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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1910)
- . . . . . .w r c e - _ . . - } - e . , S. , . . . - . . . . . # - - - : \ \ , - N-EBRASKA ( NEWS ( . NP 4 l . . Hettraskan Faces Charges . in , ginneetlonWi.li Mabray Case. I . . ; IYERS ASSISTS PROSEGSOTi t t j , , , Alleged Steerer Is Defended by Ma- E bray's Counsel - His Part Is Said to - Have Been Leading John Herme'l- + fcrccht , a Bancroft Farmer , , , Up' I Against Fake Horse Race at ddun- . cll Sluffs - Selection of-Jury Begun. I Omaha , Feb. 1. - The trial , 01 Frank Scott of Pender , Neb. , on a ebarge of larceny in connection wiiii tbc alleged Mabray swindle of : Jonn rnaelbrecht of Bancroft , Neb. , out ef $5,000 in "March , 19U8 , was begun in . the district court at Council iiluns. Attorney General H. W. Byers is as sisting in the prosecution of the case. The day was spent in attempting to scure a jury. The jurymen are to be in the charge of a deputy sheriff dur- Jng the trial. Scott is defended' by Emmett Tinley . and Charles Harl. Edward Mulick of Davenport , la. , an attorney for J. C. . Mabray , is expected to arrive today , but probably will not take an active , part in the defense. The story of the Hermelbrecht case was a feature of interest , when the victim testified at the trial of John B. Dobbins , recently convicted in the district court at Council Bluffs for op- erations similar to those which Scott is charged. , Scott is charged with having "steered" John Hermelbrecht against the Mabray gang , with the result that I Hermelbrecht lost $5,000 by one ot I the now famous fake horse races. Two iBdictmentswere returned by the dis- trict court grand jury In March of last _ year against Scott , who lived near / Pender , Neb. , but it was not until June 16 that the authorities succeeded IK locating him in Sioux City , where ke was placed under arrest and , " . brought to Council Bluffs. Six weeks ' later Scott secured his release from the county jail by furnishing bonds in \ tie aggregate sum of $6,000. NO EXTRA SESSION Cavernr Will Not Call Legislature TofMher to Act on Bank Guaranty. Lincoln , Neb. , Jan. 29.-Governor .Bkfclleaberser . announced definitely ' . 'tkat ke will not call an extra session of th ® legislature for the enactment at . aeyr bank deposit guaranty law , &a he has been asked to do. The gov . ernor says the constitutionality of the Qfclaioma ; law , which is similar to the enactment in Nebraska that has been ielre4 unconstitutional is now pend- - Jag IE 1 tt . United States supreme ceart , aad awaiting a decision. He sa , . an extra session would not be jU tlSed. , The indorsement of the income tax . latr amendment by Nebraska , Govern , or Shallenberger says , is not of vital 'interest at this time. 1 - - . SPRAGUE ABBOTT DEAD - . .Champion Golfer Passes Away in " Omaha Hospital . ; , . Oraaha , Jan. 29. ' - Sprague Abbott , well known in golfing circles , died at tho Clarkaon Memorial hospital , fol- lnwIag an operation for an abscess in the left lung. Mr. Abbott took up jolflng : .several years ago in an ef fort , it is said , to fight off incipient consumption. He was not only suc cessful in this , but developed into a Cfcarapion. He won the transmissis- . 'sippi championship at Rock Island ! in ] & 01 and held the Nebraska state championship : more than once. . Mr. Abbott's sister is the wjfe of Flnley Peter Dunne , the well knowa i . p morist. H F < was thirty years old and unmarried. ' - ' " - . Grand Jury Probing at Lincoln.t t Lincoln , Neb. , Jan. 28.-From the ffcct that A. E. Hargreaves was one of " * the witnesses before the grand jury , it is generally believed here that borly is engaged in making an investigation . iato the workings of the alleged'meat trnat. : In a recently published article ! . ( r. Hargrcaves made the assertion that four local representatives of the , big packing houses have a close . rorkics agreement ; that the prices made by each of them are absolutely the same at all times. - - . Racing ; Circuit Is Organized. . McCook , Neb. , Jan. 29.-Red Willow ' Hitchcock , Dundy and Chase counties , have organized a district racing cir- cir-/ / . /cujt. with A. Barnett of McCook , presi- dent ; Elmer Kay of McCook \ , secre- , ' tary ; C. C. Burr of Eenkelman , treas- , . : srer. At a meeting to he held in this . , .city in the future the dates for the V . district , purses and other details will ! bo decided : uncn. i ' - I ' . Indians Oppose Sale of Lands. , tOwt.ha : , ; an. 27. - Major J. S. Reyn- . . . . ' , . . ' elds oJ the Crow Indian agancy : : : passed ' . > 7 . through Omaha on his way to Wash- fagtoa , where he is sent Jin connection . wltk , a proposed congressional nieas- " . L * rtt f ° r the sale of the surplus land on - > . " tl & & reservation. : _ A party of about . , " .tv/oaty" Indians from the Crow agency . ? : : ) : , .I-also on the way to Washington to - : * : /oppose ' the bill. - . : " * t - ' . , , _ . ' /fc-v i \Y'.emc-n'e : Clubs at Tecumseh. . ' * * ' . Teoaaeoh , Neb. , Feb. Arrange- 44 ' " ' , iaents ij'nve been- made for the meet- . . irtgs ! ; of Hie1 Nebraska Federate ! Worn- ' , , rfn's clubs in the sis cotsressr.l ! dis , & 'frcts th5s ' -spring. The First , i-trlci : - ' . ti W be held in Pawitt-j . fifty . ; " . " ' ' . , , : , , , : , : . on ! tJfi ( ! ; , ntf 21 : . _ ' t - . . . . ; . ; .c . / , . ; . - , , ; ; : . - . . ' . , . ' . . I. , . . . .t ' z K / i ' , MAY IMPEACH HASKELL t Threat Made by Member of Legisla- ture in Introducing Resolution. Guthrie , Okla. , Feb. 1. - Reference to 1 a possibility of impeachment of Gov- I ernor Charles N. Haskell and other state officers is made in a resolution Introduced' in the lower nouse of the legislature here by Representative ' I Humphrey. The resolution demands an investi- gation .of the Columbia Bank and Trust company , which failed at Okla homa City last fall , owing depositors \ over $1,000,000 , and it calls upon At- torney General West to btfng before , the legislature matters which he had previously stated were being consid- ered by the grand jury at Oklahoma City when the body was discharged recently by order of Governor Haskell. \ The resolution is based upon a let- ter written by the attorney general at the time the grand jury , which it was known was inquiring into the af- fairs of the failed' bank , was dis charged. At that time Mr. West criti cised the acts of certain state offi- cials , alleged to be concerned in the institution. The resolution says : "Such charges , if true , might subject the governor of this state to impeachment and the offi cers to whom reference is ma'de , to ! m- peachment or removal. " USURY CASE TO HIGH COURT . ' Miss Doris Griffith Was Fined $6,000 and Sentenced to Jail. Hartford , Conn. , Feb. . - The appeal of Doris Griffith , agent for D. H. Tol- man , a money lender , from tb.3 sen tence . of $6,000 frffe and sixty days : in jail , imposed by the supreme court for usury , will be carried to the su preme court of/ the United States , . Chief Justice Baldwin of the Connect- ; 1 icut supreme court having decided to allow a writ of error to issue on con- ' , dition that Miss : Griffith file a new bond for $8,000. This , it is under- ! J stood , will be done. I UNIONISTS WIN ELECTIONS ! ' - - Tariff Reformers Have Majority of Twelve in House of Commons. London , . Feb. 1. - The re-election of , J. G. Hancock , labor candidate for the middle division of Derbyshire , com- pletes the elections for the new par- , liament in England. The remaining half dozen constituencies to make re I turns are the Scotch and Irish. Tl ; final totals in England alone give th j J unionist tar.iff reformers 239 seats , ' the liberals and laborites combined , 227 , or a unionist majority of 12 , compared with a liberal labor major- ity of 211 received in 1 & C6. - . t SHIPP GREETED AS HERO Man Who Served Term for Connection With Lynching Given Ovation. , Chattanooga , Tenn. , Feb. 1. - With bands playing "Dixie" and "Home , I Sweet Home , " Captain Joseph E. ' I Shipp was greeted here by 10,000 of ; his fellow citizens when he alighted , from the train that bore him to his ' home from Washington , where he had ; just completed a sentence in prison , for contempt of court in connection : ; with the lynching of Ed Johnson , a negro. CHOKES TO DEATH ON STEAK Fatally Follows Meat Boycott in Pitts- I burg Boarding House. I ' Pittsburg , Feb. 1.-A dozen for- eigners discussed' the meat boycott at breakfast in a Mulberry alley board- ing house , and all except Mic Skovlac , a Slav , agreed to eat no meat. Skov- ' lac , delighted with having the break fast steak to himself , tackled it so violently that he chok'ed to death with the first mouthful. . , BLACK HAND MEN IN PRISON Ten Men Convicted at Toledo in the Leavenworth Penitentiary. Leavenworth , Feb. 1. - Guarded by a United States marshal and eight deputies , ten members of a Black Hand gang , who were convicted in To ledo , and sentenced to from ten to sixteen years' imprisonment , arrived at the federal prison here. The con victed men gave ' no trouble on their journey. THREE CROV. AT MEMPHIS Disabled Gasoline Launch Run Down . by Tow Boat. Memphis , Tenn. , Feb. 1. - Floating helplessly in a disabled' gasoline launch , three m . . . ii were drowned when the launch was run down by the tow boat Enterprise , off Hopefield point. The dead are : Albert Schinner , Jo. seph Dietrich and Harry Hurst. Congress May Probe High Prices. Washington , Feb. Forcshaaow- ing an investigation by congress of the high cost of living , the house ways and nfeans committee authorized Chairman Payne and Representative Clark : , the majority ard minority lead ers in the house , to collaborate in the preparation of a resolution providing for such inquiry and defining the form of proced . ire. Higher Price for Bibles. . Chicago , Feb. 1. - The price of bibles will go up on March : 1 , accord- ing to an announcement by a large bible' 'puhlishing h'ouse. The cause for the advance is the enforcement of the new tariff on imported leather and paper. Dr. Cook in Sanitarium. Heidelher.-j , , Germany , Jan. 31. - An attendant of the Rongenau sanitarium saitl that D : ' . Frederick A. Cook had been stayin : ; at that institution for some time unSer the .name ot ( Junth'er' , a tfcab : he' irk , ' f r Yii'J91t1d ' ! ' . ' . - - - . UNDER CROSS..FmE Ousted Special Agent O : : .1 ] on . . ' Witness Stand , 1\ TESTIMONY FULL OF INTEREST " Democrats Take Prominent Part in Questioning-Says Former Secre- ' tary Garfield's Antagonism to Alas- kan Coal Land Claimants Caused His Withdrawal Cabinet-Sen- From - Sen - ator Paynter Quits Committee. Washington , Feb. 1. - When the Ballinger-Pinchot investigating com- mittee adjourned until next Friday , Louis R. Glavis was still on the wit- ness stand. He will be further ques- tioned at that time. Glavis was cross-examined by sev- "eral members of the committee , the Democrats taking by far the more prominent part in the questioning framing their , .interrogations in a way which elicited answers tending to ac centuate : certain * ' parts of the testi- mony already given by the witness. Cross-examined by Senator Fletcher , Glavis said that Bellinger , while com- missioner of the land office , had ap peared before committees of congress and by his testimony had indorsed a bill which would validate 4,198 pat- ents by Clarence- Iunningham. : , Glavis said that at the time Ballin- ger asked him not to proceed with his investigation of the coal claims until after election because of the slowness of campaign contributions , no one was present to overhear the conversation. McK"nzie's : Name Brought In. The name of Donald McKenzie was . brought prominently into the inquiry when Glavis testified McKenzie had told him that the reason James R. Garfield was not retained in President Taft's cabinet as secretary of the in- terjior was because of his antagonism to the Alaskan coal claimants. Glavis said he made an affidavit con- taining this interview , but denied , when questioned by Senator Root , that he signed it as a reflection on Presi- dent Taft or that he intended to use it as an attack upon President Taft. Glavis said he thought the president might be interested in it and he thought also that the affidavit would interest " Mr. Garfield. Asked what he had done with the affidavit , he said he had left one copy in the land office at Seattle and sent the other to Wash- ington. Pinchot on Hand. Gifford Pinchot was present at the session with a large leather bag filled with papers. It is expected' he wll follow Glavis on the witness stand. Senator Paynter of Kentucky re signed from the committee and did not attend the session. Illness was given as the cause for this action. The appointment of a. successor has been left to Senator Money , the minor- ity leader of the upper house of con- gress , and he offered the place to more than a dozen senators , without being able to induce any one of them to accept service. The witness declare that Repre- sentative McLachlan of California and Representative Kinkaid of Nebraska were interested in Alaskan claims , and that Ballinger , after becoming commissioner of the land office , had acted as attorney for Kinkaid. Glavis asserted that Ballinger , had suggested' to him not to pursue an in- vestigation against Congressman Mc- J' Lachlan , saying : there had "been too much of that sort of thing in the past. " When , towards the end of his testi- mony , Glavjs was asked the direct question , if he thought Secretary Bal- linger and Commissioner of the Land Office Dennett were in league to do Tong in the Alaskan cases , he re plied : "Well , I thought the cases wbuld be better protected with them out of the way. * " Glavis' attack' seemed to center more on Commissioner Dennett. He said he became convinced in the sum- mer of 1900 that "Dennett was 'crooked , ' ' and took steps to secure carbon copies of letters Dennett was writing back to Washington. ' ' Several of these letters were introduced in evidence. URGES POSTAL SAVINGS . Carter Cchampions Administration Bill in the Senate. Washington , Feb. 1. - Senator Car- ter had no difficulty in getting permis- sion to proceed with his speech in the senate in support of the postal' sav- ings bill , which he delivered in accord- ance with a previous notice , but the general consent did not extend be- yond this courtesy. Police Grafter Sent to Prison. Chicago , Feb. . - Edward , McCann , I former police inspector , who was con- victed of accepting bribes , was sen- " tenced to from one to five years in the penitentiary by Judge Barnes in the criminal court. . _ . I Stabbed Boy Who Snowballed Him. ' Beaver Falls , Pa. , " Feb. . - An Ital- ian snowballed by a crowd of small boys stabbed one of them , John Wat- son , near the heart. The lad is in a critical condition. The foreigner es caped. , . Two Burned to Death in Home. Scrantpn , Pa. , Feb 1. - Mrs. , Patrick Joyce and her. granddaughter , Mary Sweeney , lost their lives' in at fire which destroyed their hointj' ! tt Mi- Hooka " . . . _ , . \t. . . . . . - . . ' ; . . . - . " . \ : . . . . 'v. . ; : ' . . . . . " ' : -i : . . . , , . . . f , a 1910 I FEBRUft..RY 11910 Sun. non. Tue. Wed. Thu. Fri. Sat. 1----- . . . . 1 2 345 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13141516171819 2021 22 23 24 25 26 21 28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . POISON IN , SWOPE'S BODC Analysis Confirms Suspicions i of Kan sas City Millionaire's Family. Chicago , Feb. 1. - Colonel Thomas [ 1. Swope of Kansas City died from the effects of strychnine , according to the findings of Drs. Hektoen , Haines and Vaughn , announced here. The report did' not include the -re suIt of the analyses : of the contents of the stomach of Chrisman Swope , nephew of Colonel Swope , who died soon after the demise of his uncle under similar circumstances. The result of the investigation into the causes of the death of the elder Swope and his nephew will be- the basis of criminal prosecution , accord- . ing to Prosecuting Attorney Conkling of Kansas CJty , in which the definite finding that poison caused the death of Colonel Swope will play an import- ant part. Mr. Paxton later ' admitted criminal prosecution would follow immediately. Accused Doctor Sues for Slander. Kansas City , Feb. . - A sensational phase in the Swope case developed when Dr. Bennett Clarke Hyde , high- ly connected professionally and so- cially : filed a suit at Independence , Mo. , against John H. Paxton , an executor of the Swope estate , to re- cover $100,000 for alleged slander. The petition alleges that Paxton made statements that Dr. Hyde was guilty of poisoning Chrisman Swope and Thomas H. Swope. OUT TO SLAY INDIANS Two Brave Pennsylvania Lads Taken In by St. Louis Police. St. Louis , Feb. 1. - Two brave In- dian hunters , who gave the names of William LoUosh and Michael Patrick of Charleroi , Pa. , sixteen years and thirteen years old respectively , were ( checkmated' the Union 'station. They are being held at police head- quarters until the police hear from their parents. The sombrero hats wjith yellow , bands aroused the suspicion of the police. The boys' baggage included a knockdown rifle , a pistol , a hatchet , a dirk , a dagger , ammunition , a tele- scope , a loaf of bread , a roll of stage money and a prayer book. The boys said the reading of dime novels caused them to start for Utah to unearth a buried treasure. The rifle was to fight back invaders and the telescope to detect Indians. The youthful : Indian fighters left their homes on Saturday and rode to Pitts- burg by trolley. They came tC' St. Louis on their joint savings. READY TO BRING UP BODIES Shaft of Cherry Coal Pit Will Be Un- sealed This Week. Cherry , Ill. , Feb' 1. - Nearly every woman ) in Cherry is drawing .her heart strings tight to undergo the , ordeal ol exhumation expected this week : ; : , fol lowing the promised unsealing tomor- row of the St. Paul mine , in which more than 200 coal miners have lain entombed since Nov. 13 , when fire caused the death of some 350 men. As it is , not certain that the fire in the mine is extinguished , nothing defi- nite toward the recovery of the bod- ies will be planned until experts , pro- tected with oxygen helmets , have ex- plored the shaft. It is though that about forty bodies are floating on the water' in the bot- tom of the mine. More than 200 other corpses are said to be huddled in the second level. WHEAT AND CORN WEAK Cats Also Off , but Provisions Gained Materially. Chicago , Jan. 31. - Grain sold lower : : t the close of the day after a session marked by fluctuations within com- paratively nanow limits. Provisions advanced steadily through the day on a strong demand' Closing prices : - . July $1.00Tx. \Vheat- -May , 1.10 ; , Corn-May , 66c ; July 66V4c. Oats-May , 46c ; July , 431/4c. Pork-May , $21.35 ; July , 21.32 % ' . Lard-May , $ $11.92 ; July , 11.87 . ' Ribs-May , $11.62 % ; July , $11.60. | Chicago Cash Prices-No. 2 hard wheat , 1131.15 % ; No. 2 corn , 64 % ' @ 65c ; No. 2 oats , 4748c. South Omaha Live Stock. South Omaha , Jan. 31. - Cattle - Re - ceipts , 2,500 ; stronger ; native steers , $4.00@6.85 ; cows and heifers , 3.00 5.00 ; western steers , $3.0U@6.00 : ; stockers and feeders , $2 > 80g ( > 5.30 ; ' calves , $3.50@8.00 ; bulls and stags , $3.00@5.00. Hogs-Receipts , 3,400 ; 5c higher ; heavy , $8.15@8.25 ; mixed' , 8058.10 ; lightt $7.95@8.15 ; pigs. 7007.50 ; bulk of sales , $8.05@8.15. Sheep-Receipts , 3,000 ; strong , 10@ 15c higher ; year'ings , $6.45@7.40 ; wethers , $5.00@6.00 ; ewes , $4.75@ 5.50 ; lambs , $7.40@8.40. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago , Jan. 31.-Cattle-Receipts , 18.COO ; 5@10c higher ; beeves , $4.15@ 7.60 ; cows and heifers , 2105.60 < ) ; stockers and feeders , $3.00@5.40 ; westerns , $4.00@6.00. Hogs-Receipts , " 34,000 ; 5c higher ; top , $8.55 ; mixed and butchers , $8.10@8.55 ; good to choice heavy . 8358.55 ; rough heavy , $8.20@S.80 ; light , S.00@S.40 ( ; bulk , $8.35@8.50 ; pigs , $7l.tfQ@g.Ofr , Sheep - Receipts , 18,000 ; steady } Bheep , § , 3.90 0G.OO-lambs ; : , $ G.OO@S.SO , , _ / , . . . . . . . . - . . - - . - . - - . . : _ - - - . - - - " . , . . . .J. . . . . . _ , . I I iO'O MINERS DEAD . Seventy-nine ' Bodies Found in a Pile in Primero Mine. ! VICTIMS BLOWN TO ATOMS. t , 'I Rescuers Make ' Desperate Efforts and Finally Succeed in Entering Shaft. Laborers Are Rushed from Neigh- . . . boring Towns to Aid in Search for Dead in Colorado Fuel and Iron Company's Shaft. Frimcro , Colo. , Feb. 1. - Over a hun- dred men are , believed to have been killed by a terrific explosion in the Primero mine of the Colorado Fuel and Iron company. Seventy-niife : bodies were 'found ; n a pile in a mass at the foot of the air shaft. When the explosion occurred the men evidently made a rush to es cape to the air shaft and were found as they fell , while battling their way to freedom. The main shaft of the mine is completely wrecked. Eight'more bodies have been recov- ered and rescue parties are making desperate efforts to reach the interior workings , cut off from the outside by the caving in of the main shaft. Three men were killed at the mouth of the mine slope by the force of the explosion. Most of the victims are Slavs and' Hungarians. Electrician Will Helm is known to be among the missing. The camp is a scene of indescribable hor- ror. While every ablebbdied man is. taking his turn with pick and shovel to clear the shaft , the women and . children , kept back by ropes , have gathered about the shaft , weeping and calling wildly upon their loved ones. Miners were rushed to Primero from Trinidad , Segundo , Starkville , Sopris and Cokeville : , and are laboring fran- tically to clear the main , shaft. Members of the rescue party say that the effect of the explosion under- ground is indescribable. . The bodies recovered' were horribly burned and unrecognizable. One body was im paled on broken timbers. Others were blown to pieces. PARIS IS ONCE MORE GAY Spirits of Citizens Rise as Waters of Seine Fall. Paris , Feb. 1. - The improvement in- the general : situation continuos , and the spirits of the Parisians are rising as the waters tall. Street hawkers are selling postcard pictures of the flood and the boulevards are once more gay with rejojcing. With the crisis past , the French people ! are resuming the ; r ordinary troubles with a light heart. The prefect of the department of the Seine has issued instructions to the owners of flooded houses to clean and disinfect the premises , to the sat- isfaction . of the municipal architects , I within twenty-four hours after the sub sidence of the waters. sUb-I . Allhough the papers are printing col- umns of pitiful stories , a hundredth part of the sorrow and agony suffered never will be known. Hundreds of houses have been swept down the river and occasionally : a coffin in a boat. Scores of half famished families have been rescued from their homes and there are hundreds still occupy- ing their half submerged houses wait- ing for the water to recede. WARRINER TELLS OF BLACKMAIL - - Says He Paid Mrs. Ford $1,000 a Month for Seven Years. Cincinnati , Feb. 1. - Charles L. War- riner , defaulting treasurer of the Bjg ; i ! Four railroad , as first witness in the trial of Mrs. : Jeanette Stewart-Ford , ' said he had paid Mrs. Ford $1,000 a t month for seven years from October , 1902. Mrs. Ford is charged with havi " blackmailed \Varriner. ' The witness described' Mrs. Ford as a woman who could never get enough money , and himself as a man never free from her demands. This was the first time Warriner had uttered ' any- thing publicly regarding Mrs. Ford , < ; and the crowd in the court room fol- , ' lowed his testimony with great , terest. . " CHILD . MURDER . IN NEW i YORK City Startled by Second - Fiendish At. tack of Same Kind. New York , Feb. 1. - Another child murder startled the city. It occurred in a home on East Fiftieth street , where a man shot and killed one child , ' I , 1 . , wounded another probably fatally , and then shot himself. The police are following a theory that tho man may have been the slayer of the two boys shot recently while coasting. z . Miners Want Increase of 10 Per Cent. \ Toledo , 0. , Feb. 1. - Coal operators anticipate a long drawn contest in the joint , conference with the miners of Ohio , Indiana and western Pennsylva- tia , which began today. The operat- ors are determined on a decrease from n 9C to 80 cents per ton in the wage 'scale , while the miners demand an increase of 10 cents per ton. - President's Brother Seriously. Sick. ' Los Angeles , Feb. . - The condition. of Henry W. Taft , brother of the pres- ident , who is in a local hospital suf- fering with an /ittack of erysipelas ! , be- ; came suddenly worse and it i is a6 w 4 feared that the disease has secur & a.a. . . , . much stronger hold" upon him than't - . 'W9 h 1 , 64t EGG t . . ' . - ' . . , . . . , , . , . . . , . . _ " ' - - - - - - - - A - . - ' . . . : . . - . . " " ' , . , . - , , . ' % , . . - . , - . 1 R. : M. Faddis & Co " ? ostoiiltt address Valentine or Kennedy. f ' t : ' ! pt. : sJuiiie branded ' ' $ on hIt -r\ _ . . * * _ - - - - , tH.J : & ' 'S " ? 'r kA > * } ( I - Horses bra ID left [ shvuldt or thJf , i Some * - ' Some branded brawled " on : hrandedBl nri left i "I or shoulder. . should ? I or till 0h , ! P. H. Young. ' I Simeon. Kebr. j , ' . _ . . _ _ _ _ _ _ . _ . Cattle branded : as cut on left sIde r Home Q. yon left r elde. - An left Jaw.r V horses. Range on Gnrdoa Creek north of 8tme' + n. t Albert Whipple & Sons. Rosebud 1.iJ. D. Cattle branded SOS on left side ! OSO on riffbtsld Irsos MSome , cattle also Tiave a -f- on neck Some with A on left ! shoulder and i some branded with two ban across ! ' bind Quar- ) j I ters. SomeTeias : : t 1 cattle branded O on left side and some 'I on left side. _ Horses branded SOS on left hip. Some cattle I i branded AW bar connected on both sides and ' left hip of horses . . N. S. Rowley. Kennedy 't - Nebt stsn. i Same as cut on left side ' and hip , and on left shoulder of hor- ses. AlsoKEB on left side . 'md hip. * X on left H' Some rafc . - . . ' r- . tie brand-i _ p. . < - ed husk- ' ing PCR ( either 'aide up ) oa left side or hip. F on left jaw and left shoulder of horses. HI HIQ on left hip of horses , 77" on left Jaw of horses . < L C. P. Jordan. - Rosebud , SD Horses and eattlt same at cat ; ' alt * OJ BE JJ on rijr kt hip. ; Range on Oak aai Butte creeks. A liberal rewarf for informatfom leading to detection of rustlers of rtwk , bearinirany of these , brands. ti " \ R. M. Terrillv ; Propr. x \ . Brownlee , Ne . < . " Cattle branded aa ' In cat oa left side. Son branded JL T T on left hip. Hans on North Lon , - river , two mile west of Br . Trnl . e J. Yaryan. . : fullman , ITcbi Cattle branded JT on right side Horses branded. JT on right shoulder J y Reasonable rewr4 for any IDtor ; tl. . leading to ta . n . / corerj cf cattle / strayed from ' ny , range. . . / D. M. Sears. Kennedy ; Nebr. Cattle branded HF % as on cutleft side Some on left hip. S o - Horses same on left shoulder. Range Square Lake. NebraS8a * : Land and Feedlag Co. 3artIett Richards Pres Will G Conutock . V . 'P. Chas 0 Jamison cTrM ' Cattle branded on any part olan1m.l ; ! : also tha following ! brands : r' . ill ( norsfli brant t s s am * Bange betw. . * Mordon on the F . . . & M V. . B , B. a1)f Hyannis on B & M. R.ll. in Northwestern Nebr. . . BARTI.ETT _ 1CIlARDS Ellsworth , Bebr John Kills Plenty. , I St Francis Mis sinn. i Kosebud. S. D. C , ttle branded _ . , . as , in cut ; hors"es T" r aime 0 n left thigh. ! KJinue he- tvyeei' SpririV C'k and Little White river. Snwyer Bros Oasis. Nebr , ' G. K. Sawyer has cnarvo or these cattle. H rsei l > If onlettshonl- der. Somr left sldn. . SOlIlt"1I Hors s same left thigh ttauge on Snake river. Metzger Bros. . ' ; , , itolf , . Zebr Cattle branded . anywhere on left side. 1 Earmark , square . - , . n . . crop right ear. . . . . ) Horses have I ame brasd on eft thigh. i Range on Gordon and Snake CreeJts ; Reward of $ Z50 wlh bo' "aId i to , any person ! fOJ I , "for " format uBton Je ' lea'ling to the arrest , and final convIction of 'tDY ' rSon . - - person or personsstealla . : f' .a flp . - * with : \ \hov hmn ( l , " i M I . Roan Bros. Woodlatce Neb \ - b I " / 4 " . ' - . . . . \ . . . a Ranjrr on Long R 8' _ .ah aud Crook- ! ! Lak . - : l I . . ' : : " : . : , + . - . ' - ' . - . . . . . . ; . 1 - . - . , . . . . - : . : , 11' '