A _ _ , I - . "The . - - - Valentine Deiuocrai , . . . ' . VALENTINE NEB. : . . . . . , . ' , . ' . . . . . . l L'\L : ! \ RICE , - - - - Publisher J ! . . , ; ' . , : , " : " ; PEOPLE : : FACE IAMINI n . . ; I 1 ; IMEXIOAN QUAKES : ARE CAUSING I 1 . " : . ; . : GREAT DESTITUTION. ! i , ' . * 9Dwro Cities Mass : of Debris - Xo Doubt : f ' I _ I . " : I of Fate of Acapulco and Clillpaii _ j i I ; E cingo - Country Residents Afraid to I : Bring Produce Into Towns. I I I . . , . . . ! . . Details from the state of Guerrero i : . chow that the recent earthquakes in . , ' tue : valley of Mexico : : and along the < " Pacific coast were the worst experi ' , -onced in many years. It now is cer- . iain that the towns of Acapulco and ' Chilpancigo have been practically de- -stroyed. l What the earthquake of Friday . -failed to do was accomplished by one ' ; ' of Saturday , which either leveled or . . -.Rendered uninhabitable every build- "fng In the two places. In addition to ; "the ruin caused by the earthquake , Acapulco now faces a famine. All of I the markets were destroyed in the shocks of Saturday and the country . . . : p ople are afraid to bring more pro- j ! J. . . kluce into the town. The people are f. -.camping in the public squares. The ' , few buildings still standing are being _ I leveled by dynamite , as they are little i Ii ° ' : " more than tottering walls than fall as : , new shocks come. , r : Inuring ? a heavy shock Saturday the .4 ii , , , t ' \vater in the harbor receded a distance ! : -of 33 feet and then rushed back cov- j , . r. . 't. J . "Ins the docks and piers , causing con- -siderable damage. : i . 1 In Mexico City the shock was heav- -fer than any yet experienced. As the work of examination continues more . 'I ' .and more evidence of damage is found , , I -although so far as known no lives I - were lost in the last agitation. I , . A dispatch received from Acapulco : Sunday states that 73 distinct shocks of earthquake have been felt there since the first shake Friday. . . ! ' " ; : , ' ' TWELVE PERSONS KILLED. " ! . . , ' , ; ' . i ! ' jfty Hurt in Collision on a Spokane i ' . , _ nailwa ' . Twelve are known to be dead and nearly fifty injured , some fatally , in a = collision on the Coeur d'Alene and Spokane Electric railway , about twen ty-five miles east of Spokane Wash. , t Saturday afternoon. I i Passenger traffic on the line is par- I . , ticularly heavy on account of the , I thousands passing between Spokane and Coeur d'Alene to register for res res- t ervation lands. . The two trains collided head-on. "The one coming from Coeur d'Alene , j , crowded to overflowing , was complete ; ly wrecked , the cars being ground to 1 + splinters. The moans and cries of the I Injured filled the air and the whole i scene was one of indescribable con- s Cusion. Officials of the line have as I. p' \ . yet made no statement as to responsi- bility for the wreck. It is said the ; eastbound train did not take a siding ! as ordered. ! j The motorman of the westbound ' train is among the dead. Both trains . were running at high speed , especial- ly the westbound train , and were pre ' - umably beyond control. . IMEAN TO HOLD CHUNG SING. - - " sOfficers Have A\rarrant Accusing the I i f Chink : of Slaying Miss Sigel. ' 5 /After having held him as a material -witness for more than a month , the _ New York authorities Saturday ob - - I I tained a warrant for the arrest of Chung Sing , Leon Ling's friend , on a I I I charge of first degree murder , as an accessory after the fact in the death -of Elsie Sigel. Issuance of the war- rant , followed application Saturday on ja writ of habeas corpus fpr the re- dease of Chung Sing from custody. I The warrant will be served should the supreme court deside the prisoner is -entitled to release. In the afifdavits . , _ ! ' ' , .on which the warrant was issued , . - , iQuan ' Yick Nam , a Chinese interpreter , , I ' ; : iswore that Chung Sing had told him ' . .of assisting Leon Ling to put the body .Jof Elsie Sigel in a trunk. . j The affidavit of Charles H. White , ti ' . ' I and . expressman , stated that Chung I Sing had helped him and another expressman in the removal of the # ! ; , trunk containing the body when it iwas taken from Leon's apartments and -.sent on its mysterious journey around jNew ' York and vicinity on June 9 last i : Kills Her Two Children. . : 'Martial troubles caused Mrs. Emma I /i JMichael to kill her two children , Meta 115 years old and Gustav , 12 years old , 1 l and then commit suicide by means of . _ Illuminating gas in Chicago Sunday. S + Sioux City Live Stock : Market. : Saturday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market follow : Top ( ' : . Beeves , $6.50. Top hogs , " $7.50. I i . Summer Resort Burns. A night watchman's prompt work in sounding the fire alarm enabled the 100 guests at the Hotel Tybee a sum- mer resort on Tybee island , near Sa- i vannah , Ga. , to escape without Injur- b ! . ' ies from the structure when it burned before daylight Saturday. _ A"- Girl Ascend Mt. : : \ Blanc. . " . . .Helen Bauer , aged 20 , of Chicago , , ! : ' . /has accomplished the feat of climbing T ° SIt..Blanc. . , . - " . . . . . , . . . , . , - ' , . . , .ri" " fj. , . ; , ' ' \ ' ' ; ' , . . 'tt- : . . . . : . . . , " . : , . . ) " \ , / \ . .to. ' , : - . , . - ' , , : , , ; , ' . < " , - ' ; > ( 'J't ' . ' -'oJ ' : ' , " , . ' . , . . " " " _ . " ' . o ' " , . ; , , . . : n . . . " ' . ' - , , _ , ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' , ' . , ; r ' 0 0 - - - I - I - MEXICO SHAKEN UP. Nation's Center Jarred from ' Atlanti < to Pacific. , Central Mexico from the Atlantic to the Pacific , and from Querato on the north to Oaxaca ' on the south , a distance covering more than 1,000 ( square miles , was shaken early Friday by a series of the most severe earth- ' quake shocks felt In the region for a quarter of a century. Reports of the < loss of life are not complete but the < official figures show that fourteen were killed outright and more than a score mortally injured. The towns ; . of Acapulco and Chilpancingo , in the state of Guerrero , have been partially destroyed. I Communication with that part of : the republic has been imperfectly es- tablished. According to the observatory records ! the first shock of the series was felt at 4:15 Friday morning , the rocking oscillation being from east to south- west. It was very severe , causing the bells of the many cathedrals of the city to toll , breaking crockery , and in some instances leveling walls. The people had hardly recovered from the first fright when a second and more severe shock caused an out- pouring of nearly everybody to the streets and plazas. This movement was of a tripoditory and oscillators . character and lasted thirty seconds. The tall buildings of the city swayed , and in some instances cracked , the pavement opened in places , and in the poorer sections of the city a num- ber of houses collapsed. Six persons lost their lives in Mex ico Oity and its environs as a result of this second shock : , two men , three women and a child. Four persons are in hospitals and are so badly ' injured that it is stated that they cannot re- cover. CRIME AVAS MOST : BRUTAL. , Slayer : of Sidney Hermlon Put to :2patI.1. : Claude Brooks , aged 21 years , a ne gro , was hanged at Kansas City Mo. , Friday for the murder of Sidney Herndon , a well to do real estate own- er , formerly of Tyler , Tex. , at Kansas City on January 13 , 1908. The crime was most brutal. Hern- don a defenseless cripple , was killed in his room in a downtown apartment. His skull was crushed with a ham- mer. which was found lying nearby. The murdprer had stolen Herndon's pocketbook. Brooks , who was em- ployed by Herndon as an elevator boy , , had been befriended by the man he killed. The negro confessed. SEARCH MADE : : FOR : MISSIONARY. . Fremls of Rc. > Y. James Burks Believe Ho " Murdered. : . That Rev. James Burks , a physician and a missionary , was robbed and murdered is the belief of friends who are scouring the country in the vicin- ity of How'e , Okla. , in a search for the missing man. Thursday Mr. Burks went to his apartments at the hotel at Howe to prepare for a trip to . Mena Ark. When he did not reappear in a reasonable time an attache of the hotel went to his room , found a par- tially arranged trunk , but Mr. Burks had disappeared. Several persons whose actions aroused suspicion have been taken into custody. STEALS $23,000 AS MEN : EAT. a ; Louisville Thief Gets Away ; with a Valuable Package. : Government bonds , bank stock , notes , insurance policies and other financial papers to the value of $23,000 were stolen , presumably about noon Friday , from the safe in the office of the Louisville Coffee company in Louisville , Ivy. ' All of the papers were the private property of C. W. White , president of the company. While the office force was out at lunch , it is thought , the thief entered , < ? ot the package and fled. Dashed to Death on Pavement. J. Garnet Wood general agent of the Des Moines Life Insurance com- pany , fell from the eighth story win- ' dow of the Southern Trust company building at Little Rock , Ark. . Friday and was instantly killed. He had spent the night in his office , and all indica- tions point to an accident. ! Overcome by Gas. Forty miners were overcome by gas in the Central Coal and Coke company mine No. . 31 at Pittsburg Kan. , Friday. All but fifteen were quickly placed out of danger. Twelve were seriously and three perhaps fa tally hurt. Nearly all are foreigners. I Indians in Need of Aid. Commissioner of Indian Affairs Val- pntine Friday took steps to relieve some 1,200 Indians Wisconsin who were left without shelter and food as the result of the recent series of cloud- bursts In that state near Odanah. Compere in Berlirf. : Sampel Gompers , president of the American Federation of Labor , ar rived in Berlin Thursday to study la- - or conditions. Roosevelt's Are Guests. j Col. Roosevelt , his son Kermit and Frederick J. Jackson acting governor of British East Africa were guests Thursday night at. dinner given by the itewards of the East African Turf : : lub at Nairobi. To Declare Office Aratant. ; The Georgia senate Friday voted to remove from office S. G. McLendon : , : : : : : hairman of the state railroad com- ' [ missh n. , . , < . . . , r- ' , _ . r'r. : ' . : ' : " . , : , . . . . ' : . : " ' " ' : . . . ; : , , : , ' : : . . , , J ' . / ' + . : : , ' " - . 'r. . ; 1 , . . } . . . . . , . r. " . " . > . . . : , . . " .I. Ih " ' , * . ; 1- . . " _ _ , .C. . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I MEMBERS DECIDE TO QUIT. CHn'm.Is ; : Reached in Cuban Cabinet Crisis. The Cuban cabinet crisis , which for some time has been impending , reach- ed a climax Thursday afternoon when all the mnisters as well as the parlia- . . . mentary secretary . , Senor Castellanos ! signed their resignations , which will be officially presented to Presiden Gomez on his arrival from Cayo Cris- - to. The action of the cabinet was tak- en after a conference with the avowed purpose of expressing loyalty to the < president and relieving him of the em- barrassment of making removals. According to rumor , Luis Octavl Divina of the department of justice , will be succeeded by Ramiro Cabe- . rera ; Nicolas Alberdi secretary of the . interior , by Gen. Machado , now In- spector general of the armed forces ; Dr. Mathias Duque , ' secretary of sani- tation , by Senor Alberdi , and Postmas- ter General Nordarse by Senor Morua Delago , ex-president of the senate and leader of the colored party. The resignations of Benito Lague- ruela , secretary of public works who recently was severely criticised for the dismissal of James Page chief engi- neer of construction at the Cienfue- gos waterworks , and Senor Castella- nos , who developed anti-American prejudices since his appointment to office , " probably will be accepted. SHORTAGE IS $100,000. Investigation of Tipton Bank Shows Much : Bad Paper. William H. Marker , cashier of the First National bank at Tipton , Ind. . , and brother of Noah R. Marker the missing assistant cashier , who is charged with the defalcation of more than $100,000 , has resigned. Many bad notes and checks are turning up in the progress of the exam- ination of the bank's affairs. This pa- I per , bearing forged -signatures of citi- zens , represents , it is said , thousands of dollars abstracted from the bank's funds. It is not expected , that the shortage will be less than $110,000 , and it may be much more. DUAL KENTUCKY : CRIME. - - . AVomaii Kills Mnn and Then Swal- lows a Deadly Poison. A double tragedy was enacted in Bellevuc , Ky. , a suburb of Cincinnati 0. , when Mrs. John Mullarkey 28 years old , shot and killed Edward Ax- line , 30 years of age , and died later as a result of self administered poison. Mrs. Mullarkey who was the wife of a well known resident of the sub- urb , and mother of two children had been seen in company frequently with Axline in the last few days. What led to the tragedy may never be known. I INDIANA WIND STOR\ : Strikes Indianapolis and Plays Many Peculiar Pranks. A terrific storm which swept In- . dianapolis and Indiana late Thursday , ! caused great damage to that city. The wind played many pranks among them 'blowing an automobile thro.ugh a store front and tearing the roof from a baseball grandstand and depos- I iting it with such force upon a house that the structure was almost demol- ished. The mercury reached 91.4 , the hot- test of the season. Resort Keepers Arrested. The grand jury at Chicago which has already indicted a police inspector a detective and others in furtherance of State's Attorney Wayman's attack on the West Side "tenderloin , " Thurs- day returned indictments against twenty keepers of alleged illegal es tablishments. Three Thousand Made Homeless. A fire which broke out early Fri- day in a Chinese restaurant on Hai- leybury road , near Cobalt , Ont. , caused a loss estimated at $100,000. Three thousand have been rendered homeless and the entire business sec- tion north of the square has been de. stroyed. - - Ends Life in Denver Hotel. Ned Copeland , 40 years old , mem- ber of a prominent family of Santa Ana , Cal. , and proprietor of a hotel at Esperanza , Mexico , committed sui- I cide in his room at a hotel at Denver by taking cyanide of potassium. Gen. AVorthington Dies. Gen. Henry Worthington , former delegate in b congress from Nevada , diplomat and jurist died at Washing ton , D. C. , Thursday from cerebra' hemorrhage. He was 81 years old. - - Rcceivci'snip Is Lifted. On order of Judge Lurton in the United [ States appellate court , the re- ceivership of the Cincinnati Hamilton and Dayton Railway company was lifted Tuesday. Judson Harmon , as eceiver , Is relieved of duty. " - Roosevelt at the Races. Theodore Roosevelt Thursday' - tended a race meeting of the East African Turf club at Nairobi. Kermit Roosevelt had a mount in five of the races , Triple 3Iissouri : Crime. A triple tragedy occurred at Hanni- bal , Mo. , Thursday when Charles Beas- ley shot and killed his baby , danger- ously wounded his wife and then com- mitted suicide. Reyes' Resignation Accepted. Gen. Rafael Reyes has announced that he has receiver official notifica- tion of the acceptance by the Colum- < oIUm-\ \ . bian congress of his resignation as resident I . . " , , , , ' . ' ' , " : ' . , , : ' , . . ; ; ' : . : : . : . > . . . : . . . . . \ . . : . ' , _ ' , " " , . . . . .l , . ' ' , . ' " ' ; , , . , ' : " . ' . : " ' ' ; ' , ' " ; " " - " : : . s , ; Y ' ' < 'ri ' , ' ' ' , , ; ' -j. I - . . . . . - , t . . . . , . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , , - . - i- ' = : : : : - 1.r' ; ; v # * r ! ' : + : " : : + : + : : { : + + + 1o r : " " : : " : " : " ' : ' : -1. : : + : : .z : " : " " .M I ' , ' . . 0 . + t . . I V ' .5 . r t R SKA STATE NEWS i . . . 4. I : ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ ; ' I ' k "H i < : - 3'H + I ' 1'.I i 01'I < ' 1 < .t..X."A. : .z- : + .1.H.v + + ! IMMENSE STOCK : DAMAGE. : .Omaha Printing Plant l Suffers a Fire ] Less of 75000. I Fire Thursday night in the plant of the Omaha Printing company at Tenth and Farnam streets did damage < to stock and machinery which will ex- ceed 75000. An immense stock of paper , three large presses and a large stock of office furniture were badly ] damaged. The plant ! was the largest of its kind in the city. The fire started in the basement , where a 20.000 stock of paper was stored , and was entirely destroyed. A big cylinder and _ two Gordon presses fell into the basement : from the first ' floor and were entirely destroyed. On the third floor , where a jobbers' stock of office furniture was stored , the damage was chiefly from smoke and water. BAR SOCIALIST F11OM TOWN. I Towns ! te Company Refuses Man : Lot , Because ol' Political Views. Broadwater. the new town on the Union Pacific , scrutinizes a man's pol- 'tics before admitting horn to citizen- ship. John Shankman , from North Platte , arrived there last week and 'selected a Jot on which he proposed to build a house. He deposited a consid- erable sum of money in thelocal bank and waited patiently for his deed. In the meantime it leaked out that Mr. Shankman is a socialist and then he was notified by the townsite proprie- tor that he could buy no lot in Broad- water. Mr. Shankman did not wait to argue the question , but came at once to Bridgeport , where he purchased five lots and will proceed at once to erect a building thereon. FIVE HURT COLLISION. . - - Party of Omaha "Joy" Antoists Strike a Big Van. Emil Brandeis' large touring car in charge of the chauffeur , accompanied by two of his friends , was rolling along in Omaha at a forty-mile per I hour clip. At Charles street it struck a moving van fair and square in the I center. The result was that the auto I and van were completely WreC ! < ed. , Two of the horses attached to the van were killed and later the third was I killed on account of injuries. The driver of the van and his helper were : I hurled fifty feet into the air and were badly shaken up , though no bones were broken. The "joy" riders all es- caped death , but all were more or less injured and all were sent tc the hos- pital. Ate Rat Biscuit , Repents. Mrs. : Andrew Lingle , who with her husband and children reside in Ne- braska City , had some troubie with her family and at the conclusion of the quarrel secured some rat biscuits and at them. After midnight she awoke her husband and family and told them what she had done. A phy- sician was called and after working several hours pronounced her out of danger. Reward Offered. William Halloran has offered a re- ward of $50 for the arrest and convic- tion of the person who shot his broth- er , Dan Halloran , from an automo- bile last week. This makes a total of $75 offered as a reward , for the Auto mobile club had previously posted a reward of $25. Dan Halloran was shot through the arm with a rifle while sitting on his porch. Overland Reaches Bridgeport.I I The new North Platte valley line of the Union Pacific railroad has at last reached Bridgeport and the chief officials of the road have arrived to select the depot grounds and make transfer arrangements with the Bur- li : gton. Bridgeport will be the ter minus of the road for the present at least. Neither Can Recover. J. M. Knapp , a carpenter , shot a nd fatally wounded his wife and then. . sent a bullet into his own brain. Neither can recover. The shooting oc curred at the Knapp house in Madi son in the presence of a 3-year-old daughter and is said to have resulted _ from domestic trouble. I' ' I ( Automobile Overturned. : I Fire Chief Clements had a narrow ] escape from serious accident at Lin- coln. He was returning from a small fire in the suburbs when his automo- ( bile struck a chuck hole and was over- turned. Mr. Clements was caught un der the machine , which was badly wrecked but escaped without a e scratch. e t Habeas Corpus ; for lIrs.Ioral1. : . t The attorney for Mrs. Maud Moran , I wife of Attorney W. F. Moran : , of Ne f braska City , who after a hearing cov ' ering five weeks before the commis- sioners of insanity was declared in- sane , has gone before Judge H. D. Travis and secured a writ of habeas corpus. The hearing is set for Au- gust 2. b Chief Scout to Governor. t Billy the Bear has been appointed "chief guide and scout to the govern- f or. " The commission has been mailed to the scout. Billy the B.ear , whose name is L. J. F. Iaeger , acted as guide for the governor and his staff of col- onels during their recent visit to \ ' Crawford. Writ for Release of Dr. Neff. An attorney secured a writ of ha- beas corpus in the county court at t Beatrice for the release of Dr. J. G.n S"eff , of Sterling , who was in jail at tl Tecumseh on the charge of assault 11 preferred by his daughter. The writ i J was granted and Neff was released. g gs s : . Son Succeeds Father. A deal has been made whereby Har- ry E. Graves succeeds his father , C. iL. Graves , as \ editor of the Union Sl jedger. ' " , 0 t " - - . . ti : . . f " ' ; i - ; l'3. ; ' / : . : : " WANTED TO PUNISH : IHM. Auburn Wife-Beater Barely Escape Rough Handling. The cry of "bring a rope , " was heard frorn a crowd of men in Auburn Saturday evening , and it was soon learned that a woman had been as- saulted by her husband and beaten in the face until the blood was flowing and several wounds were apparent and the man appeared bent on renewing the attack. Bystanders came to the < rescue and the woman fainted. Th < man undertook to leave the place , but just as he got into his buggy George Hays seized the reins and took him by the collar , and he was soon in the city jail , which was possibly a good thing for him , as there were parties ready to act. It was learned that the man was L. B. Throop , a switchman and the woman , his wife , Mrs. Deloris Throop. FORGER AT BEATRICE. Smooth CrookLeaves the City with $50 or More. The smooth , forger , who had been hanging around Beatrice a few days , took in a number of business men and left town about $50 or more to the good. The - checks were drawn on the First National bank in ' favor of K. Alsen and signed J. S. Shugert. The forger visited a number of places and purchased a bill of goods tendering a chbck always much larger than the bills amounted to. In each instance he received a nice balance with the. goods purchased. The forgery was not discovered until after the fellow left town. He is thought to be the same party who recently visited Hast- ings and a number of other towns in the state. HEADACHE POWDERS FATAL. Wife ol' Farmer Near Auburn Takes Too Many. : News has just reached Auburn of the death of Alberta Reding , wife of Thomas Reding , a farmer living six miles north of the city. It is reported that Mrs. Reding was troubled with a severe headache and in her effort to give herself ease , took several head- ache tablets , which commenced to take effect soon after and made her very sick. A physician was summoned , but arrived too late to save her. She died within a few minutes after he came. Mrs. Reding was about 40 years of age. She leaves a husband and five children. - - - HAD BEEN THREATENED. - - - - = - , . . - ' . . , - Omaha Minister's House Fired in Al leged Incendiary Manner. : Fire believed to have been of incen- diary origin was discovered in the resi- dence of Rev. John A. S'pyker. pastor of the Trinity Methodist church at Omaha , at 1 o'clock Monday morn- ing. , The damage was $2,000. Rev. Mr. : Spyker was one of the strongest advocates of the early clos - : ing law and since its passage and en- forcement he has publicly proclaimed it as one of the best measures ever idopted. Since then he has received many threatening : letters , two of which in- formed him that he was to be burned out. Coal Miner Killed. : Tom Clements , of Beacon , was in stantly killed while working in a coal shaft owned by him and a brother. He was engaged in digging the coal with a pick , working underneath a heavy mass , which without warning fell with a crash , crushing him to an unrecognizable mass. He was one of the popular young men of Beacon and was married and had a family. Gas Jet Left Open. G. Darby was almost asphyxiated at his home in Lincoln by escaping gas. Mrs. Darby awakened and discovered her husband unconscious and the room full of gas. Prompt medical attention saved the man's life. The gas came ( rom a jet which had been left par- tially turned on. Father Murphy Has Service. In accordance with his announced itention , Father William Murphy : , of Ilysses . , held services in the Catholic hurch : Sunday. There was no disturb- nce and no attempt to prevent the iceting. : The priest appointed by ishop ! ; Bonacum in place of Father lurphy made no attempt to hold an pposition service. Load of Beer Confiscated. John Baeuer was arrested in Lin- coln by the police and a wagon load ) f beer which he was having taken to .he Rock Island depot for shipment to Hallam was confiscated. The beer ad been shipped to Hallam direct 'ror.1 Illinois , but had been unloaded md stored in the Baeuer warehouse. Drainage : Ditch Approved. Plans for digging a $30,000 ditch ere adopted at the meeting of the : ogan drainage district board at loop. The Elkhorn river drainage sard met in Fremont . and approved he proposed route of the river cut- Iff which is to be dug within the next ew months. - - Little Girl Burned to Death. Nina , the 12-year-old ! daughter of 1 1Ir . and Mrs. George Gillem. of Blair , 1 . as burned to death by the explosion t of , gasoline. j t Young Traveling 3Ian. Harold Banks , aged 10 years , took 1 he prize at the traveling men's pic- f nic at Lincoln for being the smallest iveling man on the road. The young mn : lives at Lexington , but was born u Cozad , where his father was in the ( e neral merchandise business until a hort time ago. . e Runaway : Accident , Fatal. Dennis Lyhenne died at his home , 1 : ( ) uthwest of Sutton , from the effect e f injuries suffered in runaway. ( J - . a : : ; . . . . : " r , ; . s , , ' ; 1 " ' . . "r . : - . _ _ , _ _ on . L . . . SPAIN IN AN UPROAR ; - ALfONSO HOOTEV' ' _ Rioting In Barcelona and Other Cities in Catalonia Hourly Is Becoming More : Serious. filAETIAL LAW EVERYWHEEE Returning King Learns'of Victory at Heavy Cost in Moroccan Battle. : . Rioting in the provinces of , Cata lonia , Spain , and the general manifes tations of discontent in Madrid over the continuance of the war against the Kabyle : tribesmen in Morocco have , given rise to grave fears that the en- ' tire country is on the brink : of a feT - olution. ' King Alfonso Wednesday declared all Spain under martial law and an- nounced a temporary suspension of constitutional guarantees. He an nounced that the rioting in Catalonia would be put down at all costs and arranged to dispatch to Barcelona at once two cruisers and the entire Third and Fourth Ar my corps , under the personal command of Prince Charles of Bourbon. Prince Ferdinand of Ba varia also will accompany the troops , with the rank of squadron commander. Kinpr : Is Hooted In Street King Alfonso was publicly hooted on the streets as he drove from the rail road station to the royal palace on his return from San Sebastian. Cries of "Down with the king ! " were heard on every hand. Barcelona is the center of the worst rioting , and it is there that the upris ing against the war policy of the gov- ernment seems to center. The author ities feel that their first care must be to break the spirit of the Barcelona rebels , after which they can subdue the malcontents in other places with greater ease. Wednesday marked a black chapter in Spain's history , for there was trag edy both at home and abroad. The king reached Madrid in time to learn l that part of his army at Melilla b. ' had a bloody battle with the Moors. " which , though the final victory was - " ' \ won by the Spaniards , cost the lives of twenty-one officers and a total of 200 Spaniards killed or wounded. STORM DEAD TWENTY-ONE. Fourteen Missing Along Gulf Coast and Property Damage $750,000. Twenty-one reported dead , fourteen missing , ten injured and a property loss totaling $750,000 is the result ol the storm which raged over the south- ern coast of Texas Wednesday. Of those : missing , thirteen are the memr bers of the families of three brothera ' r- , . Abernathy , who left High IslanSL/ Tuesday , intending to go to Sablafi Pass They traveled by wagon srad were to camp out on the beach during Tuesday night , resuming their Journey Wednesday. Part of their equipment has been found , the animals which drew the wagon drowned , but search- Ing parties have found no trace of the three men , their wives or the seven .hildren who made up the party. The tonn practically demolished the town of > Velasco , but only one life was lost. /70MAIT GONE ; FEAR FOUL PLAY. Clothes Found on Pond Bank Indi cate That Tragedy Occurred. The finding of a woman's cape , stockings and petticoat on the bank of Truer's pond near by lends a slnis- ter aspect to the mystery surrounding the disappearance : of the young woman from a hotel in Burlington , N. J. , last Thursday. The missing woman , to- gether ; with a man supposed to be a New York broker , registered at the Metropolitan Inn Wednesday evening as Mr. and Mrs. Wilkins of New York. The man left on the early train for New York Thursday morning , and h 13 , , - woman , who seemed to be in trou Ie , Ired a horse and carriage for a drive In the country. Later the team was found deserted on the bank of Ran- ocas ( creek. Letters in the woman's nltcase were addressed to "Miss A. M. filson , Manhattan : Hotel New York. " U. S. DeMtrorers Go to Alaska. , Six torpedo boat destroyers which : ave been in Puget Sound for nearly , L month , met at Seattle Monday : and hen : began a long cruise . to Alaska , to quaint officers and men with the jrthern waters and to give " an oppor- mlty : for maneuvers. The destroyers Lre the Whipple , Truxton , Hull , Paul r raes , Perry and Hopkins. It Harry PallIam Shoots Himself. ' Harry C. Pulliam president of the ' ational League of professional ' base- , ill clubs shot himself in the right ' : mple in his room at the New York thletic Club. The bullet passed en- , . rely through his head from right to Y eft : , cutting out both his eyes. There is little chance for him to recover. Mayor Marlcbreit Is Dead. \ CoL Leopold Markbreit , mayor oV ncinnati , and a distinguished soldlerN Lnd journalist , died Tuesday night h after an illness extending ' ' ' " . over the eater part of the nineteen months < , - he s had served the city as its chief \ ecutiv : < > . He will be succeeded in Iffice by Vice ! MayorvJohn Galvin. ' . . . . . . " . - . , , > 'V ; ' " , ; ' . . ' I'i 1 , . . . . . ,