "good news. " Noth ing came of the attempt , however , and there was no good news at night for eith er side. The strike in the lumber district spread AVednesday with great rapidity and practically all business of that kind was at a standstill. Some few lumber yards are still in operation , but their vol ume of business is so small as to amount to practically nothing. A number of planing mills and sash and door factories were compelled to shorten operations AVednesdny and soon will be compelled to close entirely if the supply of lumber is not largely increased. The lumber yards made little effort to transact busi ness and were waiting for drivers to he sent them by the Employers' Teaming Company. United States deputy marshals AA'ed nesday began serving notices on the sixty teamsters who have beeen cited for contempt of court in violating the injunc tions of Judge Kohlsaat prohibiting them from interfering with the wagons of tiie seven express companies and of the Em ployers' Teaming Company. The men are cited to show on May .51 at 10 o'clock- why they should not be punished for con tempt. Mayor Dunne has issued a call foi 1.000 extra police , to be sworn in as needed. MUSIC GREATLY ENJOYED. Grand May Festival at Sioux City Comes to a Successful Close. The music lovers of Moux City. Iowa , and surrounding country were given a rare musical treat during the big two days' festival which closed there on Tuesday evening with the presentation of Handel's sublime oratorio , "The Mes siah , " at the New Grand theater. The festival consisted of three divisions , the first evening being taken up with the singing of Rossini's masterpiece "Sta- bat Mater. " followed the next afternoon by a splendid program of entrancing mu sical numbers rendered in masterly fash ion by the celebrated Chicago Symphony orchestra. "The Messiah" was given Tuesday evening. Assisting in the festi val were seven renowned soloists from Chicago and Cincinnati , and a splendid chorus of 200 trained voices. Prof. J. AV. Mather , of Morningside College was the director , and the great artistic suc cess of the festival was largely due to his efforts. The Sioux City Commercial Club , which financed the enterprise , was so well pleased with its success that it has been decided to make the festival a per- manent institution , so that not only the music lovers of Sioux City but those of this part of tho northwest can look forward to a grand musical treat each year. BLOWN UP WITH A BOMB. tSovernor of Kuseian Province is Assassinated. Advices from Baku. Caucasia , state that Prince Nakachidza. was assassinat ed AVednesday afternoon by a bomb thrown at his carriage. A lieutenant accompanying the gov ernor aud a bystander were also killed and the coachman is believed to be fatally injured. The chief of police of Siedlee. Russia , and three other men were injured by the explosion of a bomb at midnight Tues- day night. The ; men who threw the bomb escaped. DENIES HE IS A MURDERER. Bothwell Pulford Says He Did Not Kill "Dan" Berry. Bothwell Pulford , the wealthiest man of Savanna. 111. , denied AVednesday that he is the slayer of Attorney Daniel S. Berry , a former leading member of the : Illinois legislature. Attorney Berry was mysteriously mur dered at the door of his office , and it is saixl he was killed by the husband of a woman to whom Berry is reported to have paid attention. * Four Instantly Killed. ' Mr. and Mrs. Gust Miller , of Louis ville. O. , and Mrs. Ilowell and daughter Anna , of South Bend , Ind. , were struck by a passenger train on the Pennsylvania Railroad while out riding at Canton. ( ) . . late Thursday night , and all were in stantly killed. Arctic Explorer Dead. | AVilliam Zeigler. a capitalist and pro moter of arctic explorations , uied Wed nesday morning at his country home near Noroton , Conn. ' Prohibits Convict Lmbor. A AVashington special says that the president has issued an order prohibiting the employment of convict labor on gov ( ernment works. Drowns Self and Tfiree Children A special from Sulphur Springs. Tex. . says : Mrs. Tip Sanders drowned her- self and three children in a creek near her home , two miles south of town , AVed- nesday. The tragedy , it is said , was the result of domestic troubles. Killed by Fall from Train. J. AV. Ilitt , a well known P.urlington Railway conductor , was killed in South St. Joseph. Mo. , by falling from a mov a ing train. His home in recent years has been in Chnncothe. Mo. STATE OP NEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON- DENSED FORM. New Sensation at O'Neill An Al leged Defalcation P. Haudley , Township Treasurer , Said to be Indebted to Township $5,4OO. T. C. Cannon , expert accountant , of Sioux City , has been in O'Neill ihe past week checking up the affairs of Grattan Township for the past eight years , and has unearthed a very rotten mess in the conduct of the office of the township treasurer while that position was filled by P. Haudley during the years 1000 to Jt)03 , inclusive. Mr. Cannon , it is alleg ed , has found Haudley to be a defaulter to the amount of about $ i400. . He says nearly all the money was secured by raising warrants and charging the town ship with the amount of the raised war rants. It is also charged that many warrants paid by other treasurers two and three years prior to his term of of fice were raised from the original amounts , the date of payment erased , j and credit taken for them during the years 1000 to 15)03. ) AA'hile Mr. Cannon has completed his Investigation , his report will not be j ready until some time next week , but he says the shortage will be about . * . " .400. The taxpayers at the regular town meeting in April appointed a committee to employ an expert to go over the otlice books of the township , which resulted in the finding as above stated. For the past two years Haudley has been in the grocery business at Spencer , and it is reported that one of his bonds men has gone after him. The annual town meeting adjourned in April until July , when the report of the export will be read. During his residence at O'Neill Haud ley was one of the leaders of the young er element in the populist party. BOYS SERIOUSLY HURT. Tney Tried an Experiment with a Gas Pipe Cannon. Morris Laudenberger and Roy Killian. > f Morse Bluffs , were seriously injured by experimenting with a piece of gas pipe filled with powder Tuesday afternoon and are now in the Fremont hospital. The boys found the gas pipe , which had been charged with powder , and decided [ o see if it would explode. Morris took it out into the middle of the street , while Roy observed the situation from the side af a building across the way. He proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the con tents of the pipe were of an explosive j nature , for as soon as he dropped a light-1 ed match into it there was a terrific con- ! cussion. throwing him to the ground and almost severing his left foot and leg be low the knee. A piece of the pipe took off two fingers from Roy's hand and an other went through the wall of a nearby house. The boys were taken to Fremont I on the afternoon train and young Laud- ] eubergor's leg amputated. Both are do ing well. TWO CONVICTS ESCAPE. j Men Under Sentence to Penitentiary I Make Their Getaway. Guy Applegate and AVilliam Roberts escaped from thecounty jail at Ne braska City some time Saturday night and no trace of them has yet been found. They are both young men. mere boys , in fact. They were under two years' sen . tence to the penitentiary , having pleaded guilty jto robbing a store in Wyoming pTeciuct. j They dug a hole in the brick wall of i the jail with a piece of pipe taken from i a steam radiator. i i Banker Held for Assault. In a hearing Saturday morning before County Judge Rogers. William N. Skin- < tier , president of the Citizens' State 1 Bank of Springview. was bound over to i the district court in the sum of SUOO. I < charged with assault with intent to com- j nut great bodily injury on tlie person of j Charles E. Lear , a prominent attorney , i s Big Strawberry Crop. ' The crop of strawberries from the Mo- Jony fruit farm near Ilumboldt promises to be large and of good quality this seaa son. The harvest has already begun , t the first picking having been placed on the local market Saturday. A great t many of the school children will spend i 1 their vacation in picking berries on thei ; Jar in. j v Kimball Has Telephones. j Kimball now boasts of an excellent tel-1 * ephone system , just completed by the i Independent Telephone Company. The i j1 automatic system is used and gives excel- j ' lent satisfaction. Kimball now has long j l distance connection with points on the i " l'nion Pacific east and in the Platte val-j * ley north. j : State Examinations. j State teachers' examinations will be i held June 1 and - at Lincoln. Fremont j iund Grand Island. The usual time , o schedule will be observed. Applicants v taking the examinations will learn of u their markings in about one month , at.- ' 11 cording to the state superintendent's an- ' i jiouncement. ; r ! a Suicide nt Clearwater. a AA'ednesday morning a young woman jiamed Julia Sullivan , from O'Neill , went ' to Clearwater and took a room at the ! Ihotel there. She kept her room all the afternoon and the people became alarmed . \ about her and broke into the room and i ' found her dead. She had shot herself I * through the head. : l c Cattle Thief Goes to Penitentiary James R. Rhodes , sentenced at Broken Bow with J. E. Chandler , to three years in the penitentiary for cattle stealing last November , was taken to Lincoln : * AVednesday morning by Deputy Sheriff Robinson to serve his term. Packers Stop Meat. Supply. Proprietors of hotels and restaurants in Beatrice who have had their supplies , ' ' of meat shipped direct from Omaha for i ° years received notification Saturday from ! v the packing houses that they could not j v ship them any more supplies of this kind. a Severe Storm Near Norfolk. A strong wind , accompanied by hail stones as large as hens'eggs' , blew down barn eight miles south of Norfolk Wed nesday. No one was hurt , but it is fhouyht some live stock was killed. uf MARKED WITH A MONUMENT General Thnyer Tells of Council with Pawnoe Indians. An event of great historical interest to nil citizens of the Elkhorn valley and eastern Nebraska was commemorated Thursday by the placing of a monument on the bluffs overlooking the Platte southeast of Fremont to mark the site of the council held by ( Jen..John M.Thay- er. the sole survivor of the known partici pants in the council , assisted by W. E. Lee. who came to Fremont the following year : .1. J. Hawthorne , a pioneer of T(5. ( who has devoted much time and research to the history of the Indians of this sec tion , and Itobert .McLean , who lives on the site of the "Big Village" the Paw nees , traces of which were plainly visi ble when he came there more than n quarter of a century ago. had little diffi culty in locating the site of Chief Pita-le- shur-ifs lodge , where the council waH held. held.The The monument is a block of granite aobut three feet in height and bearing j upon a polished face the legend "Pawnee Council. May ± . . 1ST > ; V lien. Tliayer made the principal ad dress of the occasion. WILL BE HIS OWN HANGMAN Nebraska Boy Murderer to Spring the Trap Himself. Frank P.arker. a boy murderer , con fined in the penitentiary at Lincoln un- der sentence of death , will touch the but ton which will spring his own denth trap. Because Warden Beemer. the otli- cial hangman for the state , whose duty ir is to spring the trap at all legal deaths in Nebraska , is too tender heart ed to perform the "operation" the boy , young Barker has volunteered to be his own hangman. "I'd just as soon do it as not. " said Barker , when asked about the report. "I might just as well touch the button as anybody else. I've got to die anyway , and if Warden Beemer. who has been good to me sL'ice 1 have been here , doesn't want to hang me I will save him the trouble and do it myself. " Barker is not yet HO years old. and was found guilty of one of the worst crimes ever recorded in the state. For the sake of the few dollars they possess ed he deliberately killed his own brother and his brother's wife. YOUNG WOMAN KILLS HERSELF Disappointed in Failing to Secure Government Position. Word was received at O'Neill Thurs day that Miss .Julia Sullivan , of O'Neill , had committed suicide at ( 'learwater by shooting herself in her room at a hotel there. Her mother and family are griev ed beyond expression , her mother break ing cb > wn entirely when the news of her daughter's death was taken to her. She was an exceptionally bright and an ambitious girl , had beeir teaching school and some lime aso took the civil service examination for a position as teacher in the Piiilippines. It appears that about a year ago she got word that she had passed j examination and was encouraged to , think she would soon be appointed and that she then began a study of the Spanish hinguago and had worked hard to master the language she expected would be of benefit to her in her work. She lately received word to the effect that only a few teachers had been select ed and that it would be useless for her to depend on a future selection. BILKED THE BUTCHER. Fremont Meat Market Man IB "Touched" by a Stranger. Fred Wislicen , a Fremont meat market man. is out $12.50 on a swindle perpetrated by a smooth individ ual , who claimed to be the foreman of a construction gang on the Union Pacific. He came into Wislicen's market in the evening and ordered $ ! ! ( > worth of meat , to be delivered "atthe car"near the de pot j and to be paid for on delivery. After being 1 out of the shop a few minutes he came back and borrowed $1li. . " 0 to pay a bill , telling Wislicen that he would give him 1 a check for the full amount at the ca r. r.When When he went to deliver the meat he found that there had been no car or con struction gang of the company in the vi cinity. ElectricIine Strikes Ashland. All doubt about the Omaha. Lincoln and Beatrice Kail way Company's going through Ashland vanished this week. Agents for the company iiave closed up transfers for the right of way to the Platle Kiver throntrh town on the orig inal survey , with but six exceptions , which they will acquire by condemna tion proceedings. Police Judge Formally Removed At Nebraska City the city council heM special meeting .Monday night and heard ' the charges preferred against Clin ton P. Lu trait , removing him from the otlice of police judge. Logan is charged with refusing to turn over to the city about l J1.UMI ( in fines and costs collected by him. Corn is Hotting. Many of the farmers in the vicinity of Papillion are complaining that corn which was planted the fore part of the month is rotting in the ground and that many of the lower fields will have to be planted over. This is accounted for as a result of the cold weather , together with an. overabundance of rain and the rav ages of the wire worm. / Bankers Hold Convention. The members of group six. of the State Bankers' A > sociation he-Id a very success ful and pleasant convention at Grand Island. Tuesday with a larger attend ance than at any previous session. Otil- ccrs were elected for the ensuing year. Fowler is Chosen. At Lincoln the Mate board of educa tion Mondav evening by a vote ogi to . elected W. K. Fowler principal of the Kearney normal . cmml on the first for mal ballot. li.jiirMl by Bursting Wheel. Theodore Klein , a blacksmith at Ne- braska City , was fatally injured while operating a 12-inch emery wheel , which was revolving at terrific speed. The wheel broke in three pieces , one piece strikinir him in therighl breast , making terrible wound. Another piece shat tered his left lei : . His physician says he cannot recover. Campbell to H-.ve Waterworks. The village of Campbell on the Kith voted $7.000 hom'is for the construction a system of water works. | It is conservatively estimated that about 85 per cent of the corn crop of ? South Dakota is now in tho ground , ami that a continuance of favorable weather until tlie middle of this week will see the remainder of the crop planted by that time. Farmers generally , owing to the lateness of the season , have , during tho past few days , vigorously pushed the work of corn planting. I many in stances the women of the households have Koue to the aid of the men and as sisted them in corn planting during such time as the work was not made impossi ble by the frequent rains. While corn is being put into the ground somewhat late , the excellent condition of the soil , due to the unusually heavy and soaking rains of the past few weeks , will make this and other crops grow very fast with warmer weather. Because of this there is every reason to believe that corn , n3 well as other crops , will be as far ad vanced by the middle of June as they usually are. * * * # ? At a meeting of the state board of * k charities and correction , held in Sioux Falls , the contract was awarded for the machinery needed in the operation of a shirt factory at the Sioux Falls peniten tiary , for which the last legislature pro vided. It is expected the factory will be placed in operation within the next six weeks. The factory will employ about 100 convicts , and the state has entered into a contract to furnish this number for five years. It is estimated that40 dozen shirts will be manufactured daily , , and that the factory will mean an addi tion of from $ r > .000 to $ t , OW Ji year to freight payments to the railroads. It is figured that the state will make a proflt of about liO.u < ! 0 per year from the oper ation of the factory. ( > . S. Swenson , . who last week retired from the position of warden of the penitentiary , has beeii appointed manager of the shirt factory by the Chicago concern which has enter ed into a contract to take tlie product of" the factory. * * * Because about 1.000 men of all ages- from every state in the union want to marry the 120 women wh ; are eligible- for matrimony and drew homesteads on the Rosebud Indian reservation , the women have formed a mutual protective society. The man wiio marries into the- family must show he is able'to work a farm and must put in a whole season at plowing , sowing and harvesting. After he does all this work , for which the ob ject of his affections receives the re ward , the applicant may be rejected ir he does not please the owner of the homestead. But if his work lias been well done , if there has been no grum bling , if the furrows habeen straight and even , then the man may possibly be come the possessor of a wife and a quar ter section of good Kosebud land. Miss- Ruth Pyrtle , formerly of Lincoln , Neb. , , is president of the society , and .Miss Es- telle Salle , furmerly of MexicoIo. . , is- vice president. . * * * T. E. Blanebud and G. C. Hartley , of the state land department , have returned from Rapid City , where they went with Atorney ( General Hall to push cases in regard to the department in that section of the state. Two classes were consid ered , on which hinges a larire amount of state lands in the Black Hills. One was- in regard to squatters' tilingson school land in the forest reserve and the other was in relation to mineral lands on the- state tracts. * * The following appointments have been made as colonels and aids-de-camp on- the staff of Gov. Elrod : rapt. Geo. D , Gtioyer , of U. S. army. Brookings ; A. T , Abbott. Vermillion : C. M. Daley , Hu ron ; Christopher .Mentor , Faulkton : Mau rice A. Hockman ; Howard Case. Water- town ; AV. II. Stokes. Jr. , Watertown- T. -AIcNamce. . Brooking : Carl D. Johnson. AVatertown ; Charles Carpenter , AVatertown. * o * Insurance Commissioner Perkins has ordered the South Dakota grand lodge- A. O. U. W. to cease payments of the guarantee fund to the supreme lodge on the grounds that the S nh Dakota order is a domestic corporation and cannot be assessed to assist in payment of losses of the order in other stato = . The order was- issued on complaint of members of the Sioux Falls lodge of that order. > * V The number of old warrants for wolf bounty which are unclaimed in the i-flico of the state auditor iti'-luJe a large part of the state , the greatest number beingr in the western portion of the statev Eighty-three such warrants aggregating several hundred dollars are in the offlcer and an attempt will be made to find thff owners. * * * State Superintendent Nash has pre pared a li > t of institute dates with names- of the conductors for all the counties- which have made the proper reports , No arrangements have been made for the- counties of Brookings. Butte. Hans-en or Stanley on account of the failure of the- county superintendents t.j make the re quired reports. * * * The interior department has tendered : to Superintendent Pierce , of the Indian school at Flandreau. the position of" traveling supervisor of Indian schools. It is said that Mr. Pierce will decline the- appointment f. > r the reason that he is- well located at Flandivau aud does not care to leave that locality. Solicitors of the Woodmen Accident'- Association have been ordered to cease- soliciting business in the state for the- reason that the as.-ueiatiou is debarred for its refusal to pay taxes in the state. . ' * * * Chamberlain during th < ? past severaK days has had an opportunity to experi ence the efiVct of the recent decision of the supreme court of the L'nited States'- to the effect that Indians who have tak - u en lands in severally may purchase intox icating liquors without violation of law , . Hundreds of Indians who have ju-t re ceived their clsh : annuity have been in town to invest their money , and natural ly there were many wi.st desire took the direction of liquid refreshments. Al . lotment certificates were conveniently atr hand to convince d-aUn-s-that ihu holder- ? l I V.I _ JL