Daily Bee The Oma HA WEATHER FORECAST, m .Wbniskn Fair. For Uw 1'nitly tloudy. For wtatticr report bcp pue - The OMAHA DEE gov to tho home la rwad by tho woajtn !! good for 4vrtiaera. SlXULli COPY TWO CEN'JU OMAHA, FI?I DAY MORNIXU, OvTOUKU :!1, TWLLYi: PACKS. VOL. XL NU. 107 The Colonel's Southern Tour BYRNES STA2JDS FOll 1UTC1IC0CK Chairman of State Committee Will Hear Nothing Against His Tarty's Candidate. DEAN HEECilER MAUEA1LSU01' Head of Trinity Cathedral Appointed to Bishopric at Kearney, Webraska. ONE OF SIX AFPOLNTEES TO HONOR Other Bishops Chosen for West and David B. Hill Dead at Wolfcrt Roost, His Country Home Demise Comes Suddenly Following Bilhous Attack of Two Weeks Ago. HONOR D0LL1YEU Funeral of Late Iowa Senator is Held in Armory at Fort Dodge. I DECLINES TO LOOK FOR PROOF THOUSANDS STRIVE TO ATTEND I Foreign Fields. ?. ? V r 7 LEAN MUCH SURPRISED AT N i Was Planning Great Extension His Work Here in Omaha. ELECIION IS NOT YET ACCEP - Re. Hrfrbrr Hill He On of f lonnumt Prelate In the ( hurrk W n Ordained Draion at Kearney. '. i.WINNATI. O.. Oct. ZO.-The followlng new hlsnops wire appointed by the Pro testant Episcopal gcueial convention heio: Hev. Hoorgn A Urn Hi ccher of Omaha to be 4,i,op ot Kearney, Neb. ttev. '1 heodoie Payne Thurston. Minne apolis, to be bishop of flirt Oklahoma. Hev. Francis I,. H. PullH, Shanghai. China, to be bishop nf Wiihu, Cliina. Hev. Ituin Sunford, Berkeley, Cul., to be bishop of San Joaquin, Cal. ilov. Julius YNalker, At wood, Phoenix, Aiii , to be bldiop of Anxonu. HeV. Edward A. Tempie, Waco, Tex., to be bishop of northern Texas. Willi the exception of Bishop Bcecher Iho other "new bishop are missionary bishops. Hy the. election of these bishops the membership of tho house of bishops of tho church is Increased to 119. Bishop Thurslon Is rector of St. 1'aul'a In .Minneapolis. Dean Ueeciier was informed of Ills elec l.on . Thursday inurninK by a telegram from Clm tnnall. Tho dean Immediately went Into soohision declining- to sue or laiK with any oiie "Has the dean heard of his election?" was asked of tiie home, over the telephone. "Vc. that Is why the dean will see no one for a little while." Ncwi of Dean lieechcr'. elevation will be hoard with great Interest In Umaha. whore the clergyman has been active In Juvon.Ie court work, aside from parochlul diules In connection with Trinity Cathedral parish, which is, of vourso, under his chant. Dean Bencher has ajways becn.a believer In an Institutional ihurcli and has recently Inaugurated aoclal activities for youug men and women which are to center in the new Jacobs' Memorial hall when that building Is completed.. .' Was ul )-',.MM-ttns It. v''l, had no (Mctailen of an tiling- of this kind." said Dean Deecher after lunch- con; "did not feel It possible that such a 'Change would como In all the circum stances. 1 have been just on the thresh old of a great work in the social depart ment of the church's advance In this work which la Ruing on not only here,' but gen erally, as J found Indicated in the Inter nutlonul Prison congress, as well as in the general convention of the church now on in Cincinnati. A significant fuel In this connection Is the appointment by both house of the convention of a standing committee for tho study of extension of the church's work ulonK sociological linen. "Now that the call has come, it must be that Home good man will be called to take up the work here nnd carry It on because of Its signal importance to Die church." With respect to personal regret, at leav tug Omaha friends. I 'euii lieechcr did not rare to speak, but he plainly feels this deeply. Nor did he car..- to discuss the mutter of his consecration because he has not yet accepted tho election. That he will accept Is certain. The pies dinsr bishop of the church will Issue ordcis with respect to tl;C consecration and dcs.gnate the con- j s.'ciiiilng bishops. One of these Is crlulii I to bo Ilishnp Williams, and there is an I initial certitude that the other will b U:ahop Graves, through whoso resignation the, see of Kearney became vacant. lilshop Graves It wus who ordained Dean lieechcr f.rst n d' aeon and then a priest of the church, and It was at St. Luke's. Kcurney, that these orders were conferred li! 'on the bishop-elect. Horn In Illinois. Dean iteecher was born 111 Monr.i.ii; 111., in nut. and will be one of the younti t bHliops of the church. He came with his parents to Nebraska when he was Hj " and went to the stale university from lv t Fnueral of Marderrtl PnalHst Held lo 1V-9. Ti.e next three years he attended mt Catholic Church ear Old tne riiiladelpliia Divinity school, and' Mlchlaaa Home. graduating in lU. came to Kearney fori oi di:.aliou as deacon. Immediately Mr. Hcclui- was sent to Kidney, then a garrl- I GRAND RAPIDS. Mich.. Oct. 20.-St. sou, and for two y.ars I, ad charge of a 1 Adelberfa Polish Catholic church was triug of missions which necessitated drtv- j crowded to the doors today when the last log 400 miles every mouth. In 1MW he vlsl- i rites were performed over the body of td Kearney to be. ordained as a priest. In; Stanley Ketchel, the murdered mlddle lv."i he was called to the Church of Our c weight champion pugilist. Kuviour at North Platte and remained there ! The body was escorted to the city from seven yiara. The next two he was rector 1 Ketchel's farm home near Belmont, ten of 81. Luke's at Kearney and In 1!4 was I miles from Grand Kapids, by a delegation called to the deausl.ip of Trinity cathedral, 1 of Kilts and a large number of friends. At succeeding ery Hev. Caiu bell Fair, who ! IAoiiard street the procession was met by had died. , , the Polish military bund and eight flower I Kan lieeche knew that his name had girls, w ho preceded the white hearse bear We:i presetted. V Ou- lunise of bishop, but ! ng the dead pugilist's body. At the church felt no conlidetne that his el lion would ', a rt.qUiein high mass wus chanted by IU-v ieult. It fs a fin t U.al people at Kearney ; , asini,,r skorey. The remains were In and oluer nariahes In the mlH.louai v dls- ; t,.rr,-d ,i the new Polish Catholic ceme ti. ct urged li ,4 iiomiiiathui and uiuloubi uh I'l'lioua Grave and Williams advo cated bis selection in tiie i'ocet dings of . li.t liutiM'. Dau Hciclicr lecelved many j 'oii(,i ai ulatory telr.raius during the uf- j lirnooti. one of these bcihg a Joint wire I (loin Ilia Uo bisho; named. lli-i-tiir. louumlnlullum. His lesideiue m liaiduer Memorial pai.--; Louie was a busy place in the aflcino,.,) IT.e teWpnolie lang liu-evsautly with friend., lulling Uf and iiiauy came to the hoi.-- lh: ivuvrters ai i cd slinulutaiicou-b "I ...en to uave grown almost famous ,., tt.'"":Ul':, '"I " '? . ., 1 i ail nci iiri will ut' OIJllop til lllc "missionary district of Kearney." He Is to u not u diocesan insiiop, but a mission :irj Idsaop and the election by the con vention settUs the matter so far as church procedure la concerned. A diotrsaii bishop Is flil m ined by a diocrsau council. The 'lettlon li thru forwarded to the pre siding bishop of I he ciiMreh. who sends word 1.1 II lll .l.ll.lilltf llllllll It, .-U lit I I... LA.,- l dioce-e. for their approval or dis- Ufioval. The Utter sometimes ihcuis Kaint IU. tings Grand Island and North Platte e tne principal center of t mlsalunaiy distriC Le.ides these InUht. lb vie aits about tbnty ni.saion. AL.bA.SV, N. V., on. -.' David B. Hill, ix-l.nu.d States s-nator and lormer gov---oi of New Vork, died auddenly today . Wolfeit s Boost, his country hum-., jut two wocks t,u Mr. Hill was seized li a bilious attack while at his law ol i In thin city and, although his condition f not considered serious, h.s physician Jseu him to rema n at home until he ivered. cold developed, and later alarming re . . of his condition were circulated. ! be lupous, however, were denied by ; " ids; in fad, the senator uppea.ed to ,u n.e load to recovery until lust ..t, when he suffered a utnkiu spell, "which resulted in his death. I L'avld beiuiett Hill was born August 2il. JSIU. Wlien 17 yeaifl old he entered the law oi'lice of Colonel John I. Lawrence of Huvanu, N. Y., and w hen 1 years wld was admitted to the bar. Later be was chosen city attorney of Klmlra, then being elected alderman and still later mayor. He was elected to the assembly In 170 and again In Is . 1 . In bis first term in the assembly he made his niemorablo fight to abolish contract convict labor, and In his second he was a member of tho Judiciary com mltteo witli bamucl J. Tilden, they being the only democratic members, which had the tank of investigating the alleged scan dalous and corrupt conduct of certain New Vork City Judges. For many years Mr. Hill was a member of the democratic state committee and In ld7ti and 1W4 was delegate to the national conventions which nominated Tllden and Cleveland, respectively. In 1SS2 he was elected lieutenant governor on the same ticket with Cirover Cleveland, and follow ing Cleveland's election to the presidency of the Vnltrd States Mr. Hill became gov ernor, subsequently being elected for two years. Ho was governor for seven years, in 1SU1 Mr. Hill was elected L'nltwd .States senator, in 1st I he was once more the can dldatc of tho democratic party for gov ernor. but was deteateu uy Levi r Mor ton, his republican opponent. Mr. Hill was the candidate of the New York democrats for the nomination for president In 1M, but Grover Cleveland was renominated for that office. In UW Mr. Hill was credited with being the political sponsor of Alton 11. 1'arkei who was nominated for the presidency by the democratic national convention at St, Louis. Following that election Mr. Hill announced his permanent retirement from politics and since that time had devoted himself to his law practice. David B. Hill of New York, who died yesterday, was nl Intimate friend of the late lien B. Wood of Omaha, necause of her late husband's affection for the man Mrs. Wood a . rteofity grieved by the ne'vs of Mr. Hill's death, though ihc her self never knew him personally. Mr, Wood and Mr. Hill were born and reared In the same neighborhood and attended the same country school. Their intimucy continued until Mr. Wood's death a few years ago. . Bank of England Raises Its Rates Heavy Demand for Money and Dc crease in Reserve Starts Pro tection Measure. LONDON, Oct. Ai anticipated the Bunk of England today raised Its rate of discount from 4 to u per cent In order to protect Its reserve, which had been steadily depleted despite the Imposition of the I per cent rate three weeks ago. The reserve this week Is expected to show I nearly Slu.OOU.OOO decrease. The Egyptian de inund already hus exceeded the estimates owing to the hasty marketing of the large crop of cotton. India is expected to take gold soon and tho Uouth American demand ,b,y W1 apl,cl4r turly and as very ,Ulle ,,, from the mlneH to tno Bank gold 1 of England a strong protective measure j was necessary. I A fresh outburst of speculation In Amer 1 ca and the many American finance bills . ,i n. re u!so lire factors to be reckoned with In the monetary situation of the fu ture. , I b I HlMLt I MiTCHEL BURIED tery . Mimic Warfare Starts Boys ro Using Loaded Firearms . , c warfare in Omaha that began with j l(u( mtineuver, occupied cor- In..,- .. for ,. dev.lo.,., I" ------- - -- ' j serious proportions and "the innocent by- - I slander" Is beginning to play a part. Besides the one fatal case of the death 1 of Helen Leer from a revolver shot the . , ,. .. ,.. . . . j juvenile authorities have received com- I plaints from Thirty-sixth and Aniea, here, hoy shot into a street car; Sixteenth and 1 winnow, or tne boy scout meeting last night an eff irt i Great Western .epot were broken in wiCilWas made to Impress the l,oy. Interested I bullets, Thirty -si Mil and Boulevard, whei. with the fact that firear'iis must be handled ! ,m',y ot uun bndlt. took a few shots mly by W s old enough to ur.detund ' pedestrians, and from Hanscom park, them and that no shooting t allowed In wbti neighbor have been alarmed to cetue city. Large Number Unable to Secure Ad mittance to Building. CITY FILLED WITH MOURNERS Distinguished Men Pay Tribute to Value of Deceased. CUMMINS VALUED COLLEAGUE unlor Senator Laa stress oa Worth of the Peart -Statesman to His Country I'onaraiwrf Master Mind. FOUT DODGE, la.. Oct. 30 .-(Special.) Thousands crowded to get Into the Na tional Guards' armory in this city, where It was necessary to hold the funeral sr- ices of the late Senator Jonathan I ien- tis Dolliver, because inclement weather prevented the much-hoped for outdoor ser vices on the veranda of the Illustrious sen ator's late residence. Thousands who were In the city were thus deprived of the privi lege of hearing the various simple tributes paid by great men to a heroic life, ended in the leiilth of its triumph. Thousands more were thus prevented from coming to the city troin numberless farm homes that ficl a personal bereavement in the senator's death; others gave up automo bile trips. Many more, how many can only be imagined, realizing the futility of trying to gain entrance to the armory, did not come from out-of-town places. Not withstanding this condition, however, the city waa filled with mourners from home and abroad and 2,000 were able to get Into the armory. These were largely rela tives, the Illustrious national arid state visitors and Intimate friends, who, of course, were given precedence over others. Viewed By Loving Ones. Weuuesday afternoon thousands passed tho bier of the senator as It rested on the residence veranda In simple gray casket, lined plainly with gray cloth, but lovingly caressed by a myriad of beautiful flowers. It had been arranged that the public must give up Its right to view the reuialiib, at 1 o'clock, before the funeral. The iam lly thought to have a last quiet hour wltu the departed loved one. Everything possible was done to carry out . this wish and though some people. still hoping the services would be held 44 tbo . residence. . gathered outside and crowded toward the houhe, to injure good places lor the funeral; guards kept people quiet, or Informed them finally the ser vices would bo at the armory. There was a great throng outside the armory as soon ' as this was learned, and when the en trance was possible, the building filled rapidly, stats being reserved for the family and special friends. It had been tho plan to have no music ut the tervlce, but the Empyrean quartet of Mason City that had participated with Senator Dolliver on many Chautauqua programs asked lo furnish music as a last tribute to the man they had como to love. Tho request was graciously grunted by the family and they opened and closed the Im pressive service with simple hymns. The quartet Is composed of Messrs. HlRgtns, Kttiikln, Ensign and Menne of Masou City. Words of Tribute. Gathered on the. platform were many distinguished men, Including Hie seuute committee detailed to represent the nation. The men who offered tributes were Senator Cummins, chairman of the com mittee, and the following: Dolliver. the Man," C. M. Stewart. Evaiiston, ill. "ln behalf of the State," Governor B. V. Carroll. "ln Behaif of the United States Senate," Senator Cummins. "In Behalf of tho Press," George E. lU'hcrtB, Washington. I "In Behalf of His Home Town," Judge W. . Kenyon. "In Behalf of Northwest Iowa Confer ence of tho Methodist Church," Hev. Hub ert Smylle, Hioux City. "The Senator's Relation to His Home Church," Kev. W. H. Spence. Mayor Byers of Des Moines read an original poem, entitled "Senator Dolliver." "A Fallen Leader." D.shop William Eraser McDowell, Chlcugo. "In Behalf of Metiiodist Education," President King, Mount Vernon college. Governor Carroll eaL.a. In paying his tribute of respect to Sen ator Dolliver. Governor B. K. Carroll said in part: ' "Our slate lias given to the public many able and capable men, out there are few who have approached that degree of rec ognized ability and capacity for public, service attained by him whose hie we here commemorate. But we think of him no more as the aggressive, forceful and ever ready combalojii of public life "All lowans today Join in sweet, solemn memory of the life oi thia beioved states man and glories in his grand and magni ficent record of puollc achievement. "Senator Dolliver'a life work i ended. Two and one-quarter ndlllons of loyul c:Li.ciis uf our great commonwealth Join (Continued on fecund I'uge.) boys chasing each other aro ind with sharp i bayonet, and army -words. . Th. juvenile .u.horule. Will hold ...rwit. and sporting goods desleis responsible. In ' the case of Maurice Alexander a peddler ' who was shot In the face at Twewueth ano Vinton by a boy, the young culprit will ht nelJ 'n Juvenile court but In most cases the older persons w ho allow the children . ,, . . to have fnearms will be considered the j. , j At the Young Men Christian association From the riiiladclrhia Itecord. CRIPPEN IN m BEHALF American Dentist Accused of Wife Murder Testifies in English Court. TELLS OF PURCHASE OF HY0SCIN ituarreled with Hello Klmorr, After Wlilrli Went Awny i lden Whose Body Wita Found la Hnement. LONDON, Oct. 20. Dr. Hawley Crippeu faced his accusers from the witness box today. It was a dramatic moment when the diminutive figure of the American dentist emerged from the ccunparatt ve Isolation of the dock and took a pot.lt km where he was stared at with tntore.-si' by the throng that filled the New Bailey court room. Crippen was pale, buj jiis composure that has remained ninrri -warTirsl charged with the murder of 4ils actress-lf, Hello Elmore, did not desert him. He stepped quietly, but quickly Into the box, and, holdln tne Bible ln ,l18 hand' took the oath calmly, Under the tactful guidance of his coun sel, Crippen gave a sketch of his career. Ho had studied the theories, but had not taken a practical course in surgery. He had performed a post-mortem. The drugs Crippeu had purchased in Ens land, he explained, were wholly for his own preparations, lie explained the pur chase of hyoscln. the poison which the crown alleges was used to kill Hello El more, by saying It was required for use In the treatment of nervous cases am de scribed his formula In making up iiyoscln tabloids. Of the hyoscln which he pur chased on January lit. the doctor said he had used about two-thirds. The prisoner admitted there was a scar ou the body of ids wife four and a half Indies ln length. U was caused, he said, by an operation twelve years ago. He had never administered hyoscln to Ids wife. He had no Idea whose was the body un earthed in the cellar of his llilldrop Cresctnt home. In fact he was not aware that a body had been burled there until he returned to England under arrest. Crippen told of the gradual alienation of his wife's affections until the climax was reached ln a quarrel on the night of Janu ary 31, last. His wife, he said, had accused him of a lack of attention to Mr. and Mrs. Martinet!!, w ho had spent the cevnlng with them. They quarreled and on the follow ing day Ids wife went away. He bore out his counsel's statement uf an ulleged plot which he had lorined to escape from the suanier Montrose. He cald the quartermaster had told him the captain had recognized him and Miss Lcueve and that lie was to be arretftod when the steamer landed. I no quartermaster oneitd to make a I splash In the water during the night, when i Crippen was to pretend to commit suicide, j The quartermaster had told him there was no charge asainst Miss Leneve, and he planned to separate from her for a time, but he left his proposed addres In America so that he mtcht Join her later. t'grso 'w . Tim wnsTnurj vprrzir, , . -jst-- . J. . .SMI tk.UIX.! li.l ' ' " ' Vmv tfu u-i .mIi .fly fMn us . - V, r 5 tultVli.l fc.il fcl WjuiAofci, VBOM T. ECEXRT. General Mauiar. am arm nrnv mm O ri v Missouri Pacific Men to Go On Strike Friday Sheet Metal Workers, Coppersmiths, Pipemen, Blacksmiths and Boiler Makers Included. T. LOUIS. Mo., Oct. All sheet metal workers, coppersmith, pipemen. black smith:! and bollc.rmakcrs employed by the Missouri Pacific and iron Mountain rail roads will be i rdered on a strike tomorrow morning ntilo o'clock, according to an offi cial tKatcmenl made by tho presidents of three unions here at noon today. The issuance of Hie statement followed an unsucconsf ul conference to end the strike of the machinists which begun ev erut mouths ago. It Is expected that the i.Z'M niciuberj of allied trades will respond to the order tomorrow. V, Omaha's Suburbs Given by Census Population of Benson, Florence and Dundee Shows a Big Increase. WASHINGTON, Oct. W (Special Tele gram ) Tho director of census today made public the population of the following towns In Douglas county, Nebraska: Benson, 3,170. us against f10 In l'JOO. Florence, l.KC, as against 6SS ten years aKO. Iiundee, MCI, as compared with 400 In l!iw. According to the figures on all the suburbs of the city, the total population of what would be greater Omaha is loti.074. Following are the population figures: Benson, 3,170- Dundee, 1,023; Florence. 1 ,;-:.; Omaha, 14,ti; South Omaha, 2ti,&9; total. lutS.OIt. TWO DIE IN RAILROAD WRECK Train on Ilocklnw Valley Hoad illlrhed and Many I'erons Are Injured. I'PPEU SANDUSKY, O., Oct. 'JO. Two women were killed and a score of other persons hurt when three coaches of a Hock ing Valley passenger train, northbound, were ditched at W.'M this morning, one half mile south of llarpster, this county. The train was running at a high rate of speed and it is not known what aimed the wreck. Tho dead: M KS. NANCY CtiOK. Grogan. O. WoMAN Nl ItE. name unknown. Anions the Injured were: Thomas P. Kearny shoii inspector. I'ujton. state work- M. y. Brooks, Cleveland wards' unlmul show. manager Ed- C. AI. Brown, GroveiHirt. Elmer Thompson. Lee City, Kail. -Mrs. Elmer Thompson, Lee City, Kan. Another Tell-Tale Document . tili U Ut - 4 VI hf request of ft ,Kltl II IM I . . 9tttJtjnjbt tbr cooirtiw aanJ atr HITCHCOCK MAKES AN APPOINTMENT WITH FRENCH STEAMER WRECKED Louisiana Ashore on Sombrero Reef, Off the Florida Coast. PASSENGERS ARE ALL RESCUED tnirrlrsn Schooner Knlghta Key Is a Total Loss on Pigeon Key and Out- Man Meets Death by Drowning:. KEY WEST. Fla. tby way of Havana). Oct. The French transatlantic steamer Loiilslane, from Havre for Havana and New Orleans. Is ashore on Ponvbrero reef, about fifty miles cast of here. About half of Its 647 passengers have been brought here and the. others are not thought to be In danger. News of the Lcuiaiane's plight and the rescued paascngors, were brought her to ddy by the United Stales revenue cutter Forward. The cutter will teturn to take the rest of the passengers from the wrock till afternoon. Tho steamer was struck by the hurricane Monday. It Ilea onlv eight feet out of water and It will be impossible to float It until Its cargo has been Jettisoned. The French liner sailed for this country by way of Corunna, Spain, Las Paltnas, Canary Islands, and Tenerlffe with a gen era! cargo and 547 passengers. When within fifty miles of Huvana on Monday and in the teeth of tho hurricane tho cap tain lost control of hi ship, which at & o'clock that afternoon was driven hard upon Sombrero reef. The cutter found those on board were not suffering, and after taking on an many of the i assengera as it could accommodate, sailed for Key West. Those remaining are well. Reports from Knight's key say the Amer ican four-masted schooner Edward T. Stotesbury is a total loss on Pigeon key. One man was washed overboard and drowned. Threu others were brought to the murine hospital here. The schooner was bound from Tampa to Baltimore with a cargo of phosphate The schooner Seraflnn has been towed Into port. The Spunish schooner Marta, from Havana, has been dismasted and abandoned. SAVANNAH, Ga.. Oct. 2C In a ninety. mile wind off Jacksonville yesterday the Texas Oil company' barge Dallas, with nine men aboard, broke adrift from the steamer Northfleld. The Northfleld re ported here today that the fate of the castaway Is unknown. ARIZONA SHOWS BIG INCREASE!""" ? ,0'' ,,,onEy' I'",1 tho More Than lOlabty Thousand vr Met tiers Locate In Territory la the Last Ten Years. ' WASHINGTON, Oct. DO. The population of the territory of Arizona is a04,J."4. accord ing to statistics of the thirteenth census nmdo ,,ubllc todav. This is an Increase ot 81,4?;t, or ;6.2 per cent over the 1900 popula tion, which was 12:',931. Arizona's population Increased 4O,iw0. or G8 per cent from to WO. "CGRilFH COMPANY. lMtuts - Wa.oltftW !fcr -Ili . .? Ur VftY iV 1 'i' IfOSVIN ORKEN. Pridtit. BAHTLEY. Expresses Brlief in Innocence of the Accused Maft. PUTS WHOLE BLAME ON HOWARD Columbus Editor Made Scapegoat in Present Scandal. OVERLOOK METCALFE'S SERVICE I'.ffort to 5lkf Hint Appear the One Mhn la Wrona. To Apparent lo Do Any Good for HKcheoeU. ,?'f ( From a Staff Correspondent ) fViLCMUl S. Neb., Oct. 20. -(Special. V- . Nothl.ig fdiort of a signed confession from Gilbert M. Hitchcock that he borrowed state money from Treasurer Hartley and refused to pay it back will convince the democratic slate committee that the sen sorial cnndldato Is a beneficiary of tho Bart ley shortage. "Do you believe that Mr. Hitchcock is innocent of the charge made hy Edgar Howard ?" was asked Chairman Byrnes ot the slate committee. "I believe he Is Innocent," replied Mr. Byrnes. j "Were Joseph Hartley 0 place beforo ou evidence to show that Hitchcock did ite money, would you then ie- enatorlal candidate to wlth- Iraw?" ho was asked. "Whatever Joseph Hartley has to say will have no weight with tne." replied Byrnes. So It Is clear that when Edgar Howard produced positive proof that Hitchcock was a beneficiary of the Hartley shortage and asked tho state committee to request Ids withdrawal he v,as going against a packed Jury. Even though he was reinforced with a statement from Hartley that Hltchoock hud not only borrowed the money, but had refused to pay it back, the committee would not uo convinced. Kernes to Hoar Howard. Even though Mr. Hitchcock lias answered the evidence produced by Edgar Howard only with charge of "blackmail" and "Mar," the state committee had no ear for the Columbus editor. Tho committee did not even auk Mr. Hitchcock to produce the letters mid notes which represented a. debt of between I3.0HC and K000 that he owed to Hartley,. which he nettled for Sl.MWt All l tlrtsse notes and letter were turned over to the drvno erotic senatorial candidate at tho time lio forced the then needy ex-state treasurer to deliver them upon the receipt of about three-fifths of the amount of the interest due on the loans. Joe Hartley turned over all these papers to Hitchcock and their publication would tend to fdiow the truth fulness of the Howard charges. The very fact that Hartley hud turned back the letters and note Is taken as the best evidence that Hitchcock thought when Howard first made his charges that he and he alone hud the goods which would condemn him. That has been suggested us tho reason why he preferred to stand pat nnd bluff It out. He did not know that Hartley might have photographed the evi dence before turning it over to him. Aflor onco halng mode the bluff there was nothing left for him to do but go ahead with it. Over the state Hitchcock is condemned for borrowing state money and falling tc pay It back no more thun he is for the treatment he is according the man whom he confessed hud helped to save him from financial ruin, even at the sacrifice of hl own good name and his liberty for tlx ling years. Hartley ot In from thole. Joe Hartley Is in business In Denver. 1I 1 out of Nebraska politics. It was not his choice that ho wa forced to take a hand in this campaign. He came to tho front only when Gilbert M. Hitchcock hud denounced one of his warm personal friend as a llur and he himself a a blackmailer, it was only because of Hitchcock a vicious attack on Edgar Howard, followed by Ids' charge that Joe Hartley was trying to hold ; ... . . .umii; wvi.cvi.lvu glU.ll HQ iniel- ' view on the subject. He broke his silt-bus that the editor of the Woi Id-Heiuld might taste of the oame medicine that he forced down tho throat of a republican candidate for regent of the state university. Joe Hartley feels the ' sling of ingratitude" us strongly as did Mr. Hitchcock feel It Soluu year ago. Metcalfe's tonneclloa. Another feuture of tho ce that hsi brought forth severe condemnation of the. senatorial candidate Is hi effort 10 make of Klchaid L. Metcuile a scapegoat in this case. Metcuile, according to Hitch cock inuoe the. settlement with Hartley. He was nil employe of Hitchcock and as en employe he carried out ins instructions. And Metcalfe hu.i lit. 1U hid tongue. He hus refUM.I thus far tu lull what he know, of tiie r itt.il its of tiie state treasurer and Hitchcock, bvcaiiM- lie was an employe of Hitchcock at the time. Mr. Hitchcock's reference to liim as ''Hartley', friend" lather than uu his own employe, has cryate-l a feellnj, against Hitchcock among tne fileiids of the assoiiut editor of the Com luoiier. In fa.t iluring tiie primary cim palgn Ilu.-heock received the benefit of the circulation of the ttury that Metcalfe had signed tho petition for the Hartley pardon. HiulicMk cl i n it sign the ietltion. H.i got tne money. Edgar Howaid raji-es that he can di nollilng with the democi utlc Male com mittee siiico it ret'iM.l to pay any utttn t.ou to his eiidihi -. lie realizes that ha lias i.iude his -use and It Is now up to the voteis insofar as li. Is concemed. V.hnt llonnrd Nay. He realizes that Hitchcock would rather sacrlfic- iln- entire d inoctatie state ticket tna.i ti sup asl le anJ go into the courts for his x inilicatli.:i. Today Mr. Howard said: "I feel that 1 have done my full duty towurd my partv and my state. I charged that Mr. llitchccrk was a partner with Joe Hartley in the slate treasury shortage. I lave submitted the proof. That proof must comlnee very man who la open to com lotion. 1 now ft el that it s time for m to relit c f i oin the l ontroversi. which hus now deM-lopt I into a piurrel between Hitch cock and Hartley, t unnel a lo toe traawsury