. . _ ' - _ . . . ' . . . . . . . rT' J" " " - = ' = > < - = - - " ' = - ,1 - - . . , . - ' ' : ; .4 : . : ; . . : - . * * * ( - i1" I. - . _ THE VALEHTIHE DEMDGRA'f - VALENTINE , NEB. I . . . . ' : t. : . ) [ . RICE - - - - Publisher. . . . l 1 . : : ; CUBA FEAKS A CRISIS 9 r . . ' ' t FRAUGHT ; ITNANCIAIi AFFAIRS r . , r . WITH 3IUCH ANXIETY. . " * , . ' : - One of President's First Acts Was to . . " ' . ' . , Cancel Magoon's Proposal for Loan ' . : . ' . ' of $15,000,00o-Gusincss Checked in . ' . , f : . , : Island as Result of Shortage. s - . - I . P . . Financial problems constitute the : gravest feature of anxiety on the part r "of _ the Cuban government , and with the protracted delay in the presenta . tion of the budget for the coming year the general feeling of uncertain- ' ty and lack of confidence becomes ac centuated. How the government , in E view of its enormously increasing ex ' . penses due in great measure to the ° - cost of equipment and pay of the new military the cost of the national legis- lature and increased number of civil employes arising from political press- ; ure for offices will meet its obligations out of the ordinary sources of reve- . nue is asked on all sides. While there is no doubt that Presi- dent Gomez is fully alive to the seri- . . - .ousness of the situation and is doing everything in his power to effect re- I : ductions in the cost of all departments , It is feared that political exigencies will compel him to refrain in insisting upon retrenchment on the scale that , , Is believed to be absolutely necessary. Gov. Magoon's budget for the cur- f rent fiscal year ending on June 30 was t $24,250,000 , and the estimate of reve- nue a little more than $27,000,000. Careful estimates of the revenues for the coining year indicate a total of probably not more than $24,000 , ex- clusive of the taxes available for the ; , payment of the interest and sinking - fund : of the $35,000,000 loan for the ' , P payment of the army of the revolu- i tion. \ The sources of revenue applica- - ble to this purpose always have been and continue to be ample , with a con- siderable surplus. Estimates of the "expenses of the government for the coming yeHr place the total at not less ° # than $30,000,000 , and , by some author- 'ities as high as $40,000,000 , indicating - under the most favorable conditions a . very serious deficit. I President Gomez is opposed to bur- dening the country with an additional issue of bonds and one of his first acts - - Tvas to decide against the issue of the Joan of $15",000,000 authorized by Gov. lagoon to meet the cost of the con- { tracts for the sewering and paying of . Havana : and the waterworks of Cien- fuegoes. . ' , . - , f - . EXGIXE AXD CARS JX RIVER. t l Ore Train Wrecked : on Montana Cen - tral Road. ATI ore train on the Montana Cen- ' tral division of the Great Northern - - was wrecked Sunday at a point be- tween Helena and Great Falls , Mont : , and eighteen cars of ore were precipi- . tated into the Missouri river. Brake- man Rogers was killed and Engineer Siebeii seriously injured. Three other members of the train crew were more or less seriously hurt. . At the place of the accident the Mis : . . souri river runs beside the track. The river has been rising for the past few days and softened the roadbed. There "were no visible signs of weakening , but when the train struck the soft . ; : _ . . . . . place in the road bed the engine plunged into the river , taking eighteen - cars after it. The engine now lies at the bottom of the river bed , complete- ly submerged , and the cars are part- _ ly covered. Following closely behind " . - the freight was the regular passenger train from Helena , but it was stopped in time to prevent an accident. , - ! In Memory of Meredith. S A service in memonry of George ( ' JMereditlv : : the novelist , was held in Westminster Abbey , London , Satur- day and was attended by a large gath- ering of persons prominent in diplo- . matice , literary , political and art cir- cles. Ambassador Reid represented -the United States. . , Murdered Her Mother . . Mrs. Hattie Pope has been found . . , : , < - - , guilty of the murder of her mother , ii Irs. Mary King , at Monroeville : , Ala. , i . on March : 4 last , and was sentenced to , . .serve ninety-nine years in the peni- s < . tentiary. Mrs. Pope broke down when fthe verdict was announced. - - , - ' ; - - Sioux City Live Stock Market. " : ' . Saturday's quotations on the Sioux ; . ; City live stock market follow : Top . . . , . ; : -beeves , $6.05. Top hogs , $7.15. . d _ : i ; ; Artist Pleads Guilty. P . . ' - , . . . . Henry Weidenbach , the artist who . " " . : . fobbed a number of homes in Cincin . . . . ' . ; - - : , . e - - ' ; . . / . . nati , 0 . , where . he was employed to j - . ' ' -work , pleaded guilty to larceny Satur- < - _ day and was sentenced to four years I in the penitentiary. Weidenbach is i * . known the country over as a repairer ! G < ' " arrested Ic .of old" paintings. He was : I - St. Louis. . : . 1 ; ir i r- ti . . ; . , . . . _ _ . - 1 - - - - - . , . - - . . . . . . . . . , . , ; . V - + < : : : - . ' ; ' ' , . . _ , - . . ' " . ' , . : ; , w - , - HELMS IS A WITNESS. " "I Frisco Officer Takes Stand in Calhoiin I . " * 1.rr1 ? L * . Patrick Calhoun's tr 5-i at San Fran- cisco on a bribery charge ended the most important week of its 1 five months' session Friday with the ad- journment of court. Rudolph Spreckels/.who financed the prosecution , and Detective John Helms alternated as witnesses Friday , and it was evident that a crisis in the case had been reached. Interest was sus tained until a late hour in the after- noon , when Assistant District Attorney Heney , ignoring two restraining orders issued by a court of similar jurisdic tion , announced that he would ask Judge Lawlor's permission to open sealed packages seized in the raid upon the offices of William M. : Abbott , gen- eral counsel for the United railroads , and alleged to contain documents stol- en from the office of William J. Burns , head of the prosecution's corps of spe- cial detectives. Arguments upon this issue were deferred until Monday , when the prosecution will attempt to support the charges made by Detec- tive Helms against Abbott , under whose direction he claims to have op erated. One of the lines of probable inquiry was indicated when Helms , after testi- fying that he knew Luther Brown , for- mer partner of Earl Rogers , said : "Abbott and Brown met me at the steamer landing on the day I left the city , after quitting the service of the United railroads Abbott asked me what I knew about the dynamiting. "What dynamiting , inquired Heney. "The dynamiting of Gallagher's home , " said Helms , referring to the blowing up in Oakland last spring of the home of former Supervisor James i L. Gallagher. Helms declared several offers had been made to prevent his appearance as a witness in the Calhoun trial. Since his arrival in this city , he declared , a plot had been laid in the office of W. H. Metzon , a prominent attorney , to trap him in a conversation over the telephone. The testimony followed an inquiry , by Mr. Rogers , who asked the witness if he knew that a graphophone had 'been attached to the telephone while he was speaking from the other end of the line. A dramatic outburst occurred when Helms charged that Abbott had once expressed to him a wish that someone , would shoot Heney , and that Stanley ! congratulated him on his performance in following Burns. Stanley Moore : arose in his place at the counsel table and in a voice trem- bling with anger told Helms that he was "lying like a dog and perjuring himself. " He then stepped to his feet and defied the attorney to make good his charge. - . OVER 60.000 CEASE WORK. : Standard Oil Employes Pay Tribute to Rogers. The funeral of Henry H. Rogers , president of the Amalgamated Copper I company and active head of the Standard Oil company , Friday at New York brought together many men prominent in the business and financial districts of this city. Although the attendance at the services in the Church of the Messiah : at 10 a. m. : was limited to intimate business associates and personal friends , these included so many of the leaders of the New York business and financial world that their absence from their usual activi- ties had a notable effect upon the busi- ness of the financial district. Through- out the country wherever the Standard Oil company had a station or a branch there was a pause during the hours of the funeral to mark the passing of the first vice president of the company and one of the men who had helped ma- terially to make it a great organization. Orders had been issued .that all opera- tions of the company cease between 10 and 12 o'clock , and these applied to every one of the 67,000 employes- a condition which had not existed in the giant corporation since its founda- tion more than thirty-five years ago. PARIS STRIKE : COLLAPSES. General Federation Decides to End the Struggle. Following the vote of the builders and masons Friday afternoon at Paris favoring a return to work , the federal committe of the General Federation of Labor decided officially to announce the end of the strike. The members of the committee agreed that the present movement was hopeless and in bitter words they attributed the failureto the leaders and the agitators , especially M. : Guer- ard , secretry of the railroad employes , and M. : Pataud , secretary of the elec- tricians , who they declare had not ful filled their promises to procure effect- ive collaboration at the psychological moment. , Meredith's Body Cremated. The body of George Meredith : , the English novelist , who - died May IS , was cremated at Dorking Friday at London in the pr ' . ence of a few mem- bers of his family. There was no re- ligious service. The ashes were de ' posited in a black metal urn and tak- en back to Mr. : Meredith's house in Dorking for interment. Tries to Kill Wife ; Ends Own Life. Frank Slack , a business man and real estate agent Middletown : , Pa. , shot and killed . himself at his home Thursday after attempting to kill his wife. . _ Horse's Kick : Kills Boy. Elmer Goldie Lee , aged 16 , of Chi- cago , . who -went to Pontiac , Ill. , to spend his summer vacation , was killed Thursday morning by being kicked by a horse. _ ' , - . - . . . , , , , - - - - - - - - - . . - FACE DEATH IN FIRE. Many Persons Injured in a Chicago Blaze. I . Twenty ] or more persons were In- jured , some of them seriously , by dropping from . second-story . . . : : . windows . , in a flr& - starting from a gas explo- sion. -which . destroyed the Toledo . . . . flats . , - - - - - - - - - - - Sixty-fifth street and Minerva avenue , at Chicago Thursday. The first explosion occurred in the basement and was followed by others in various partn of the building. Flames burst forth in several quarters and ; i halls and stairways became choked with flames and smoke. Those in the building were thrown into a panic. Mrs. E. C. Updegraff , who occupied a flat on the second floor , rushed to a window holding her 4-year-old baby in her arms. Her screams attracted a crowd , who cried to her to thro\\ the child and it would be caught. Mrs Updegraff , leaning far out of the win- dow , dropped her boy , who fell safely into a dozen upstretched arms. Mrs. Updegraff herself then climbed out and after hanging to the ledge dropped. She was seriously injured and taken to a hospital. Mrs. A. Ellmore , a third floor ten- ant , also was injured by jumping from a second-story window. She lived on the third floor , but escaped to the sec- ond , where further progress was cut off by ilamo.s and smoke. From this floor she jumped and was badly hurt. Mrs. : C. Ballard , said to be deaf and dumb , was in her flat on the fourth floor when the fire broke out. She was assisted to safety by other occupants. John Miller , the janitor , who was in the basement : , was severely burned " by the first explosion and was taken to a hospital. Mrs. : : Catherine Garmody escaped through the hall and "was severely burned. She and an eldely woman , whose name could not be learned and who from second-st win- jumped a second-story - dow were tt.ken to hospitals. Among those who escaped was a Mrs. Horn , who "rushed into the street ca ' rying her parrot , and then she real- ized that she had forgotten her moth- er , 89 years old. Mrs. Hern rushed back into the flames , but fainted be- fore she had gone far. Meanwhile her , mother had reached the lower floor and both women were rescued by a - . . neighbor. - - . The explosions which followed that in the basement blew out nearly every window in the building , and within half an hour of the first explosion the entire building was a mass of flames. Firemen were unable to check the fire and some of them narrowly es caped when two of the walls fell. CRIME EPIDEMIC IX PITTSBURG. Three Persons : : End Lives ; , and a Negro Tries to Kill Woman. . " , * - Three persons succeeded in taking their lives , two made failures and a colored man- attempted to kill a wom- an companion by shooting in Pittsburg early Thursday. George Phillips , of Greenburg , Pa. , took cabolic acid and then threw him- self in front of a passenger train. The bodies of two men were taken from the river , both , it is ' said , having . committed suicide. - Ethel Atkins , a negress , of Cleve- land , was shot and seriously wounded by Walter Jones , also of Cleveland. The couple arrived here Wednesday. Mrs. : Tessie Gallager , 22 years old , took cabolic acid. Her condition is critical. Harry Quillan , a bridegroom of twenty-four hours , attempted suicide by drinking lye and then jumping in to the river. He was hauled out. NEW ORGANIZATION FORMED. Union Society of Ch'UVar Incorpo rated in New York. The Union Society of the Civil War , with its principal office in New York , , was incorporated Thursday "to pepetu- ate the memroy of those loyal officials who outside the military and naval services of the United States rendered invaluable aid and assistance to the , national government and union cause during the civil war ; to promote fel- lowship among them and their de- scendants , encourage historical re- search in relation to the civil war pe- riod and preserve records of individ- ual services of loyal officials , docu- ments , relics and landmarks. " . / The directors include Frederick W. Stewart , Montrose : , N. Y. , and Hanni. bal E. Hamlin , of Ellsworth , Me. FOUR ROADS FINED $9,700. Plead Guilty to Law Violation in ' St Louis Federal ! : ourt. Four railroads upon pleading guilty were fined $9,700 by Judge Dyer in the United States district court at St Louis Thursday for violation of the In- terstate commerce law providing that cattle be taken from cars every twen- ty-eight hours and fed. The railroads fined were the St Louis , Iron Mountain and Southern railroad , $1,300 on thirteen founts ; the Terminal Railroad association , $7,600 on seventy-six counts ; the Wabash railroad , $100 on one count , and the Missouri Pacific , $700 on seven counts Postal Cashier Embezzler ? William S. Myer , assistant cashier of th ? < postoffice at Baltimore , Md. , was arrested charged with the embezzle- ment of $1,400. He had been an em- ploye at the postoffice since 1884. Helen Cortelyou Dead. Helen Cortelyou , the 9-year-old daughter of George B. . Cortelyou , , for- mer secretary of the treasury , died Wednesday night at the Cortelyou l home , . Huntingtcn . ! , L. . I. , of the grip - 539" - . - . . . . . - . - . v . t . - . : : . Y . . . J.J .yN4a. i t'.0. . . sIJ.O1 + ! ; ' I ' oe. - * ' Y . t , I 1S ftEBRASKA STATE r 4 EWS i ) : . . ' J. J" : . . . . _ . _ . . . . . . . . : . . . . s _ 1. - . _ .d..u. . . _ . . _ A:1NNf. . . - . . . . . _ t. + r. K.- ; ; . ; . . . ; . : + " ; .r ; + . .l'i" . . H I . . - CAIRO BAXK ROBBED. i : Robbers Blow Open Safe and Obtain Over $5,000. Robbers blew the safe and the bank building of the Cairo State bank at Cairo , sixteen miles north of Grand Island , to pieces with three different charges and secured between $5,000 and $6,000 Tuesday night. How the robbers came or whither they went is a mystery. Sheriff Dunkel left with a party of armed men in automobiles ; early Wednesday morning. Local authorities have been hunting up what clues were offered but with no results. One suspect is in jail , his name being O. A. Anderson , but there is nothing directly to connect him with the crime. A stranger who has been stopping at the Koehler for the past few days with a small flexible grip which he carried almost constantly , . disappeared with it Tuesday night and efforts are being made to trace him. The bankers' association , in which the bank had $10,000 burglar insur- ance , will offer a reward of $50 , and the Cairo bank will increase this by at least $250. Some of the money was in new crisp $20 silver certificates and $800 in gold. I J GETS LIFE TERM. Jury at Alma Convicts Ben Hedden- dorf of Killing : W. C. Dillon. Benjamin Heddendorf , the 18-year- old boy who shot and killed W. C. Dil- lon in his cabin near Stamburg March : 19 , was found guilty of murder in the , first degree and sentenced to life im- prisonment by a jury in district court at Alma Wednesday. Ths case went to the jury at 6 o'clock Tuesday evening and the ver- dict was returned into court at 4 o'clock Thursday morning. The case was a sensational one , eighteen witnesses being examined for the state and twenty for the defense. Dillon was shot from the window of the hut in which he lived , while he was eating supper. The body was found afterward by neighbors. Blood- , hounds followed a trail which result- ed in the arrest of Heddendorf and George Crites , aged 16 years. Crites afterward : told a story implicating Heddendorf as the one who fired the shot. Crites is also in custody. FOUR SALOONS IN SEWARD. Council Decides on that Number and Aims to Stop Scorching. The city council of Seward has passed an ordinance conforming to the new state law relating to the li- censing of saloons and closing at 8 o'clock. Also limiting the number of saloons in Seward in the future to four. An ordinance was also passed regu- lating the speed and handling of auto- mobles within the city limits the speed limit being fixed at eight miles an hour , and providing heavy penal- ties for the violation of the same. There are several reckless drivers of machines in Seward and the wonder is that there has not been an accident. A resolution was also passed closing the pool rooms at 10 instead of 10:30 : o'clock , as at present. - - WATER POWER AXD ELECTRIC- Surveyors in the Field : Near Valentine . on Improvement Work. W. K. Palmer , an engineer of Kan- sas City , arrived at Valentine Wednes- day with assistants and camp equip- ment , organized a surveying party and is now engaged in working out details for a water power from the Niobrara river owned by C. H. Cornell. It is understood he will have an- other party in the field within a few days locating a route for an electric railways , starting at Valentine and ending somewhere on the Dallas branch of the Northwestern , thus con- necting those two branches. From these surveys it will be determined whether or not securities can be mar- keted for development of the water power and constructing and operating an interurban. - HAD A "GOOD TIME. " Salesman for Omaha Finn Ackmvl- : edges lie is an Embezzler. Stephen Schmidt , city salesman for a large Omaha jobbing firm , walked into the police station Thursday and demanded that he be locked up for embezzling from his employer. He told the desk sergeant the amount might reach $2,000. His employers say this is the first time they knew of Schmidt's peculations. Schmidt says he spent the money on a "good time. " He was locked up and his accounts are being investigated. Schmidt is 45 years of age and has a family. Must Face Facie : Sam. Deputy United States Marshal : SIm- mons arrested J. B. Kennedy and Fletcher Taylor at Holdredge Wednes- day. Kennedy , it is alleged , shot up a mail box several months ago. Taylor is charged with sending obscene matter through the mails. Both prisoners were taken to Hastings. Afraid of Neighbors. Walla Roth farmer about , , a - living ' ten miles south of Dickens' , has been adjudged insane and taken to Hast- ings. He had been under the impres- sion for several days that neighbors would. . shoot .him and he constantly , carried a gun. It is believed his con- dition will improve in a few days. No Deaths from Tornado. Delayed reports from the tornado swept section of southern Nebraska shows there were no fatalities and only two serious cases of injury. Some stock was killstl arxi : one house and a number of outbuildings were wrecked. , Gibbon to Celebrate. Gibbon will celebrate the Fourth this year and is looking for challenges from neighboring baseball teams for match games on that day. The largest amount of cash ever raised there for a celebration was raised recently. - . . . - - - " " . - - - - - . ' - . . - - - - - - . : : - - - - . - - - - - - . . , - - - - - - ' * " + . . . . . . . . . . . ; ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C _ . . .H. . . _ . 1' . . . 1 . . . . . . " LOW C03IBIXATIOX : RATES. . . . - ' ; 0- Western . . Railroads Probably Will Re duce Fare to Chica& That the western railrc.-Js will soon announce a combination passenger rate to New York and other eastern points on the basis of a $15 round trip I fare to Chicago from Missouri river points is the belief of W. H. Rowland , of Omaha , traveling passenger agent for the Pennsylvania lines. The regular round trip rate to Chi- cago from Omaha is now $20.50 , and a corresponding rate is charged from all Missouri river points. It is pro- posed to cut this fare to $15 on busi- ness destined for extreme eastern points. It is not only declared that th/ roads are planning to make this vora * bition rate from Missouri river poinia , but that they will put these tickets ca : sale at cities farther west , the reduc tion , however , to be in effect only eoat of ' the Missouri river. According to Mr. Rowland , the many conventions being held in the west this year are turning the course of travel in that direction and tfco roads leading east are preparing to of - fer inducements which will take some of the traffic eastward. .The Pennsyl- vania lines have announced special rates from Chicago to New York and other eastern points , and it is under- stood other roads are doing the same. The western roads , it is said , are ready to co-operate with these eastern lines in making low rates from the middle west. LAND OWNERS FAVOR DRAIXAGB Neinaha River Commission Makes Progress in Its Work. The committee selected at the drain- age meeting in Tecumseh : a-week ago -select the land owners along the Namaha river bottoms in Johnson county has put in a good , " ek's work. The reports are most encouraging. Al - most without exception the commit- tee finds the land owners for the movement to go ahead that they may find relief from the high waters which I have been destroying crops with great frequency. : It is believed by most people who have given this proposition more than passing thought that if it is possible to push the drainage pro- ject to completion it will mean much to the county in general and to the owners of bottom lands particular. . If it is possible to prevent the Nema- ha bottom from overflowing and ex- pert opinion is to the effect that it is , a large per cent of the very richest farm lands in the county will be re- chimed. The possibilities in the way of crop production on these rich lands , with the water kept off the fields , is almost incomprehensible. The values of these lands would double "the moment it was demonstrated that the water is con- trolled , and the outlay to secure the re- sult in proper drainage would amount to but little , if the figures of experi- enced men can be counted REV7 3IR. CROFTS DEAD. Neligh Congrcgjitionul Pastor Expires _ at Advanced Age. Rev. G. W. Crofts , D. D. , pastor of the Congregational church at West Point , died Monday at the parsonage in that city at an advanced age. His health had bee"n failing for some time , but his demise occurred quite unex- pectedly , his friends and the congrega- tion looking forward to his complete recovery on the advent of warm weather. The doctor went to West Point two years ago from Beatrice , and from the day of his arrival estab- lished himself firmly in the esteem of the community. He was a man of profound learning and deep piety and possessed the happy faculty of mak- ing friends everywhere by his cordiaf and unaffected manner and his ChrIs- tian life. He leaves an aged widow and a married daughter. The remains will be taken east for interment. SOLD FEED AND DRINK : , TOO. Farmer Gives Up 'Name of Man Who . Sold Him Liquor. Frank Riens , a German farmer , who was arrested Saturday night at Boat- rice , informed the police after he had been fined $25 and costs that he had purchased liquor of Henry Frerichs , who operates a feed barn at Beatrice. The : officers visited Frerichs' place' and searched the premises. They found a barrel of pint bottles of whisky and two quarts of beer. A warrant was sworn out . for Frerichs' arrest , charg- him Avith ing selling liquor without a license. Riens' fine was remitted after he told the officers who sold him the liquor. Nebraska Boy Special Agent. Louis K. Sunderlin , a former Teka- mah boy , has been appointed by the United States government as special land agent to investigate land frauds in the state of Oregon at a salary of I $2,280 per annum. He has been lo- cated at Portland , Ore.1r. . Sunder- lin prepared for college in the Teka- mah public schools. - Norfolk Drouth Ends. After two weeks' drouth six Norfolk saloons reopened Monday morning , having secured licenses at a stormy council meeting. Under the ordinance seven saloons can operate but the council could not agree as to the sev- enth man. Stanton Child Loses an Eye. While playing in the yard with his older brother , Ronald , the youngest son of . Prof. and Mrs. Welch , of Stan- ton , had the misfortune to injure one of his eyes to such an extent that it will have to be removed. The child ren were playing with a broom handle one end of which was pointed. In trying . to get the stick away from his older brother'he forced the. sharp end into his own eye , bursting the eyeball- Ronald is 16 months old. ' - , - " - - ' > ' - _ . - - - - - . . . : - - . . . - _ . . ; ; . ; : : - - : . . . - - - - _ . _ . _ - - - . . . . - - . . . - . ' . . . . _ 1 8 TO m-1EARS IS , / A SENTENCE fOR HAINS 'r , S t i Captain Convicted of Killing W.B " _ / Annis Gets Indeterminate . _ , Term in Prison. ; j . I - I t JUDGE : DENIES A NEW OSIAL : 1 Defendant Seems Overcome - bJ : ' and , Court's Words and Father Brother Deeply Affected. ' - . s Capt. Peter C. : Hains , Jr. , U. S. A. , convicted of manslaughter in the . first William E. Annis degree for killing r Yacht Club last Au at the Bayside sentenced Monday by Justice . gust , was .I' ' ' ' ' In Court Garretson in the Supreme Flushing , L. I . . to an indeterminate sentence of not less than eight years , nor more than sixteen years , a hard labor in State's prison , the de counsel for - John F. McIntyre , fendant , made the usual motion for a . . new trial on the ground that the ver dict was against the weight of evi dence and also contrary to law. Jus tice Garretson denied these motions. Mr. Mclntyre then raised the point oE jurisdiction of the Supreme Court over the defendant , contending that he- had never been released from jurisdiction I of the federal government and there- I fore the case was not properly bc. . ! orri. > . _ - the court. Mr. Mclntyre also stated that Dr. Brush , who had been an ex pert witness for the defense , had ex- amined Capt. Hains since he was con- victed and found him insane. Justice Garretson said there was no evidence to that effect before the court and he declined to consider the motion in re- gard to jurisdiction. The court clerk then instructed Capt. Hains to come to the bar and proceed- ed to ask him the formal questions put to a man about to be sentenced. The prisoner seemed dazed and seemed to- have some difficulty in understanding the questions. Lawyers Mclntyre and1 Young of the defense stood on either side of Capt. Hains and assisted him in : answering the questions of the court v clerk. " Referring to - the nature of the case ' . . . . , the court said that Capt. Hains had been indicted for murder in the first degree , the severest crime against so- ciety , and , although there had been a great deal of sympathy injected into the case , the law did not allow a man to punish another for wrong' he had suffered or to wreak vengeance on the man who had wronged him. After Justice Garretson had imposed the sentence Capt. Hains sat down and dropped his head on the table before him. He seemed overcome with emo tion for a few moments , but soon re- covered himself and sat upright , star- . . . , ing at the court. Gen. Hains , the de- fendant's father , and Maj. John Pow- / ers Hains , who were in court , display- ; ed much emotion. Immediately after sentence the prisoner's lawyers asked for a stay of sentence for a few days to take an appeal. Justice Garretson said the case would take the usual course , and gave the defense twenty- four hours in which to file an appeal. PITCHER IN RAGE KILLS MOTHER. Charles Rapp of South Bend Stabs. Himself to 'Death After Crime. Charles Rapp , aged 32 years , well known as a former pitcher of the old South Bend Green Stockings , a crack independent base ball club , Saturday evening murdered his mother with a. hammer and butcher knife and then- committed suicide with the same knife , death occurring at the county jail in. South Bend , Ind. , where he was taken : by the police. The murder was most revolting and brutal , and beyond a. _ statement made by Rapp just before his death , that he intended "to get the whole family , " there is no explanation for the crime. Until Rapp fell a vic tim to the liquor habit he was one of the most popular young men in the- ' city. POSSE E2LLS : A MURDERER. lUcn "Who Pnrxueife ; Slayer In. . . South Dakota Shot Him Down. The body of Mrs. William L. Lan sing was found in the cellar of her- home in Presho , S. D. , the other night with her head crushed bJ.a hammer. The husband was missing and a posse- began a search. After scouring tbe- country all night the men found h4m twenty-two miles north of Presho , in a . claim shack on the Brule reservation. Lansing showed fight and was shot through the chest. He died in a few hours. Lansing had threatened his. wife and her brother because of di vorce proceedings which she had start- ed. He started north at dark after failing in an attempt to kill his three- children. P r BIG DITCH TO BET CO CONSTRUCTED. Will Drain Big : Area of Farm Land- . In Hntchinson County , S. D. A dredging company has com menced the work of constructing an immense drainage ditch in Hutchin- \ soa. County , South Dakota , southwest of Sioux Falls. The ditch will drain. _ It a large area of valuable farm land ' " , which is . now out of commission be- cause of being flooded , and will en- tirely remove a lake covering 1,555- acres of ground , which also will be re . claimed and made to produce crops * during future seasons. : - . - - . . . - . . . - - - -