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DANY MALEY BEATS COLLIER | 3.ttt e e REGARD CZ0LGOSZ SANE WAN|STANDARD OIL LITIATION RpkRy - : Portland, Ore ep—— “This makes one of the stronge ~4ll minor oy — hysiclans in Scientific He rt l‘lvul‘ | league circults In the country and ar we Assnasin Re nsible ot Bensly Twe Reunds Suffios to Demonstrate | are o mmber of the Nadlonn S3gintion | Hickey asd Baadle Find Tws Exosl Crin [ Kis Fuperiority, cure and retain &od playing talent 3 | P With ‘the travell o granied s by the Looations in Nerth End ; - [ - i\(un.'m' ![‘Im‘ll\ m-l“;lr.p“.:.\i-' :.‘n :nd-" NEW YORK, Jan. 3.<An exhaustive re- A s " utte and Helena, notwithstanding the loni port cn the trial, execution, autopsy and | OMAHAN SURPRISES ~ HIS FRIENDS | raliroad jump for Portland to Butte (LD CIRCUS GROUNDS NOW AVAILABLE [ iental status of Czolgoss. the assassin of | DEFENSE OF LATE ATTORNEY GENERAL ) d « 2 Is give € New Pight '::' nu‘:n--.'. . ':'Md" Vietory Goes to Ontsiders as Well as “"“""": h" ': ""‘|'"' “‘" Been Of« | 1o report embodles the result of ,.,{;‘,, Insists that His Saccessor Had Every . L ered the American Aswoc careful investigation by Dr. Carlos Me- | Opportunity to Make Winning f A f e ey th 2 i Enthusiastic Crowd ot Mt :_“":" & tlon Owners for Use of Donald and Bdward A. Spitzka of this city Fight Before Reterces asd (0] merican amece Spectators. The question which these investigators set | themselves to answer was When Czolgosz shot Their Team. Did Not Do So. SAN FRANCIRCO, Jan. 3. outsiders divided the honors Favorites and at Oukland he aa he uses WOOL president o | T e rnrise Gt the atternoon wos | Messra. Hickey and Bandle were very |he know the nature gud quality of the act| It took Danny Haley of Omaha barely | ({0 tory of GEand Sachem, & 20 o 1 ghot, busy yesterday in search of a eite for the | he was doing, and that the act was wrong The Bee has received from former At-| ’ two rounds to knock out Frank Collier of | in the weven furlongs event. ' He and Katle | ymerican association base ball grounds.| This was from the legal standpoint. | torney General Smyth the following answer Wheeling, W. Va., At the Red Light theater | Walcott got the best of a bad start, and L ¢ Siear (o' this 1otter of AV Detieral Provt ree in South igh they. ranc one twa . The first race wis | They have found two most desirable loca- { From the standpoint of mdical sclence the | to the letter of Attorney Gene rou n South Omahs last night. A large and | gyen by ‘Bl Mido, the ond - choles, | tions, and expect within the next twenty- | question that framed itself was: ““Was|lating to the case brought by Mr. Smyth| wildly enthusiastic czowd of sports was on | Mounce made his run at the right time and | gouhouee 1050l a lease on one of them. | Czolgos at the time he committed the act | gaivst the Standard Ol company under | . band (o see the match, and the work of | ne G0i_uR'in tima o win'by ' nose rrom [24f EUS 19 Fowe & 1R G0 6 FE R CEVRE T Slontal alsease or mental un- | the Nebraska anti-(rust law with a request O the same the winner was recelved with loudest nc- | Lot Gifl ~ Holen Bmith was third El| ¢ wags | , the fuvorite. failed to show much |have found that by going up Into the south | soundness " that it be given space in its columns claim 1 event _Saul of Tar o The reply to these questions, which em-| OMAMA, Jan 3.-To the Fditor of The " “ i o hote T ‘Ned Donnls and | €0d of “the old exposition grounds they can D 24 A At e, AL R, 'i'f"zvo;'r""""' o g S ;"I bt o | chuca, played from 2 |secure ample space for a splendid base ball | bodies the entire history of the case from Bt TR e e v aaid Tk dab i aley nds, Colller and his backers @ to 5, won the third race, after (park. The owner has named a low rental | the trial of the criminal to his execution [ to fnve the public believe fx o1 answer (o ton Cuwil's Dil : ovia Dasirie ewa ‘Secends ead masegurs, | geiting yesy, poorly. “lepine Jbeat DY | or (his location and the only (hing to be [and the disposal of his remaine, takes up |my criticism of his conduct in the Sty Use Swift's Pride Soap in the Laundry. 'y fousl ke Shreck a few monthe | Pedro handieun al six furiongs. She did | be made with the street rallway company |ical Journal and, divested of ull technicality | olve. ‘This 1 know is a harsh charge, #ince he was a green one, and showed it |not display Fer usiial speed, probably ety Fhe g3 ne base ball sear |18 1o the effect that Czolgosz was sane and i prove It in every move. On that occasion he was ! '0 the cuppy track Byron Rose | WEWS ARTVIRY VORI (WD Puiw. ot WORZ | he 1 wttorney general should know that eaht &l atoust (e Pin A Kknocked | e way, winning eagily rom Mat {son. At present only one car line passes |tesponsible under the law and punishable | ¢ 140 o moment, in this regard, what my | How does he attempt to excuse his con . ' around the ring and knocked | and the firse chofce T close 1o the site, the Sherman averue iino, | for the offense, although everything in his | views may be with respect o whether the | duct? He says, speaking of me ] 2 | y ¥ out in threc rounds. Last night he ap- | Florenzo played from which gives & ride of thirteen minutes | history, according to the medical experts, | federal or state power ls hotter Mited U Having refused to swear positively ¢ peared & totally different man, fast, foxy | 14 all the way. ‘Resuits: |8 : *| Dofnted to the existence in him of the soe'al | 0€41 successtully with the trust evil and | the books of the company showed it wa o atrone iy et e ooy | Firet race. one mie and seventy yards, | from Farnam street to the entrance to the | hemiht, Mherefore, v spired himselt | o eist, e now afinibiiice. te dismisstl y e i [fln; etk Behiad '“mxo' |‘h A ‘nv»v.y:v.(smlnl;‘nm;du;;:lvm'l,a»lr GIrl” seconds | park. Cars on this line run five minutes | disease anarchy, of lwm‘-n he was & vietim m‘(- \m\.... '..v . n'l“:vlu : T ;..:.‘un. |“r.m. of the \’UH’ to my failur ‘r'\' ,‘m ar to the ol o' 4 | Hlen Smith third. Tiimec 147" |apart. It arrangements cun be made for |His refusal to’reply to questions at the |4 letter of milne on that sublect to a coliewe | contonts ot the boke' he had never beett | || Ng M No L | Do b 10 ghe Jaw were \hewelling:" Saul of "Tarsus won, Ned Dennis | apecial base ball trains duriog the season | trlal Is regarded as being in \ine with his| Tho quesion fa: Was It the fault of the MO B R B 0 More, No LCSS | ows With which Haley did the work, and it | ccond, Bard Burna third, ‘Time: |18 | the car service will he pertect role, expressed in the theatrical declara- |court or the statut of Attorney Gen- What Smyth Sw o, | took just ix of them, three in the first| Third race. futurity course, seliing: Hua- wf narchist and have done| rdl Prout that the hiate was defeated In ut Smy ore To, ’ Pound. and thres In the secend. The lngt | ChUd Won, Ishtar second, DF. Scharft third, | The second site is the old clreus grounds | tlon et B db B Ll 4 11 R g TR The attorney gen- | 1y the fiest pl 1t i not teue that 1| 1 When taken in moderation | Wht's tarrible Jar, aad lett Colllar henging 1:114, i & mite, | ® TWentioth and Paul, a location that has [ my duty I's political partisans, by .m.,]..mm,. to reflised (o Ewehr positiyely that the booke as a tonloal stimulant ‘ (g i by 4 P bon gk L LB . | long been looked upon by loceg fans as an eastern papers, would have the peoplo | oe'ihe company showed it was o trust. It v outside | handicap: Hyron Rose won, Matt Hogan o ink that the fault was that of the faw | company showe [ : | over the frat rope with his hewd outside | Bl it ot Bt i, M | ideat place tor a ball park. 1t has excol-| PROMOTION COMES AT DEATH | Lo "l Wortisok "ot "t St "ol | Wk, nol, wecesegry that 1 shauld s I Bowever, he structe b ad hard oo th | pEIEt, race, seven-eighth of o mile, sell | lent street car facilities, is within easy ac- | - But (he facts are otherwise—fucts set forth | e er phot Taw did not require | VRO gy 98 (e Chaster ‘stagy, WAL i Bachem won, Katlo WaIcott | cens of the business center and has none of | CAPEain Leary s Made Rear Admiral, fjn my lotier to the New Vork WRching | such an afdavic of me at that time. =My unter | edge of the theater stage, which | it bTand sixteenth sell- | the objections that can be urged agalnst but Dies Without Knoy- ) SR Re o 1 UY | aMduvit upon information and bedef acs I\ was Just behind the ring, and It was as one mile and o s h h n L g Mr. Prout, although he has laboriously at complished what 1 intende it to pm- | TG R G A LIUa o0 the siage sb.onat | 10Ky TR renso, won Domed second, Bodeck | other locations. One or the other of these ing 1t tempted, (o e sure. & '..m:.l re n: m in his | ERAPIEREE Wit Tequlred of him wan Baltimore | $OISG Whnt 1416 bew put Bim out. He ‘:.‘ : - sites will be taken for the new grounds, - TRt The raieroes refused 10 receive Mr | bons e Sat o | unable to rise, and lay with his head bent | BRUSH REFUSES T0 SELL CLUB ‘\‘\'.""‘{' ;::f“;::',':":"'"::';"l': :::B‘:;“:fi"p‘;‘:;: BOSTON, Jan. 3f-—Information from Wash- | {{/0% TR Nt ogurt, s Qeupaitions purpose, uid have sworn s’ positivel ye If back under him while the count was fir Lot o 4 ington shows that Captain Richard P. Leary, | are usually directed, instead of the rer- |8 (he AW Eeai e L oule R ve | - by + . V! " 4 1] =22 Y b i b e tor me to e doin nd | would hav ished. There were thirty secouds of the | Cimeinnacl Seores Spalding k) i [ ".'r“"_‘:"’l ":r’:_""]m": L’:H“‘:‘-:’h‘:“"“‘.“;"‘ :"~ U. 8. N., who died at Chelsea recently, died | eross. But upon amnouncing thelr, detelon a0 i 1 s "fear T Proutn’ biao | o oats o " # o opent. court, advised Mr. Prov 0 g Rl a0 Fouve | bt om0 B atbondll i Sl b b fecting the site at Twentleth and Paul, that |y, ' "'"",m” R oot it rlu,[‘ o ek 1o ‘The. notary whe haa tase it it by "Fending e testimany. il For health snd Crien Over His Defeat. Clrelew, o k ( the t wos a promotion which he|sition back to the notary who had taken it | dEGRHE B CELERE LUG Ao en of nrinted e: | . the overtures from the Western league will [ pote oo, T Tt 5 B0 o have been | o roperly direct it, and that | {eling of several bundret pages o 2Uohvo | | hospitality will No one had expected such an early con- —— be rejected and no attempt made to buy the t reof. These | 4 ouinet the Standard Ol company, wherein | | rove itsell to be T , the one thing that troubled him in bis last| fyei, has,_not ¢ hd cannot | A8a ¢ any, P clusion of the match, cspeclally in Haley's | CINCINNATI Jan John T, Brush. | the Vinton street plant. - | 58t the officers of the trust testitied; by pro- f the favor. Colller i 2shiing | president of the’ Cincinnati league base bali | B moments. The uppointment was made the | successtully deny ot follow | curing from the secretary of the stute of | | bl er 1s a fighting man of 10ng | ¢lub, tonight notified the local syndleate | day before ho died, but it was only when | {he suk&estion of th ot Tt cltent | inatana w certiicats of s rocords, which | | vy A 8 kted reonrd. He R N oiut that ia” Stock WAk Rat Tor NEl COMPANY WILL QUIT FIELD | nis brother-in-law, Dr. Fairfax Irwin, re: | would e hot have ‘W amd 1f he had | showed that‘at one tme tne Stundard il | | outweighed apparently fitteen pounds, but | the club that his stock was not for stlc b d et T ) S it " gub. | trust owned all but about ane-half doxen L4, " He held n long conference at the St i " turned from his funeral, at Annapolis, to | not would he not hereby Justly subs | LEEE ORISR 48 DL O defendant i this | | nghest e kv.u‘ and aggremsive from the start. | Nichoii hotel fhis fteroon Wit Tud Trast Concern Dectdes on Voluntary | ot DR L0 o ment was found, | ected himselt to a”charge of malpractice? | SIS UG SR dtimony, or so mueh | || Purest rank cried piteously over his defeat when | Howard Ferrls, the head of the syndicat uldation, Promising to WABHINGTON, Jan. 3.—Capt Quention of Sufliclency. of it'as was published, in the investigation ) he was brought to his senses. He was | DUt nothing was settled, Mr. Burns su R aptain Leary's of the Standard Oll company before the g Shatins | b 4 | esting that a written proposition be sub- Meet Obligntions. retirement with the grade of rear admiral| Hut he says In defense that I character- | attorney general of New York, and by cons B e RYE Quality ng from the nose. Haley hore not a | mitted Later in the Udge Ferris, in was made under the law giving the pres-|ized this ‘deposition ‘s “insufficient.’ He | culting other sources of 1.formation. 1t ATIMORE K scratch, although Cgllier had put in sev- | Writing, arked Mr if he and h's 2 is right, but Insufficlent for what? Insuffl- i My, Prout had done the same he would | | Nso oy eral blows, mostly to the bod assoclates were willing to part with their ST. PAUL, Minn., Jan. 3.—The directors | /dent authority to retire officers who served | ciont, of course, on which to rest the whole [ have been able to have made the requisite | WuLananan & SO For the first twi . holdingw In the Clncinnat ciyb. Mr. Brush, | oo o paul Trust company, a well known | 0 the civil war one grade higher than the |case.’ But that'was far from saying that it | amdavit. *And 1 he had been representing | || SEEALIIEE Rich in Flavor, 'or the first two minutes and a half of {in a long statement in reply, declined to - 4 osition they held at the time uent | 414 not contain valuable testimony for the | a” private client, and as loyal to his in- Mellowed b, ) position Yy me the request the first round Haley did not take an ag- Offer for the clib and fook | institution of St. Paul, of which General State, Because 1 deemed the unsupported | torcat us a lawyer should always be to Age E1O0(Y6 PRYE 10 the. Awht, although it was g0 Ito the tecent meeting of | J. W. Bishop has been president since 1884, | fOF such action Is made. Unfortunately, for | testim of onc ' withess insufficient on | the intorest of his ollent, he would have % h ue at New York. He |, o ¢ $200,000, hav 0 some unexplained reason, actlon was de-[which to submit the case did not warrant | done #o, and If he had not done so his ensy to see as 8oon as he squared off aft Iding for the purt he | With a capital of $200,000, have voted to go fetied on: Cuntsin Lasry's leatt w1 | Mr. Prout's deduction that the testimony ‘would have been culpable and df the gong that he was a different Haley. | ving_that he had |into voluntary liquidation. Public Examiner | ferred on Captain Le application until} w4 ‘worthless. Surely it cannot be that t proceedings would be justified {[ , sota aeane Meanwhile Collter rushed and swung and | [ned (he fasue of ‘base hall o aaarchy | pope made the announcement of the com- | his sudden destb recelied the master to| My, Prout does not know e o uation | e Mes of the attorney” genefal's ||| TN LANEHAY S auring hix brie of dlsputed control : e e officla 0w Mr. Prout pleads further, in extenuatio as o D o kecretary Jabbed and dodged, with some success, | {intil the lsnus I settiod, Mr. Brush said | pany's declsion at noon, stating that from | the attention of the Mcials, when he was : Kol M G S oy o L of his condy ot wi h resp this deposi- of the state of Indiana, just referred to, while Danny took the whirlwind's measure | he must remain loval o ot with him I | bis knowledgo of the company's business | Promptly retired at the advance grade, the|yion, that | knew, during my term of office, | which showed that the Standard Ol trust | e sl 4 o' present unsettiod condition of = the |yt p A all creditors would be pald in | retirement taking effect as It beforo bis|that the deposition had been wont to the | owned practically all the shares of stock and o ground slowly. Collier seemed | jenge o Delis .M death. Tk and not to the referees. This I8 true. | of the dofendant company. If the attorney much the more active, though Haley was on | He l1||<'\‘m-‘l‘lr\< Ing ‘n..n when Deace ] full, although the stockholders vrnbl;'ly 3 But how, does 1t fustit i\n l);:«‘m" hl 'l‘l‘ml o al had been half as industrious i the alert. estublished he may welcome a renewal of | would lose part of their investment. The slon to glve any thought to whether | digging up that certificate s he was in OAIEEL ot forty seconts of thiy | hE-SHE OF the EhRci il BAICAte. | C | N e A red on an sxtensive busis | SMILES ~ AT HIS " SENTENCE | fho"iioiton had b breberidinecied, | rabfntecil ' loter o mine a's Calegt WU round to go when Collier rushed Haley to n | KANSAS - MAN IS A SLUGGER|™** and administered several large es- Boy Cenvieted of Murier Gets Twenty | Peen misdir Aid not come up for con- | geeretnry of state of Indiana could have E g SPECIALIST e orner and the latter countered o tates, the greatest having been that of the | ation or declsion until M rout_pre- | gj him Important testimony. Why did ) in « and the I untered nicely on Sl s | I in the Penite sented the deposition in evic e. Then | hy not do 1t? “ the jaw with his right just as Frank was|James Ferns Knocks Out Pennsyl- [ late Coumodore Norman Kittson, who left | borsiid bt b the detect In the direction—n mere techni- $ All Diseases and tting away. The blow was a good one Siak da the Neadad $5,000,000 or more, the last action on his [t callty -was brought home to Mr. Prout. n of Refereen. and Danny leaped in for another, which ho | i ea: blg property having only recently been b gad7he wan ivel sn epportinity 40 % 1 4id, how- Disordurs of Men put In the same place with the other hand taken, There m:l been much litigation of| wINFIELD, Kan., Jan. 3.—Clyde Mccre, | daya’ dely. oolh of which were at Mr. XN 8 cvery 10 years in Umats Colller fell back, though not put out, and — this estate, the heirs contesting the trust| p. 17.vear.old boy convicted of murder | PTouts command, wou ave made o e lof n my hands by my p' p) 1P ames Fi , > . i jeposition admissible in evidence. 1 sub- | predes . It was all rejected and the went clear (hrough the ropes to the floor, | FHILADELPHIA, Jan. &.-James Ferus | company's claim for compensation and se-| in'the gecond degree for killing C. L. Wilt- | it to the candid reader, 'Would nat an at- | referces’ held it "wa' insufficlent. [ ex- VARICOCELE «24 ! b o O of Kansas knocked out Jack Bennett He climbed back into the curing a big cut in the amount claimed. second round at ¥ing to finish the round. They fiddled for a minute, and as the bell sounded Haley put of McKeesport, Pa.. in the, the Industrial ' Athietle clib fight was to have gone six rounds. tonight. The The most serious case against the com- pany was that of the estate of C. D. berger, a farmer near here, last April, for bis money, was today sentenced to twenty torney, loyal to the intérest of his cliy uge thé postage stamps and incur the dela and does not the fact that Mr, Prout re- cepted ut”the time to their holdings. ws shown by the reports, but the report was confirmed by th supreme court.” HYDROCELE curea Method naw, without 3 oo mol ec years in the penitentiary. He recelved the | fused to do 8o prove him unfaithful to tho [ 'This ls another illustration of the fact i cattiug. DAL 1oss his pight stralght to Colller's jaw again | hoton 1 e Tenend Found. theKanahs | Strong. whose estate showed a depreclation | voraiet with u smile. foreat’of the Hate which e pretende €0 | that @ haif truth in worse than n whole e, | {08 i/ of time with fa % man caught Pennsylvanian on the jaw |of more than $100,000 during the ten years " ! _ | represent? e secks to lenve the Impression o gured for |ifeanathe po'son 1 speed B e R g puanly . Beniary | o e e e of (e trust qomiaty. | o The prisoser’s atiorneyplasded fof & re v AR I T M. W presented his exceptions to the supreme | SY PHILIS Rotoagnty Trom Second Reund Fast and Fur| tried to clinch, hut ran i a right “|torm school sentence, but Judge McBride e Wer o Tt/ iing Tof | e nystem. Soom etery sikt and symptam > hand uppereut, which -eompletely knocked | The supreme court held that there had been | goiq the boy was sufficiently mature to| Second It is a fact, admitted by Mr. is unqualifiedly faise. Upon the fillng of | jiyapnears com) jetely’ and forever. e The seconid round apened fast and furious, | him out. o criminal impropriety of action In|know what he was doiog. when he com. | FFOut: that when I retired from the offic | the ‘refercew report the court made an A NG UL of she dinease on the siiD for now both men were more than willing s of attorney general, I left him an order of forder that {f no exceptions were filed by bandling the Strong estate, but that the or face. ‘ireatmaen: contains uo dsngerous Haley had loosencd up, and was there with a left and a right and a clever duck when- ever needed. After some clinching Collier rushed at Danny, and the latter broke sround, at the same time bringing his right around in a hook to Collier's jaw, the latter being unprepared for the blow. Each man then landed once, when Haley put In tho shot that ended the fight. It was a vicious punch and cinched a contest which was Haley's almost from the start. Young Corbett, featherweight champlon of the world, who has been exhibiting at the | Trocadero, was (o referco the fight and ap- peared, but was too tired to attempt the work, so Frank Murphy of South Omuha officlated. The champlon was given the | ovation of the evening. In Haley's corner | were Oscar Gardner, Billy Haley and Dick Keefe. Collier had behind him John Ritchie, | Charles Kluso, Jim Ford and CIff Hough. | Tim Murphy of Sloux City challenged the | winpér from the ringelde. A battle royal by cight colored men | & popular preliminary. Ed Flowers won | after a lot of dust had been raised. In the | fourth round of & four-round contest Charles Marfisi was glven an unpopular de- the Gate City alle: Totais ... Celebrities Take n SWOOD, N. J., Jan It match was akewood “Goif club ke Gilderslee dent of the New York Base score of #9109 i eral Small B clsion over Frank McGuakin on an alleged | MILWAUK foul. Frank had the boetter of the fighting. | ‘»',1' -'_lln- igo was r"m he Both were bantamwelghts at 105 pounds. | Mauriee Bayres of this city. b Claude Graywon and Abe Warren, both col- ored, furnished another four-round bout Grayson was cxperienced and active, though much smaller than his antagoniat. He bat ted Warren around so freely in the first three rounds that the latter lost, although in the last round he had Grayson tottering Manager Guptill, handling Haley and Gardner, offercd @ side bet of from $500 to $2,000 on the Intter to whip John Ritchie GOOD SHOWING ON THE LINKS | Men and Women Golfers Arve nted In Tourn nt by Snow. LAKEWOOD, N, J., Jan. 2. snow on the iinks of ‘the Lakewood Coun- try club the winners today among men and wamen golfers who are taking part in the mid-winter foursome handicap tournament turned In fairly good cards. I \\?urlh bY 2 un and 1 to | “Miss 8. Downer and ¥ Miss AmbVose and J. Thorne b Rolston and G. 'T. Brokuw A h%-mer and R. Symns by 2 up (twenty- oles). Bemi-final round Miss and Mr. O'Donough beat Mirs and Mr. Ferrls by 2 up and 1 to play, and the match between Miss 8, Downer and I P Freeman against Miss' Rolston and G. T rokuw was not finished on account of lh""l‘ll agthing and her son, J e i B. Naeth- ng, €M Mr. Clark, 5 up and 4 play In the mateh play round for the Root cup and drew u bye for the semisfnal Musa 1. Wallaog and D. Bacon beat Miss Park a oL obbiny by 3 up and 2 to play, and Mrs and Mr. Rogers beat Mrs and 'Mr. Clafin by 5 up and 5 to play. In the seml-final round Miss Wallace and Mr Bacon beat Mrs. and Mr. Rogers by 2 i and 1 to play, und tomorraw they wiil meet and en her holes, Mrw, Nuething TouRd of elght the Roof trophy, SAYS LEAGUE WILL THRIVE Preside: in the teh play, final for of Pacific Northwest Ball Cireuit Expects Goad Yenr, Hase ST. PAUL, Minn, Jan. 3—Pr LW 1. Tucan ot the Bucific North Bass . mkie, who s In the city to consul wn}, orthérn Pacifia offic n Logard (4 Tates for next ewson. sald wnd s ceeded {n obtaining rates, and nothing no: nde (n the way of completion of the ol | Desplte the he plny was | dimensions the . Panorama bullding preliminaries Walter to u draw knoeked out one round and “Young' MK Black ol BALTIMORE Jan. 3. ¢ Yonkers, N.'Y was kno g Kureka Athletic club tonlght SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. that a line of merchant (his_port”and Manila lished acting {n conjunctlon with t the steamer Albion. en will s | York and mies In West ted u petition on be excess of that amount. The heard tomorrow. | est bankruptey case ever befo UMBUS, G ating the damuk Jlumbus Power company L Chief Engineer John negroes were carrled throug breuks in the atrueture. M. ne | three other mnegros ~w | names are Frank Harvey and Matt Dixon Jan, 3, terday at the French hospitaf, today to be resting comfort as_ sald that operated upoti for stricture and not appendicitiv, as repo TREN N. J.. Jan. 3 hees this afterndon’ recelved Mayor Frank O. Bridges of latter's acceptance of be state trewsurer. late James B. Swain, e wil t. “Butte and Helenn," he sald, “have been admitted to membership In our league R The res of New York e od 1o huve been §300,000, Andrew Freedman toda tonight olan_of Philadelphia | and Joe Curtin of Chicago went six rounds Scotty of Denver t scheduled for twenty rounds at but vary somewhat in tonnags Viginia, alF T Aitieraua ro were rescued badly brulsed drowned. Willlam Bussey Mr. New Jersey Has New Tre the ppoin Clarksons Win, last_night the ok two out three games. CLARKSONS, Kolls Molyneaux 1 Lucas 125 Brunke 161 Clarkson 170 Totuls .oovvvreiien 81 787 NATIONALS, 18t Ahmanson o160 swonill Lile L1o8 and 3.—A three- played over ‘the links between S ve und Rich- After a well contested gume at elghteen I medal play, Justice Gildersieeve de- teated the Tammany chief und the presi- all club by a nee Forbes sion _over n o ¥lx-round oxing club in In the " Chicago In tul. | mas Briderick d out by Joe s of Baltimore in the sixth round of a the Steamed Line to Manila. ~Tha Call s mers between on be estab- by the Kmpire Steamship company, he owners of The company will put the transpacific route the steamships fo, Indiana and Pennsylvania, while Albjon — will ran in the ' Inter- island_trade, The steamers first na have been vl In the (ransport s ice until They are of the sun @t elghteen holes, match play. Tomorrew | OWing to the difference in thelr Attin the final rounds for both prizes will be on | They are 343 feet long, forty-three feet « the name Dbaste. irhe Tpbiaes. ue eups | beam and twenty-four feet nine inches onated by Mrs. George J. Gould and Mrs, | deep. R oe 18, Reos. e —————— Following are the results of the day's | Coal € ny Bankrupt, mes bl 4 B .4 PARKERSHURG, Va, Jan. &-Col- h.I: m.nfllu.‘ll“.l‘"'.'; Donohue won by de- [ ot Jonn, T. McGraw and {“‘,;"‘“;'I D. iDonehy n o Jost, ‘reprerenting creditors of the Flem: faglt trom, Miss Wallace and 4 Moller, ot | fgtn' Coal company, with: affices. (- Now have creditors to have the company declared an involuntary bankrupt. —Assets are sald to be $500,000, with llabilities considerabiy in case will be | 1t is sald to be the larg- ore this court Three Negioes Drowned While Investi- done 1o the dam of the 1y the recent Lee and four h one of the Lee and one but the The Blovel Teats Comfo ¢ YORK, Jun, §.—Ma Rlouet) was oners rtubly. % O'Rell (M ted upon yes. was roported ably. At the Riouet was of ‘the bawels orte er, Governor Voor- from former Trenton the ment to succeed the tron and R, e 1s under: trust company must make good the $100, 000 depreciation in the value of that es- tate, such falling off in values having been in real estate which the company trus- tee for the Strong estate purchased from itself as: owner of such property. It is stated that tho company will be closed up by new officers. No figures are yet obtainable. The assets of the company consist largely of real estute and, notwithstanding the depreciation in realty valuations during the last few years, the assets still largely ex- ceed the llabilities. The total assets are given at $610,579 In the last published state- ment of tke company. Today's action was taken with the con- sent and approval of all the creditors and the public examiner was simply notified of the action taken, ‘mot having taken any official part in the decision of the direc- torate, GOOD USE FOR PRIZE MONEY Captain MeCa Wil Bulla ¢ House for Sallors with His Share. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 3.—Captain B. H. in command of Kearsarge, the fagship of the North Atlantic squad- ron, has in viev the erection of & fine club house at Vallejo for the enlisted men of the navy. He bas already secured a site for the proposed bullding, paying for it with the prize money awarded to him for his services in the Spanish war. Additional funds are to be secured by popular sub- scription. Mrs, McCalla 18 now here mak- ing the preliminary arrangements for the erection of the structure, which will prob- ably be modecled after the Blue Jackets' club house in Brooklyn, which was'erected through the munificence of Miss Helen Gould. It will contain a library, gymna- sium, billlard room, a bowling alley and sleeping rooms and be a home for the men at Mare Islanc when off duty. PREPARES FOR HER RECEPTION Presisdent o | Managers at His Home, ST. LOUIS, Jan. 3.—Miss Helen Miller Gould, a member of the board of women managers of the Loulsiana Purchase ex- | position, and a party of four or five friends Lwill arrive In St. Louls over the Wabash road on the afternoon of January 11 and | In the city until the following | Prosident Francls of the Louisiana Pur- chase Exposition company and Mre. Fran- cis have tendered Miss Gould a recestion at thelr home for Saturday evening, Japuary 11, to meet the directors and officers of the exposition company and their wives, Invitations will be sent to the national commission dnd all the mem- ers of the board of lady manage FREED BY STATE'S EVIDENCE Party to Nl“ll'l:;‘;-l'li piracy Getws Liberty While Confederates Face the GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Jan. 3.—It de- veloped today that Stilson W. McLeon, in~ dicted with City Attorney Lant K. Salls- bury, Thomas E. McGarry, Henry A. Tay lor of New York and others, for con- spiracy in the attempt to folst @ $4,000,000 water contract upon the city, confessed his share in the affair to the prosecuting at- torpey last Tuesday and has agreed to turn state's evidence in the trials of McGarry and Taylor. Salisbury bas already been convicted. The case against McLeon is to be dropped in consideration of his action. mitted the crime. Wiltberger was shot from behind while driving to town, His dead body was found in the wagon and three checks which he | had received for his wheat were missiug. Clyde Betts, aged 13, and Moore, boys who had run away from home previous to the {of such disobedionce: the RULME Jrovidex o o i that upon application N X murder, were arrested charged with the | that uron abplivation o6 I SIS G SRR crime. Betts was tried first and acquitted. | book, paper or document) “to be such as While Moore was being tried a prisoner in the Sedgwick county jall confessed he, with Moore and another boy, Wiltberger. CITIZENS FIGHT Bandits Forced that killed ROBBERS | Flee Atter Using Dynamite on Bank v . ST. JOSEPH, Jan. 3.—A special to the Daily News from Cambden Point, Mo., a college town forty miles south of St. Jo- seph, mays: At 2 o'clock this morning tour masked | robbers entered the bank at Camden Polnt | and wrecked the vault with dynamite. A. P. Sarrhurst, assistant cashier of the bank, and H. F. Rixey, a local merchant return- | ing from a country dance, passed the bank | just as the explosion occurred, Hastily | arming themselves with shotguns and | summoning a small posse headed by Buck | Cullins, the crack shot of the town, they | surrounded the bank and opened fire on | the robbers. After a fusilade lasting sev- | eral minutes, in which one of the rob- | bers was shot in the shoulder, the bandits broke away from the bank, ran-to the rail- | road tracks and escaped on a hand car. | They secured no booly. Several armed posses are In search of the robbers today. WRECK ON NEW YORK CENTRAL Work Train 2 Rear of enger and Badly Hurt ALBION, N. Y., Jan. 8.—A collision oc- curred on the New York Central road at Fancher today. The westbound passenger train had just pulled into the station when a work traia crashed into its rear. Several passengers In the day coach of (he pas- senger train were badly shaken, but only one, Mis. Catherine Reddy of New York, was serlously injured. A telephone message from Kagle Harbor | cald the rear passenger coach, after the | collision, rolled over and was burned. | | HE REALTY MARKET, | INSTRUME NTS placed on record Friday, Januar, Warranty Deods 3. J. Nelson and wife to Mary Siek- : Kkoiter, lots 1 to 6, block 7, Millard.. § 1,000 W. F. VanBurg and wife to Hannah Lind, ebs lo* 2. block 10, fsaac & 8.'% usband 1o Emily block 4, Bherman Larson and K, lot 2, 1,9 | Avenue park N “ . AW | B A Hutchingon wd husband 't Ross Peterson, lot 22, block 1, Ames \ ol TR Palmite o Ames Place 50 L D, H. Casey, 1ot 23, | block § Sheridan Place » omah cantile company o Pt Tersen, lot 1. Rustin's ada | 4 Qul Claim Deeids, LA Willsey to C. €. Bllfs, wis sw and sely swig 15-16-12 Hattie Lee to C. G trator, whé lot 7, bl M. L. Leland to M Ha ¥, wdminis- 31, Omauhy 1 . Bpethman, lots 5 and 3, block 12, Hriggs' Place 102 Deeds, | Bherlft to Nebraska Loan and Build- ing amsoctation, 10ts 12 and 13 Sunnyside add... .. % 1100 Sheriff to Willlam Wallace, fots 19 and 20, block 4, Hawthorne add, W.' A Dellord, = recelver. to Annie Sweeney, lot 2, block 2, Wilcox's 24 add Ll Skiarsrisednie . 100 | order.™ | court hv € | Justify {he supreme court upon the Standard Oll company whereby the company was re- quired to permit the state, through its at- ney general, to inspect and copy the books, papers and documents in the pok- sepsion of the company, containing evidence Telating to the merita of the action. The company disobeyed this order. In the event the party by affidavit alleges it to be." It was, then, the dufy of the attorney general to file an aMdavit setting forth what the bool papers and documents of the Stan- dard Ol v showed with respect to that compa 1N|l< l::d‘ hv’ do It? No, On the efused to do any- b plated he should nt thing which the law conte do with respect to the matter, and thereby cast to the winds the means which T had placed in his hands of Ably, the case of the tandard Oll Company What did he do In this regard? He pre sented an aMdavit of mine, used by me for the ‘purpose of' procuring the order just mentioned upon the Standard Ol company, and affected to think that this aMdavit: filed by me for one purpose, which ft Served, could be used by him for an en- trely different purpose. The afidavit of mine referred to by him In his letter was made and used by me in support of my ap- Dlication to the court for the order to com- bel the company to permit an Inspection of s books and papers. That application was granted and the affidavit, therefore, accom. Wished what it was intended to do. But Mr. Prout finding it amongst the files of- fered it to the referees to prove the con- tents of the books, a purpose for which 1 never Intended it. ' The referecs called his Attention to the leading case on the sube Ject In this tate, and then sald of that case: | We find that the adavit npon Which_the order was obtained was not tha one offered In evidence, but that after the Tefusal to comply with the order the plain- i and filed a positive aMdavit.” Jroving, indisput. tate agalnst the Tn concluding their opinion they exvressed themselves thiis: “The statute contemplates that the aMdavit may be made after the obtainin of the order, e estahlished practice of this state fs that the affidavit may be made after the obtaining of the Une of the Afidavit. Mr. Prout was thereby told that whil® the amdavit of mine presented by him and the one upon which T had obfained the order was sufficlent for the purpose for which T had ured It it was not the afdavit which the statute contemnlated for the pum lose for which he had offered it; but that t was the command of the statute. the practice of the state and his duty to file fnother afmdavit of a different character entirely. The attorney general mivht as well have taken any other old affidavit of mine, such. for ingtance. as one fof Yervice by publication or for an attach- ment, and piesented it to the court, ne the one which he dld present. 1t would have been fust about as pertinent Now, turn to his letter and contemp'ate what ‘miserable plece of pettifogeing Mr. Prout engages In with reference to this affidavit. 1 had sald In my letter fo the Post that he had presented an “‘fm- proper” afdavit. Commenting upon this, he writes “Would any not familiar with the case ever suspeet that the ‘imoroper’ af- fdavit was made and filed fn the sunrems 7. 8myth, yet sueh is the fact, was his, thereby endeavors to v the impression that T h AfMdavit for the purpose of proving the nts of the books and papers of the Standard O company after they had dis- cheyed the order of the court, and that that afdavit was in<ufctent, when the truth 1 that T had fAled no sich aMdavie and that the aMdavit which he nresantal Was one filsd by me for an entirely dit- | ferent nhurpose, and, ax the indgm-st of | {he court established prove? aufts spMelent for that e 18 not this a piece of Aownright deception on the part of Mr Prout. nmworthy of the high office which he holds? What He Should Have Done, ane the aMidavit He pubikc to the an But supposing, for the moment. that | had flled o defective aMdavit, would that him. the attorn:y general, in r1e. | fusing 1o ille a prover one after he had | heen Informed by the court that m¥ af- | was defective; what wis necessary | make it sufficient, and that he cowd | the ttme to nresent such aMdavit? ¥ not. Defeative pleadings ars flled | ay by lawyers, but upon the defect | cing brayght to thelf noties by a decision | the caurt (hev at once correct them, 1f thev be correctable There I5. however, no profit In proceeding upon the assumntion that 1 had made n mistake In the aMdavit. for 1 had not { that Mr. Prout did not presant I aMdavit, that it was hix duty that he was Informed of this b and: that he flagrantly neg ™ that respsct tab fidayit to hav the his Tt duty Total amount, of transfers ...,......§ 5,81 beyond the p sibliity of #ucces‘ul de the attorney general within ten days the teport would stand confirmed. He knew of that order, but he falled to file uny ex- ceptions untfl after the ten days ' had ¢lapsed, and, consequently, never presented .2 1o the supreme cou¥t for Its declslon any » of the rulings of the referees to which he had excepted. This he cannot ruccesatully | STRIOT ed with a new Hom deny. But ncw he seeks to have the public | Treatment 10 detention frow tu belleve that he did present the exceptions | ness. Kidney and Bladder Troubles. and that the supreme court ruled agalnst flummu, ‘9 him. This is a bare-faced attemiit to put oy Comuttation free. T Yrentinent bv Mall the responsibllity llnr :nn ':-nulm upon the Call on ou oraddress {19 So. 14th 8t supreme court, when it _should rest upon LMo rey tponural, Such conduct tan Soarles, Omaha. Neb. eliclt only the men, ndemnation of honorable What the Files Con ned, If there be one statement In the fore. going which Mr. Prout thinks he can suce Eoenfully Controvert 1 challenge him. fo do If. The fact s, he cannot do it. And the result is, that wien I retired from the office of attorney general: 1. There was on flle a deposition of Mr. Rice containing much valuable testimony in favor of the siate, which Mr. Prout could have used, but falled to do so. 2. There was an order of court requiring the Standard Oll company to permit the attorney general to inspect and take a copy of Its books and records bearing upon the question of whether or not It wus & trust; this vlaced Mr. Prout in a position to establish beyond the poradventure of doubt every allegation of the state's peti- tlon if he had only utilized it wl;" loyalty to his client, the state; but he did not 1 have no disposition to unjustly criticise Mr. Prout or his office. So far as I have abgerved the work of his uty, Mr. Norris Brown, 1 have commended 't u reservedly for' ita earnestness and energ In conclusion, let me say, that my com. munication to 'the Poet was not written for the purpuse of ‘commending the im portance and efficiency of my publie serv. ces in attempting to drive the Standard OIf company out of Nebraska," but at the request of men eminent in the field of po- Iitical economy, who desired that the truth o ; 6 for #6.00 mailed in be made known, and for the purpose of | TN Taerre | A detending myselt ‘and the courts of my fR. W State againsi the aspersions of certnin | gee o»., Dewepiier correspondsnce, and of vindicat: | DR e vy roan *hifine U, Tk (he outr lawa of this commoi @ Dav wealth—outraged In the presence, and with the connlvance, of thetr sworn, but faith- less, defender. C.J SMYTH. | = ¥ nalty with Life. YTON, Ala, Jan. %.—Bob Brown. a | who murdered Mr. McLeo ond hanged here todi The was attended by a exuct noon. large crowd of white and colored people, ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Carter’s Little Liver Pills. GURSE 8ICK HEADASHE. Dr. Searles & louth O Tuts, Ta 1 | | 'have no equal s | : druge of injurious medicine. Bk iy ARTING WEARNENS With EARLY JUNG and MIDDLE AGED. 1ack of vim, vigo A atrength, With organs fiupairad and wea RBLLITY or KX 80AY Poor Indeed are those weighed down by mental de- preasion. Men rise in this world hrough buoyant nerve force. The loss of this force daily down 10 Tailure some of the woridla brightest minds. Such a condition 1s commonly kuowi a8 Nervous Debilit; When you lose uell-confidence and feel y foree a you seek senmble aid. You prefer health aud success to miscry and failure, ’ 2 nerve restorer, A (Somes will dlspel that héavy couple feeling; the unnatural weariness dis. appears and replaces languor with new foree and vigor of body and brain, Bix boxes will cure an: nervous debility, money back, pe ordinary case of 1f uot, you get your @rccscccccscccnsccoceel Stop! Did you ever stop to think that over six hundred individ- vals use The Hee Want Ad pages every Sunday? That, bestdos this large num- ber who are personally inter- ested, there are several hundred that are fnterested In every classification. That classifications ¢ found for ¢ man, GET IN LINE Don't you think you had better get In lne under one of these n be ry want of mortal classifications and let your ants be known? There 1 surely someons among this vast army of read- ers that you can interest, and want Ad will do the a 3 “Bia sessssscsssesecsose from Excesses or VIOTIM® USTIO) s Drug Co., Councl/