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1, YET CONFINED IN All ASYLUM! Ltinational Experience of a South Dakota Woman— I Some Lawsuits \\ ill Result. ■ p|n? from an Insane asylum at H * n S D., where she had been K!i sd. M she believes, because of a KUsiracr; wandering two nights W T-w the Missouri bottom lands, al- Ct starved, not daring to bo seen; wedding ring for money Kj P at a hotel and buy a ticket to KjCltr. now holding a good posl- ET|i that city and enlisting her In- Wr.. L.1.1 South Dakota friends to And KTiittle boy, who has been taken EL t«r—such is the story of Mrs. ■EkMi Whitney, formerly teacher In EiSosth Dakota school for the blind EgstT -1 Mrt. Whitney, a bright young worn- I o( thirty, told her story to B. H. Eh of Sioux Falls, a member of the CL of charities when Mrs. Whitney Etf Gary. He and other prominent Ctb Dakotans pledged themselves to E the plucky woman. ■ Bra Whitney, after leaving the Loot at Gary, went to Sioux Falls, Eere ihe taught music. She had a ELreen’ent with a relative, which L. bare been responsible for Mrs. Eutney's trouble. At any rate Mrs. Kkitney was committed to an asylum Eftakton. She tried to induce the Ellorities to give her an examina- E: by skilled alienists. In this she Elid. Her mind might have been EiMrad, but for her concern about Erboy. who, having lost his father, Eh the pride of a devoted mother, hei she was sent to the asylum the Igtlft fellow was sent to an orphanage, Ekch she has been unable to locate. Ek this determined her to escape. She Esduded that she must take French Eir« of the institution that was prac lij f a prison. The buildings were HFiTOUS JACK SULLY IN CANADA ■Got Tired of Being Hunted and Took Himself Over I Into Edward’s Domains. 1 lick Sully, the best known cattle IN horse rustler of the West, alleged Is bare been involved in countless Batting and shooting scrapes, is now In Canada, according to United States llanhal John M. .Petrie. I After Sully broke jail at Mitchell ■ liltsummer, with the aid of members ■if ill png who brought him a saddle I horn, he returned to his home in Ly lauewnry and stayed there until six Iweiiago. He left his wife and four IdHghter; behind, I Th» old man simply got tired of K hunted.” said Mr. Petrie. "He pt a horse saddled near his house in 111 daytime, ready at a moment's no- P* to start aw ay. During the day he Bviaited his cabin, which is built on an riFTirilSllT COMPANIES Speculation as to What They Will Do in Consequence of Judge Garland’s Decision. Jndiro Carland of the federal court Mr. Hannett also stated that the f Sioux Falla, having given his rte- companies did not feel any too friendly Won in the anti-company case, which toward the state and that there was a ■ttalni the demurrer of the state and probability of their withdrawal. The Kctlcally upholda the law, It is now J companies feel that they have been to Ito the foreign insurance companies a great expense In establishing their • make their last move, and there is agencies and that they cannot go to Nch speculation as to what they will J the additional expense of making a • I personal examination of all the future frwton ft Hannett of Mitchell, who 1 risks that may be written, as the law the attorneys for the thirty com- requires. •Hies that are represented in the fight ' One of the members of the local firm • the law. said before the case was will go to Chicago to confer with the tomenced that it was expected that j managers of the companies Interested, to* companies lost they would carry and they will then determine what wcase to the circuit court of appeals course they will pursue—carry the 18t.Louis.and perhaps to the supreme f ease to the higher courts or withdraw •hrt at Washington. from the business of the state. WOULO LIKE A DECISION. dlers until the r * legislature con • ■ I venes and anot aw, framed to ***thanta Want to Know the Legal i aland the test ot . v - courts, is enact- Standing of Peddlers In South Da- ed. k o»e- -Last Case Before Supreme Frank Crnne, clerk of the state su preme court, in answer to a letter ot Merchants throughout the state inquiry from E J. Mannix of this city, **• been anxiously awaiting a deei- secretary of the South Dakota Retail l# o by the state supreme court on the Merchants’ association, does not hold tiidttx of what is known as the ped- out much hope of an eiriy decision be *■ license law, which was enacted ' ing rendered in the test case, owing to f the last legislature. The arrest of the large volume of business before 1 ••‘ldler In Sioux Falls for refusing the court which has to be disposed ol take out a license as required by before the test case is reached. J* Dew law resulted In a test case carried to the supreme court. Those Double Keels. ® the supreme court upholds the "A yachtsman of New South Wales *. merchants in all parts of the atato proposes to lift the cup with a boat Nl *ee that it is vigorously enforced, fitted with twin keels. He’ll be thor fc°u!d the law be declared unconsti- oughly cured of making any further *M®al and void, the merchants of attempts If he tries it." Dakota will again be at the mer- ‘‘l see. Sort o’ double Keeley cure, 1 °f transient merchant* mad ped- 'h?" —Cleveland Plain Dealer ** • meeting of the board of educe Rev. N C. Mallory, formerly pastor ** »t Clark it was voted to divide 'f the Baptist church in Aberdeen, • Primary department of the’city Iropped dead whl'e running to eatch *noola. owing to the crowded eondi t fain at Aurora. 11l *nd to employ an extra teacher Corn Is yielding about seventy five *• Myrtle Boyle, who has a kinder " site’s an acre around A’exandria; *•* clms at Mllbank. was proffered "’’eat averare 1 about twenty, barley Position as teacher of the oxtre vvtv and rye t' rtv ’ve. T r‘°n, and at once notified the boar ' The news of the death of R. B Tur- h *r acceptance. The lecture roe-' t. sup-'-Inter-’ent of the Keaissrgo *’• l-utheran church wtli be fitter* old mno In ''ontans.. has «l‘cltcd tbe children and wi’l bn rend? <mrevr ! -ns of ?orrow from the . Dec. t. A fine, upio fraternity rf the HM’t, where d* **ool house is to be erected in ’r. T-un'r was well known. He visited •Prtng. hat region several months ago. guarded and the windows were barred by heavy gratings. Mrs. Whitney cal culated that she must conduct herself as a model prisoner. In a short time she knew the routine of the institution perfectly and she was ready to escape. The hoavy shutters ol her first-floor window were fastened by screws. Waiting till a night when there would be no moon, she took from the dining room a spoon. Secreting It till | she reached her room, she succeeded < in removing the screws that fastened the heavy shutters. She knew that at a certain moment the electrical cur rent which maintained the Incandes cent lights was turned off for a brief space to switch the current from a dynamo to a storage battery. The grounds were patrolled by guards, but with great care she man -1 aged to loosen the shutter screws. leaving the frame in its plac«*. Her ! hands were on the shutters ready to snatch them away. The lights went out. Instantly the woman tore the grating, dropped it to the ground, leaped through the window and ran. Tramping along the road toward Klk ! Point, she walked till exhausted. Then she lay down in the woods and slept on the ground. In the morning she trudged on, keeping out of sight as much us possible. At night she reach ed the town, ready to drop with hun ger and weariness. She went to & hotel and. taking from ! her finger her wedding ring, said she wanted to raise enough money to ; keep her over night and get a ticket to Sioux City. The next morning she came to Sioux City. She found em ployment at a hotel as a waitress. As a result of the afTair some sensational lawsuits are promised. elevation commanding a view of the surrounding country for miles. With the aid of a powerful telescope he was able to get a view of people approach ing, and if they were strangers he rode away to gulches where it was impos sible to find him. He spent his nights In an Indian village where outposts watched while he slept. All these pre cautions wore on him, and Mrs. S.illy told me he had left the country never to return. "The Sully gang is protty well brok en up, but some of the worst members are going yet, as evidenced by the es cape of John Connire and Henry Boun cer last week. The men were given a steel saw with which they cut the bars, and when they got out they rode away on horses which were waiting." 6CHOOL ENDOWMENT FUND. How It Has Increased in a Half-Dozen Years in South Dakota. While the lease fund for the benefit ! of the public schools of the state nas , shown an Increase of SIOO,OOO from 1897 to 1903, the endowment fund for the different state institutions has also shown a decided increase in lease money. In 1897 the total endowment fund secured from leases was $1,318.96, while In 1903 the amount received from this sourco was $33,798.17, the increase being at a rapid ratio. For 1897 it was $1,318.96; for 1898, $3,-! I 397.32; 1899, $5,613.69; 1900, $14.- 932.17; 1901, $24,045.57; 1902, $29,- 140.67; 1903, $33,794 17. The lands from which the Instltu- ! tlons draw their funds are not, as the public school lands, located all over the state, but were selected in the counties in which there was the light est settlement at the time of state hood, or where reservations were I opened and celfections could he made, practically uli such lands being in tho northern and western parts of tho , stale. The lease funds received for the last fiscal year by counties show the location as follows: County. Amount. •’ Brown $11.60 Butte 1,133.60 Campbell 132.40 Clark 829.49 Codington 218.96 Day 8-3.42 Edmunds 3,550.39 Fall River 1,185.60 Faulk 1,264.61 Grant 3.1/1 ( Hughes 23.4 4 ' Hyde 1,000.75 ; Jerauld 152.76 ; Kingsbury 57.60 . McPherson 4.611.64 ; Marshall 5,831.90 ! Meade 1,298.80 Pennington 364.40 Potter 4,903.80 Sanborn 53.23 . Sully 2,809.67 Walworth 1,454.85 - i Total $33,794.17 j State Supt. Nash Is taking up the ira.ter of school district officer mcct ; lngs, and has suggested to county su | perintendents the following topics a 3 good ones to select from: School houses and appliances; ventilation of rooms; decoration of school houses and grounds; relations of teachers to ; boards; relations of boards to county superintendent; how to induce the larger pupils to remain in school; how may patrons assist in the management management of schools; reports of dis -1 trict officers; teachers’ reports and wages; how to Improve the country school; trnsportation and its prob lems; regular and special ooard meet ings; tuition of eighth grade gradu ates; formation of township districts; 1 salary of school district officers; pur chase cf apparatus; Institutes; pen alty of non-attindance; moral lnstruc -1 tion in schools; libraries; high ! schools; compulsory education. FELL FROM A HILL. M. C. Connors and Miss Gammon In jured at Deadwood. M, C. Conners and Miss Jessio Gammon of Spearftsh are in St. Jo seph’s hospital at Deadwood, both painfully injured as the result of a fall from Spearftsh hill in the lower part of Deadwood. They were severe ly cut about the head and face, and Miss Gannon had not regained con sciousness until a late hour, although the physicians announce that her in juries are not necessarily fatal. Each sustained four scalp wounds, several cuts penetrating to the bon". Neither received fractures of tho skull, although the bone was found u> be chipped. Aside from the cuts and contusions about their heads and fac -J they escaped injury. M. C. Conors is a well-known Cattle man of Spearftsh, of the firm of Con ners Bros., sons of the la*e M. f*. Conors, Sr. Miss Gammon is daughter cf J. P. Gammon, on exten sive raiser of fine horses and other live stock. Found Two Skeletons. Otto Ktiwe, who resides near Bristol, has received a deed to one of •* finest farms in this part of the state. This in itself wonild he of no partied lar interest, but the land was paid for as the result of a curious and uclqun contract. About six years ago Huwe entered into a contract with Samuel Farring ton of Bristol for the purenase of . - farm. The terms agreed upon v*c.o that he should pay down the sura of S3OO In cash, and that as soon as ho had delivered at a Bristol elevator to the credit of Farington an asrgregaio of 4.400 bushels of wheat he should uo given a deed to the land. Farrington took his chances on tho market prico of the grain. One-half of tho wheat crop raised e i the farm each year was to be deliv ered to Farrington until the last busfi el of the amount in the contract was delivered. A few days ago Huwe turned over 1.800 bushels of wheat, half of what he raised this year. This made up ib« total of 4.400 bushela, and ho is Uuw the possessor of the farm. Whipped by Whites. N>w Orleans, Nov. 17.—Race riots of large proportions are In progress In Scott and Smith couniics. Miss. The whites ha ,- e whipped the occu pants of numerous ne ;ro cottages ana driven them from the state. TERM OF FEDERAL COURT. Personal Injury Buits Lead in Number at Aberdeen. Judge John E. Carland opened a term of the United States court In Aberdeen for the trial of several Im portant cases, most of them being per sonal injury suits. One of these is the suit of Mrs. Kirkland of St. Paul who sues to recover $20,000 for Injuries al leged to have been suffered while sho w as on a Northwestern passenger train at Iledficld. Her husband also sues for $5,750. t | j Mrs. Hester of Texas sues the Mil waukee road for $15,000 for the loss of her husband, who was killed at . Everts a year ago last summer. I Fred A. McEldowney of Veblen is 1 suing the Gar-Scott company for $25, v 450 for injuries sustained by the loss of a leg in a thresher self feeder made by the company and alleged to be de- ( fective in construction. A case of importance Is that of the Live Stock National Bank of Sioux City against Judge A. W. Campbell, as administration of the estate of Edward Coleman, for s4.tyt> claimed to be due on notes executed t»y Joseph Coleman. Edward Coleman was murdered, and his brother, Joseph Coleman, was con victed of murdering him for life Insur ance, and is an inmate of the Sioux Falls penitentiary. Judge Campbell collected $5,000 insurance on Edward Coleman’s life, and the bank sues to recover the amount of Joseph Cole- man's indebtedness on the ground that while Joseph Coleman signed the note, cattle secured thereby were for the brothers, who are alleged to have been | in partnership. TRAPPED IN FIRE. One Man and Many Horses Lost In a Biaze at Aberdeen. One man, thirteen horses and one cow were burned, and twenty persons had a narrow escape from death early one morning recently at Aberdeen in a fire which destroyed the Atlantic house and the boarding stable of James Jen kins. It is not known how the fire started. The hotel guests were aroused quick ly and the scramble for places of safe ty reached the proportions of a small panic. The majority fled in their night robes. Several remained behind to gather their belongings, but the smoke and heat drove them from the building in the scantiest of attire. Matt Jenkins, a stable employe, slept over the stable. In the excitement he was overlooked and his charred re mains were found in the smoking ru ins. It is thought that wuile trying to • escape he fell through the burning floor and was too badly hurt to make his way out unassisted. , Among the horses burned were Joe Bush, the pacer, record 2:16%, and Etranger and Dan V., valuable Ham bletonian stallions. Joe Bush made a circuit of Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and lowa this summer, and carried off many prizes. Jewett Brother-. wholesale grocers, saved a valuable draft team, the only animals taken from the stable. The stable was owned by Charles j Bremer and was partly Insured. Jen kins carried no insurance. The hotel, Nels Sunden proprietor, is also a total loss. CENTRAL TO INCORPORATE. Mass and Committee Meetings to For ward the Project. Citizens of Central have taken pre liminary steps toward Incorporating as a town. A mass meeting was held at which an Informal vote was taken on the proposition. A committee was ap pointed to consult with a lawyer as to the best method of procedure and the probable expense. After the consulta tion a second meeting of citizens was held, at which the committee reported favoring Incorporation as a town and was acco r ding!y authorized to have a survey made to establish the limits of tLu proposed corporation. As soon as the survey can be made a census will be taken to determine the number of citizens, and the county commissioners will then order a spe cb.l election, at which the citizens re -1 siding within the proposed corporate liiuiis will vote on the proposition to incorporate. If the proposition car ries at this special election, the com mlv.-donera will then authorize the in corporation. The next step would then bo the election of town trustees. • It is purposed by the citizens to In corporate all that territory between . what is known as Golden Gate and tho oayville cyanide plant of the Horae stake Mining company, including that l. occupied by the Columbus mill and adjacent dwellings and extending to the top of the hill on each side of Deadwood gulch. SLAME ON DISPATCHER. R*«mf>ti*ibility for Wreck of Purdue Football Team Fixed. Indianapolis, Nov. 17. Coroner Tutewiler rendered his verdict Satur day on the Big Four wreck which oc curred In this city Oct. 31. The cor oner blames B. C. Byers, the chief train dispatcher at Kankakee, who, he says, failed to notify the Indianapolis that the special train was coming. Sixteen people were killed j in the wreck, fifteen of whom were Purdue students. i New Recruits Arrive. ' Ftnrela, S. D., Nov. 17. About p'cnty reerutta arrived at the Stursla der-.at yesterday afternoon from Jef* fersoa barracks for Fort Meade. They «r.-.r.-.g£la.toly proceeded to the poet. N N M MM N M H II II < South Dakota j O.n.rM !?«*• „ * m Paragraphed. . A merry "apple war" is on at Park* er now and fancy apples can be bought at 50 cents a bushel. Nelson C. Bigelow, late of Chicago, has located at Howard and engaged In the practice of law. The water tank and engine house are completed and Parker has one of the finest systems of water works In the state. A tiny lizard, which she swallowed In some drinking water when she was a little girl, caused the death of Mrs. George Ziegler, a pioneer resident of Hartford. The well which Is designed to fur nish water for the new water works system at Lennox has been completed at a depth of 204 feet An ample sup ply was obtained. The county officers are occupying the new court house at Parker, but ns yet the old furniture is used, the com missioners not having received satis factory bids for new. | Ex SherifT Struif, twenty miles north of Miller, has the bonanza artesian well of Hand county. It is three inch es from top to bottom, is about 1,400 feet deep and flows 400 gallons to the minute. George Morehouse, president of the Bank of Brooking*, died after a linger ing illness. He was the pioneer bank er of this county and had a wide ac quaintance because of his philanthro pic deeds. A women’s study club has been or ganized at De Smet. Officers were j elected as follows: President, Mrs. C. S. Whiting; vice president, Mrs. J. H. Hubbard; secretary, Miss Anna Wright; treasurer, Mrs. G. E. MAllory. Work has commenced at Orient on a new Catholic church building which will take the place of a similar struc ture which was destroyed by a severe storm which swept over this region last June. The new building will be a handsome one. , ! Thieves attempted to blow open the safe of the Farmers’ elevator, at Fcuy ney. The knob was knocked oIT and an effort made to effect an entrance by the use of gunpowder. The burg lars left the work unfin'shed and there Is no clue to their identity. As an evidence of the change In ways of the few severalty Indians who yet remain in this part of tbo state, Lone Rock, one of them. Is put ting in time in the jail in Pierre on a charge of v Ife beating which was pre ferred against him by his squaw. T. N. Matthews expects to begin work at once upon his new opera house block at Spearflsb, for which the foundation wallls were laid two years ago. It will be three stories high and will contain business rooms and offices besides the opera house. Parker has been the scene of a diph theria scare for two weeks, and great ly exaggerated reports have been sent out from neighboring towns. There have been fourteen cases, with three deaths. The quarantine has been re moved and the city is assuming its normal condition. Cardinal lodge. Degree of Honor, named after C. Cardinal of St. Onge. one of the grand officers of the A. O. U. W., has been organized at St. Onge. The following officers have been in stalled: Miss Elizabeth Cardinal, past chief of honor; Mrs. Lillian Wil liams, chief of honor: Miss Somerville, lady of honor; Mrs. Daniel Boone, chief of ceremonies; Charles Furious, recorder; A. Cardier, financier; Mrs Johnson, receiver. Frank H. Hopkins, a real estate dealer of Slsscton, has filed a petition In voluntary bankruptcy. He sched ules his liabilities at $12,433 and as sets at $Bl4. Of the assets, property to the value of $382 is claimed to he I exempt. A similar petition has been filed by Olive E. Blever, a milliner of Flandreau, who places her liabilities at $2,268.83, and her assets at $1,236.80. At the business session of the state encampment of the Union Veterans' union at Yankton Edmond F. English of Yankton was elected major general commanding the department of South Dakota. R. T. Paine of Aberdeen u senior brigadier general, Oscar C. Pot ter of Sioux Falls, Junior brigadier general 8. J. Moore, Mitchell, surgeon general, and H. A. Van Dalsera of Hu ron, chaplain. Aberdeen was selected for the next meeting place. Judge William O. Rice has decided in favor of the plaintiff in the case of Meade county against the North-West ern Railroad compariy, a suit for tax es. The amount involved was about $5,000, and payment was resisted by the company on the groun 1 that the levy was in excess of that allowed by law. The case was argued at Dead wood some ten day 6 ago, Mende coun- yt being represented by James Mc- Nenny, state's attorney, assisted by Charles J. Buell of Rapid City. Central. Golden Gate and Terravlllr citizen? are considering the advisabll ity of incorporating as a city. A com mittee, Edward Kcllley, Thomas Hart and Matt Plunkett, was appointed to determine whether to incorporate as a town, village or city. Citizens of Vermillion are talking of organizing a stock company for the purpose of establishing a factory for the manufacture of cement. Experts aay that the quality of clay in this lo cality is first class. An investment o! a few thousand dollars In machinery | would fit up a plant that would bring a yearly income of at least $50,000. Twelve street gasoline lamps will b# put up at once at Clark. Erneßt Clausen was kicked by a horse at Clark and seriously Injured. Enough members have be?n secured to organize a lodge of the A. O. U. W. at Pres ho. Mayor McDonald of Deadwood has appointed Charles McAllister poll tax collector for the city. During the past thirty days an ag gregate of about 100,000 bushels of grain has been marketed at Frank fort. The farmers’ elevator at,01(1 ham is proving a great success. Thus far about 125 carloads of grain have been shipped. The fall term of the slate school for the blind commenced at Gary with forty-two pupils, eleven of whom are new ones. Richard Yearneau, proprietor of the Clark telephone system, has sold out to the Dakota Central Telephone com pany of Aberdeen. C. F. Huestls of Bradley has been appointed county commissioner to take the place of James Landers, who disd several weeks ago. Steps have been taken to furnish Clark with a street lighting system. It is proposed to purchaso gasoline lamps and place them at various cor ners. Professor D. H. Bashford believes that, on the Missouri river bottom, gas and petroleum can be obtained by sinking wells to a depth of 700 or 800 feet. The careless throwing of a lighted match in the dry grass caused a prai rie fire In the Emanuel Just neighbor hood near White Lake which destroy ed about thirty tons of hay. Jacob Meyer, a farmer of Liola waa badly injured by boing enught by A knuckle on a tumbling rod of hit threshing machine. He was thrown to the ground with terrible force. After having a hole shot and drilled clear through his body above hia stomach. Samuel Estlick of Rapid City, who was shot by Charles K. Howard, the cattleman, Is getting welL Jack Riley, a farm hand employed near Harrisburf, was arested at Eldo ra, lowa, on the charge of stealing money and Jewels from a companion. He will be brought back for a hearing. Sergeant Peter J. Donahue of Trop F, Sixth cavalry, has gone Fort Bayard. N. M., in charge of h hospital nurse. He has been suffer in' with lung trouble for three montha and is in a serious condition. Several farmers around Wagner have engaged attorneys and will oon lest in the courts the attempt of tha mauagers of a defunct insurance com pany of Watertown to force them to pay for insurance which they allege proved to be worthless. The first move In the case brought by the Standard Oil company to Lest the gravity provisions of the state law was made by the arrest of L. B. Al bright, the distributor for the company at Pierre, on a charge oi offering for sale a barrel of oil which was under the required test Mrs. Jacob S. Gantz and children havo returned to Rapid City from Alaska. Mrs. Gantz is in business at Nome. W. H. l.aßce has been at Nome, but has returned to Seattle. He thinks be has made a rich strike in the Tanana country and has re turned to the states for the purpose of organizing a company. The Lawrence oounty commission ers have deided to Rell the new 6 pec cent bonds of the sum of $30,000 lo cally instead of to Fred L. Fuller Jk Co. of Cleveland, Ohio. Eleven thou sand dollars of these bonds have been scld to local men, and the auditors and commissioners are reasonably cer tain they can dispose of the entire Is sue at home. The farmers of northwestern low* and southeastern Dakota are becom ing agitated over the horse and cat tle thieves that have become a post. Thousands of dollars’ worth of cattle, hogs and horses have been st eu in iess than a year. Owners realize that something more vigorous than the or dinary channels of justice must be tdopted to protect property. The Black Hills district of Honor held Its regular session at Vmdwood. Mrs. Marty Newell of Sturgis, grand chief of honor, presid »d. There are in this district se en tcen lodges, each of which is en tied to three representatives at the annual listrict meeting. There was almost a full representation. The next annual meeting will be held at Terry. As usual at this season of the year, tho question of an open winter or a hard one is being discussed, and the old-time sign* are carefully examined -nd results predicted from them. Bo ides the corn husk, muskrat and wild »oose. the scientific theory of general averages by the weather bureau would ,ndirate an open winter. The record of the Pierre office up to the first of November shows a deficiency of ITS iegrees In temperature for the year •ip to that date, and an excess of about two Inches in precipitation for the -tame time. On the theory of a-er ages, there should he mild tempera ure and little snow fall. Several thousand young black baan and trout have been planted thij year ty R. O. Robertson of Nemo. He ban ibtalned the trout at the United States ’.sh hatchery station at Spoarflsh, and a ouantlty of black bass of C. R. San wick of Galena. The regular fall term of the elreuM ?<n:rl opened at Yankton. The case if W. H. Melrstelne vs. Bsrak F. Kyon vs** dismissed at the request of u* lalntktf. Tke case of N. f. Cramer vs. tsle Kyea was taken up and a J .17 '■•cured. The suit is to recover m n iromlssory note which reads ZuiO la <. imrM hut tl SSft l» wrttl»» r* 9 -,'v