THE VALENTINE DEMO ! VALENTINE , NEB. t , M. RICE , . . . . Publisher. EIGHT ARE DEO WED TOWIJOAT EAGLE SINKS IX TIIE MISSISSIPPI RIVER. Persons AVlio Lost Their Lives Were Asleep at Time Vessel "Breaks in Two as It Goes Dovm in One Hun dred Feet of Water. Eight people were lost and seven on board had a thrilling escape from i death Sunday when the towboat Eagle , / of the Louisiana Petroleum company , went down in the Mississippi river about forty miles south of New Orleans. The dead are George Joyce , captain ; Charles Goodbud , second engineer ; Charles Martin , fireman ; Richard Le- "banc , mate ; two negro deck hands ; a negro chambermaid and a cabin boy. The accident occurred at 4:30 a. m. , and at the time all those who perished were asleep. The boat began to dip and take water , and in an instant was coing down , breaking in half as it i sank. Unconscious of danger , those on deck found themselves precipitated into the swift current of the deep channel. They succeeded in catching hold of objects washed from the boat , and managed to stay afloat until they attracted attention from shore. The sinking of the Eagle is a mys tery. There was no explosion of any kind. The Eagle conveying an oil barge up the river and when it sank the barge broke away. At the point where it went down the river is about 100 feet deep. ACCIDENT IN BIKE RACE. Kider Is Hurled Against Two Men Fracturing Their Skulls. Thousands of persons at the Coli seum motor cycle track at Los Angeles Sunday saw a rider going at the rate of a mile a minute thrown over the fence and across the grand stand with out being very seriously $ .ijp > ed. Two spectators , however , who were stand- 'ing1 ' at the race track were perhaps fa- Itally Injured. The accident occurred in the five- 7V 5hIle event. Freddy Huyck. of Chicago f Jxvas leading , and on the upper turn [ 'collided with Earhart of Los Angeles , | ' .ivlio shot tip the track as Earhart was V ( going by. Earhart was thrown high in 'the air. His feet struck the head of Howard Pipper , and Pipper's head bumped that of Charles H. Henry , of IHiawatha , Kan. The skulls of both men were fractured by the impact. Eii $100,000 FOR RELIEF. Portugal Parliament Votes Aid to Earthquake Sufferers. The seismic disturbances in Portu gal have now ceased. Everyone is greatly impressed with the courage and energy of King Manuel , who , after directing the firemen in the city , set out with physicians and supplies for the districts where the destruction was the greatest. A number of vil lages have been wiped out. Salvatorra and San Stefano were badly damaged. Many bodies have been taken from the ruins , and 128 persons are missing. JHundreds were injured. It was reported - ported that two large finshing boats foundered and their crews , numbering thirty-eight , perished. Parliament has voted 5100,000 for the relief of the sufferers. - PHYSICIANS SEE CASTRO. T > eclino to Make Statement as Belligerent's Condition. Cipriano Castro , the deposed presi dent of Venezuela , who arrived in tla Paris Saturday from Martinique , tlP -whence he was expelled by the French P authorities , has been visited by two o physicians. The doctors , however , de Va clined to express an opinion regarding a the seriousness of Castro's condition. tlb It is believed that his illness is little tlel aggravated. To some of his callers elrr Castro again broke out in a torrent of rr rage against Juan Vincente Gomez , rrn the present president of Venezuela , n and the United States. ir. ir.rr rr Kansas City Fire. tc tcM Fire broke out at 2 o'clock Monday M morning in the Ridge building , a seven story structure in the heart of the w { downtown business district of Kansas P City , Mo. The National Bank of Commerce - , merce and other large office buildings fi joining the Ridge build- ting were threatened. P 01 Sioux City Live Stock Market- Saturday's quotations on the Sioux eib City live stock market follow. Top by : ifceeves , $6.30 ; top hogs , $7.20. a ] Counterfeit 3Ioney Seized. Thousands of dollars in counterfeit I' currency , both of the United States LA -.and Italy , were seized by police and th thJc secret service agents at New Rochelle , Jc New Tork , Saturday. Ins Si bf ; Remains on Way Home. CO Mrs. William E. Bainbridge has left Cherbough , France , on the steamer { Philadelphia. She is taking with her jthe body of her husband who com- Va .Jxnitted suicide in Paris last week. lay i 7 / EARTHQUAKE LN PORTUGAL. Buildings Sway and Old Ones Fall at Lisbon. A series of violent earthquakes oc curred at Lisbon Friday night , and dis turbances , according to reports from various places , were felt throughout the whole of Portugal. For a time fears were entertained of a repetition of the great earthquake of 177S , which demolished the city. No material damage was done , though the ground rose and fell in wavelike motions , buildings swayed and the walls of a number of old houses were broken. No one was hurt , but fires broke out and a condition of great alarm prevailed. Several of the broken walls threat ened to collapse , and it is believed that some of the churches have been damaged. King Manuel appeared on the streets and took a prominent part in encouraging the firemen and reas suring the terrified people. The house of lords , which was sit ting at the time , was thrown into a great panic. Several of the members Were thrown to the floors. There was , however , no perceptible damage to the edifice. The seismic disturbances , which were general throughout the Iberian peninsula Friday evening , caused a Email amount of damage at Madrid. A few old buildings in the suburbs were wrecked , and two fires broke out. Following the first shock the people rushed into the streets , women faint ed and for a time there was something of a panic , but the shocks that follow ed the first one consisted merely of a far away rumbling and a gentle , un- dulatory movement. Dispatches received from Cordova , Seville and other cities report shocks varying from ten to twenty seconds , but with little or no damage. ' TRIES TO END FOUR LIVES. Chicago Man Succeeds in Killing Wife and. Himself. Harry L. Summers , of Chicago , a nickel plater , shot and killed his wife , Henrietta , severely wounded his 10- year-old daughter , Gladys , and his mother-in-law , Mrs. Anna McKenzie , and then killed himself. The tragedy occurred at Mrs. McKenzie's home. Mrs. Summers , after repeated quar rels , fled a week ago from her home to that of her mother , Mrs. McKenzie. Thursday Summers entered the kitchen of the McKenzie home , where found Gladys and the two women seated at dinner. Without a word of warning he opened fire. Mrs. Summers fell dead at the first shot. Mrs. McKenzie and Gladys fled up a stairway with Summers in pur suit. As they neared the top he fired four shots , wounding Mrs. McKenzie n the back and arm , and the child in the ba/ik. ThefJ Stammers returned to the kitchen where lay the body of his wife. Policeman Mahon , who had heard the shooting from across the street , was trying to break down the front door. One shot remained in the pistol , and with this Summers ended his own life just as the policeman burst into the room. 1 STEWART'S BODY CREMATED. JQast Rites Over Remains Are Held i at Washington. The body of William M. Stewart , former United States senator from Nevada - vada , who died /Friday in Washington , D. C. , was cremated Sunday in ac cordance with a Avish expressed just before his death. The ashes Avill be sealed in an urn and as soon as Mrs. Stewart recovers from an illness they AA-ill be taken to Bull Frog , Nev. , for interment The last rites over the body Avere conducted by Rev. John H. * Van Shack , at the chapel of a local undertaking establishment in the pres ence of the former senator's daughter and granddaughters , in addition to several of the personal and political friends of the deceased. : BITTER FIGHT IS DECIDED.d ji Airs. Scott is Elected President of the D. A. R. P By a vote of 43G to 428 Mrs. Matthew $ thew S. Scott , of Illinois , was Friday at Washington , D. C. declared elected president general of the Daughters of ; the American Revolution over Mrs. William Gumming Story , of New York. Mrs. : Scott's election was a victory for n the administration faction. A number - a ber of delegates refused to make the election unanimous on Mrs. Story's motion. i\ Rounds of applause greeted the an nouncement of the vote. Mrs. Story moved to make the election unani mous , but a chorus of voices refused join her. Mrs. Story bespoke for Mrs. Scott the support of all members. The total vote cast at the election $ was 873 , but the total legal vote for president was 864. The tellers are unable to rcpurt further on the election. Mrs. Donald McLean , the retiring president : general , was electd an hon orary president general. n Here Mrs. Scott the , president gen ji eral-elect was escorted to the platform jirr a corps of pages. The delegates rrei applauded vociferously. eics. Navigation Is Opened. Navigation on the south shore of Lake Superior was opened Friday by Q arrival of the steamer Charles O. 63 Jenkins at Ashland Wis. , The Jenkh is the first vessel to cross Lake i , , Superior this spring. There Is still considerable ice. Sugar is Advanced. m All grades of refined sugar were adCi tranced 10 cents 100 Frl- per pounds Frlo ] at New York. PATTEN RCNS AWAY. Small Bulls Left Stranded in ilia Wheat Pit. / That James A. Patten , hailed throughout the country as the "wheat king , " has withdrawn from the mar ket after disposing of his heavy hold ings of May and July wheat , was as sorted in many qaurtera in Chicago Friday. To this assertion was added the fact that prices have tumbled over 9 cents during the last week and that Patten has sought rest in New Mexico. Whether he has eliminated himself from the so-called "deal , " and if so , whether he came out with profit or loss , are questions which can be an swered only by Mr. Patten himself. Only those who read the dispatches from Colorado anent the discouraging reception met by a reporter who tried to interview the big speculator at Trin idad between trains , expressed the opinion that this answer seemed un likely to be forthcoming. The session of the board of trade was sensational Thursday. Bulls had expected that after the 6-cent decline of the two previous sessions a recovery would ensue. Taking the Patten view of a big crop shortage as correct and wheat intrinsically worth all that has been paid for it , in a purely speculative way the reaction \vas due. But the first quotations were a start ling disappointment to the bulls. From nearly every point came reports of normal shipments from Argentina , Australia and other foreign countries , which were said to be greater than usual at this time of the year. Bears filled the wheat pit in a dense mass and like an eruptive volcano poured forth a swollen stream of wheat. Longs liquidated all along the line and the execution of stop loss or ders added to the confusion. Frequently It was Impossible to make a sale within % of a cent of the price designated by the customer to his broker. The Patten vortex of other and more bullish days Into which the cereal might bo pured seemingly without af fecting its appetite was not in evidence. It was a tremendaus liquidating mar ket and.-Patten have been , - might buy ing secretly thr.ough others than his own house. From him there has come no word that he has changed his views as to the value of wheat. He called May wheat cheap at $1.29 , and if he still thinks so it is pointed out that the same investment. The same was said of July at $1.094These prices were approximately 9 cents under the high price of last Friday. DRYS WIN FIRST BATTIiE. Florida House Passes Bill for State Wide Prohibition. The first battle for prohibition in the Florida legislature Avas begun Thursday in the house with thpJiQtro- duction of a bill for a constitutional amendment for state AA'lde prohibition. Hours before the legislature coiu'enecl Tallahassee was crowded with men and women and children who had come to town by train , wagon or afoot. Senator McMullen made a plea for prohibition in behalf of the mothers of the country , which was of dramatic effect , for while the senator's OAvn mother lay dead In her home he had remained at Tallahassee at her wish , he said , to fight for prohibition. Senator - ator Zim rose from a sick bed to speak against the state wide bill. When late in the afternoon the senate at tempted to adjourn for luncheon the motion was defeated and women in the galleries supplied luncheon to the pro- liibition senators. Voting was begun shortly afterwards. The bill passed , 24 to 7. Upon announcement of the result the women in the galleries said : "Flor Ida is going dry. " Railway Counsel Arrested. Judge M. F. Jordan , of Spokane , Wash. , general counsel for the Great Northern railway , was arrested Thurs day on an indictment by the grand jury. He is charged with embezzle ment of funds from the railway com- pany wh'ile acting as its attorney. His bond for appearance was fixed at $20,000. Chauffeur Breaks an Ann. A five-passenger motor car ran off an embankment Thursday on Lookout mountain near Shattanooga , Tenn. , and the chauffeur suffered a broken arm and was severely bruised. The accident occurred while the machine t was -coming down the mountain at a JI good speed. ° , $00,000 Fire at Liberty , Tex. 'Fire in Liberty , Tex. , Thursday de stroyed the principal block in the town , entailing a loss of approximately $60,000. Philip Debatt , a pumper for y the Texas and New Orleans railroad , was seriously injured by falling from one of the burning buildings. Cave-In Kills Two. in A cave-in at the M. & B. zinc mine near Joplin , Mo. , killed two men. in jured two and entombed one. The men were timbering the roof of the c entry when the crash came. Three escaped - p . without fl caped injury. Hopes to See Man Hanged. Charles Leper , who is in the San aicl Quentin , Cal. , penitentiary awaiting cl execution on June 23 , requested that J , be allowed to see a man hanged before he himself is led to the gallows. Young Woman Killed by Train. ta While walking , on the track five ein miles from Frankfort , Ky.t Miss Mattie in Conway , 24 years of age , a telephone operator , was killed by an L. & N. cc eastbound train. > iX > * > * : > # # # C X * < > > * T $ * t * t ; * * * * * EWIXG FUNERAL FRIDAY. Former Sioux City Woman to Be Buried at West Point. The remains of Ivlrs. O. K lowing , formerly Miss fimma Mcl/iughlin. are expected to arrive In Wcfct Point from San Antonio , Tex. , on Friday morn ing and were interred thu same after noon under theiauspices of the Congre gational church. The death of Mrs. Ewing occurred at San Antonio from the effects of an operation performed npon her some two weeks ago and from which she did not rally. She was the eldest daughter of M. Mclaughlin , former county attorney" and the Nester tor of the local bar. She was brought up and educated in West Point and lived there with her prmnts until IKM marriage to O. F. ISwing , of Sioux City some years ago. MUST PAY TAXES. Transient Merchants Assessed Same as Regular Merchants. Assessor Donneker bore down upon a firm of "transient merchants" who were running a store in Madison for a few days and proposed that they be assessed. This they at first refused to do , but when Lonneker informed them that they Avould be assessed anyhow and fine attached for their refusal to list their property , they backed down and permitted the assessment. Here after "transient merchants" will stay out of Madison , at least during the month of April. NEBRASKA PASTOR DEAD. Rev. Mr. Ramsey , of Ainswortli , Meets a Sudden Sdimiions. Rev. Mr. Ramsey , of Ainsworth , fell dead from a chair on which he was sitting Thursday afternoon in front of the Ramsey restaurant. The deceased was for many years a well known and well beloved pastor in the Methodist church in Ainsworth , Rushville and other points in northwestern Ne braska and Wyoming. He served one term as county judge of Brown county and had a host of friends everywhere who will sincerely mourn his loss. He leaves a widow. He had been in fail ing health for a number of years. CATCHES ELOPING WIFE. G. W. Krabill , of Lincoln , Finds His. Spouse with Another Man. Eloping from Lincoln Monday even ing with a traveling salesman from Galesburg , 111. , and coming to Omaha , Mrs. G. W Krabill , whose husband is a stationery engineer in Lincoln , Avas follOAved by a private detective in the employ of her suspecting spouse , and , after being apprehended and placed in jail for a feAV hours , Avith the salesman , closed the affair Avith a kiss and for- giA-eness from Mr. Krabill , Avho hur ried to Omaha on the first train. ROLLERS UNDER E. F. WRIGHT. Young Englishman Pleads Guilty and Goes to Prison. Ernest Fred Wright , the young Eng- lihsman who passed several forged checks , last week , was captured at Ox ford last Sktui-day , brought to McCook , arraigned in district court -in special session , pleaded guilty and sentenced to state's prison for five years at hard labor. Sunday night he was taken to the penitentiary at Lincoln. His total forgeries only amounted to $94.95. KNOWN IN NEBRASKA. Howard Baskerville , Slain at Tabriz , Former Bellevue Student. Howard Baskerville. the young American who was slain at Tabriz , Persia ] , was formerly a student in Bellevue college , Nebraska , and a brother until recently was a pastor near Inman. The brother , who is well known in Norfolk , is now a stu dent at Princeton. The family lived in Spcarfish , S. D. , before moving to Minnesota. Justice of Peace Stoned. o As a result of ill feeling engendered at the recent municipal canvass and election at Chapman , a mob attacked the home of Justice of the Peace Alex ander Stout , broke every window of v the house , smashed the doors and wrecked part of the interior , badly v frightening but not injuring Stout and T. his family. 1 1a 1a Diplomas for Graduates. a Seventy-dne .members of the grad uating class of the state agricultural school received their "sheepskin" Fri day evening at the conclusion of the n commencement address. All but t three residents of this state , one com c ing from Iowa , one from Missouri and one from Louisiana. S Sn High Prices Increase Acreage. n Farmers are in the fields their small grain. Grain men say that there is more wheat being sown this N year than there has been for several k years past. The present high price is laol said to be the reason for it. olni ni Saloons at West Point. tr tl The usual number of saloonkeepers have applied for licenses to sell liquor si West Point the coming year. Stolen Horses Recovered. R. L. Cramer , of Fremont , has re m covered < the three horses which disappeared Sj peared last week while in charge of his Sjm farm hand , Krum , near Schuyler. in State Dismisses Liquor Case. The case of the state of Nebraska against George Hulshizer , of Wymore , charged with selling liquor without a TV license , has been dismissed by the of plaintiff. ofFJ FJ Farmers Arc Busy. The farmers of Dakota county are taking advantage of the spring weath and work in the fields is progress- th : rapidly. Several hundred acres of ly small grain have been sown and the lyWJ soil is being put in readiness for the WJwl corn crop. ' L MANY FATAL ACCIDENTS. Season Marked by Largo List of Acci dental Deaths. Seven boys , under the age of 18 years , have been killed in Nebraska during the last six weeks , either while handling firearms themselves , or at the hands of their boy companions. These seven youthful lives represent only a part of the toil paid during the spring hunting season in Nebraska Aside from the fatal accidents there have been a score or more of casual ties more or less serious in which life was not taken. Eyes , arms , hands and feet were targets for premature dis- . hargecl shotguns and the total num- ! or of serious accidents will probably mark this as the most disastrous hunt- ng season for youth the state has ever seen. seen.The The strange series of accidents be gan March 1 and continued until the latter part of the month , April so far being free from casualties in which youthful life is forfeited. Following is a list of the young nim- rods who have given up their lives in sport of hunting : Sylvester Cozad , of Freedom , 14 years old , shot dead by a boy com panion while playing ball. _ , - William Ham , of Curtis , 15 years old , shot himself while hunting ducks. Louis Xebola , of Leigh , 7 years old , shot by young brother Avhile the latter was returning from a hunt. Harry Taylor , of Beilwood , 15 years old , shot by discharge of gun in the hands of a boy companion while hunt ing. Hans Jensen , of Plain view , 16 years old , shot and instantly killed by boy companion who was shooting at ducks. John Coffey , of Nebraska City , 15 years old , shot himself while pulling gun from a boat. Elver Ralya , of Simeon , 13 years old , shot himself while taking his gun , out of a boat. FREED OF SHOOTING CHARGE. Peru Man Permitted to Go Result ol Hallowe'en Scrape. The preliminary examination of J. C. Chatelain , of Peru , charged Avith shooting at William Colby Avith intent to do great bodily harm and charged Avith shooting L. R. Dillon A\ith intent to Avound , Avas held before County Judge Parriott. The result Avas that the judge refused to hold Chatelain to the district court and discharged him. The case has been standing since NoArember last and greAv out of a Hal- loAA-e'en party on the first of that month. Chatelain is a justice of the peace at Peru and during the night of November 1 AA'as informed that some boys were turning over his sideAvalk in front of his store. He put his re volver in his pocket and took a lan tern and started down town. On his Avay doAvn he met a bunch of about thirty boys in the street and told them to t consider themselA'es under arrest. About this time Colby gave his lan tern a kick , AA-hich caused it almost to flicker out ; Avhon it flamed up Dillon , Avho Avas standing near , noticed that Chatelain Avas in the act of shooting Colby and struck him arm , AA-hich act saved Colby's life , as the bullet bare ly missed him. Dillon then grabbed Chatelain's arms in the struggle , Chatelain shot Dillon in the leg. Chat elain is an excitable person and AA'as evidently laboring under the impres sion that he Avas being mobbed. He did not knoAv Avho Dillon Avas AA'hen he fired the shot and felt A-ery badly about it , as he and Dillon Avere the best of friends. THEY LOOTED MANY TRAINS. Nebraska Robbers Stole on Wholesale Scale. The arrest on Wednesday at La- Platte of four men in a house in which was found stored $2,000 worth of goods alleged to have been stolen from freight trains in the vicinity of Oma ha , has been followed by a full con fession from the leader of the gang , which is said to implicate several others , including some prominent business firms , where their plunder has been sold. The men arrested are Louis and J. W. Adair , Alfred Bayes and J. Walters. 'They have been working on the Burlington near La- Platte and rented a house there , which was used as a storage warehouse. Louis Adair made the confession. Their plan was to board freight trains at South Omaha and throw off goods after the trains started. They have been operating since last October and are alleged to have stolen many hun dreds of dollars worth of goods of al most every variety. The police refuse to divulge the names of those impli cated ; by Adair's confession. SECTION HAND KILLED AT BLAIR Door Swings Cut from Passing Box Car. Crushing His Skull. Jesse Miller , a section hand on the Northwestern railroad at Blair , was killed about two miles south of Blair late Saturday afternoon. With others the section crow ho was standing s P near the track waiting for a freight train to pass and while looking toward the engine a car door swung out , a striking him on the head , crushing his s skull. i Grand Island Man Killed. v Fire destroyed the Miller & Ogor- v man furniture house at Grand Island d Saturday , and Frank Miller , senior member of the firm , was killed while r the basement of the building. a g Woman's 3IissIonary Society. The east Nebraska branch of the * ; Woman's Foreign Missionary society i , the United Brethren church closed two days' session at Blue Springs Friday evening. Injured in Runaway. n E J. C. Ready , a farmer , living about to hree miles south of Dickens , was bad- p injured in a ruuaAA-ay Saturday. He „ vas driving near the railroad tracks vhen his team became frightened at Burlington freight trair DENOUNCES WHEAT DEAL. Predicts Patten's- Secretary Wilson Corner Will "Go to Smash. James Wilson. Secretary of Asriru - A Liu tnro. aiM i" answer to James tno rimrcvs that the figures or Agriculture concerning - cerning tHe wheat supply were iuic curate and un trustworthy : "Our figures are cor rect. That fellow- Iii Chicago is en- -aged in a scheme-- con to rob the 's umer and to wheat in America. If sh 01 t c at son is cororect there is no fam me * * all , but only an artificial gendered by Mr. Patten for spef" purposes. 'Also , if Secretary Alison is ' will 'Oo correct. Mr. Patten's deal smash soon. . . . " insists" The Secretary of Agriculture ' report to the effect that the government's 143,000,000 bash- < * fect that there were \ els of reserve wheat in the farmers hands on March 1 was strictly correct where the wheat is. and that he knows from. "We do not get our information postmasters ! " exclaimed Secretary Wilson angrily when the Patten state ment was shown him. "We get it from- farmers who are reliable , conscientious- men. We have been perfecting our sys tem for gathering information for the last twelve years , and it is as correct and thorough as it is possible to get To corner the wheat market success fully nowadays you have to keep buy ing and buying and buying. Finally the time comes when you can't buy any more , and then the smash comes. ' " 213-YEAR SECRETS OUT. Hector of Rich Trinity , Xevr YorlCj , Denies Property Harbors Vice. Asserting that Trinity is the rich church o the poor people , Revi Dr. Will iam T. Manning , the rector of that New- York church , Sunday morning made re ply to the criticisms which in the last few months have been made against it , . defended every action of the vestry , de nied that any reason exists for the at tacks , and outlined a policy less conservative vative than the one that has been fol- loAAed. It Avas the first time in 213 years , since the parish AA-as founded , that Trin ity has ever broken silence in regard to- its management and come out with ai * Sh statement in its own defense. Dr. Man % u , ning preached for an hour and a quarter , , whereas his usual Sunday morning ser - mons require about eighteen minutes for delivery. There Avere 1.200-persons pres ent , including five of the vestry and some- parishioners from St. John's Chapel , , which has been the cause of the contro versy. The average Sunday morning au dience at Trinity is 100. Dr. Manning : did not divulge what disposition the cor poration AA'OUIU make of St. John's Chap el , but he surprised his hearers by an nouncing that it is the intention tp build a new church in that location. "The present situation , " said Dr. Manning , "is- not an ordinary one , and it is one which demands a plain and public statement from the rector of the parish. Very- many of the statements which have been made as to the condition of the dwelling- house property owned by Trinity parish are grossly untrue. Pictures Lave many times been published , both in magazines-- and newspapers , with the statement that the Avretched tenements shown in them- jvere the property of Trinity parish , when , , in fact , neither the houses shown nor the- land on which these stood were owned by the' parish , or in any way connected Avith , it. ] Certain papers have even published pictures implying that our property is * the home of drunkenness and vice and disorder. " MAJTY DIE IN BURN12TG HOTEL. Six Bodies Fonnd , Others Still in tf Rnins of San Francisco Building. Six bodies recovered and probably eight or ten others buried in the ruins : six injured , one fatally , and property loss of $125,000 are the results of an early morn ing fire that destroyed the St. George IIo- tel , .a lodging-house for laborers , and- eight other small buildings in San Fran cisco. The bodies taken to the morgue- were so charred that identification was- impossible. The hotel was a three-story fr-ame building and burned so rapialy that none of the 200 occupants had time to dress , and many escaped by jumping : to the roof of an adjoining workship. Scores clambered dovrn the ladders of the- firemen and the fire escapes , and four jumped to safety into the net held br the- fire fighters. Of the regular boarders- thirty are unaccounted for , but it is be lieved that many of them escaped in the- confusion and have neglected to report their safety. SMUGGLERS NOW OFFER S260,00f > Loeb Rejects Second Proposal to. Stop the Customs Prosecution. i "Call off the investigation ' of recent * ' smuggling and we will pay the United. * si States government $200,000. " This of f fer , sent through intermediaries in such manner that it cannot be traced to its- source , was made the other day to Will iam Loeb Jr. , collector of the port of fcew York. R came from the smugglers , who tried to bring into the United States , without paying duty , many thousands of dollars' worth of Paris lace.1 gowns and . w. km the few past weeks. Mr Loeb- - refused the offer , just as he had refuse * an offer of $100,000 made by the glers several days ago. It indicated smug in his mind that the smuggling syndicate- was desperate and that only a smaij tion , perhaps , of their operations been uncovered. Jilted Girl Slays Actor. \ 01 Cl ° Sely ° D the ? ! the ! announce L1 approaching marriage $ of Earl P. Adams , actor and stage dfrector Miss Elizabeth * Ba-lev Mi * r Brown , a well-known youns 1 whom Adams had been prevToully 'en- and killed him i f * < '