' . - - -Z'- : . . _ _ . _ . - . Z'.t . . ' .t . , . . .j.l. . , " ' . . . . . . : . . , . . i , - El1 . . : ' The Yalentine Democrat ] " - . f' . . . . . . . . - I' . VALBNTIX , NEB. ' , . . " _ _ _ j . J . . i . . f.r. Publisher ; M. RICE , - - - - ii : . , . * . " . ' r I1 UP SHAKEN t ; MESSINA L T - . . . _ . 4 . . . , . , , ' I J. . 'it . . ; . . . ' > 'I 1 . ) . , SEVERE EARTHQUAKE FELT IN t . . TIIE STRICKEN : CITY. ' . t ' \ I . . l - I " , . . Walls of Old Ruins Razed-Village < . . 1- . ! > - : * for a l"cwlomcnts is Encased in a ] . , . Cloud of Dust-So Far as Known l 1 k . Only T\vo Persons Meet Death. i / : Messina experienced two terrific i 1i' ! I I r ' rarthquakes : at about 7 o'clock : Thurs- I day morning , which were accompa- .1 1 ' II i ' : nied by roaring sounds and are said 1 'j 1 'J 'I . ; to have had a stronger and more un- Un- I 1 dulatory movement than the earth- i I \ j , quake of last December , which de ! ; t stroyed Messina , Reggio and otiier I I 11 j cities , laid waste many villages in Cal- ' , : abria and killed 200,000 people. 1 i The walls of the old ruins were I. 1 ; 1 i d + : I thrown to the ground and Messina \ II , ' was for a few minutes obscured in a i ( ! E J cloud of dust. The casualties were i 1 II i , ! ' n few , and the only persons killed so far ' . ti I 1 I ! I ' " . . as is known were a young woman and ! ! , ; . I I . her infant. The woman had gone to ' 1 I \l \ "j n f Messina only a few days ago and had I i' ' El r ' settled in rooms which the great ( J ! I i earthquake had left comparatively ' ; ' undamaged. She was standing at the l' ' ' : . : door when the shock occurred , and " . Y rushed inside to save her child. Be- ill , I i ; ,1 , fore she could escape from the room J ) ) ' , t the 'second shock threw down the I I I I. i I I ! I I . . . walls burying both mother and child i " ' , under the debris. Soldiers and en- ! j I gineers , who rushed to the rescue , f I ' I \ E ; heard the voice of the woman calling I ! t ! for help , and they worked over her II i 'I ' t several hours , when they found the ' ' H mother dead , with her child in her I' 'I U arms. Several persons were struck "Ii I F' ' by detached stones , but so far . as is : I Ij , known no one was fatally injured. \j \ I. i i \ } J' I ! The first shock was followed quick- t Ij ! II ly with a second and people fled pell c mell to the American quarter , which 1\1 \ I they seemed to feel was their safest I place of refuge. So great was the , j I rush to the American huts that the au- 1 I , 1 thorities were unable to check the in- , J . , 'I E vasion , and as a consequence these structures , which were designed for - the most needy of the populace , were taken possession of by the first corn ers. The soldiers , however , drew a cordon around this quarter and a ' . . guard was mounted at the bridge lead- ing to it. Many of the panic stricken j people vyere driven off and orders were - issued that no one should be permit- I ted to occupy the American quar- t ter pending further instructions. Com- merce ceased in the city and the places I , _ of business along the seafront were closed. As a result several thousand , workmen are idle and special precau- tions are being taken to prevent dis orders. SUGAR TRUST IS IXDICTED. ' Accused of Consiracy in Restraint ol . Trade. ' i The American Sugar Refining com- , I I pnny , six of its directors and two oth I er idividuals were indicted by a fed- . . . . eral grand jury : Thursday on a charge j of conspiracy in restrain of trade. f The individuals indicted are Wash- ington B. Thomas , president of the American Sugar Refining company ; Arthur Donner , Charles H. Senff and I John E. Parsons , of New York ; John Mayer , of Morristown , N. J. , and Geo. I . H. Frazier , of Philadelphia , Pa. , all of \ whom are directors of the company. Indictments also were found against Gustave Kibsel and Thomas B. Har- nett , counsel for Adolph Segal. There were fourteen counts in the indict- " ment. The indictments charge the corpora- tion of the American Sugar Refining company and the persons accused of conspiracy in restraint of trade in vio- I lation of the Sherman anti-trust law. J The defendants will answer to the in- - , " dictments in court next Tuesday. . - ' - , The section of the law under which " the Indictments were made involves penalties of a fine of not more than . $5,000 or imprisonment for not more . " ' - . . , than one year , or both in the case of . t . - . . the individuals , and a fine of not more : I than . $5,000 in the case of a corpora. I . t. Ion. i' \ 3 ' , ' i'I I ' : ' J . " . , 4- ( . > \ " . . . , Plant Cost $12,000,000. thhc system of filtration and water BUpply for Cincinnati and suburbs was officially completed and formally ! transferred to the city Thursday. The , I plant has been under construction for , I ' " twelve years. It cost about $12,000- , . 000. . Sugar Prices Cut. ' All grades of refined sugar were I reduced 10 cents per 100 pounds i Thursday. .1 l I Sioux City Live Stock Market. . \ , . Thursday's quotations on the Sioux I ' City live stock : market follow : Top : beeves , $6.40. Top hogs , $7.75. I I - I I , Found Dead Washtub. . I I } The body of Yung Yow a Chinese I' Jaundryman. who had been strangled ! with a rope , was found wedged into a I . I . washtub in his laundry at 124 Stanton I < ' street , New York , Thursday. I ' . If t f i. { : Ten Per Cent Wage Increase. I , 'I Wages of 3,000 men and boys em- ( 'J 'I' . ployed in the plant of the Maryland : ! ' Steel company at Sparrows Point were I increased 10 per cent today. . . . ! - . . . ' . ' \ ; ' ' . . ' I I . f' , ; . : ' ' . . . ' , . 'i . . i' ' . . . . . , A , . " ! J' . . . . . - ' _ - L , . , _ , . , h - . . , ' . . ' ; ; f' , . . . . . . . . . . , ' - . . . - , > . " . ' ! - " . . . _ ' ΒΆ : , I t - - r- - - . , , , , , , , , - W'.r ; . . . . _ - - _ . . . . . . . , - r - , . - . . . . . . . " . . . . . . - - - a " . BRITISH SIHP IS ITEI/T > . t Customs Officers Stop Sailing of Ethel- ) EthclI' I' . wold. ' The British steamer Ethelwold , a small and harmless looking little j steamer lying ] at the outer edge of the forest of shipping which skirts the j t south Brooklyn : water front , was held up by United States custome officers Wednesday night on suspicion that the vessel was about to engage in ' a fili bustering expedition against the little West Indian-republic of San Domingo. The order to detain the steamer was received from Assistant , Secretary Mc- Harg , of the department of commerce and labor at Washington , and was promptly executed by William Loeb , collector of the port of New York. The Washington advices that the min- ister from Hayti has complained to the state department that the Ethel- ' wold was believed to have been en- gaged by Jose St Pierre Giordan ! and Gen. Juan Jiminez , San Dominicans , to aid in a filibustering expedition. Within an hour after receipt of the order Collector Loeb had two customs officers on the ship. They were placed aboard with orders not to let her sail. Capt. Brown and all others in au thority were found to be - - ashore when the vessel was visited Wednesday night. Customs Inspector Wm. E. Dodge explained that he and Inspector R. W. Reulberger had come aboard scarcely an hour before to see that the vessel did not sail. He said no inspection. had been made of the cargo and none would be undertaken that night , and that , although he knew nothing defi- nitely of any filibuster , he did know that something of the sort was sus- pected. A search of the cargo , he said , would probably be made Thu.rs- day. LIGHT ON BOMB MYSTKRY. Chicago Suspect Makes : a Confession Wednesday. Felix Shakey , former convict , once a terror to the police , but now crip- , pled and gray , Wednesday divulged all he 'knew ' of the long series of bomb outrages which have mystified the po- lice of Chicago. State's Attorney Way- man , to whom Sharkey told his story , laid a strict embargo of silence upon the narrator and the police officials who were present at the interview. Tuesday Sharkey refused to talk , but a night in the jail conquered his stubbornness. "Sharkeyl has changed his story , " was the statement made by llr.Vay - man. "He has told all he knew. " Nothing further could be gained by reporters. Arrests are expected. Sharkey was taken before State's Attorney Wayman Wednesday by Chief of Detectives O'Brien. Two de tectives and R. Michaelson , a police- man of Morgan Park , where Sharkey holds the office of constable , were present. "Sharkey has changed his story , " taining of information that twenty- five pounds of dynamite had been shipped to him at Morgan Park. Tues- day night Capt. O'Brien repeatedly asked him what he did with the explo- sive , to which the prisoner as often answered , at last breaking into tears , that he could not tell. PREVENTS DISAST10USTRECI \ . . Woman Flags Train in Time to Enable Engineer to Slacken Speed. But for the presence of mind of Mrs. Jennie Lewellyn , an aged woman liv- ing nearby in a tent , who ran onto the tracks , flagging the westbound Excel- sior Springs train on the Wabash rail- roa.d near Missouri City , Mo. , the head-on collision of a freight and pas- senger train at that point Tuesday night probably would have resulted in many fatalities. As it was one man was killed , one woman badly injured and ten slightly injured. The passenger engineer was enabled to lessen the speed of his train and to prevent a more serious collision. Both engines were demolished and the bag- gage car and a coach on the passenger train were telescoped. BOMB IN BASKET OF CHERRIES. Female Spy of Police at Tiflis Is Vic- tim of Revolutionists. Marie Bakhtadze , who had been prominent as an agent of the political police at Tiflis , was killed Tuesday by a bomb that had been sent to her by an unknown person in a basket of cherries. Madam Bakhtadze was a widow of a man who formerly was prominent among the revolutionists. He turned traitor , however , betrayed many of the revolutionary leaders , en- tered the police service and was killed last autumn. Out of revenge his wife became a spy and devoted herself to hunting down every one responsible for her husband's death. For several weeks past she had not ventured out- side the police station. Execution is Delayed. Forty-five minutes before he was to nave been hanged for the murder of Sidney Herndon , a well to do real estate owner , formerly of Tyler , Tex. , Claude Brooks , a negro , was Wednes day granted a thirty-day reprieve by Gov. Hadley , of Missouri. Eight Hurt in Storm. The latest report from Niles , N. D. , where a tornado late Tuesday was sup- posed to have killed eight persons and injured many , is that only eight per- sons were slightly injured , and that no one was killed. Bolt Kills : Mother ; Spares Child. Mrs. Charles Newman , of Mt. Ver- non , Ill. , was killed by lightning while carrying her child , the latter . escaping ! injury. . . , . " . " ' . ' : ' . , ' . . .r. _ ' . ; , . : ; ' ; ' . . : ; . < . . _ , . . . . . . - . . _ . . . . . : ; --c - - : = ; ; - - I CRIME OF A MADMAN. : Two People Arc Killed at Valley Junc- tion , la. Calvin Littlepage , a farmer living near Valley Junction , la. , a suburb of Des , Moines , Tuesday night shot and killed Elmer Jamison and Mrs. Jamison , both parents of his divorced wife , and then forced her and her Infapt baby to enter a buggy which was waiting and flee with him. . The murderer then drove towar. . . . Adel in a blinding rain and hail storm , but was soon pursued by a posse from Des Moines. Farmers along the high- way with shotguns joined in the chase attracted by the pitiful screams of the orphaned woman , who cried out that she , too , would be slain by her former , hus t and. The tragedy is the result of the re- fusal of Mrs. Littlepage tolive with her former husband- she : having been divorced from him last. May. Threats of murder on the part of Littlepage were often made , according to the wife's story < > prior to the tragedy. A lynching is feared. At 1:30 Wednesday morning Little- page succeeded in breaking through the cordon of officers surrounding him in a barn on the -Butler farm. The fading light of the moon made it dif ficult to cover all avenues of escape. Officers found the murder's trail through the wet fields , and discovered a spot where he had evidently laid down to rest. Ben Littlepage ; a broth er , who works on a farm near the Butler place , told the officers Wednes day morning that the murderer had called on him after midnight and had said he would return to kill his wife and baby , and he threatened to kill his brother , and then disappeared in the darkness. NOT GUILTY OF MURDER. The "Unwritten Law" Plea Clears Chicago Man. : The "unwritten law" was sustained Tuesday by a jury in Judge Kernstein's court in Chicago , which freed Michael Pacellanp , charged with the murder of Frank Sereno as a result , it is al- leged , of the latter's betrayal of Pacel- lano's sister. The defendant's sister , Mrs. Josephine Fresso , was a bride of only a week , when it Is charged Sere- no persuaded her to leave her hus- band. According to Pacellano's de fense , Sereno took her to New York and placed her amid questionable sur- roundings. The brother followed and brought both back to Chicago , Sereno having promised , it is said , to marry Mrs. Fresso after a divorce had been secured. When the party left the train it is charged that Sereno de- clared he would have nothing more to do with the girl. The shooting fol. lowed. INTERCHANGE OF STUDENTS. Scheme Affecting America in Process ! of Formation in London. A scheme for the interchange of the university students between the United States , Canada and the United King- dom , rivaling in importance that es- tablished under the will of the late Cecil RhoDes , is in progress of forma- tion , with every prospect of success. The idea which is supported by an influential committee headed by the Hon. P. H. Asquith , prime minister ol Great Britain , and Lord Strathcona , high commissioner of Canada , and in cludes the heads of the chief universi- ties in the United Kingdom , and has also the indorsement of the president of the American and Canadian univer- sities , aims at providing opportunities : to students of the three countries tc obtain some real insight into the life "progress and customs of other nations , with a minimum of inconveniences tc their academic work and at the leasJ possible expense. - To Fly Across English Channel. Herbert ; Latham , Count de Lambert and Henri Farman are at present on the coast at Calais , France , awaiting favorable weather conditions to at- tempt an aeroplane flight across the English channel for a prize of $5,000 offered by a London paper. French torpedo boats are being held in read- iness to guide the aviators In theii flight and rescue them in case of neod Well Known Baseball Man Dead. Charles Cushman , aged 52 years well known in baseball circles as man- ager of various clubs , died Tuesday in a Milwaukee hospuital following an illness extending over several months which is said to have resulted from an accident. Mr. Cusliman at different times managed teams in Milwaukee , Toronto and Rochester , N. Y. Explode Bombs in Theaters. Bombs were exploded at midnight Monday night in two of the theaters at Barcelona , Spain. One of the play houses fortunately was empty , but the other was crowded and the audience was thrown into a panic. One man was fatally wounded. Deaths from Plague at Ainoy. . According to official reports there have been 177 deaths from bubonic' plague in Anioy in the fortnight ended Monday. Native reports show improved health conditions in the larger interior towns , but the populations of some villages have been decimated during the month. TViclilta Trades Watt. ' The. Wichita Western league base- ball club has traded Pitcher Watt to the Omaha team , of the Western league , for Pitcher Johns , a south- paw , who was with Dayton , 0. , last year. Woman Lawyer Dead. Mrs. Carrie E. Burnham Kilgore , aged 71 , the first woman admitted to the bar in Pennsylvania , died Tuesday at her home in Swarthmore , Pa. . I" \ . < : ' , " . - , . ' . " . , " " . I . , . - . , ' . , \ I , , . : : : : . . - . . . : . . . . tr' ' _ ; . : : : : - : : : - . . . . - In.'Jrd.t.'f ' ' \ > . , . , . . . . . . . . . . . - - - . . . . . - , . . ' . . . . . . . . . . - - . . . . . - - _ ' ; . _ _ : : .A ' " = : _ _ _ _ ; : ; : ; c. _ _ _ , _ _ - : : - - . : ; , . . - . . . . . , , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' t . .t"11 - 'I' ' " 'H."i..y" : : + .4. + J..i.'S : + * "r- : + : " : r. : .J..LJ..W : : + + : + + X . Xt " ! tt I NEBRASKA i STATE NEWS ! i , ! t.-t. + . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' _ . . , , + _ . . _ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ . . _ . . . _ . . . _ . . . . . . . . . . . . , . , : . . . . . _ : . . - - . . + " , DAYLIGHT LAW IX FORCE. S"el hiSKa Saloons Locked : Doors at 8 O'clock Wednesday Xiglit. . At midnight Thursday the Nebraska daylight saloon law , enacted by the last legislature , took effect. It pro- vides that all drinking places in cities and towns where license exists must close at 8 o'clock p. m. Gov. Shallen- berger reiterated Thursday evening what he has heretofore announced , that the llaw will be enforced to the letter. He says municipal authorities will be expected to look to the en- forcement of the law , but if they fail then the state government will act. In his efforts the governor will be as- sisted by the Nebraska Anti-Saloon league , : which has appointed agents in license towns to act as watchers. So far as known there will be no united attempt to ignore the law , although in some places , where the liquor interests are strong , funds , it is said , have been raised to test the law. Lincoln being a dry municipality , local interest was not keen , only so far as it affected the wet suburban town of Havelock , where the local supply of intoxicants is drawn from , and to which place crowds from Lincoln go nightly. A new rule was promulgated by the Lincoln excise board which prohibits the practice of drays and delivery wag- ons bringing beer and other intoxi- cants from Havelock to Lincoln and supplying customers. , Other enactments of the last legis- lature went into effect at midnight , save the bank guaranty act and non- partisan judiciary law. which have been enjoined in the courts. SIDNEY MAX SHOT IX TEMPLE. Anton Krupicka : is in Critical Condi tion and May : Die. Anton Krupicka , a well to do farm- . er , residing fourteen miles southeast of Sidney , was shot in the right temple about midnight Wednesday night , sup- posedly by his stepson , Andrew , a lad aged 15. The father was sitting at the dining room table , and the shot was fired from the outside , shattering the glass in the winodw. The weapon used was a 22-caliber rifle , which the boy had recently purchased. After the shooting the wife wrapped the gun in her apron and buried it near the house , where Sheriff McDan- iel unearthed it. The boy , who is half- witted , claims his mother fired the shot , and that he stood directly behind her , while the mother says the lad did the shooting. An effort was made at the last term of district court to send the boy to the reform school , as it was charged that many of the prai- rie fires which had been kindled in the ! I vicinity had been started by him. The neighbors filed a complaint , but I I ! through the assiduous efforts of the father the charge was withdrawn. The I . home has been the scene of many camily quarrels. I COURTS SHOULD .NOT INTRUDE. Shallcnberger Recents "Interference" I in the Bank Guaranty Case. . Gov. Shallenberger has entered a protest against the intrusion of the federal courts in the affairs of the state. He had reference to the in- junction issued Tuesday against the bank guaranty act. He said : "The p' ? ople of Nebraska have ex- pressed themselves in favor of the : guaranty of bank deposits. When the I opponents of such a mea'sure will not i ! let the state courts pass upon a matter I in which the people of the state are i primarily interested and forced the matter into the federal courts , which have no connection with the affairs of the individuals of the state , it merely I means that the enforcement of the law has been delayed. The people of the state have spoken and they will not be denied , even if the federal courts do provide a temporary bulwark for I the opponents of the guaranty act. " BODY IS CARRIED TWEXTY MILES : Stench Leads to Finding of Corpse Near Grand Island. Induced by the stench that filled his nostrils , James Denman , farmer , liv- I ing along the Platte South of Alda , I rode to the river's edge to investigate and found lodged to a wire fence that I stretched to an island , the body of a I man with his hand raised up and fearfully bloated. The sheriff was im I mediately notified and with an under taker's wagon went to the under-I removed the body to the morgue in I Grand Island identified , where it was as the body of Milton O'Neill , who was drowned while bathing south of Shel- ton Sunday. The river had carried it about twenty miles. Concord Man : Fatally Hurt. Frank Johnson , an employe of a Concord implement dealer , while fix- I ing a windmill on the C. G. Swanson farm , two miles northeast of Dixon , met with a serious accident. 'While doing some repairing near the wheel the tower broke and the young man fell on an iron rod which was . forced about eight inches into the ab domen. Wheat Cutting Begins. Farmers in and around Beatrice be- gan cutting wheat Wednesday. The grain is very heavy and it is estimated the yield will average from twenty to thirty bushels to the acre. Scratch on Foot Fatal. Mrs. Pauline Wittulski died Wed- nesday afternoon at her home in West Beatrice from blood poisoning caused by a scratch she received a few days ago on her foot. She was 63 years of age and leaves a family of eight child- ren. : Murdered While He Slept. Antone Krupitska , living southwest of Lodge Pole , was mysteriously mur- dered in bed Wednesday night. There Is no ' clew as to who did the shooting. . ' " , , ; ' ' - - - SHAM BATTLE J2XDS REUNION. \ . Large " Crowd in Attendance During the Whole Program. The Fort Kearney National Park association reunion closed Monday. A large crowd filled the grounds all day long , and many were loath to lea\e in the evening. While the gathering has not been the success that was planned for it , on account of the unfavorable weather , there is great satisfaction foi the promoters in the great enthusiasm that has been shown. The program consisted of various addresses and a sham battle between the old veterans and a company of militia. The veter- ans had an old brass cannon behind the breastworks , where the fort proper . stood , and they shot this with the rapidity that generally prevails with I an old-time cannon. Col. ! Maxon of Minded , was elected commander of the association , while Dr. Hoover , of . Kearney , will act as secretary for the ensuing year. The plans are to hold another reunion next year and each . . succeeding year. . - - RUNS INTO A MOVING TRAIN. Frightened ; Horse at Harvard Imperil ! Drivers. Two daughters of Conrad Schnell. residing four miles southeast of Har- vard , received several severe bruises as the result of a runaway Monday afternoon. They were going to town I for medicine for their father , who It very ill with typhoid fever , and when within about two blocks of the Bur- lington tracks their horse became frightened at a cement walk outfit and became unmanageable. He ran fu- riously across the tracks , the girls I holding with all their might and yet unable to stop or turn him. A freight train was switching on the Northwest- ern tracks , and the horse , blinded with its fright , dashed into the moving train , striking head first and breaking its , neck. The girls jumped out before the impact and thus received their I hurts. They were picked up and con- I veyed to the doctor's office and after I their injuries were attended to were taken home in an automobile. ENGINEERS CONVENE. I I Brotherhood Gathers at Lincoln in , Annual Reunion. The annual reunion of the Brother- hood of Locomotive Engineers , and in connection with it a conference of members of the order , began at Lin- coln Monday with an attendance of 300 engineers and as many more rail- road men from nearly all the states of the union. At an open session of the brotherhood held in the evening ad- dresses were made by Grand Chief Stone , of the brotherhood ; Daniel Wil- lard , second vice president of the Chi- cago , Burlington and Quincy road ; P. H. : Morrissey of the American Rail- way association , and Mrs. Murdock , president of the ladies auxiliary. Early in the day a business session Of the engineers' brotherhood was held behind closed doors. It was an- nounced that the meeting was of a routine character , unimportant , and that no trouble was Impending. SUN RAYS LIGHT FIREWORKS. Department Puts Out Dangerous Blaze Kef ore Much Headway is Made. : The sun's heat lighted some fire- , works Sunday morning by passing through a plate glass window of the Bilz store , 204 North Sixteenth street , Lincoln , and focusing on a new variety of vari-colored night fireworks. Only one box of the inflammables burned , although the window was filled with 'firecrackers , skyrockets and other kinds of fireworks. The fire depart- ment turned out promptly and saved the rest of the stock. : Another fire Sunday morning about t the same time did slight damage in t the kitchen of the home of Moses Mos- : t covitz , a few blocks north of the fire works fire , . at 607 North Sixteenth I street. Some surplus fuel around a gasoline stove caught - > n fire , but the flames did not spread far before the , firemen came. CAPITAL STOCK : $730,000. : . - - Chicago Men Form Omaha Company to Take : Over Phone Line. The Nebraska Securities company , of Omaha , with a capital stock of $750,000 , have filed articles of incor- poration , and its purpose is for taking , over and financing the Omaha Inde- pendent Telephone company. The in- corporators are Walter Grover , George E. Shoemaker , F. M. Phipps , Charles P. Flynn and Albert E. Wilson , said C to be all Chicago parties. Wilson is ' attorney for Joseph Harris , the Chi- cago capitalist , who was a heavy buyer of independent stock several months ago. He was also the head of the company that furnished most of the ! material and installed the plant. . . 'Catches Nine-Pound Channel Cat. Smith Head , a well known local pis catorial artist , caught a nine-pound channel catfish from the Nemaha riv- er at Tecurnseh Monday morning. That is unusually large for a catfish , though carp and buffalo weighing a few pounds more are frequently caught. Caught Under ; a Dump Car. An Italian laborer with the Burling- ton construction train near Geneva , was caught under a load of gravel from a dump car. He was quickly dug out , but was unconscious for several hours. Run Over by a Mower. Albert Hester who lives northwest of Tecumseh , was thrown from a mower by a runaway team and one of the wheels passed over his body lacer- ating his head so badly several stitch es were required to close it. Fell Through Trap Door. Baltz Luetzinger , Sr. , residing northeast of Harvard was quite se- riously injured Monday afternoon by falling through a trap door to the j cellar in Higgins' tinshop , while look- ing about the place. ' . , . ' , J. _ . . _ . . . . " . . ' . , ' , ' " . . - - , - , . . . a.----- . _ . . : . . . ; - _ . : : - - - - = . - _ . . - - - . . ; ; . " - - - . . - - < :1 : _ NEW OUAIE { SHAKES ( 'a ' THE lSlAND OF SICILY . Messina Crumble * Walls . Shocks in : : r : " and Drive Out Many in State J : . I. of Panic. " . ; , , ; " . ,1' . , , GUIJ . ROAR E IKE THE BOOM . 0 ? : ; ; GTJ1TSJ ' . - . : . . T ! Some of the Tremblings Hore : Severe ) . ] . than Those of Disaster of . ' j ' - December 28. * . ! \ , . ' . - ' Sicily was the scene Thursday . } . of e ' mother earthquake disaster which , in ; : Messina at least , completed the de- ; struction wrought by the shocks of ! Dec. 28 , in which tens of thousands ' offc lives were lost. ' ' I The instruments at the observatory - registered a total of ten shocks of varying severity since 7:20 o'clock Thursday morning. Eight shocks , were felt during the night. News that has . come in there from the provinces shows that damage has been wrought " there , but it is as yet impossible" - rectly to estimate the extent of _ the losses. ( The shocks both at ' Messina . and at Reggio created a great panic among ! the people of these two cities. . . : , r Houses Fall ; People In Flight. . ; ' " ; Walls of houses not completely de- molished in the visitation of lasUwin- ter were shaken : down , and the inhab- itants of the towns rushed from the streets toward the open country , A woman and a child caught under the . wreckage sustained serious injury , the ! earth- woman subsequently dying. The quakes have been becoming more in- tense recently } , and Wednesday night they were sufficiently severe to cause " alarm. ! The shocks of Thursday morning were undulating and vertical , and ac- companied by deep roaring sounds. The first one was followed by an ex- plosion like the roar of cannon and lasted between eight and ten seconds : It is said that this quake was of great- , er severity than the fatal one of the night of Dec. 28. The wooden houses and huts erected for the accommoda " tion of the people seemed to be thrown' . from one side to another. Cries filled the air as the people fled into the road. . _ , As on the night of Dec. 28 , the , first i shock was followed by a circular move ment of the ground. Five minutes later there came another quake , ac- companied by further roarings. This completed the destruction. The re- mains of wrecked houses collapsed and the entire district was covered by a dense cloud of , dust. ' ; . ItecallN Imnt "Winter's Upheaval. : News' the latest shock : in Mes- sina brings vividly to mind the disas , A ter of last December. Positive knowl-5 . , . ; J edge of the number of persons killed /1" and the damage done to property was j never obtained. It is known for cer- tain that the dead exceeded 100,000 , while scores of cities and towns in Calabria and. Sicily were left in ruins. INDICT SUGAR TRUST CHIEFS. President Thomas , Attorney Par- sons and Four Others Hit. ; The American Sugar Refining Com pany , six ot its directors and two oth- er individuals were indicted .by a fed- eral grand jury in New York Thursday on a charge of conspiracy in restraint of : trade. . . The individuals indicted are Wash- ington [ B. Thomas , president of the American Sugar Refining Company ; Arthur Donner and Charles H. Senff and John E. Parsons of New York , John Mayer of Morristown : : , N. J. , and George H. Frazier of Philadelphia , all of whom are directors of the company. Indictments were also found against Gustav : E. Kissel and Thomas B. Hart- nett , counsel for Adolph Segal. There were fourteen counts in the indict ment. The indictments charge the cor- t - - - t p--- Company : : ; , and the persons named ; . . ofr- ' . " conspiracy in restraint of trade In violation of the Sherman anti-trust . )1 la W. . 4 I" . " 4A - A FIGHT FOB THE PENNANTS. : . tit Stnndlnpr * of C3iil . . In the Principal y'1 ; : : ' IJaxe Ball Learue : ' , . NATIONAL LEAGUE. . , . ' W. L. W. L H , Pittsburg15 . Philadel'a ! .27 31 : . Chicago . . .38 22 St. Louis . .24 35 . I New Yor .33 23 ' ' N.cw. Brooklyn . .21 3S \ Cincinnati .32 29 Boston . . . .16 ! 42 -r i - - . j' . , AMEB1CAX LEAGUE. : - . . . r : . . - ' V. L. 'XV . L . " . ' r Detroit . . .43 21 New York . 2 ,9 31 : i Philadel'a .36 25 Chicago . . .26 33 ' Boston . . . .35 28 St. Louis . .22 40 . . " : " Cleveland .32 29 Nash ' g ton .21 39 : 1" . : > . ' AMERICAN . . . . ' ASSOCIATION. , W. L. . , ' . . " . , ' W. L. ' Milw'kee " . . " 9' Louisville .35 36 t - : { Ind'polis . . . .39 34 St. Paul . . .31 33 : . . . Mmn ' polls .38 34 Kan. City .32 35 ' ' . . Columbus .37 36 Toledo . . . .30 40 \ Fatally Injurea . . Seeking Kiss , . ' In her anxiety to kiss her husband farewell at the Charleroi station Pitts- burg Mrs. \ Marie C. Antonio . of Califor - nia [ thrust her head through . . 0 the glass in [ the car window. She was ' ; , : severely' gashed on . the neck and Is not expect. . , . ed to survive. ' ; , . , .j _ .f ' > " , , . . . . . : , _ j - ' , . . A" i 'f- : - r - ! ' - , Y , ' 3 f _ , ' - . j , . ' ' ' .