i fl l THIS WIDE WORLD INTELLIGENCE FROM PARTS WHOLESALE AERESTS AMERICAN BLUEJACKETS PER SECUTED BY HAWAIIANS Popular Outbreak Is Feared at Any Time Citizens of the Hawaiian Capital Consider the Situation as Very Serious Other Items News from the Islands Honolulu harbpr is dotted with British Uapanese and United States war vessels and more British and Japanese vessels are expected daily In semi official quarters it is reported quiet but the impression among citizens is that the condition of affairs is very threatening and that a pop ular outbreak may occur any time when international interference from the ships in the harbor will be the occasion of com plications The stream of Asiatic laborers is still pouring in each shipload causing a Xresh outbreak of feeling among the dif ferent factions The immediate cause of alarm is the fact that the United States bluejackets are bit terly hostile to the Hawaiian police who exercise almost military rule The British and Japanese sailors are not molested but alnierieair bluejackets are constantly ar rested as deserters without cause and an D03ed in every conceivable way Heavy Towards have been offered to the police for arresting United States naval deserters which has caused wholesale arrests of men of the American fleet HAZARDOUS CLIMBING FEAT Members of 3Xt Tacoma Exploring Party Report on Their Trip The first party to return from the inas expedition to the summit of Mt ITacoma has arrived at Tacoma Wash The advance partr of five to break the way experienced many dangers and report the ascent and return more difficult this year than ever before At times the steel points of an Alpenstick could not be made to hold so hard was the ice and the climbers were forced to leap from point to point taking chances on securing a safe foot- Lold H C Ainslee and Walter Rogers of Portland lost their way in returning from Uamp Muir Each was precipitated into jan icy ravine from which they escaped prith great difficulty H L Pittock presi dent of the Mazamas had a narrow escape irom an awful death at Gibraltar rock WHEAT SAILS UPWARD Sharp Jump Made in Prices on the New York Exchange Wheat took a sharp jump Monday in ftew York and carried September up to S2 cents against Sl cents on the curb Saturday Local houses were all good buyers and so was the foreign element particularly continental representatives The French market displayed marked strength Paris flour for instance advanc ing 60 centimes to 1 franc and 5 centimes Another feature of strength in Xew pTork was the big rise in corn due to bad crop news from Kansas At noon how ever local wheat prices received a setback pf 1 cent in consequence of a larger in crease in the visible supply for the week than figured on MURDERED BY HIS WIFE Ahuse Causes a Wisconsin Woman to Kill Her Husband I A Red Falls Wis dispatch says John OConnell a well known farmer and poli tician of Westline township has been enurdered After he had been beaten to oeain ins clothing was saturated Sceorsene and his home set afire The statements of three of the oldest of he nine children to the authorities are to the effect that the wife of the murdered man was the author of the tragedy Her husbands abuse of her and her children -while under the influence of liquor is the supposed inciting cause Gilbert Defeats Heikes Hollo O Heikes of Dayton Ohio and Trod Gilbert of Spirit Lake Iowa shot a 250 birdrace in Fairview Park Dayton Ohio Saturday for the E C Powder Com pany trophy and championship of Amer ica The contest consisted of 50 singles flniown traps and unknown angles Fifty singles known angles and unknown traps md 25 pairs doubles Gilberts total score was i Jleikes total score im - reieree declared Gilbert Irophy and championship winner with The of the Disli washer the Only Keir A Boston special says Carl Cronheiln has been employed heaving coal and washinc dishes in this country has been notified of the death of an elder brother Count Henrik Julius Cronheiln of Sweden without issue with the request that he re urn and take possession of the estate as 4he only living representative of the fam ily He thus comes into a title to four arge properties and an income of 50000 a year Cyclist Leo Reaches Chicago Henry Leo of Sioux Falls S D who started from Sioux Falls July 24 to beat Charles Fosters bicycle record of thirty daj s and eight hours from the Missouri Stiver to New York city arrived in Chicago 3Tonday He said he was a day ahead sof Fosters time Killed by a Jump William OBrien aged 2J employed in lhe Byron Paper Mill at Grand Rapids Wis on a wager jumped out of the mill window a distance of thirty feet into the Wisconsin River He burst a blood vessel from which he died an hour later Murderer Sentenced to Hnny Edwin Flanagan who has been on trial at Decatur Ga for the murder of Mrs Nancy Allen and Miss Ruth Slack the 31st of last December was found guilty and sentenced to be hanged I THE SUGAR COFFEE WAR Trust Will Start a Big CofTeo Roast ing House in Philadelphia ALLi The Philadelphia Record on Monday contained the following The war be tween the sugar trust and Arbuckle 25ros the big coffee roasters which has carried the trust into the coffee trade and the Arbuckles into the mysteries of sugar re fining is soon to be transferred in part to this city Some time ago the trust in order to strike at the Arbuckles bought control of the Woolson Spice Company of Toledo Ohio one of the largest coffee houses in the country and now it proposes to con vert he old Delaware sugar warehouse at Reeds and Swanson Streets into a great coffee roasting establishment from which the trade along the Atlantic seaboard may be easily reached It is not likely how ever that active operations will be started for some time to come as all the machinery needed has not been delivered yet Much of it is to be imported from Germany The plant when completed will give employ ment to a large number of skilled work men Draw Poker Not Gambling Draw poker can now flourish unmolested fn Chicago on the north side According to the interpretation of the police the game known by this name is not a gamb ling game Inspector Schaack issued an order exempting draw poker from molesta tion He instructed his subordinates to close all places where stud poker faro keno or other gambling might be found but not to touch the harmless little game of draw In explanation the inspector said he regarded draw poker as on a par with whist euchre high five solitaire and tiddledy winks Any one can gamble with those games if he chooses the inspector said but they are not real gambling games Sells Freedom to Prisoners W G Malcolm clerk of the village of Braceville 111 and Hugh Allison the citv J marshal will be compelled to face some very ugly charges preferred against them by some Polanders as a result of the in vestigations which have been made by Justice o the Peace McCall of Braceville The two officials are charged with releas ing two prisoners without due process of law and accepting bribes According to Justice McCalls statements three prison ers were released from the Braceville lock up on the payment of 3150 to Malcolm Marshal Allison demanded the payment of 5 as the price of the liberty of another Englands Big Strike The strike and lockout of engineers in London is now on in earnest The execu tive committee of the Amalgamated Engi neers has instructed the remaining 75 per cent of the members of the society to strike The manufacturers of bicycles have taken a hand in the strike twenty one manufacturers of bicycles having joined the Employers Federation and posted notices in their shops discharging 25 per cent of their employes who belong to the union The labor leaders say 16000 men are now out Plans of Gen Gomez Thomas Estrada Palma president of the Cuban junta in Xew York has received a letter of the date of July from Gen Gomez in which the general says It is our purpose to make this summer empaign as active and aggressive as possible To carry out our plans successfully we will need rather than anything else a steady supply of ammunition For that we will depend on the support of patriotic Cubans and friends abroad Daughter Born to the Whitneys A daughter was born to Mr and Mrs Harry Payne Whitney at Newport R I Thursday Mrs Whitney is the daughter of Cornelius Vanderbilt and this is his first grandchild Harry Payne Whitney eldest son of Wm C Whitney was mar ried to Miss Gertrude Yanderbilt the eldest daughter of Mr and Mrs Cornelius Vanderbilt at The Breakers the Newport home of the Yanderbilts on Tuesday August 2G 1S Doesnt Think It Was Andrce The report that what was supposed to have been Andrees balloon had been seen adrift in the White Sea caused much pop ular excitement at Stockholm it being feared that the intrepid explorer and his two companions had been lost Men of ex perience in the Arctic regions discredit the port Dead IVfan Named for Postmaster Last Saturday Peter Yoakley was ap pointed postmaster at Wahoo in the First congressional district of Tennessee The appointment is supposed to be due to a promise of Congressman Brownlow made during the campaign last fall It develops that Mr Yoakley died two months ago Havanas Suburbs Raided Havanas outposts have again been at tacked by a large body of rebels who be fore the Spanish troops could be gathered to resist had swept through the suburbs carrying all befonAhem They used it is believed rapid firing guns and a iarge quantity of dynamite Sherman Growing Stronger Secretary Sherman it is reported at Amagansette Long Island will remain another week with his daughter He is getting stronger daily He spends his time in still water bathing in the morning and walks and drives in the shade during the afternoon King of Siam Arrives in England Chulalongkorn the King of Siam ar rived at Spithead Friday morning in his royal yacht The British warships re ceived his majesty with a royal salute The Duke of York cordially welcomed the king Cotton Mills Close Down The voluntary curtailment in produc tion which is being made by the cotton mills of Fall River includes the mills of nine corporations representing S75000 spindles and 8000 operatives Engineer and Fireman Killed Two Lehigh freights collided atDepew Junction near Buffalo N Y early Sat urday morning killing George Ellensbee an engineer and Charles Eddy a fireman The true life is the life we live within ourselves SPALDING IS GTJttTY CHICAGO BANKER MUST GO TO THE PEN convicted on tue Third Trial of Embezzling University of Illinois Bonds Two Couple Drowned Sun day at Carlisle Ind Guilty at Last Charles WSpalding ex president of the Globe Savings Bank of Chicago was found guilty Saturday of embezzlement and his punishment was fixed at imprisonment in tne penitentiary The specific charge against Spalding was the embezzlement of bonds of Macoupin County Illinois be longing to the State University of Illinois of which Spalding was treasurer and valued at 28000 This was Spaldings third trial and the evidence sub mitted to the jury was practically mo same as on the for mer trials On those he was acquitted be cause the jury believed that he hypothe cated without intent to embezzle The third jury found him guilty on the same grounds on which he was twice acquitted the only difference being that they took a different view of Spaldings intentions The prisoner took the verdict very hard and sat with bowed head while the clerk read the finding of the jury He will make a hard fight before he goes to the peniten tiary and will carry the case up to the last court The duration of his sentence will be settled by the prison board of the state Mr TWO COUPLE DROWNED and Mrs Grant Hammond and Mr and 3Irs Abner Morris Sunday was a tragic Sabbath for Car lisle a town about thirty miles south of Terre Haute Ind Four of her citizens were drowned at nyatts ferry in the Wa bash River and one was ground to frag ments by an Evansville and Terre Haute freight train The dead are Mr and Mrs Grant Hammond Mr and Mrs Abner Morris Charles Hines The first four were seen to go in bathing and later their clothing was found on the river bank It is believed one of the women was seized with cramps and the orhers wero drowned in trying to rescue her Charles Hines was found lying close to the Evansville and Terre Haute track at Carlisle The head was crushed in the right hand torn off and the body almost severed It is thought Hines fell from the train while stealinga ride MURDER AT HILLSDALE IND James McLaughlin Shoots and Kills Joseph Robson At Hillsdale Ind on Sunday James McLaughlin shot and instantly killed Joseph Robson of Montezuma McLaugh lin although not a drinking man had gone to Montezuma for a night out Mc Laughlin and Robson were in a saloon when without provocation the former drew a revolver and fired three bullets into Robsons breast McLaughlin then backed out of the saloon and made his escape One report is that McLaughlin had sworn to take the life of a man who had caused McLaughlins father to com mit murder and Robson was mistaken for that man McLaughlin married a rich woman several years ago and has since been spending money recklessly WRECK IN KANSAS Engineer and Fireman Fatally Hurt but Passengers Escape The Missouri Pacific passenger which left Eldorado Kan for Kansas City at 1030 oclock Saturday night crushed into four loaded freight cars that had been left carelessly standing on tho main track at Yates Center The passenger train was running at a speed of thirty miles an hour The wreck caught fire burning the bag gage car four freight cars and the loco motive and tender The engineer and fireman both men of family living at El dorado were probably fatally injured All the passengers escaped serious injury Fitz to Try the Turf Robert Fitzsimmons champion pugilist is about to gratify the ambition of his life Soon his colors will be shown on the race track by thoroughbreds from his own stable Already he has purchased several horses Fitzsimmons says that before next year he will be in possession of a fine racing stable More Trouble in Crete The foroign admirals held a conference in Canea Crete on Thursday last and de cided to oppose by force the landing of any additonal Turkish troops In reply to their notification to that effect Ismael Bey said he could not accept such a decision It is believed that fresh trouble is brewing Oldest Ironmaster Dead Samuel Lewis believed to be the oldest ironmaster in the country died at Allen town Pa aged 92 He founded the Allen town iron works in 1S46 and continued as superintendent until 1SS6 building five furnaces and the Lehigh rolling mill Raises Wages of His Men Leon Godhau owner of seven sugar plantations in Louisiana and the largest producer in the United States has tele graphed the managers of his seven planta tions to advance the wages of all field laborers 1034 per cent Bridge Set on Fire A Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway bridge between Mt Pleasant and Long Run Ohio was set on fire Saturday night Trackmen put out the fire and saved the bridge This road is crowded with coal from West Virginia Cuban Prisoners Pardoned A hundred Cuban prisoners who were recently pardoned have arrived at Gibral tar whence they will proceed to New York Spanish government organs ex press the opinion that they will rejoin the insurgents Well Known Turfman Dead Clifford Porter a well known turfman died at his farm near Lexington Ky Sunday aged 17 R G DUN COS REVIEW Wheat Raisers Will Realize SO 000000 3Iore Than liast Year R G Dun Cos Weekly Review oi Trade says Dispatches from almost every northern city of importance report without exception improvement in business and from Detroit to Seattle and Portland splendid crop prospects The task of ad justing the business and industries of the country to conditions created by a new law has progressed with gratifying rapidity and ease Even the increasing strength of the striking coal miners prob ably forwards the adoption of the uniform ity plan which promises to remove most of the causes of such struggles Some con fusion is caused by events seemingly con tradictoryby the closing of large cotton mills when many other works are starting and by declines in Bomp nrices whon others are advancing but the balance is unmistakably on the right side Wheat has risen i cents during tne week with western receipts for the first time exceeding last years The Iact that corn exports exceed last years although the price has advanced to 8287 cents is further proof that the foreign demand is substantial With crop news still favor able producers may probably realize some thing like 80000000 raore than last year on wheat wliich means a great difference in purchases by agricultural states Corn also advanced 125 cents and cotton a six teenth though reports as to yield are good IS WILLING TO ARBITRATE Japan Accepts Hawaiis Offer for a Settlement of Their Dispute Japan has accepted the offer of Ilawai to arbitrate the dispute over the landing of Japanese immigrants in Hawaii A brieJ synopsis of the acceptance was cabled the Japanese minister in Washington and was given the state department It says Japan accepts the principle of arbitration and is ready to negotiate terms of settlement When advised of this move by Japan tho officials in the state department informed the secretary of the Japanese legation thai until annexation was concluded the United States would stand aside and consider the dispute as between Japan and Hawaii The secretary said he was glad the United States took that position as it would permit Japan to send two or three warships to Hawaii pending the final action of the treaty of arbitration This declaration was rather a surprise to tho state department officials who replied that that was quite another matter and intimated that non interference by the United States in one case could not bo con strued as passive acceptance of the other A RADICAL JURIST North Carolina Judge Advocates Sweeping Changes Walter Clarke associate justice of tne supreme court of North Carolina de livered an address Friday before the Tennessee Bar Association at Nashville in which he advocated sweeping changes in the constitution of the United States declaring that the constitution is now un democratic and conducive to centraliza tion He advocated the election by the people of the federal judiciary and officers of the court the election of senators by the people and of postmasters and all other federal officers and made a vigorous at tack upon the appointive nower of tho president Two Negroes Hanged Pig Newel colored was hanged at Selma Ala Friday He admitted his guilt and while on the scaffold praved for the Lord to send two angels to escort him to glory John Johnson colored was hanged at Livingston same state Friday for the murder of Archie Clark The drop fell at 1 oclock He was dead in ten minutes Britain to Arbitrate The British foreign office has notified Ambassador Hay that Great Britain has accepted the proposition of the United Stales for an international conference on the question of pelagic sealing in theBehr ing sea to be held in Washington the com ing autumn Six Killed by an Avalanche As a result of a mountain slide in Ger many on the southern slope of theKoppen one of the Riesen Gebirge peaks six per sons were killed MARKET QUOTATIONS- Chicago Cattle common to 300 to 550 hoes shinninir prime irrades mn jw r zbu to irHW sheep fair to choice 200 to 450 wheat No 2 red 76c to 7Sc coru No 2 27c to 28c oats No 2 lUc to 18c rye No 2 40c to 42c butter choice creamery 14c to 15c eggs fresh c to lVv new potatoes 70c to SOc bushel per Indianapolis Cattle shipping SIOO to ii00 hogs choice light 800 to 400 sheep common to choice 300 to i wheat c 2 72c to 73c corn No 2 white 2Ge to 2Sc oats No 2 white 21c to 22c St Louis Cattle 300 to 525 hogs 300 to 400 sheep 300 to 400 wheat No 2 7Jc to Sic corn No 2 yellow 2oc to 27c oats No 2 white 18c to 20e rye No 2 39c to 40e Cincinnati Cattle 200 to 00 hog 300 to 400 sheep 250 to 400 wheat No 2 75c to 7ic corn No S mixed 28c to 30c oats No 2 mixed 21c to 22c rye No 2 35c to 37c Detroit Cattle 250 to 525 hogs 300 to 400 sheep 250 to 400 wheat No 2 7Gc to 7Sc corn No 1 yellow 27c to 29c oats No 2 white 23c to 25c rye 41c to 43c Toledo Wheat No 2 red 77c to 7Sc corn No 2 mixed 27c to 2Dc oats No 2 white 17c to 19c rye No 2 41c to 42c clover saiil 440 to 445 Milwaukee Wheat No 2 spring SOc to 81c corn No 3 20c to 2Sc oats No 2 white 21c to 23c rye No 1 41c to 43c barley No 2 30c to 35c nork mess 725 to 800 Buiralo Cattle 300 to 525 hogs 300 to 450 sheep 300 to 475 wheat No 2 red 7Sc to 79c corn No 2 yellow 30c to 32c oats No 2 white 24c to 25c New York Cattle 300 to 550 hoes 350 to 475 sheep 300 to 475 wheat No 2 red 83c to 84c corn No 2 32c to 34c oals No 2 white 21c to 2oc buter creamery 12c to lGc egjrs Western 12c to 13c STATE OF NEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON DENSED FORM Home for the Friendless OfHcers Firmly Believe the Courts Will Decide Against State Control of the Institution Other News Items Neither Side Makes a Move The Society of the Home for the Friend less at Lincoln still holds the fort at the borne and there has been no move on the part of the state to molest tho occupants of the building in the last two weeks What ever plans the state officials have for the future they have not made public The officers of the society say the society feels safe in its position and that it will be up held by the courts They did not feel dis posed to talk regarding the probability of state appropriation being shut off pending the settlement of the controversy but it is learned from an outsido source that two or three business firms have agreed to furnish supplies on credit feeling sure that in the end they will get their pay In the meantime the investigating com- muiee nas oeen liaving a little trouble with the society that has heretofore con ducted me Home for Fallen Women at Milford Some time ago the committee ap pointed Mrs Myra Olmstead to go to Mil ford and examine into the books of the home When she arrived there were no books to be found It was learned that they had been sent to the headquarters of the society at Lincoln and when called upon the officers declined to hand over the books Last week Chairman Mutz of the investigating committee made another call on the officers of the society and finally succeeded in getting the books winch he immediately expressed to Mil ford in order that the examiner might com mence work at once New Cattle Diseaso Appears The disease of the eye which has been prevalent among cattle in other states and in parts of Nebraska has made its appear ance in the vicinity of Norfolk D White who lives a mile southeast of the Junction has discovered its presence in his herd One of his animals is entirely blind and others seem to be suffering from the first uy 01 me disease A veterinarv sur geon who is treating Mr Whites cattle has been very successful in coping vith the disease thus far It is said that the iirst indication of its presence is when an animals eye commences to run and if a stop is not put to its progress the eve will be entirely eaten out Demand His Resignation The police commission f nni 1 called upon Chief of Police Sigwart to hand in his resignation as the first step in reforming a badly demoralized police force For some time the citv has been overrun with thugs thieves and the most daring class of highwaymen The police appear to have been wholly unable to de tect the criminals The attack upon John A Creighton at the very door of the mill ionaire in the heart of the citv was the crowning work of the daring criminals Martin J White formerly a police officer vi v muaiiw win prouaoiy be elected to the place Loyal to Her Lover MissLue A Ilirsch superintendent of schools in Dakota County is in Lincoln seeking release of William A Ream to whom she is betrothed Ream is serving a six year term in tho penitentiarv for cat tle stealing and Miss Ilirsch has been his ardent supporter since his arrest furnish ing him money for his defense An appeal to the supreme court for a new trial has uwn maue at ner behest and pending action tho lady seeks his release on a bond which has not yet been approved Miss Hirsch is prominent as an educator in north Nebraska Charged With Talcing Money Sensational charges are made against Captain Howard of the Salvation Army at lork by Thompson D Carnhart a mem ber of the army The captain is charged with appropriating the money received to his own use and leaving the other mem bers to go without food At a street meet ing the captain denied the charges and said that hisUvoks were open to inspection no ueiiounceu itarnnart bitterly and ex pelled him from the army Quite a furor has been created among local circles of the army sympathizers Stores Coal for a Double Reason The Union Pacific Railroad company is aireauy commencing to store coal and will stack up several thousand tons in the yards at Columbus This is sixty to ninety davs earlier than in former years but the com pany has a two fold purpose this season One is to have a stock on hand in case the western miners should go out in sympathy with the eastern strikers and the other object is to relieve the cars which are badly needed in the movement of rmi nearly all the coal being shipped in box cars Chip of Iron in His Thigh EdKoepke an assistant in the black smith shop of William Pleifferat Arling ton met with an accident which will lav him up for some time While weldinira piece of iron a chip about half an hiclfin length broke off the sledge cutting into his thigh immediately over the femoral artery and missing it by a hair He re ceived surgical aid at once bat the piece of iron could not be located Burned by a Gasoline Stove Mrs T M Mann of Hastings was badly burned about the face and hands while trying to light the vapor from a gasoline stove Mrs Mann lighted a match and opened the oven door with the intention of starting a fire As the oven door opened the escaping gas became ignited and flew in her face burning her eyebrows hair and hands Seventeen Candidates for Sheriff Already for the iiz campaign there are three Populist canuvlates for sheriff in Stromsburg Precinct Polk Count- and there are seventeen in all jn the county Fanner Killed in a Itunaway Henry Durst a prominen farmer living near Central City was killed while stack ing grain In some manner Mr Durst slipped and fell from the wagon scaring the team which ran away One of the wheels passed over his neck killing him instantly Freight Train Wrecked Freight train No 77 on the Burlington was wrecked between Inland and Hast ings recently The train was going at a moderate rate of speed when a car jumped the track and caused several others to pile up JVODoay was injured Two School Boards at Niobrara At the regular meeting of the Niobrara high school the people voted a return to the primary system of a school board ot three instead of six trustees At the proper time the new board organized anflvj called upon the president of the old board to turn over the books but they were re fused because of the absence of the di rector Upon the return of the director he was waited upon but refused on tho ground that State Superintendent Jackson says that the old board is the legal one and the people have no power to vote back to the former system In the meantime the treasurer who was also treasurer of the old board holds the funds and refuses to honor the orders of the old board and he is threatened with a mandamus which will settle the question Prof Brownflelds Fatal Accident The particulars of the death of Prof LeRoy W Brownfield of Shelby at his parents home near Spencer are given by a friend who went there in response to a telegram He and his father tossed a bundle of cheek rower wire into thn wagon It discharged a gun which was lying in the bed and part of the load went into Brownfields left eye He told his father he was not badly hurt but soon fell and remained unconscious till he died tho next day Prof Brownfield was principal of the Shelby school last year and would have taught it the coming year He was an ambitious young man who had secured nib euucauon by hard work He single Kills Him Erick Larson was in Twelve Hours a farmer sovpn miles nortwest of Wahoo committed sni cie by taking pans green The poison is thought to have been taken in the forenoon and he died at 11 oclock the same niirht Larson was thought to be unbalanced from an accident which happened hidf some three years ago After taking thl poison Larson secreted himself until evening when he came from his hiding place and told his wife what he had done She sent for a physician but he ar rived too late to save him Larson was 52 years old and leaves considerable property Remarkable Growth of Corn A little over three weeks ago Mr C T Heartwell living near Hastings planted some corn and took no better care of it than most farmers do When the corn was three weeks old to the dav he measured it and found that it had grown just exactly three feet from the day it had bpen put in uuuiuunu mis gives some idea of the remarkable rapidity of the growth of corn in Adams County this year Sues the City for Damages Thomas Rote of Norh Bend has brouht suit against the city of North Beiidfor 10000 He alleges that he was perma nently injured by the explosion of an an- n on me public street of the citv at tho Republican celebration October 25 1898 A salute was being fired at thp timp nd me inn exploded prematurely doing considerable damage Rote was the only iisuii seiiousiy injured New 31111 for Cook Within a short time Cook will have a large mill The company has been organ ized and incorporated which intends to re move the large milling plant from Grant Perkins County to that place Several crop failures and a scarcity of cereals in Perkins County prompted the parties in terested to change the location of the mill which has been idle in Grant for three sea sons Osborn Is Offered a Consulate It is reported that L W Osborn of Blair has been tendered the Samoan mission btf -President McKinley the position whicEif was several weeks ajro offered to rimrnh Howe of Nemaha County Mr Osborn has not yet decided what action to take iri the matter The understanding is that it Mr Osborn accepts Mr no we will b given some other place Bartleys Bond Is Not Filed The report was current that the Bartley bond was to be filed Mondav forenoon and the presence in Lincoln of all the members of the supreme court led the public to be lieve that they were called together to pass upon the bond However the bond was not filed and members of the court say it was purely accident that tliev were therrv and not official business Arrests Under Dog Tax Law There have been four arrests at York on the charge of illegally harboring dogs In each case on the day set for trial the per son arrested has appeared in court and paid the tax and costs or made a showing that he had no dog and the cases have been dismissed It seems now that everybody will abide by the ordinance Gold Fever in Nebraska The Alaska gold fever has struck Ne breska and as a result the Lincoln and Yukon Gold Mining Company has been incorporated with a capital stock of 100 000 in shares of 10 each The principal office of the company is to be at Lincoln but the operations are to be carried on up in the Yukon River country Make Brick at West Point The Weit Point brick yards commenced operations last week with eighteen em ployes on the pay roll Over 25000 brick were manufactured the first day aud 30 - 000 the next Nebraska Short Notes The old settlers of Nemaha Count- will have a picnic at Nemaha on August 7 Mrs E II Monroe of Emerson foil fr a hammock and sustained a fracture of the collar bone The ancient order of United Workmen lodges of Richardson wu ii their annual picnic at Shubert on next Tuesday July 27 A little 1-year-old child of Henrv Gur gensmeyer and wife of Auburn got a ker nel of corn in its windpipe and died before it could be dislodged The old Churchill nouse the first hotel Minden ever had has been purchased by es Dildine who is tearing it down and removing the old lumber to his farm lust w 111 ui iw vu William OConnor an ONeill bar tondor had an eye injured so there are fear he will lose it by flying gia3s from a beer bottle which burst The sixth annual reunion of theDodo County Veterans Association will be held at Scnbner August 12 wmhe TiUP VaUey Association Will hold its first encammnonr of E Stewart near North iouP lasting three days viz August 10 11 and 12 n old veterans are invited to be nreenV nU bring their familes with them rJunSenth anmial Ancient Order of Lnited Workmen picnic 2 of Butler rw will be held at Risin rstv w 5 County August 11 Sixteen odge35wnThineSda sented and Tcrowd h TfpFt a large f counties will tereS 1 j will besecured for the occjjon i A i n i V