It I i i THE WORLD OYER LATEST NEWS FROM EVERY LAND STIES UP GERMANY OPERATION OF THE NEW TARIFF - MEASURE FEARED Hopes to Make New Treaties with this Country Consul Monoghan Sees Little Market for American Products in the Fatherland The Germans Dont Like It United States Consul Monoghan at Chemnitz Saxony in a report to the state department says Germany just now is very much- excited about the proposed new tarriff act for the United States Her hopes to extend and increase her exports have been built upon other rates than those re ported Reciprocity is regarded as the only way in which to keep her commerce within safe and sure lines Hopes are expressed that commercial treaties may be made be tween the United States and Germany The consul feels that there is little market there for American manufactured products and believes that were our man ufacturers to make half the effort in Rus sia South America and the east that will be necessary in Germany the returns will be five times as great Even the natural products Germany would not buy from us could she get them as cheap and good else where says the consul who produces an array of figures to show how our grain tradeonce of large proportions has been turned by Germany almost altogether over to Russia i In conclusion he earnestly enjofnes American manufacturers to patent their machines and processes in Germany where our machines are now bought taken apart and successfully imitated HER FOURTH HUSBAND DEAD Insurance Companies Suspect Mary D Gurley of Foul Play Judge Ball of Chicago issued an order to exhume the body of Franklin D Gurley who died suddenly a week ago and an ex amination will be held to determine the cause of his death Gurley carried 7000 life insurance his wife Mary D Gurley to whom he was secretly married in May 1896 at Kenosha Wis being made the beneficiary The insurance companies re fuse to pay pending a thorough investiga tion of the causes leading to Gurleys death Mrs Gurley has been married four times All of her former husbands are dead She is said to be a student of medi cine particularly of drugs DIES UNDER THE KNIFE Crum the Famous Sprinter - the Victim of Appendicitis John Y Cruin aged 23 champion short distance runner died as the result of an operation for appendicitis at Mercy Hos pital Des Uoines Iowa Monday morning He ran and jumped a week ago without previous training which caused his fatal illness Crum was considered the fastest man in the world and took part in 1895 in the Mt Haven games Wefers was the only man who ever defeated him The body was taken to his home at Bedford for interment by a delegation of fellow grad uates of the state university A GREEK JOAN OF ARC Nineteen-Year-Old Girl to Lead a Band of Irregulars A newspaper correspondent at Athens had an interview with Helen Constanti nides the 19-year-old girl who has started for the front to head a large band of irreg ulars She is an excellent shot Her brother will accompany her Both of them are bitterly anti dynastic She declares that she will fight in the front ranks and has no fear of death Her departure was witnessed by thousands of enthusiastic Athenians who hail her as the Greek Joan of Arc- Sues Fitzsimmons Isaac Michel a millinery salesman of New York has entered suit against Robert Fitzsimmons the pugilist for 20000 dam ages Michel claims that on April 7 the pugilists dog Yarrum jumped out and attacked him in the corridor of his hotel He states that he was permanent injured and his wounds have caused him great ex pense He has been confined to his bed for a number of days utterly prostrated It is stated he will also sue the hotel man agement Colorado Labor Congress A large number of delegates to the state labor congress which was in session at Victor Colo last week met Sunday night jto consider the advisability of independent political action by the members of unions of the state After a warm discussion a committee of two from each labor organ ization in the state was appointed to form ulate a plan of action and report at a meet ing to be held in Denver on July 4 Maecos Alleged Betrayer A dispatch from Havana says Dr Max imo Zertucha Antonio Maceos physician who is alleged to have betrayed the Cuban general fo the Spaniards was arrested at his home near Guinea Sunday and taken to Havana under close guard Ex Congressman Perry Dead Ex Congressman John J Perry died suddenly at liis home in Portland Me Monday aged SB years It Caused His Death George Bull treasurer of the North Da kota Milling Company at Grand Forks N D which assigned recently died the other day from heart disease arid worry superin duced by the failure He was an old res ident ad highly respected t Anti Kinetoscope Bill Passed The Michigan house of representatives has passed aibiU Mjtf prpjiibit repToductioiij of prize ngfifby Vitascope ftinetoscope etc The penalty is a fine of 500 to l00tf or two years imprisonment or both TO REDUCE TAX ON SPIRITS Secretary of the Treasury Will Rec ommend a Reduction It is very probable that the secretary of the treasury will soon recommend to con gress a material reduction of the internal revenue tax on distilled spirits and an in crease of the tax on beer The action will be taken on the ground that the present tax of 110 per gallon is above the revenue producing point Some days ago Senator Cullom introduced a resolution which was adopted calling upon the secretary for his views on the subject This report will show that since the increase in the tax on spirits from 90 cents to 110 per gallon illicit distilling has increased to a point almost if not quite beyond con trol This is the case particularly in the mountain districts in the south Recently evidence has been obtained of its extension into the north That it is rapidly increas ing and extending in many directions in ternal officers say is beyond doubt and with only the 50000 appropriated by con gress for the detection and suppression of illicit distilling the internal revenue bureau is almost helpless to stem the tide Under a lower rate it is comenueu mat uie induce ments for violating the law would be re duced and at the same time the revenues would not suffer PORT BANES RECAPTURED Spanish Forces Recover It from the Insurgents The port of Banes in Santiago de Cuba held by Gen Calixto Garcia and 6000 Cubans ever since the Laurada landed Roloffs expedition has been recovered by the Spanish combined army and naval forces under Gen Gomez Ruberte and Ad miral Navarro The Spanish forces con sisted of two columns including 700 ma rines 400 navy and 1200 infantry Both columns boarded the Spanish fleet under command of Admiral Navarro The fleet protected by artillery landed under a heavy fire from the insurgent musketry at Ramon Peninsula off Banes losing during the removal of the troops one killed md seventeen wounded The Cubans in view of the combined attack of the army and navy abandoned their stronghold without much resistance leaving a large quantity of ammunition The government has strengthened the mil itary forces in the province of Havana by the addition of twenty one squadrons of cavalry and fifteen battalions of infantry STEAM SHEEP SHEARING Plant Now in Operation River Wyo in Green The steam sheep shearing plant of Will iam Cooper and nephew upon which work has been in progress for the past month at Green River Wyo was started up last week Forty machines manufactured by the Wolseley Sheep Shearing Machine Company of London England compose the plant which represents an investment of upward of 5000 The shearers do not take kindly to the machines at first They ire paid the same price for shear ing by the machines us by hand but annot at the start make as large wages It is claimed however that with several weeks practice the men can do better work and make more wages with the ma chines than by hand The shearing is much closer than by hand and an average of one pound of wool is gained upon each head in the shearing At the Green River plant forty shearers are employed and it is sxpected when the men become familiar with the machines that from 3000 to 4000 sheep will be shorn a day Comptrollers Monthly Statement The monthly statement of the comp troller of the currency shows that on April SO the total circulation of national bank notes was 2328022 14 a gain for the year Df 8700899 and a loss for the month of 5906650 The circulation based upon United States bonds was 208768459 a gain for the year of 5365310 and a loss for the month of 999153 The circulation secured by lawful money was 24033695 an increase for the year of 3335589 and an increase for the month of 92503 The amount of United States registered bonds on deposit to secure circulating notes was 232749800 and to secure public deposits 16318000 AVill Make Twine of Marsh Hay In a short time Oshkosh Wis will have In operation the first grass twine factory in the world It will employ 800 hands and will make binding twine from marsh grass something never attempted before A deed lias been executed conveying the North western car shops to the Wisconsin Grass Twine Company represented by J OShaughnessy of Chicago and machinery will be installed immediately The Ex Minister Fatally 111 Ex Gov Albert G Porter of Indiana is fatally ill at his residence in Indianapolis Two years ago the venerable man sus tained a severe fall and since then he has been confined to -his room almost con stantly Gov Porter was minister to Italy under President Harrison and at the zenith of his career was a big factor in Republic an politics of Indiana Irish Lassies Reach America Eight hundered Irish girls landed at Ellis Island off New York on April 30 in the steerage of the trans Atlantic steam ers They represent all of the thirty two counties of Ireland Most of them were from the provinces of Munster and Con naught They are coming over in answer to a general demand for white female do mestics Dunlop Must Go to Prison President McKinley has decided not to Interfere in the case of Joseph R Dunlop publisher of the Chicago Dispatch sen tenced to two years imprisonment for sending obscene matter advertisements in his paper through the mails Wolcott to Soon Go Abroad Senator Wolcott one of the commission ers of the United States to promote inter J national bimetallism is preparing to start for Europe next Monday He expects the tariff bill will be reported from the finance committee before he starts Window Glass Will Be Higher Saturday last a 5 per cent advance -in the price of window glass including all sections of the country went into effect 8BW2Sa3EaSKESBSESJS JBIPITTSBURG FIRE PROPERTY nALUED AT 3000 OOO DESTROYED The Conflagration Occurred in the Wholesale District Young Farmer in North Dakota Butchers Four of a ivaimiy and Assaults a Woman Great Fire in Pittsburg The greatest fire that has visited Pitts burg Pa since the memorable one of 1845 started shortly after midnight Sunday in the immense wholesale grocery establish ment of T C Jenkins on Penn Avenue and Liberty Street and was not gotten under control until late Monday morning Three large blocks extending from Liberty Street to Penn Avenue and from Fifth Street to Sixth Street was reduced to smouldering ruins The loss will exceed 3000000 and is well covered by insur anc Among the buildings destroyed are Jenkins wholesale grocery establishment Homes six story dry goods estalishment Homes office building the Duquesne Theater and the Methodist Book Concern A NORTH DAKOTA MONSTER Young Farmer Butchers Four of a Family and Assaults a Woman August Norman a well known young man went to the home of Knute Hillstead a prominent farmer living near Larimore N D at an early hour Saturday morning during the absence of the latter and de manded admission to Mrs Hillsteads room Norman said he would kill all the family if she refused Then he procured a razor and went upstairs cut the throat of Peter Hillstead aged 15 and carved Mrs Hillsteads lo-month-old son after which he cut the throats of Adolph and Oscar aged 11 and 8 He then forced his way into Mrs Hillsteads room and assaulted her after promising not to kill- her and her two little girls The two oldest sons are still alive but little hopes are enter tained for their recovery The murderer is still at large MONEY TO BE DESTROYED Design of New Silver Certificates to Be Simplified The Carlisle notes the new 1 2 and 5 silver certificates issued last year are to be withdrawn from circulation as rapidly as possible and destroyed So much com plaint has been made against them by bankers and others who are compelled to count them rapidly and in large quantities that Secretary Gage has ordered new de signs made New Steamer Line to Japan A new steamship line is to be established between San Francisco and Japan to be known as the San Francisco and Yo kohama Transportation Company A monthly service is to be established be tween these two points via Honolulu Five first class steamers will be operated and probably a branch line will be maintained between Yokohama and Seattle and Port land The first steamer of the new line the Hakusan Maru left for Yokohama April 3 and is nearly due at San Fran cisco The new company will be operated in opposition to the existing lines across the Pacific Fatal Detroit Fire Two persons were burned to death and two others very seriously burned in De troit Mich Sunday night The burned structure was a two story frame building occupied by E H Heidels bakery In the upper story lived the family of Nicholas Sinig four members of which were quickly surrounded by the flames Lizzie Sinig aged 20 and her brother Anthony aged 5 were caught in a back room and before help arrived they had been burned to death Anarchists Condemned to Death Twenty six anarchists in addition to those already sentenced in Barcelona have been condemned to death for complicity in the bomb outrage of June 7 last at the feast of Corpus Christi when a bomb was thrown into the midst of a procession which was on its way to the church of Santa Maria del Mar killing a dozen per sons outright and wounding fifty others some of whom have since died of their in juries Will Work Double Time The iron workers and all other employes of all the departments at the mills of An drews Bros Co of Youngstown Ohio received notices Saturday that hereafter the entire plant will be in operation on double time This is the first time for over a year that these mills have been in full operation Mint Directors Report The report of the director of the mint shows that during the month of April the total coinage at the United States mints was 10410080 Of this amount 8800400 was in gold 1535000 in silver and 74680 in minor coins Of the silver coinage 1 400000 wa8 in standard silver dollars Wed in the Penitentiary t Erving Shaw and Gertie Fisher each seiueuceu 10 a year m me umo peniten tiarv fnr inint liorsp thflft were wpd in Hip jail parlors by Mayor Grady of Wilming ton Gerties mother gave her consent Gertie is a beautiful little girl and her hus band is a handsome beardless boy AVill Prohibit Sunday Baseball Mayor McKisson of Cleveland Ohio an nounced that owing to the fact that he had been called upon as an official by many citizens to enforce the statute prohibiting tiie playing of baseball on Sunday he will not allow league games to be played there on Sunday Gets Mayflower Log Book At the official residence of the Bishop of London the lord chancellor formally pre sented to Retiring Ambassador Bayardthe original log of the Mayflower which it was decided some weeks ago to transmit to the keeping of the state of Massachusetts Vice President Purdy Resigns T C Purdy of St Louis vice president and general manager of theMissouri Kan sas and Texas has resigned because of jll health A A Allen late assistant general manager has been appointed to the posi tion zzzsuzszzzazsxz SIX NEGROES LYNCHED Colored Mob Hangs a Half Dozen Jtavishers and Murderers For three murders ravishing two girls and burning down the humble home oTf their poor victims and incinerating the bodies six perhaps seven negroes Friday night suffered the death penalty at the hands of a mob of their own race At 12 oclock a mob of negroes took from a room at Sunn3side Texas where they were be ing guarded Fayette Rhone Will Gates Lewis Thomas Aaron Thomas Jim Thomas and Benny Thomas the four latter being brothers and Will Will lams all negroes and hanged the first six named to1 an oak tree The seventh is supposed to have been hanged but his body has disappeared Several shots were heard shortly after the mob took the vic tims from the room and he may have tried to escape The negroes all confessed to having murdered Henry Daniels an old negro his stepdaughter Marie and a 7- year old child burning the bodies of the two oldest by setting fire to the cabin where the crime occurred and throwing the little ones body into a well Old man Daniels had the proceeds of a robbery which the Thomas boys had committed and they demanded it of him under pain of death They outraged the grown girl and the 7-year-old girl and then killed both BRADSTREETS REVIEW Reactions in Values anda Falling Off in Volume Bradstreets Weekly Review says The more conspicious features of trade are less satisfactory including moderate reactions in prices of staples a falling off in the vol s ume of transactions in various lines con tinued slow collections and less favorable conditions in the iron and steel cotton and some other industries There is less de mand for staple varieties of iron and steel makers reporting trouble in securing speci fications for contracts on hand The out look is for the shutting down of some fur naces in thePittsburg district Sales of wool have declined sharply but receipts of for eign have brought up the weeks move ment to a fair total Nearly a years sup ply has been imported during the first four months of this year The prices movement furnished little basis for special encour agement the only advance on general rec ognized conditions being those of pork and cotton Higher prices for woolens is an effort to anticipate the tariff Exports of wheat flour included as wheat from both coasts of the United States amounts to only 1158886 bushels this week against 1260000 bushels in tho week a year ago Tortured by Robbers Mrs Shook an aged lady living at Adonis W Va was horribly tortured and robbed by a negro and white man who forced an entrance into her house The robbers brutally beat her bare feet with switches and burned them to a crisp with candles The woman finally told where her money was hidden and the robbers secured 500 and escaped Altgeld Denies Responsibility Ex Gov Altgeld whose name from time to time has been connected with the affairs of the defunct Globe Savings Bank of Chi cago gives out an interview in which he denies that he was in any way responsible for the irregularities of its management He admits having been a borrower from the bank but says it was simply a matter of business Big Montreal Failure James ACantle Co wholesale woolen and cotton agents of Montreal Can have made a formal assignment Their liabili ties are 219300 Many smaller woolen houses and mills are involved and several crashes will likely result Dual Murder and Suicide John L Lane wife and child were found dead near Biddeford Me Friday morning All had been shot It is supposedit was a double murder and suicide New Orleans Banker Convicted William P Nichols president of the de funct Bank of Commerce of New Orleans has been convicted of the embezzlement of 20000 120000 Fire in Toronto Afire in n P Eckhardts wholesale grocery establishment at Toronto Ont did 120000 worth of damage insurance 90000 MABKET QUOTATIONS Chicago Cattle common to prime 350 to 550 hogs shipping grades 300 to 425 sheep fair to choice 200 to 550 wheat No 2 red 70c to 72c corn No 2 24c to 25c oats No 2 17c to 18c rye No 2 33c to 35c butter choice creamery 15c to 17c eggs fresh 8c to 9c potatoes per bushel 20c toj 30c broom corn common growth to choice green hurl 2c to 5c per lb Indianapolis Cattle shipping 300 to 525 hogs choice light 300 to 425 sheep common to choice 300 to 450 wheat No 2 88c to 90c corn No 21 white 24c to 26c oats No 2 white 21c to 22c St Louis Cattle 300 to 550 hogs 300 to 425 sheep 300 to 525 wheat No 2 96c to 98c corn No 2 yellow 21c to 23c oats No 2 white 19c to 21c rye No 2 34c to 35c Cincinnati Cattle 250 to 500 hogs 300 to 450 sheep 250 to 525 wheat iSo 2 91c to 93c corn No 2 mixed 26c to 28c oats No2 mixed 20c to 22c rye No 2 38c to 40c Detroit Cattle 250 to 525 hogs 5300 to 425 sheep 200 to 525 wheat No 2 red 90c to 91c corn No 2 yellow 23c to 24c oats No 2 white 20c to 22c rye 35c to 37c Toledo Wheat No 2 red 92c to 93c corn No 2 mixed 24c to 26c oats No 2 white 17c to 19c rye No 2 34c -to 36c clover seed 430 to 435 Milwaukee Wheat No 2 spring 72c to 73c corn No 3 24c to 25c oats No l white 21c to 23c barley No 2 28c to 34c rye No 2 to 37c pork mesa S25 to 875 Buffalo Cattle 250 to 550 hogs 300 to 425 sheep 300 to 500 wheat No 1 red 90c to 91c corn No 21 yellow 28c to 30c oats No 2 white 24c to 25c New Yot Cattle 300 to 550 hogs 350 to 450 sheep 300 to 550 wheat No 2 red 78c to 80c corn No 2 29c -to 30c oats No 2 white 22cto 24c butter creamery 13c to ISc eggs West ern 9 tc 11c STATE OF NEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON DENSED FORM Nance County Man Makes a Great Find on the Iioup Kiver Supposed to Be the Remains of a Mastodon Other Items of Interest Mastodon on the Loup River While A P Jarvis was boating on the Loup River Sunday near Fullerton he discovered the remains of a giant mastodon under a bank twenty feet high and about eight inches above the water line The tusks were broken off and the ends of them were nearly even with the bank protrud ing but a very little The tusks lay side by side and were about five feet and a half in length and three inches in thickness at the smaller end increasing to seven at the larger The bones crumbled a great deal in even the most careful handling and he was only able to save a piece ten inches in length and five in thickness He also found the jaw bone and two of the teeth The teeth are about three inches across Further excavations will probably be made MORE POWER TO MUTUALS Auditor Cornell Extends the Priv ileges of Co Operative Insurance The state auditor has decided that under the law governing farm mutual insurance companies such companies may insure county school houses churches par sonages section 8 of the law being inter preted to allow such action He also de cides that under the provisions of section 11 of house roll 183 the town mutual law passed by the last legislature town com panies may insure mills creameries and country stores The decision made regarding the powers of farm mutual com panies is directly contrary to the one made by Auditor Eugene Moore and includes the provisions of house roll No 259 the uouiury cnurcn anci scnool house msur amenaments The insurance commissioner states that there has been a great demand from the farmers and farm mutual people of the state for a decision of this kind and that since the adjournment of the legislature a large number of letters have been received bearing on the subject Nebraskas Crop Conditions The Nebraska weather and crop bureaus weekly bulletin says The temperature has averaged nearly two degrees above the normal The rainfall has been below the normal and generally less than one fourth of an inch except in the eastern sections 1 A f -a - wnere ic nas oeen excessive It exceeded 4 inches in small areas in a number of coun tiesjn the southeastern section The week has been a favorable one for the growth of crops Farm work has made good pro gress except in the region of excessive rainfall where comparative little work has been done Oat sowing is nearly com pleted and plowing for corn has com menced quite generally in the state Corn planting has commenced quite generally in the southern counties west of Gage Early sown small grain is coming up in good condition Peach apricot and cherry trees are in blossom in southern counties Corn Rots in Open Cribs Farmers are beginning to find out that cribbing corn in open cribs does not pay Several near Exeter have begun shelling and after shelling out two or three loads have found the corn in such bad condition that grain men could not use it In nearly every case of an open crib it was found that the middle was badly damaged in ouuic uascs auuusc rotten The only way to save any of it will be to immediately sort out by hand all that is sound and dis pose of it for by June 15 none of it can be used It is believed by a good many that the foreign buyers who cribbed some 150 000 bushels last fall will lose not less than one tenth owing to the bad condition it was in when put in the cribs Their cribs however are well made and roofed which may make a difference Paid Their Money in Advance March 25 a man giving his name as B Ticknor and representing himself to be n agent of the Colorado Midland road made his appearance in Nebraska City soliciting advertisements for a publication styled Colorado Texas Louisiana and Mexico which was to be circulated with the com pliments of the above named railroad Several business concerns took space pay ing for it in advance for which they were given receipts stamped with the Midlands Indian trade mark Numerous contracts for space with prominent St Louis and Kansas City business houses were exhib ited The officials of the railroad company say it is a swindling scheme Bank Makes a Test Case District court was in session at Nelson last week with Judge W C Hastings on the bench Considerable interest was manifested in the case of the Hanover Na tional Bank against the receiver of the defunct Bank of Superior This is a test case in which a number of other banks are interested which if decided in favor of the plaintiff will increase the liabilities of the defunct bank by about 35000 This will greatly lessen the amount per cap ita which the depositors will receive as the liabilities outside of the above sum are approximately 75000 Suicide in Thurston County Frank B Phillips a young man about 26 years old committed suicide on one of the farms of J H Burbank in the eastern part of Thurston County where he was work ing as a farm hand having been in thejem ploy of Mr Burbank most of the time for three years He used a 45 calibre revolver which he deliberately held up to his fore head and fired the fatal shot No cause for his act is known He was unmarried and twas not known to have had any difficulties twith any one His parents reside near Marshalltown Iowa Drives Wife Away and Suicides Jacob Muntz an aged German of Ulys ses committed suicide under peculiar cir cumstances He had a quarrel with his wife and drove her from the house and after she had gone presumably in a fit of remorse took poison He was found dead by his neighbors Six Legged Pig Dies A six legged pig which has been an ob ject of considerable local quriosity at the farm of V J Thomas two miles north of North Loup and which grew finely for some time after its birth died last week and Was sent to the state university Bartley Under Arrest J S Bartley ex state treasurer was ar rested the other day at Lincoln on the charge of embezzlement Bartley is charged with having converted to Jrisqn use the proceeds of a state warrant to the Omaha National Bank for collection BLOODY AFFRAY Dozen Men Wounded in a Saloon Row at Crawford A bloody battle occurred in Crawford as a result of which Arthur Morrison once sity marshal of Crawford and a dozen others are seriously injured The trouble began in a saloon A dispute arose be tween Morrison and a man named Austin Marshal Spearman attempted to arrest him and Morrison struck him three times Spearman tried to down Morrison when the latter pulled a gun and attempted to shoot A bystander caught his arm and the shot went wide of its mark Spear man knowing the dangerous char acter of the man clinched with him and using his revolver as a club struck Morrison on the head cutting a great gash and fracturing the skull Mor rison still showed fight but was finally subdued and taken to jail Morrison was convicted about a year ago of the murder of Avon Harris at Crawford in January 1805 but secured a new trial and was ac quitted Spearman belonged to an opposite faction and had sworn to kill Morrison if he ever made a break at him Settles on a One Third Basis Fred Orchard state examiner of county treasurers was in Hastings last week and presented to the county board of supervis ors a claim for 281862 as the states share of the money which was collected some years ago from the bondsmen of ex County Treasurer Charles H Paul in settlement of Pauls defalcation Mr Pauls shortage was a little over 30000 and by agreement between the bondsmen and board of super- visors it was settled by the bondsmen for S10000 The board decided to act upon the -advice of County Attorney Dungan and make a settlement with the state on the terms asked which are that the state wilL give Adams County on receipt of 281862 7 a receipt in full for an 845588 claim which is now held against the county Building and Loan League The fifth annual meeting of the Ne braska League of Local Building and Loan I A ccnniofinno fio Knls C Anx 1 i auu imiuuuueu u n uuv oi who delivered an address Representatives 4 of thirteen associations were present G W Nattinger and T J Fitzmorris of Omaha and C F Bentley of Grand Island were elected delegates to the National League at Detroit Papers upon the vari ous features of the business were read by J Arnold of Schuyler C W Grinnin ger of Grand Island C M Nattinger and E C Bryson and T J Fitzmorris of Omaha which brought out much spirited discussion Lets the Guards Out A new decision has been made by the adjutant general -of the Nebraska National Guard It is in the case of George B Scrambling George M Winkleman and Charles F Hackenberg of Company L First Regiment N N G stationed at Omaha who went into the company edrly in 1891 but on account of a loose system of reporting enlistments were not recorded until March 1895 The rule has been to date the enlistments from the time of re cording but the ruling is made now that in cases like the above credit may be given for the time served previous to the formal enlistment and the discharges are granted Boy Killed by an Angry Cow An infuriated cow drew the 12-year-old son of Samuel Bowersock of Thayer be neath a wagon and strangled the life out him The boy had gone to get the Cow from the pasture and as the beast -was iLJk rather wild he tied the halter around his in order to better hold her The cow untune ingnienea ana started to run dragging the boy off his feet and over the rough ground In going around the wagon the cow pulled him in between the wheels and literally crushed him to death Telephone Will Reach to McCool Among the new enterprises that will be located in McCool this spring is telephonio connection with outside towns and cities in the state The Nebraska Telephone Company will build a line from there to Fairmont and York This will be of great convenience to business men of that place and will be liberally patronized Dr Talmage Talks at Lincoln Kev TDeWitt Talmage Dr Clopsch and Miss Leitch spoke at the opera house in Lincoln on the 29th inst for the pose of raising money for the India famine1 sufferers The house was crowded to the doors and hundreds were turned away Over 300 was taken in a basket collection Twenty Seven Years in One Church Kev J B Green has been pastor of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church at Ne braska City for the past twenty seven years Nebraska Short Notes Fulerton is suffering from an epidemic of petty thievery rucicaianer or Emerson lost one of hi3 fingers in a feed grinder Antelope County farmers report than their alfalfa fields came through the winter all right Henry Seigert a young farmer living near Wisner was killed one day last week by a horse which he was riding falling upuu mui A young son of Arthur Connor who lives southwest of North Platte got tangled up in a harrow and had his left leg broken between the hip and knee Owen Bros of Stanton last Friday shipped in 288 head of Texas hogs and while they were in town a circus wouldnt have been in it as a point of attraction Two Weeping Water men were trying tc kill a rat and one of them made a jab at the varmint with a pitchfork The fork struck Ed Norton on the foot and ran clear through it Harvey Kebuck and Sherman Reslerol Auburn had a rich find in young wolves one day last week The day being a little too wet to cut stalks they went wolf hunt ing and found a nest of nine young gray wolves two weeks old Farming will be carried on extensively on the Cody ranch at North Platte this year Manager Goodman has in 300 acres of wheat barley and oat3 and will plant 800 acres of corn There -are over 1005 acres of alfalfa growing on the ranch A prairie fire north and west of Pierce last week did considerable damage Judge Sedgwick was taken sickwhihi holding court in Seward and was obliged to adjourn court and go home He Waj able to hold court in York last week Ed Owens jr of Saunder3 County wai knocked down and oint by a tramp 6n evening last week whilewalking alongth road All the tramp got was a pocket knife A N Reed shot a crane- at hisplace three and a half miles northeast of Central City Monday measuring even eight from tip to tip of its wings 4 t I