THE VALENTINE DEMOCRAT VAJUEXTIXE , XEi : . . M. RICE , - - Publisher. IPEJUSli 1N HOi'E L FIRE 12 KXONVX JEAD AXI > MAXY MISS- JXG AT roirr WAYXE. in the Xew Aveliua Hotel Discov ered at 3 O'clock in the Monihij : ; Up Elevator Shaft , and Guests Are llurned to Death. At least twelve persons lost their lives in a fire that destroyed the Xew lAvelina hotel at Fort Wayne. Ind . -early Sunday. - The entire interior of the building ! is a smouldering heap of ruins and jhow many dead are concealed by the sdebris can only be conjectured. The hotel register was consumed iby the fire and there are no accurate means of determining who is missing. The known d < nid are : K S. John- ison. Pana. 111. ; M. Hidrseh. Xew York ; ! J. B. Miller. Sheboygan. Wis. ; J. E. lEIlis.Carbon. . . Pierie. Scott & Co. , Chicago - cage : W. A. Pitcher. Fort Wayne , -salesman for S. F. ISoyser & Co. , Foil r\Vayne ; J. W. Deviney. salesman for Crawford & Lehman. Philadelphia ; three unidentified men. The complete destruction of the in terior of the hotel makes the work of recovering the bodies a difiicult task. ! A confused head of charred wood an-1 fbrick and twisted girders is piled up between the bare walls to the second tstory. Piece by piece this must be removed ( before the roll of the dead can b * compl < ted. Some of the bodies taken out are mangled and charred beyond jrecognition. Infantry Company D and Batter 11. of the Xational Guard , are on duty and aiding the fire and police forces to clear away the debris. The fire was discovered at ? : ,0 -o'clock Sunday morning in the elevator shaft by Xight Clerk Ralph Hopkins. ! He rushed to the upper floors , alarm ing the guests until the flames , which mad spread with appalling rapidity , drove him back. His efforts , however , caved manv lives. BOAT SIXKS AT WHAUF. Child Lo-t I'rom Mother's Arms in : ui Accident XearVa hiii ! > ( on. The steamer Trenton , owned by the -Potomac Xavigation company , capsized - < sized and sank Sunday while at her Jwharf at Alexandria. Ya. . carrying < down with it Stanley D. Posey. the 1S- jmonth-old son of Murray Posey. a law- jyer of Brooklyn. X. Y. About a dozen passengers who jumpedoverbaord 'were rescued. It is claimed that the accident was due to the shifting of the cago. The vessel plied between Wasli- lington and Potomac rivQr points. The IPosey family , consisting of fathei. mother and two sons.as on its way to Posey's wharf when the accident oc curred. Mrs. Posey jumped overboard with -.her little son in her arms and was 'holding him out toward and approaching - ing party of rescuers when he slipped from her grasp and sank. KILLS GII1L WHO JILTED g Polander Had .fust Arrived from EnroKJ for Wedding. Enraged because his long journey across the sea had ended in the refusal of his proposal of marriage William Sekansky , a young Polander , shot and killed Annie Kockonwa , a 20-year-okl Polish girl , in the hallway of a board ing house in Williamsburg , X. Y. , Sun day night , and before he was overpow ered by the police , shot Michael Kir- sani , who sought to intercept his flight. Kirsani died in a hosupital. An enraged crowd that gave chase to Sekansky made threats of lynch- 'ing when he was captured , but the of ficers hurried their man to the police station. Ki'Kht Killed in Explosion. The finding of another body in the ruins of the Chicago Reduction com- jpany's plant at Thirty-ninth and Iron I street , Chicago , which was wrecked 'by an explosion and fire last Friday night , makes the list of known dead jiumber eight. FrancN Joseph in Good Health. The disquieting rumors that were rurivnt on the Berlin bourse Satur day regarding the health of Emperor Francis Joseph were without founda- tion. The health of his majesty is in all respects satisfactory. .Ur. Cleveland's Condition. That former President Grover Cleveland is not so seriously ill as pub- jh'shed reports during the past week lhave declared him to be was the as- isuranee given to a representative of the Associated Press Sunday. Fire Destroyed Philippine Town. The town of Antipolo , in the prov- incr of Morong , has been practically .destroyed by fire. Four hundred houses were burned and hundreds of * , . A" .people are homeless. The famous jshrine was saved. The lire was caused 'by ' lightning. Sioux City Live Stork 3Iarket. Saturday's quotations on the Sioux ty live stock market follow : Beeves , | $ C.00 < 3 > G.90. Top liogs , $5.40. iil DOG AIDS MAX TO EXD LIFE. Animal flakes Vicious Attack on ReS- CUerS. After making two attempts , early Friday morning , to commit suicide , al- thpugh a vicious bulldog used its best endeavors to prevent the rescuers from pulling the wouldbe suicide from the water , Henry P. Turpin , aged 3'2 , com mitted suicide by drowning' ' himself in the canal at Steelton , Pa. Turpin spent the night drinking and , early in the morning , accompanied by his bull terrier , went to the canal and plunged headlong into the stream. Ed ward McCord and Frank MagnelPa saw Turpin in the water and made an attempt to reach him , but the dog sprang at them , biting a piece of flesh from the wrist of Magnellia. The dog was thrown aside and held by another 'man , who appeared on the scene , while McCord and Magnellia swam to the side of Turpin and dragged , him ashore. Turpin appeared very angry because the men would not permit him to commit suicide. Shortly afterwards he returned to the canal again and jumped in. An other attempt to reach the man was made by the two men , but the dog at tacked each one and bit -'McCord on the neck. Once more Turpin wastfres- cued , and the men telephoned for a policeman. Before he arrived , how ever , Turpin , with the assistance of his faithful dog , got away from his rescuers and made a third and success ful attempt to end his life. CAB II ERA AS TYRAXT. Public inflamed Against Dictator of Guatemala. It is reported that Honduras is con- cenrating her forces on the Guatema lan frontiers. Passengers who have arrived at Panama recently from Guatemala say that a revolution was being planned against the llonduran government by Gen. Domingo Vasquez , ex-president of Honduras , who is sup posed to have the support of Guate mala. This they say was the reason why Senor Bustillos , finance minister of Honduras , was sent on a special confidential mission to President Ca brera , of Guatemala , and why Cabrera , instead of treating with Bustillos , prac tically imprisoned him in Guatemala City. City.After After the latest war with Nicara gua , Honduras was left entirely dis armed , and should the reports of the Honduran military movements prove true , it will be accepted as evidence that Xicaraguans and Salvadorais have furnished her with munitions of war. war.The The situation in Guatemala is re ported to be exceedingly critical. The passengers say that among the per sons reported to have been executed there were Mrs. Castanedo and Mrs. Blanco , and Messrs. Hererra. Trigue- ras , Ed ward o Rubio and Antonio Rubio - bio , all of whom'belonged to wealthy Central American families. TROOPS SEIZE CONSUL. Homliirnn Representative a Prisoner . . , in Guatemala. It is rumored in Mexico City that Juan Barrios , Guatemalan minister of roiegn affairs , at the head of a body of troops , entered the Uruguayan consul general's residence and seized the Hon duran consul. Gen. Mindenze , and his son , who had taken refuge there. The Uruguayan consul general was ab sent from home when the house was surrounded by troops and the seizure made. As soon as he heard of the af fair he fled to the American legation , where he asked for protection , and is now a refuge in the legation of the United States. The" capitol of Guatemala is de scribed as being the center of turbu lent scenes. Suspend Senior Class. Chancellor Day , of Syracuse , X. T. , university , informed the committee which reported resolutions adopted by the senior class in the engineering de partment criticising the executive committee of the trustees for the re moval of Dean Kent that its members were suspended until the class retract ed the resolutions. Doctor's Slayer Gets Ten Years. Robert W. Gott , of Cincinnati , O. , pleaded guilty to the murder of Dr. Leo Danziger , a physician , and was sentenced to ten years in the peniten tiary. Gott killed Dr. Danziger three months ago during the doctor's visit to Anna Spangler , the 16-year-old niece of Gott. Student's Auto Kills Girl. Sophie Suderman , S years old , was run over and fatally injured at Xew Haven , Conn. , Friday by an automo bile owned by Hunlington Smith , a Yale student , whose home is in St. Louis. For Income Tax in Oklahoma. The Oklahoma house Friday passed the Anthony income tax bill providing for a graduated tax on all incomes over $2,000. April Trade Was Good. Dispatches to Dun's Review indi cate little change in the general sit uation , the total volume of trade dur ing April comparing most favorably with the same month last year. L. P. Farmer Suddenly Expires. L. P. Farmer , of Xew York , chair man of the Trunk Lineassociation , and a prominent railroad man , died sud denly Friday. Death is believed to have resulted from apoplexy. J3AXDITS IIAID FAJ5T TRAIX. Loot Express Car on Pennsylvania Flyer. Two train robbers , who evidently boarded the Xew York and St. Louis express on the Pan Handle railroad of the Pennsylvania system at the Union station in Pittsburg , Pa. , which left at 30:05 o'clock Thursday night , ten minutes later , overpowered the express messenger and got away with four bags of currency containing an amount of money as yet unknown. The robbery was committed near Walker's station , a particularly lonely and islotade spot in a rough section of country , about eleven miles west of Pittsburg. The train , one of the fast est on the road , which is not sched uled to stop between Pittsburg and Steubenville , O. , was brought to a sud den halt by an emergency signal from the bell cord , and when Conductor William Lafferty went forward to learn the trouble , he found Adams Ex press Messenger X. Rochen bound and gagged in the express car and so frightened that he could not give any connected report of what happened. Except that both the robbers were white , the express messenger is unable to give any identification that would aid the secret service forces of the Pan Handle and Pennsylvania rail road companies and the city and coun ty detective forces , all of whom have been called out to work on the case. The express safe was open , accord ing to information received here , as the messenger was making up bills for packages received from the local of fices , and the robbery was accomplish ed in a very few minutes. Persons standing on the station platform at Carnegie , a short distance from the place where the robbers left the train , report having seen the ex press messenger at work in his car and two men on the platform outside. It is reported that four bags , sealed and containing money , were taken , but nothing is known as to the amount of money contained in either of the bags. SLAIX BY SYRIAX OX TRAIX. American Hanker Victom of Unpro voked Attack. On board the steamer Konig Albert , which arrived in Xew York Thursday , was the body of Bernard Warkentin. president of the Kansas State bank , of Xewton , Kan. , who was shot and killed near Damascus early in April while riding on a railroad train. Mrs. Warkentin and her son accompanied the body. The cable dispatches announcing the shooting said that it was done by a Syrian , who occupied the compart ment on the train adjoining that in which Mr. Warkentin was seated. Thn Syrian said he was cxainning the re volver and it went off by accident. Ambassador Leishman from Constan tinople reported the shooting to th.-1 state department at Washington. He . - aid assurance had been given him that the Syrian would be brought to justice if the case proved to be one of murder. Carl Warkentin said that the man who killed his father was a Turkish prince and that Ambassador Leishman told his mother that it would be impossible to prosecute him and advised her to say no more about the matter. From his remarks it Avas apparent that Mrs. Warkentin believed Mr. Leishman had not done all he could , and he intimated that charges would be lodged against the ambas sador. DISASTER TO JAP CRUISER. Training Ship Sunk by an Explosion of Projectile. The Japanese training cruiser Mat- sushima was sunk off the Pescadores islands Thursday morning by the ex plosion of a projectile. Other cruis ers rescued 141 of the crew. It is feared over 200 , including the captain of the Matsushima , have been lost. The Matsushima sank immediately. The cause 6f the explosion , which occurred in the stock magazine , is not known. A majority of the ofiicei's were sav ed. The sons of Baron Chinda , vice minister of the foreign office , and of Prince Oyama , field marshal , were among the cadets who it is feared arf lost. Inherits Home from a Dog. Through a court decision Alderman G. D. Beattie , of Helena. Mont. , named as co-heir with a pet dog in the will of Mrs. Mary A. Pryse , becomes the sole heir of the pet dog , and thereby inherits a valuable residence. The dog died shortly after the death of Mrs. Pryse. 70 Cent Echo of Civil War. Mrs. H. M. Rutger , of Belvidere , 111. , widow of Lieut. Rutger , of the Twelfth Illinois , was notified by the govern ment that 70 cents was due her on the pay of her husband , who died in 1S7S , and a draft for the amount was sent to her recently. Germany Xecds Millions. That the German imperial govern ment must borrow $250,000,000 during the next five years was the substance of an admission made by Secretary of the Treasury Sydow to the appropria tions committee of the reichstag Thursday. Upsets Lump ; Dies of Burns. Mrs. Elizabeth Petry , of Upper San- dusky , O. , arose early Thursday morn ing and knocked over a lamp , which exploded. She died of burns in fifteen minutes. Anna Gould and Prince in Home. Mme. Gould and Prince Helie de Sa- an arrived at Rome Thursday from Xaples. From Rome Mme. Gould and the prince will go direct to the French Uiviera. z ? j ? ZcJ2 5N s5 IHTEREVTinHJPPEHiHGS _ ft fl j Pk 5NI Fro" ) Cay to Day Condensed I FOR CUR EU5Y READERS POISOX IX BOX OF < " . \MY. ( ' < ; rr jsi\c SnbMv.iat. ' L < I't in l'ivka ; > r for .Mrs. C'oll'u1-- . Dr. Jennie Colfas ? . physician for the Woodman Circle. lie ; > i'-k at ! ' > > home at Twenty-eighth and I-acific streets , jOrrtaha. from the eTects of poi soning last Friday. Thc , poison v. as found to be corrosive sublimate. The stoiy told first by Mr * . Colfass was that she found a box of candy on .her front porch , addressed to her. She expected nothing and when she re moved her wrap ? ate a couple of pieces of the candy. In a short time she was taken sick and took an emet ic. A physician was called and itvn.s found that she had taken poison in the candy. The remainder of tin * box of candy was taken ti > a chemist and it was found that it all contained poi son. Inquiry at the headquarters of the Woodman Circle revealed nothing ex cept that orders were gi\en by the de tective department to say nothing. Mrs. Emma 13. Manchester head of the Woodman Ciicle. would say noth ing. Inquiry of Mrs. ( Vitashusband. . who is also a physician in the office of Dr. Gifford , failed * to elicit any ini' ' i-- mation. The doctor said he had posi tive orders from the detective depart ment to say nothing of the eas ? Capt. Savage , chief < > ! ' the'detectives. . says he is not at liberty just ; iow to make a statement. Detectives Fleit- feld and Deverees arc working on tne case and will have a statement ready to submit to their chief soon. The ca-e is regarded by the officers as quite re markable , though no blame thus far has been attached to any individual. Since Mrs. Colfass' el < " 'tionas _ phy sician of the Woodman Circle nearly a ye.-ir ago. some friction has ari--in. and as the now cleft ion approaches that friction is said not to die down. 1SRAKKMAX LOSES A FOOT. The Accident Occurred \VhiJe Switch ing ; at Charloton. B. Reimer , a Xorthwestern freight brakeman , is York hospital having one foot amputated , caused by an accident while switching at Charleston. Mr. Reimer was standing on the ladder on the side of a moving freight car. standing on the lower step , when eith er through lack of strength or sudden bump or jar of the train he fell across the track , managing to keen his body from the center of the track ami th ° car passed over his right ank'eiu ' ! big toe. The engine was immediately detached from the train and a quick run was made , taking him to the York hospital , where his foot was am putated. He is a married man and his home is at Fremont. IXJTRED BY AX ArTO I Dr.Y. . L. Curl is Badly Injured by Be- iiif- Thrown from Car. One of the worst automobile acci dents that has occurred in that part of the state happened when Dr. W. L. Curtis , of Cook , was making a call seven miles southeast of there. The corburettor had not been working right and occasionally the engine would get an extra charge of gasoline , which would shoot the machine ahead with a jerk. This happened where there was a deep rut running oblique ly in the road and when the front wheel struck this place it threw the doctor out. the machine on top. He was brought to his home , when it was found he had suffered a fracture of the hip and was also badly bruised. Election Contest at Louisville. Frank DeRuy has brought suit in county court against Mart L. Williams and John Waldron , asking Judge Bee- son to determine which of the three was elected trustee of the village of Louisville , as the canvassing board declared there was no election , as each one of the three candidates received ' > , ' > votes , excepting Charles Pankonin. who received 99 votes , and is for li censing saloons. Williams and Wald ron , for licensing saloons , demanded that the canvassing board determine by lot which two of the three receiving the same number of votes should be declared el < B3ted , but the board refused to do so. If the court declares the plaintiff elected Louisville will not have saloons another year , but if the other two are elected the village will go "wet. " AVorkmun Killed by Fall. E. L. Barritt. aged G7. fell off a lad der at the Romp Miller eating house at Xorfolk and sustained a fracture at the base of the brain , from which he died two hours later. He was trying * o put on a screen window. Greeley Banker Dead. Report comes from Elba , fifteen miles southwest of Greeley , that Em met Love , an old resident and former banker of Greeley , died from a stroke of paralysis. Heavy Frost t\t Greeley. Early garden stuff and fruit has been killed by the sereve cold weath er. Reports come in from the farmers that the late apples will not be in jured. Clunked with Exceeding Allowance. The case at Gage county against W. W. Wright , of Beatrice , former county treasurer , who is charged with ex ceeding the amount allowed by the county board for clerk hire , was ar gued and taken under advisement by Judge Pemberton. who ordered the attorneys for the county to file a brief. Auburn Xot Hurt 3Iuoh. Auburn was visited by quit- . heavy frost during the cold spell , but it is not generally thought it did any great amount of damage to the fruit liv.o iLi.i..iiGM'IS : AWAY. Mscapi's Irons .Jail atValtliill in Mys- tcrioii.Manner. . ( 'bar.ie Jones. \ \ ho was held in the village jail atVahill ! n the charge of bootlegging , depaited some time Tuesday niyht without the permission cf the village authorities , taking noth ing except the padlock , and \\ithbut as much as marring the rough woodWork - Work of the doorway. Jones appear ed in Walthili last Saturday , hailing from Lyons , and \\ith hin > came con siderable booxe. He stated that he chose tlie day on account of the bill game which was scheduled to be ! k'\Vvl. knouiiig that their would be an u n usual ? x large croud to u.artuka of the stimulants which he had brought with him. During the afternoon and evening he dispensed considerable of the goods. About 7 o'clock he. with h < driver. wa. caught and placed in jail. Latei in the evening several of his customers were given berths near him. Monday norning he was arraigned in Justice Wood's court and lined. He made ar- raiigemt'iiLs with some parties to pay the line , after \\hith he was to leave the state. However , it is supposed he decided to leave first and have the fine paid later. The peculiar part > f the matter i.- > the fact that there is not as much us a scratch on the msty staple that held the iron hasp of the door through which the padlock was linked , it is understood that the officers have a clew as tthe way he escaped. The stolen padlock ttnd the fact that there was nothing broken about the jail \\ould seem to indicate that there must have been a ly. . ATTACKS T\VO YOl'XG GIRLS. Xchraslwnn Attempts .Murder of Wife's Sister * . After fe' ning insensibility and sub- mitti.ijr ta terrible beating Ida Tay lor , of Minden. 13 years of ase. Tues day night saved her unconscious sister from death in their burning1 home. Ida and Pearl. : iged 17. were brutally assaulted and left Tor dead. The coun ty attorney and a large posse ate in pursuit of Bert Taylor , the brother- in-law of the two girls , who is accused of the crime. According to the story of Ida Taylor , Rert Taylor demanded admittance at midnight. He nourished a revolver , dragged Pearl into the kitchen and clubbed her into unconsciousness. Next he atacked ! Ida and beat her. i-hr j.releiuh'd to faint , lie then broke a lamp and poured the oil about the house and > n the bedding. After set- tin- the hou e atire he led. Ida then managed to drag her sister away. I'ear ! Taylor may die. Ids : told her - ; > - to : hc- county attorney 'la-- iay mcining. She is painfully burned. The t\\o girls lived in a little house iienr Minde.i and ultended school. At the end of each wf-"k they vvould go to spend Sunday at the home of their parents. Taylor's wife died several months a o and an infant was b lng cared for by the parents of the girls he is accused of assaulting. VICTIMS OF PTOMAINE POISOX. Six Persons ; Made III by Keating Dried Heel' . Six persons of Norfolk were stricken Friday night v. itii ptomaine poisoning is the result of eating dried beef. Sev- : al of the cases were serious , and it was feared they might result fatally. All are out of danger now. Th MC- tiins were Mr. and Mrs. H. II. Miller , Miss Alvina Miller and Miss Anna Miller. The beef was bought at Xor- t'oik and wa put up by a south Oma ha packing firm. Samples were sent to the state chemist at Lincoln. Banker's Son Attempts Suicide. Haunted by a love affair with the daughter of a prominent citixen of his home. Geneva. George W. Epley , a graduate of the I'niveisity of X'ebras- k.i. and at one time a leader of Geneva society , attempted suicide shortly af ter midnight Sunday morning by hurl ing himself through a large glass win dow at the rear of the second floor of a rooming house at 1021 Larimer street. Denver , Colo. Boy Shoots Disturber. At about 10 o'clock Saturday night Edward Cohota , of Valentine , a 17- year-old boy. heard someone rapping on the window of his rooms beside the Cohota restaurant. The rapping continued and Edward shot through the wnidow , the bullet hitting th man in the hips. His name was Sam liordeaut. a drunken half-breed In dian. The wound was not fatal. Break Into Store. Burglars secured an entrance to the city dry goods and gents furnishing store of P. M. Green at Central City Tuesday night , but were scared away by the timely arrival of officers and left behind two suit cases which they had packed with fancy neckwear , cuff button * and other small articles of men's wearing apparel. Homer Yotes School Bonds. A proposition to issue bonds to the amount of 10 per cent of { he assessed valuation for the purpose of erecting a new school building was carried at Homer Tuesday by a large majority. It is expected about $10,000 will be realized. Woman Sues Saloonkeeper. Mrs. Annie Goltry. of Wymore , has brought suit in the district court against James P. McCarthy for $7,000 damages , which she alleges has been done herself and family as the result rn the sale of intoxicants to her hus band. The plaintiff states that her husband was at one time a prosperous I farmer and that the money derived j Frony the sale cf Ins farm is shown to 1 have been fjtianclercd at ilcCarhty's ! saloon. * commission that While the special likened to exidence in th disbarment M procedings brought by the attoiney general against Capt. All-n G. Fisher , of Chadron. finds the captain guilty or is- recommendation illegal conduct , a with the- filed contained in the report supreme court asking for leniency. actual mjury- the The commission says sutTered through the acts of the captain consideration tain should be taken into tion in fixing the penalty. The report of that as attorney the commission says for the heirs of Herman Goedde. , who- died leaving land in Sioux county , the- captain unlawfully and illegally wrote- a decree fixing the value of the lancE at $ i ,000 when he knew it was worth only $ l.fiOO. and that the captain wa to get $7,000 out of the $8,000 as a fee. for SS- The commission finds a elum land filed with the 000 for this was heir-s by Capr. state for the foreign - Fisher. In view of the fict that the claim was not allowed and no money consequently that little changed hands , tle injury has been don . the commission - mission recommends clemency. The- captain will be given an opportunity to file exceptions in legal manner. * * * Lincoln society circles are stirred the- from center to circumference by news of the coming of Senator Saure- ders , of Omaha , who during the ab sence of Gov. Shelden and Lieut. Gov Hopewell. will be act'iny governor The Omaha man is the first untamed governor Xebraska ever had. to the- knowledge of the eligible * ' . The ex ecutive mansion has been turned ; > the bachelor executiv and the minds of many are working out for his entertainment. Lost winter , when merely a senator , the Oniahc > man took quite a whirl in society ana' ' he is expected during th * > next ten or- iiJ'teeii days to set a pace for all fu ture executives in the society line , fn- cidentally , those who knov/ say , if tin. "enator gets away from here hearr free he may just as well be given ai immunity card and pas < -d up as un- -.cetable. * * * "Xewspaper advertising for the- pur pose of drawing new settlers is a conv- mon thing nowadays , on the part of certain states in the west and south , ! " - = aid Labor Commissioner Ryder "Some of the advertisements are ho- tuff. too. picturing only pieces of paradise that have somehow dropped ft * and floated to earth. Cut sometimes : th < y do not jibe in the le.ist with nav-- iral happenings. F > r instance , in ; . unday newspaper. [ not : "d a glow ing advertisement inviting1 settlers t < .Mississippi , 'the land of su \here there are no fuel bills , no and no storms. " Almost adjoining ; 111 another column , was an account oiT s. < term in Mississippi , in which ll' A en- killed and 1.050 injured. Which' -s merely one of the incidents that lead ; ne to say Xebrasku is good r-nougL ' "or any white man. " * * Attorney General Tho-tnpson ha- won a victory in the suit against the Xebraska Itetail Lumber Dealers' as sociation in the supreme oourt , whiciL- he sought to enjoin from restricting- trade and free competition. Bird' Critchfield. secretary of the association , is enjoined from continuing practices- ill restraint of trade and the officers of the association are held chargeable- with knowledge of such acLs and the : * ' also are enjoined from permitting the- secretary or any officer from perfornr- ing unlawful acts in violation of thc- statntps prohibiting combinations in restraint of trade. While the associa tion as a body is not dissolved , several individual members ar enjoined , . while in some instances the report oc ; the referee is upheld. A letter has been received at the ex ecutive office , addressed to Gov. Shel don and signed by two men who style themselves "farm hands. " They-want help from the governor. They set out that they want him to nact a law providing that no farmer he permitterT' to use other than riding machinery such as plows , rakes , and harrows. Be- cau e of the fact some farmers con tinue to use the old-fashioned kind of implements , the letter says. many- farm hands have sore feet and life to them is somewhat of a burden. The- letter asks the governor to let the writers know what the prospects ar - for this kind of legislation. * * The Daily Xews Publishing cuin - pany. of Omaha , has filed its brief in. ' the supreme court in the appeal case- from Omaha , wherein Tom Denmson- secured a verdict for $7.500 against the Xews for publishing a defamarory.- article about him. The brief conrends- the verdict of the jury was exc s-rve. and that it was not based upon chf- evidence in the case , but was secured" through passion and the skillful hand ling of the case by Der.rusou'sattor - - ney. * * * The supreme court explained co the- express companies recently that whenr it ruled the Sibley law reducing charg es was in force it meant that theshi > - pers must secure a reduction of 2. > per cent in amount of money paid fot- transportation of goods and that no reference whatever was meanc to- change in weight of packages. The- court holds that until th r merits of the Sibley law can be tested by a care ful taking of testimony the rates ihaH be actually lowered in the state. * * * Gov. Sheldon has received a war rant from Washington for.$5.22S.S1 money due officers of the Third Xe braska who served in the Spanish- American war. The governor was in formed the names of the officers , to gether with the amount due each would be sent later. Until that information mation is received the distribution of the money cannot be made. It ha been reported Col. Bryan will reee"- § 24. . and Gov. Sheldon. v.'ho wnsL captain , § 185 , and Adjt Gen. Schwarz another captain , a like amourit d ( > - pendent upon , the time served