. . I ' : I " H - \ _ _ " The Talentine Democ r : : : VALENTINE , NEB. ' 1 i / i ' : ' I. M. RICE , - - - - Publisher H } I . * - _ ( ,1 , I A. WOLTEE MUST DIE' II'I II i 'I ' \1 1 , ELECTRIC CHAIR FOR roRDER ER OF MISS WHEELER. il 1 " , I . j - j . ' I Defendant Remains Stolid and Indif- ferent to Last and Refuses to Com- 1 . meat - Found Asleep in' His Cell I When Called Upon to Hear Fate. Albert Wolter a degenerate youth of 19 years who gloated over lewd < pictures and was "crazy" about Vv"o- men , must die in the electric chair II i + ' for the murder of Ruth Wheelei . a pretty 15-year-old stenographer of New York. After only one hour and ; fifty minutes of deliberation a jury in , the court of special sessions found him < guilty of murder in the first de- gree at 10:30 o'clock Friday night bringing to a close a trial marked by Its swift movement and its testimony of horror. i His counsel said with eloquence that Wolter was too tender hearted to hurt i a cat but twelve men decided that he toad strangled Ruth Wheeler and j thrust , her , while yet alive in his fire- place : , where , soaked with oil her a crumpled body writhed and burned. With the same wax-faced : ndiffer- I I ence that he had shown throughout j the trial , Wolter evinced no emotion 9 I when the verdict was announced. . With almost inhuman complacency hc had been found asleep in his cell while . r the jury was deliberating. He will J I i > e sentenced on Wednesday. f The jurors themselves showed emo- M I Iit I tion while the boy who must dic I showed : none. When asked if they : liad found a verdict William V. Kulp foreman : , answered 'n a shaking voice ; , "We have , " and announced that they Jiad found Wolter guilty of murder in r , the first degree. No relatives of the murderer in court to hear the verdict. His aged parents were in court during the af- ternoon. Wolter refused to talk. "r \ don't want to talk tonight , I'm tired , and I want to get a good sleep first. " COTTON FRAUD IS DISCOVER . If II I I I . f . . Forged Bills of leading Are Sent to : j England. ti . A severe ' shock has been experi- enced in the Liverpool cotton mark . . according to Friday's Shipping Ga- rette , in the discovery of forged bills of lading for cotton purporting 10 have been shipped from the United States. The quantity involved is said to be between 15,000 and 20,000 bales. According to the Gazette it is diffi- f cult to ascertain which bills of lading are bona fide and which are fraud I " lent and this point will be deter- 1 mined only upon the arrival of the 1 ' 1I I vessels and discharge of their care i I . goes. II : ' The paper adds that some eightei ! , local cotton firms may be involved. .I FORTUNE FOR SWEETHEART. 11 loxran's Wealth Reverts to Girl He ] I I loved Years Ago. In 1857 a dentist of Franklin , N. H. , aaraed Steven Bailey fell in love with :1 : Bur- JI I , bank. He was crossed in love and 1 I went west and settled in Iowa. Last , winter he was found frozen to death . at Juniper Springs , Colo. In all these 53 years he had not forgotten Pretty Etty Burbank and when his will was i probated a few days ago it was found he had left her 40 acres of land and a ; i dwelling house near Mason City , la. . and thousands of dollars. Il Etty Burbank is married now and is Mrs. Osgood , of Brookline , Mass. Her brother Is Alonzo Burbank , president : of the International Paper company , of New York. NEARLY A SCORE LOSE LIVES A. Disastrous Explosion In an Ohio Mine. Eighteen of . a night force of 25 ma- Chine men employed in the mine of the Youghiowheny and Ohio Coal ' ompany , near Amsterdam , 0. , are I thought to be dead as a result of an explosion in the mine late Thursday I night. So far six bodies have been recov- ered. Seven were taken from the shaft in an unconscious condition. . Twelve men are missing. It is thought that the explosion was . - : caused by coal gas being ignited by the lights on the helmets of the min. trs. Sioux City Live Stock Market. Friday's quotations on the Sioux . City live stock market follow : Top beeves $7.50. Top hogs , $9.15. . Russian Minister Retires. ! ' M. de Vollant Russ'an minister to . _ Mexico , has been retired because of 111 health and will be succeeded by _ - Dr. A. de Stavelsky at present sec retary to the Russian . legation at Berne. . Carmen Granted an Increase. Increases % of 31 1-2 cents per day have been granted to the Southern railways to Its 1,400 carmen. . , , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ; , : , .t " : r.S : - ; , / . ' : , . ' : , F . , c t' . . - < , ' j - . . . . . . . - , - _ . < MARlt * \VAIX IS DEAD. - . Career of Saffuiel L. Clemens Comes to an End. r Samuel Langhorn Clemons ( Mark Twain ) died painlessly at 6:30 o'clock Thursday night at Redding Conn. , of I angina pectoris. He lapsed into coma < at 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon and never recovered consciousness. It was the end of a man worn out by grief and acute agony of body. Wednesday was a bad day for the little knot of anxious watchers at the bedside. For long hours the gray , aqueline features lay molded in the inertia of death , while the pulse sank steadily but late at night Mark Twain passed from a stupor into the first : natural sleep he had known since he returned from Bermuda , and Thurs- day morning he awoke refreshed , even faintly cheerful and In full possession : of his faculties. He recognized his daughter Clara ; , ( Mrs. Ossie Gabrilowitsch ) , spoke a rational word or two and feeling him- self unequal to conversation wrote out In pencil : Give me my glasses. " They were his last words. Laying them aside he sank first into a reverie > and later into final unconsciousness. Angina pectoris Is a paroxymal af- fection of the chest of baffling and i obscure origin characterized by se- . . vere pain , faintness and depression of the spirits. The pain is severe and ; of an oppressive crushing or stabbing character. The attacks progress in frequency and severity , with uncertain intermissions , sometimes of long du- ration to a fatal termination. Mark Twain did not die in anguish. : Sedatives soother his pain but his moments of consciousness aggravated the mental depression. On the way up from Bermuda he said to Albert Bigelow Paine who had been his con- stant companion In illness : "This is a bad job ; we'll never pull through with it. . RIOTS RECURRING IN CHINA. Lawless Natives Engage in Serious < Disturbances. The lawlessness of the natives which began at Chang Sha , the capi- tal of Hunan province , China , is re- ported to be spreading. : Advices re- ceived at Pekin state that riots have occurred at Ning Slang , the site df a Protestant mission , about thirty miles west of Chang Sha. n mission : school at Y5 Yang , twenty miles north of Ning Slang , has been burned. The foreigners are said to have escajed harm. Foreign residents at Yo Chow - were preparing to leave that place last ; night. These reports were cUpled ] with the statement that a wholesale ! desertion of the troops has taken place. One hundred ! Chinese trom the Chi- ] nese cruiser that recent'y arrived at Chang Sha are guardingthe foreign settlement there. HEIRS LOSE THEIR UIT. ChIcago Doctor Awarded $100,000 of the McViclcer Estate. Dr. L. C. H. Zeigler , of Chicag . by a supreme court decision render Phursdaj' , is entitled to $100,000 from the -estate of Mrs. James H. McVicker , as provided by the contract he held t o render her medicalVttendance dur- ing her life. Dr. Zeigler lived up to his part of the -contract for five year , when Mrs. McVicker died. Her heirs attacked the contract and wbn in the lower court , but this decision was reversed by the Illinois supreme ourt at Springfield today. President of Guatemala. Manuel Estrada Cabrera was re- elected president of Guatemala in the lections ended Tuesday according to a government cable message received at 1 ; the Guatemalan consulate in New York. The election was tranquil and Senor Cabrera was chosen by "an : overwhelming majority , " the dispatch ] states. . Coal Lands Withdrawn. Secretary Ballinger of the depart- ment of the interior has withdrawn from entry at proximately thirteen and a half million acres of- . coal lands ! in southeastern Montana believed to contain valuable deposits , pending ex amination and classification as to their values. i Antelope is New Specimen. Edmund Heller the zoologist , of Riverside Cal. , who accompanied Mr. : Roosevelt on his African hunting trip has decided that the sable antelope killed by Kermit Roosevelt , is a new species peculiar to the Mombasa re- gion and not heretofore described. It will be ' named the Roosevelt. . Players for Omaha. President' Johnson of the American Baseball league Thursday announced the following releases : By St. Louis to Omaha , B. E. Shotten , J. M. Corri- don. Shoots Wife and Self. 'hillip Berry of Bloomington , 111. , 1ged 43 , shot his 21-year-old wife and himseI Thursday. Both will die. Re- c ntly the couple quarreled and sep- arated. . Diamond Ornanjcnt Stolen During Wednesday night a diamond ornament was stolen from the greatly revered image of the Virgin In the Uspenski cathedral in the Kremlin , at Moscow , Russia , and many precious stones were cut out of the frames of the pictures of the saints. Sir John William Schroeder of Lon- don , ' head of J. H. Schroeder & Co. , bankers , died Thursday. He was born in 1825. . , - - _ - ' ' ' ° " " ' " " X'sM k'k-ilwwAr' ° [ KK a'Y wYa"Y" : . . . . - SITS UNMOtiLi ) AND CA i > ! . J Hostile Array of Facts are Face h' Wolter. No prisoner on trial for his life ; i. the New York courts is ever remem bered to have faced such an array 0 hostile facts and heartreridering - . . " . . * 1 - t".t1 - mony with stolid indifference a.s d' : ' , , Albert Wolter "Wednesday when con fronted with the charred fragment : of the body that once was ] RuH ' Wheeler whom he Is charged witt luring to her death in his flat not month ago. Phillip O'Hanlon , a coroner's phy- sician , testified that Ruth WheeleJ had been attacked before she Wa ! murdered and that there was stil life in her 'body when it was soake ; with kerosene , jammed up the chim ney of Wolter's flat and set afire. Ht had found human hair ' not her OWl adhering to the burneu fingers. There fore he knew she had fought for he honor. There was soot in the lungs A corpse does not breathe. Ther fore he knew a living and still senti ent body had inhaled smoke anc flames. During this testimony , which mad < < the jurors fidget in their chairs , Wol ter sat listlessly scanning the jurors the grewsome exhibits themselves . . . . - . anc . . . . . . his lawyers. He gave no sign of emo tion when Adelaide Wheeler , 19 year : old and said to be an extraordii resemblance to her ' sister , took th- - . . . stand. With perfect poise the girl identt fled a braid of artificial hair that ha been her sister's , bits of underc10th ing that she knew by their texture jewelry Ruth had worn , and lastly ; which came as a surprise to the de fense , a seal ring engraved with Rutl Wheeler's initials and which wa : found on the body. The prosecutiol will contend that this clinches beyon doubt the previous identifica which it had been thought the defensr : would attempt to overthrow. ART SWINDLE UNCOVERED. Hundreds ot Americans Have Bcm - Duped. The revelations made in the case < 0 Count de Gatigny who with tht countess , is being examined at Tours France on a charge of having misrep' resented the origin of paintings anc the : antiquity of furniture purchasec . by Mrs. Chas. H. Paine of Paris , bu formerly of Boston , have caused a pro found impression in the world of ar and served to open up the whole ques i6n : of the many sided traffic in * shan jaintmgs , other works of art and an tique furnitare. Although the declarations of Henr Rochefort , editor of the Patrie , re garding ; the Rembrandts may consti ute a satirical exaggeration , it ; is the general 'opinion ' that there is sonit truth in his assertion that celebra ollections in hundreds of homes h America and elsewhere contain spur ious Rembrandts as well as copse of other masters. / ' * Rochefort ! has said that 80 'Pe ! cent -of the "Rembrandts" owned h America : were forgeries. "I have seen so many 'Turners , ' ' said M. Rochefort , "that I have almos decided that Turner never existed. HI could not have turned out the work : attributed to him. if he had lived 201 ( years. It is the same with the Rem brandts. AFRICAN M. E. CHURCH. . early $20,000 Raised for Work II the Past Year. Nearly $20,000 was raised for the work of the African Methodist Epis ] copal church in the fiscal year jus ended according to a report made t. the financial board in session in Wash ington Wednesday. Bishop Grant 0 : Kansas City is presiding. Rev. John Hurst , financial secre ' I tart' ; ' reported that after reservatioi for educational purposes , church ex tension , superannuation of minster : and provisions for their widows anc children , nearly $100,000 was reserve for the general treasury of the churc for payment of salaries of bishops ; general officers and denominationa needs. Crew Is Rescued. The crew of the British Indiar Navigation company's steamer Satarz i which went ashore on the shoal rock : near Newcastle , N. S. -W. , Wednesday were rescued by the steamer Arari and I landed Thursday. Trans-Andtno Tunnel Opened. The Trans-Andine railway tunne. was i formally opened Tuesday. Th tunnel is 12,000 feet above sea leve. and links the republics of Chile anc Argentina commercially. Once Rich ; Now Penniless. Edward M. Field , son of Cyrus W Field of Atlantic cable fame is ir Bellevue hospital , New York penni- Jess and suffering from neuphritis. Revalee Gets Life Sentence. Charles Revalee pleaded guilty ai ! Richmond , Ind. , Wednesday to the murder of Mrs. Frank Allison and was sentenced to imprisonment for life. Gotch In Training. , w Frank Gotch said Wednesday thai arrangements had not been complet ed for his championship contest with Zbyszko. Gotch is training at Minne- apolis and declares himself in excel- lent form. Vanderbilt's Horse Second. W. K. Vanderbilt's Defender finish- ed second in the prix Ru Bias which was run at Tremblay France , Wed- . nesday. . " \ 1 ' " ' . . - - - - - : = : : : - Nebraska : News of he < In Concise . II Form Week - St > tate t News I f ii' ( . _ j ACCUSED OF KIDNAPING CHILD. Two Men of Hildreth Arrested and Bound Over. Jeff Current and L. L. Bever of Hildreth , were arrested Tuesday even- ing , charged with kidnaping a child , the son of E. Current , brother of Jeff Current. Hugo Ohms has been sub- poenaed as a witness. Tuesday morn- ing Mr. Current came in on the pas- senger tram and went to the home of his brother , stating that his wife , from whom he has been separated about two years , had written to him , desir- ; ing that he come for the child , a boy of six. He requested his brother to go for the child , who was with his mother at Upland. Current's automo- bile was out of order , so he hired T. L. Bever to take him over to Upland. . ' They took the child to Jeff Cur- rent's three miles east o'f Hildre : , where the father had remained. The following day Mr. Steinke 1 the boy's grandfather , swore out war- rants for the arrest of Mr. Current _ and Mr. Bever on the charge of kid- naping - . . . , r " Mrs. E. Current has a suit for di- vorce pending charging non-support and desertion. Mr. Current is contest- ing the suit , present'ng as evidence a receipt for fifty dollars paid recent- ly. \ PROPERTY LOSS $150,000. Burlington Railway Yards at Lincoln Gutted by Fire. With the wind blowing a gale , a spectacular fire raged for hours in the yards of the Chicago , Burlington and Quincy railroad at Lincoln Thurs- day night. An estimate of the loss is between $125,000 and $150,000. Start- ing in the old roundhouse , which has been usedj as a storehouse , the fire spread to the material yards , the large ice house and coal sheds. Nearly a dozen railroad builflings with their contents were burned , together with ] 38 cars some of them filled with lumber and merchandise. The high wind carried sparks and brands nearly half a mile threatening the Burling- ton passenger station and business houses near. The fire was under con- trol shortly before 11 o'clock. Cribs and Warehouses Burn. Fire originating at Clarks Thursd supposedly from the sparks from a . passing engine , consumed the big cribs of the Hord & Shonsey elevator , the implement warehouse of M. Kok- jer and four large barns before it was finally gotten under control by the fire department. Raid on Eagles. Persons who voted for a dry LIn- : coln under the implied promises that the clubs would not be disturbed were rudely awakened when the pollce raided the Eagles' lodge and cartea out some sixty cases of beer and a lot of whisky and deposited the find at ; the -police station. Traveler "Declared Insane. Monday an Italian name-d Andre , Gerreta , lefit the train at York with , a ticket from Leavenworth , Kan. , to 1 Selena , Mcrnt. He was picked up by the police : and turned over to the I jcunty authorities. He was examined I by the Insanity board and declare insane. Elevator at Hendley Burns 'The elevator belonging the Cen- ral : Granaries company at H'endle . burned .to tthe ground Thursday ' 'after noon. The fire started rn the dome of he elevator , under the 'eaves , and in. : . a few minutes the entire rtmilding ' was In flames. I 'Shot , aml Killed. ' I Henry Swanson , member of a. . chari ari party -which was celebrating the. reading of -a young couple on a farm neax Bertrand late Thursday night , was shot ana instantly lolled by some- one mot yet known. Open Air : Entertainments. The entertainment committee of the rymore Boosters' club -engaged 1n : Lising $1,000to : be spent in open air itertainments on the downtown , streets during the summer. j Pollard May Not Run. I Information brought to Lincoln Thursday that E. M. Pollard would nQt be a candidate for congress this year. His business in Hayti will re- quire [ all his time. Druggists to Meet in J4une. The annual convention of the Ne- braska State Pharmaceutical associa- tion will be held June 15 to 17 at the Rome hotel Omaha. Fruit and Gardens SulTer. The winter weather of last week destroyed practically all of the early fruit around Albion , much of which was in full bloom. The damage to gar- fien truck was not extensive , as there bad been little gardening done. I Penitentiary for Chicken Thief. Sheriff Sweet , of York , took Frank Gano , the chicken thief , to the peni- tentiary Thursday , where he will serve a. ne-year sentence. . . . . , . - . - - - - - = GETS FIVE YEAR SENTENC . " McMichael : : Pleads Guilty to Gram Larceny Charge. James M. Mcl\IichaeLpleaded : : guilty before the district court at Plattsmoutb < Saturday to the charge of grand lar- of five ceny and was given a sentence years in the penitentiary. Mcl\Iich- ael by a trick worked J. B. Mikelson a jeweler of Nebraska City out of a diamond ring valued at $145. l\IcMich- ael appeared a few days ago at - th'e Nebraska City store and ordered the ring sent to a fictitious friend " 1\Ih.rsh" at Mynard , Neb. The ring was to be sent by express subject to the ap- proval of his friend. The man then went to Omaha , and picking out a cheap imitation stone had it mounted to resemble the real stone. He also had - a real diamond - set . . in a solid gold > r - - mounting , and an exact duplic . .av * ct..e made with a paste stone. He gave his name at the Omaha store as "Jack- son . " - . . ; - . . . , . ' ' ' . , , : r . . Going to Mynard , he presented him- : self as "Marsh" and asked for the ring , and while examining it made the substitution. He refused to accept the ring and safely made his getaway ! coming to Plattsmouth , where he tried to dispose of the valuable stone anq was arrested. He had nine rings in : a t purse when searched. LEAVES WITH THEIR COL Hast Clairvoyant Reaps a Harvest at ings , Neb. More than 100 of the members of the "swell set" of Hastings are anxious < to find Mme. Delia Ionidos , a clair- voyant , who has suddenly left for parts unknown. Mme. Delia had arranged to give a "spiritual" party , at which she was to permit the exclusive ones to discourse , with their dead friends and relatives. She had hired i the largest hall in the town , and in order to get into communication with the 1 "spirits" she had demanded and col- lected $5 to $10 from each of1 parties who were to attend. All went < well until the night of the "spirit" party. Then those who were to meet the departed ones were on hand , but the madame failed to appear. It was later learned that she had taken with her both "spirits" and cash. ) J. to SIGNS PLEDGE ; GETS BABY. Omaha Father and Mother to Lel Strong Drink Alone. "No baby unless you sign a pledge to cut out drinking. " That was the order of Judge Sutton of the juvenile court , issued to Martin and Anna Vo- laski , of Omaha , whose 2-year-old baby had been taken away from them by Probation Officer Bernstein. In court the father and mother signed a pledge to abstain from drink- ing for one year and the child was returned to their custody. As they left the court room Judge Sutton In- formed them that If they failed to keep the pledge the child would be taken away and that they would never have ? t again. MRS VAN ORSDEL IS DEAD. itcele City Woman Succumbs to Her Injuries. Mrs. Cora Van Orsdol died shortly after 9 o'clock Tuesday evening at her home at Steele City , from a self inflic ad wound Mrs. Van Orsdol , while smporarily insane last Thursday night , murdered her 2-year-old daugh- ter , Janette by beating her over the head with a hammer and then cutting her throat with a razor. She then secured a butcher knife from the . kitchen and cut her own throat. A.t i first some hopes for her recovery r were entertained. Thewomai . I though badly injured , was able to write answers to questions asked her on paper. She said that she had com- + mitted the deed herself while tempo- rarily Insane. Mrs. Cora Van Orsdc ] is the widow of the late W. S. Van Orsdol , who died about a year ago. EIGHT WANT LICENSES. Inerca of Cost in Beatrice Makei Little Difference. In spite of the fact that the city council has increased the license for saloons lo $1,800 a year and ' has also passed . drastic anti-treating ordi- nance , there are eight applications for saloon license now on file at Beatrice with the city clerk. Owing to the fact that the council is on record favoring but six sa loons , two of this number "will not be able to secure licenses. Just which of the two will be turned down is the , subject of much speculation at the ' prSent time . as all of the applicants are residents of Beatrice. . Editors Meet. The ' Cass county editor's association met ; in Plattsmouth Tuesday and in the evening the members were enter- tained at a banquet given by the com- mrcial club. Four Days : of Snow. After snowing for four successive days and with two frr.ezes with a wind blowing almost a hurricane , the fruit prospect around Greeley is blasted. I - - - 1 1 , , U. , - S. S CONYICTSIAKE " i MAD TRY fOR LIBERTY . Five Flee the Federal Prison at Leavenworth , but Two Are Recaptured. A . , . . . . . . . . . . . ' : - &AL AN ENGINE TO ESCAPE After Wild Run Three Are Surround . ed in the Woods- Siren Calls ; Aid from Many Farms. J . . Five train robbers , serving life sen- tences , escaped from the federal pr ' s- on near Leavenworth , Kan. , early the other day. Within a short time two , h _ . . . were recaptured. At 11 o'clock the - - - three others were surrounded in the brush within a short distance of the prison and it was believed all would be taken. The men recaptured were Bob Clark , sent up from Tyler , Texas , , and John Gideon , of Moscow. The three- others were Thomas A. Kating , from yien - " ' , Ok'la. : ; Arthur Hewett , fron Caddo , Okla. , and Frank Grigware , one of the oien who held up a Union Pa- cific mail near Omaha last fall. > i The * break for - liberty Was mad about 8 o'clock , and was the result o ! on of the con- a clever plot on the part victs. Its execution was : most daring- Two men tfere at work in the carpen- I f er shop and the others were in the tai- lor shop. A Union Pacific switch en- gine had backed into the prison yarn , and at the sound of the whistle . . the , men dashed into the yard and made for the engine. Leveling dummy guns at the engineer they climbed into the cab * and compelled him' to reverse his e. - jine. The engine with the convicts aboard , rushed through the west gate into the open country and soon was. speeding toward the woods. When the escape became known ai few minutes later the siren whistle at the prison was sounded as a warning to farmers to be on the lookout. The vhistle can be heard for miles and its sound caused consternation. At the time heavily armed guards were , , thrown around the gates to prevent ' - any further attempt to escape , white others started in pursuit. When th . ' engine had reached a point.half a mfia from the prison the five men ju-mpefl. to the ground and made for the woofis . Clark and Gideon separated from th * others and soon were captured. Then very available guard , led by Deputy Lemon , _ started after the other three/ len. fiaiTa mile" farther - on .they' were . surrounded in the woods. THE PRESIDENT IS HISSED. Id ! Women Disapprove of Speech , by Taft at Suffrage Meet. . President Taft was hissed while de- rF lIverIng an address of welcome at th , ( convention of the American Wom.if Suffrage Association in Washingtc/ . The manifestation of disapproval wa not unanimous , but it was pronounced. It interrupted the ' . President's speech . but did not disconcert him. He wait- ed a few seconds for the feminine sibI- lant of reproach to subside and then finished what he had to say. The President was describing the two conditions he "would impose ia. granting suffrage to any class. "On Is i , " he said , "that the class should br intelligent enough to know its ow * . interests. The theory that Hotten- tots or any uneducated , altogether un- itelllgent class is prepared for self- government at once , or should imme- ' diately take part in self-government , la a theory I wholly dissent from-but that is not applicable to the present sItuation. The other qualification i _ that the class should care enough for their own interests to take part In. the exercise of political power if it ia- conferred upon them. If they do not , then : it seems. to me that the danger js that the power conferred may be ex- ercised by that part of the class least desirable. " j1 - . ; ; : ; ; . DEATH ENTERS DR. HYDE TRIAL. : 'G. T. Twyman , Important Witness- tor State Passes Away Suddenly. ; Death has entered the trial of Dr. : B. C. Hyde , who is charged with hav- ling by the use of poison killed Colonel. I fI'homas Swope in Kansas City. It I was ' just after City Attorney James A. . . i ! teed > had concluded the opening state- , t 'm sit for the State when the an- uncement was made that Dr. G. T ryman , one of the principal wit- _ nes.ses ' for the prosecution , had died ? : 'Dr. Twrman : was taken Twjman III Saturday an fi It has been announced that he- P r * abiy would be the first witness to' be .called by the State. His death wasj attrIbuted to acute diverticulitis The opening of the case was marked' a by 'a sharp clash between counsel for" the : State and defense s . , the latter ob - - Jectmg strenuously to Mr. Reed - as- special counsel , makIncr . ' , 0 the openmg : statement. The objection was 0er ruled. Drexel-Gould' " , reddl I1g. In St Bartholomew's Churche , \e York , Miss l\Iarjorie Gwynne G daughter of George J. Gouldf " , Gould , and A f\ thony J. Drexel , Jr. , of Philadelphi , \ t were married Tuesday. . \ j , Fire Keady Wipes Out H Hamlet The hamlet of Orleans ' N . 'y . , was r nearly wiped out by fire. Twe my-two ; buildings , Including the church and schoolhouse , were destroyed. il I . , - - - - ° - . . - . - r T .