State TTie Secies DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD. DAKOTA CITY, NEB., FRIDAY, 3IAY 1, 1908. NUMBER 35 VOLUKE XVI I SUMMARY OP THB NEWS OP THB WHOLE WORLD. BISHOP IS 'GUARDED RLPOHTF.D. . Jl I KEATS AGAINST DRHAP.KIS AT FRISCO. .Methodist Missionary Returning from Orient to Attend General Conference at Baltimore Si-Id to Have Aroused Hostility of tlio Koreuii Ioague. Warned tliufr a number of Koreans In Sun Francisco wore preparing to assassinate Bishop Merrlman Colbert Harris upon his arrival Wednesday morning on the .Pacific Mall steamer Korea from the orient, Surveyor of Port Woodward, accompanied by a number of other federal attaches and members of the .San Francisco police force, liiet the steamer upon Its op ucarance in -non. and, placing the bishop upon the revenue cutter Gold c-ti Outo, caused his removal to Oak- lund. ' The action of the officials came in response to Information from Wash Ington. I ili-hop Harris left San Francisco Wednesday for the' east. He will at tend the general conference of the Meth"('!. t Fpiscopal church to be held in Baltimore next month, Koreans at Honolulu sent a cable gram to the Korean league of Kan Francisco quoting ri purported Inter view witli Bishop Harris in Which he Mated that in the occupation of Ko lea by Hie Japanese he saw the hand of providence and that the Japanese were woiking for the good of Korea. A telegram diiected the league at San Francisco to see Bishop Harris regarding the authenticity 'of the In terview and ask If he wan correctly quoted. HOY KING WFLL GUARDED. J'.outo from Palace to Parliament Buildings Lined with Troops. The Portuguese cor test roascmblcd Wednesday. The royal mourning for the late King Carlos and his son was suspended for the occasion. The en tiro garrison of Lisbon turned out at daylight and formed along the route from the palace to the parliament buildings. The republicans, dissidents and Fran coists seem to have completed prepar ations to precipitate an onslaught on the government shortly after parllu nient opens by reviving the scun-Jals in connection with the "royal ad vances" obtained by the late King Car Ins from the state treasury. The young king apparently sincerely desires make every possible amend. He wr.in el the whole question investigated by a commission before the assemblage of the cortes and repeatedly expressed his intention of repaying to the treas ury every cent of the money illegally advanced. No commission, however, was appointed. It now leaks out that the secret of the failure to comply with the king's request was that the amount accredit ed to the king on the treasury books was not $700,000, as everybody sup posed, but that the sum liquidated by Franco was approximately $1,500,000. The most sensational revelation, how ever, is that the royal family actually only received $700,000, the remaining $S(i0,00 having been absorbed In tho process of transmission by the "retro, ac tives" then In control. COLLINS TRIAL BEGVN. Former Chicago .Chief .Accused ,o, Using Police in Politics. The trial of John M. Collins, former c hief of police, and Frank D. Comer ford, former police attorney, charged with using the police force in politics, commenced Wednesday In the criminal court. The specific charge is that the defendants caused policemen to en gage in political work against Busse In favor of Mayor Dunne, Comerford acting as his own attorney. The de fendants' request that the indictment be quashed and a motion for a bill of particulars were both overruled and the selection of a Jury begun. Kentucky Bunk Failure. The Duvies County Trust company, of Owensboro, Ky., which declined deposits ami suspended cash payments fi-veral days ago, hus filed a deed of general assignment. The bank ha a capital of $.'0,000 and deposits of over tfi "0,000. Fire at Jniiietttown. A fire on the Jamestown exposition grounds Tuesday night destroyed sev eral colonial buildings, and was check ed within fifty feet of the largest states' exhibit palace. The Michigan building was considerably scorched. The financial toss is not great. ( Robtwtu Make Good Haul. Robbers burglarised the Hcandla Stute bank at Crookston, Minn., early 'Wednesday morning and secuerd 17, 000. They terrorised the Inhabitants by "shooting up" the town and es cuped. MUa Held Mill Wed. The engagement of Miss Jean Reid, daughter of Whllelaw Held, American ambassador, to Hon. John Hubert Ward, brother of the earl of Dudley, as announced Wednesday. LATEST BY TELEGRAPH NINE MEN KILLED IN WltrCK. Intcrurban Street Cnrs Collide Near Detroit. . Two large lnterurban trolley citrs on the Detroit, Jackson and Chicago railway, a part of the Detroit United Railways system, running from Detroit to Jackson Mich., collided head on Tuesday afternoon while running twenty-five miles west of Detroit, near Ypsilantl. Nine men were killed and about thirty men and wemen Injured, some of them seriously. All of the severely wounded were taken to the University hospital at Ann Arbor. A mistake In orders on the part of Motorman Fay, of the limited car. who was crushed to death beneath his vestibule. Is alleged to have caused the collision. It Is charged that he overran his orders. The dead: Motorman Fay, Jackson; John Paget, Detroit; Charles Carmen. Detroit; Joe Howard. Detroit; Jack' McMullen, Syracuse, X. Y.; Garbodino Grlnnl, Detroit; three .unidentified; , men. The limited car, comfortably filled with about forty people, left Ypsllantt at 7 o'clock for Detroit. The running time of the car was changed Tuesday and reduced so that Motorman Foy left Ypsilantl ten minutes earlier than he had been aeeustome to. This Is thought by some to have been respon sible for his mistake. Instead of stop ping at Harris switch, about two miles west of the scene of the accident, where it Is said by the officials of the road the cars should have passed, the limited rushed by the passing point at high speed. As it rounded u curve four miles east of Ypsilantl the other car dashed into view, also running at high speed. It was hopeless to try to stop the heavy cars and they crashed together with terrific force. Motorman Wlngrave, of the local car, Jumped when he saw that the collision was Inevitable, but Motor man Fay stuck to his post. The local car was built considerably higher than the limited, so that as they met its body rode up over the heavy flooring and ironwork of the limited and telescoped it for nearly thirty-four feet. SLAIN BY RELIGIOUS FANATIC. Pennsylvania Man Kills Child During Riotous Prayer Meeting. A horrible murder by a religious fa natic In the borough of Alliance, near Allentown, Pa., occurred Tuesday. Councilman Henry Smith's little daughter, aged G, was killed by the former's ' brother-ln-luv, Robert Bach man, of Nazareth, Pa. Bachman was the head of a new praying band and last week he got the Smiths interested. They went to Bach man's house last Saturday, prayed and held services and then decided to re main untlK the spirit told them to leave. Late Monday night under Bach man's direction, Smith, hi fighting the devil, broke three doors, kicked In the footboard of the bed and jumped on the bed, smashing It. Meanwhile Bachman was In an ad joining room with the Smith's only child, May Irene. When Mrs. Smith entered the room she found her daughter's dead body on the floor and Bachman on his knees alongside In a religious frenzy. The forehead and upper portions of the child's body were bruised and scratched. luesuay ariernoon jiachman was arrested. His wife told the coroner that the child had been killed by Cod and that her husband was God. PRINCE AS AN OCEAN STOKER. lTireo Hours in Lusltania's Hold Was Enough for Russian Count. Because he wanted to know whether the life of a stoker on board a mod ern ocean steamship was as bad as de scribed, Prince Wolkousky, of Russia, took the place of one of the crew of the Lusltanla for three hours. At the conclusion of his "watch" he said con dition were worse than reported. "It was not very hot when I enter?.') o engine room first," said the prince "but It was cool there In comparison to where the stokers worked on three- hour shifts. I shoveled to the best or my ability. I am hardened to outdoor life and can stand as much as the average man, but the coal heaving left me limp and exhausted. I was ready to collapse." Wreck on the "Peniixj." One man probably was fatally in jured and many were slightly hurt and traffic on the Pennsylvania railroad was blocked for several hours Tuesday as the result of a collision between freight and passenger train near South Elisabeth, X. J. Deatli Claims Anarchist. Sellg Silversteln, the anarchist who attempted to throw a bomb into group of policemen in I'uion square Nek oYrk, on March 29, and was in jured by the premature explosion of the bomb, died Tuesday. For Amnesty in Portugal. It Is announced at Lisbon that King Manuel, when he takes the oath of the sovereign on May 6, will grant a gener al amnesty to ail political prisoners xcepting those who are involved In the murder of his father and brother Accident on a IWttUeship. According to a wire leas telegraph re. port at Portsmouth, Eng., there has been boiler explosion on the British battleship Britannia In which several men were Injured. Charge Wrecks the Bunk. Although frightened away before )' ucc"ued getting any money, flve bur",r" ary Tuesday caused :0ul , uuu uie Dank of Jienry m .iecn. turn. BODY FOUND IX THI NK. Neighbor Accused of Murdering Woman to" Get Her Property. , Horribly mutilatwd nnd Jamni-d' Into a trunk, the body of Mn. Smith llren nan, wife of Pntrick Brennnn. a re spected citizen of Brownsville, neai Wutertown. N. Y.. was discovered Monday. Near the-trunk the polleo found a bloody x. Th police claim to have already solved the mystery of the woman's death, through a con. fesslon which it 1 alleged they have obtained. According to tW police the mur der was done In a hotel formerly known as the liarton house, which Is located near the Breiinan home. The motive, the officers uM.gL'd, was rob bery. Pending further inquiry Into the ease the police have taken into cus tody James Farmer and his wife, who are neighbors of the. Urennnns. The Brennan home, which was In the wife's name, was, according to the county records, transferred on Oct. 1 last to Farmer for the consideration of JIM 00. r.rennan claimed that he was not a party to the transfer and fur ther stated that his wife had ricQiei! to him that she had executed such a deed. On Thursday last Mrs Brcnnan disappeared, nnd the same day the Farmers s( uglit possession of the lirennan home. When Brcnnan ob Jected he was directed to the county clerk's oflice. On Saturday he exam ined the records and found that a deed had been executed, as Fnrnicf stuted. CLEVELAND ENDS CM! W.AIL Deal Finally Arrjnicd for Tliree-Cent I' res. Three-cent street car fare on u'.l lines operating w ithin I lie city or Cleveland, O.. became a possibility Monday night at the regular meeting of the city council when a "security grant" was passed under suspension of the rules to the Cleveland Hallway company, n new corporation which took over the consolidated properties of the old companies. At the conclu sion of the council meeting that body, as a committee of the whole, mot the officials of the Cleveland Railway company, the Cleveland Electric Rail way company! tho Forest City Rail road company and the Low Fare Rail way company In the chamber of com merce hall, where the final paper were signed and passed, leasing the property of the Cleveland Railway company to tho Municipal Traction company, the holding and operating company, for fifty years. Thus ended the seven years' con test which has been waged at Cleve land for low street railway car fare and public control of urban trans portation, marked by much bitterness throughout and noted for tho many appeals made to the courts. I" N EASY AS TO GUATEMALA. Mexico Hears Disquieting News from Central American Republic. There Is a persistent rumor at Mex ico City that news of a most disquiet ing nature ha4s been received by the Mexican state department from Guat emala. According to reports President Diaz has called a cabinet meeting to discuss Central American affairs. Owing to Monday being a holiday it 1m Impossible to confirm these stories. It Is declared that tho United States and Mexico have reached an agree ment regarding Central American af fairs and that Important developments are about to materialize. It Is reported here on good authori ty that six battalions of Mexican troops have been ordered to proceed at once to Tapachulta, on the Mexican-Guatemalan frontier. Whether this move ment Is connected In any way with the recent disturbances in Guatemala cannot be officially verified. WOMAN SLAIN IN HOME. Shot to Death by Bourdcr, Without Knowing Motive. Mrs. Annie Griffith, aged 35 yeurs, was shot to death Monday night by Frank Mclntyre, who had been a boarder at the Griffith home at Broi k lyn, a suburb of Baltimore, Md., for about a year. Mclntyre had been en tertaining some friends, and all of them are said to have been drinking. Leaving the others, Mclntyre went up. stairs to Mrs. Griffith's room, where s)ie was In bed. He had been gone about fifteen minutes when five shots were heard. Every one of theiu hud taken effect In the body and race of the woman, who died before a doctor could be summoned. Mclntyre gave himself up. Griffith was not at home when tho shooting occurred, fur which no mo. live is assigned. Brown Sent tu Prison. J. Dalzell Brown, of Sun Francisco, formerly manager of the California Safe Deposit and Trust company, pleaded guilty Monday tu embezzling sixty-five mortgage bonds of the Sac ramento Gup and Electric company und was sentenced to eighteen mouths' Imprisonment. For Waterway CoinmlHNioii. A bill authorizing the appointment by the president of an inland water ways commission of ten member 0 introduced in the house Monday by Mr. Coudrey, of Missouri. Train Goes Into Ditch. A San Francisco passenger truin from St. I-ouls, due to arrive at Paris, Tex., at :40, went into the ditch near Stanley, Oklu., eurly Monday. Ninetteu people werv in lure' NEBRASKA STATE NEWS boot 1.1. ggf.k" gets away. Escapes from .lull at Wnlttilll In Mys tenon Manner. Charlie Jones, who win held In the Village Jail tit Wulthlll on the charge of bootlegging, departed some time Tuesday night without the permission of the village authorities, taking noth ing except the padlock, and without as much ns mfirrlng the rough wood work of tlio c'.oor-.viiy. Jones appear ed In Walth'll last Saturday, hailing from Lyons, iud with him came con siderable b,v::e. He stated thai he chose the lay on account of the ball game wh ch was Hehedu.rd to be played. Knowing that there would be an utiusiully large crowd to partake of the Atimulaiits which he had l rough! with him. During the ufternoon and evening he dispensed considerable of the goods. About 7 o'clock he, with his driver. was e-'iught uud placed In Jail. Lttler in tho evening severul or his customers were given berths near hkn. .Monday morning he -was arraigned In Justice Wood's court and lined. He niaUe ar rangements with some parties to pay tlie fine, atter which lie was to leave he state. However, It is supposed he lecided to leuve first uml have the fine paid later. The peculiar part of Hie matter Is the fact that there Is not as much u a scratch on the rusty staple that held the Iron hasp of the door through which the pudlock was linked. It is understood thut the olllcers have a clew us to the way he escaped. The stolen pudlock und the fact that there was nothing broken about the Jail would seem to Indicate that there must have been a key. ATTACKS TWO YOI NG GIKLS. Nehrasknn Attempts Murder of Wife's Sisters. - ' After feigning Inveusiliility and-sub mlttlng to a terrible beating Ida Tay lor, of Mlnden, 13 years of age, Tues day night saved her unconscious sister from death in their burning home Ida. and Pearl, aged 17, were brutally assaulted and left for dead. The ooun ty attorney and a large posse are in pursuit of Bert Taylor, the brother-in-law of the two girls, who Is accused of the crime. According to the si ny of Ida Taylor, Bert Taylor demanded admittance at midnight. He flourished a revolver .dragged Pearl Into the kitchen und clubbed her Into unconsciousness Next he attacked Ida and beut her. She pretended to faint. He then broke a lamp and poured the on anout me house and on the bedding. After set ting the house afire he fled. Ida then managed to drag her sister away l'earl Taylor may die. Ida told her Lstory to the county attorney Tuesday morning. She Is painfully burned. The two g'eAi 'ived In a little house near Mlnden xftl attended school. .At the end of each week they would go to spend Sunday at the home of their parents. Taylor's wife died severul months ago and an infant was being cured for by the parents of the girls is accused of assaulting. VICTIMS OF PTOMAINE POISON. Sl.v Persons Made III by Ecu ling Dried Beef. Six persons of Norfolk were stricken Friday night with ptomaine poisoning as the result of eating dried beef. Sev eral of the cases were serious, nnd it was feared they might result fatally All are out of danger now. The vic tims were Mr. and Mrs. 11. H. Miller, Miss Alvlna Miller and Miss Anna Miller. The beef was bought at Nor folk and was put up by a south Oma ha packing firm. Samples were sent to t,he state chemist at Lincoln. Banker's Son Attempts Suicide. Haunted by a love affair with the daughter of a prominent citizen of his home, Geneva, G.-orge . l-.pley, a graduate of the University of Nebras ka, and at one tiir.e a leader of Geneva society, attempted suicide shortly uf ter midnight Sunday morning by hurl ing; himself through a large glass win dow at the rear of the second floor of a rooming house at 16 21 Iuiiiicr street, Denver, Colo. Hoy Shoots Disturber. At ..l.mii In o'cloek Satillilav nilfht .... i.,.t:, ,.f Vuieoiloe' a 17- .,1. '.....i.i i... iiem-il someone raooliiirU Charles Jones, of Beutliee, Will be o.i the window or his rooms beside thu Cohota restaurant. The rapping continued and Edward shot through the l.l.. flic ill et h it III tlM wus Sam 1,1. man In the hips. Mis name Itordeaut. a drunken half-breed dlun. The wound was not ratal. Break Into SI ore. Burglars secured an entrance to the city dry goods and gents furnishing store of P. M. Green Ht Cenlrul ( Ity Tuesday night, but were seured uuay by the timely univul or officers uud left behind two suit cases which they had packed with fancy neckweur. cuff buttons and other small in tides of men's wearing apparel. Homer Vote School Bonds. A proposition to l uie bonds to the j umount or 1" per cent or the asxe-seil valuation for the purpose of reel lug a new school building wus curried al Hcmer Tuesday by u huge majority. It is expected about $ i O.noo wilt be rei.llzed. Woman Such SuloonUecjM-r. Mrs. Annie lioltry, i f Wymoiv, ha brought suit In tie district t-ouit against Jhiucs P. MeCai thy for $7. ami damages, which Mil- ul!tes ha-'- been lone herself and family as the lou t of tile Kale of Intuxleai.H lo l.ri bus- bund. Tlie pil.illtr flj.ei. thai her husband mis ut one li ne a pro-pr roas farmer and thut tie tn.nxy United from the sale of ills f irm I' I'll in :i I i have bueu I qui inlereif at Met 'lil IllyV Ulul'll. INTEREST K3 HAPPENINGS From Cay to Dai Condensed FOR CUR EU5Y READERS HAXCELLOK ON AGRICULTURE- tii-nka' University llcnd Address es Grutltintc. Chancellor K. Xenj.imin Atulrrwa nddrocd the graduate of the state glieultural school ut Llncol'i Friday on iHe integration or mgrier t-.tiu- atlon Within the state." He said In ia; t: "There Is r rowing up In this com monwealth a more orderly system of higher education than exists In nny ther state. Owi-lupplng of education al function N not encouraged in e- hraf-lta i:s In most sdates, and RUch lai Kl'i!; as there unfortunately Is will trow I, ss with t!ie years. "The stcte of Nebraska Is gre-Uly o be count ntulitted iion its good for tune in In" ping its higher education woik t gt t'u i- Imiead of locating It at dlfferen'. cf -.iters under more or less hostile iui plies h- hus been 'done In Iowa. KaiiMiii end Colorado. were these states to do their educational pioneering over again, they would pro'oob'y proceed differently. "Scire of my colleagues seem . to consider cur provision for agricultural tiulning excessively costly. Not so. Of fire wo i., el laige sums for this .And f musl net creul" by any remark to night a crtntiuty Impression. We need r. larger, farm, more miimings anu more stock. Still, the common notion touching the cost of agricultural edu cation is ereatly exaggerated. Our eiiliy herd lu-.s cost money, but will !ieer cost rnrch more, as It Is now uei:; y Fi-lf-KiipporllnK. So of the beef th.n-ouglihreds. We need a few thou a.iJ dollars for choice horseflesh, but, if we c t this, our stud will In a few years not only support Itself but bo a souice of revenue to the university. t'nfoiiunr.lely engineering and gener al sticntifi:-- ci'u-at'.on is not produc the In ar.y such way. It Is costly with no Immediate return. It must be had however. It r.tU"t be provided for all the same. It is naught against it that It costs heavily. The returns are, sure though more indirect and slow. "I have mentioned the saving a state effects by unity In its higher ed ucation outfit. Much more Important is the Invaluable attrition between the Industrial spirit at work scientifically and the classleal or so-called liberal spirit at work In the same way. Each gains by contact and each loses from the absence of contact." GIRL IMtEEEHS MAN'S CLOTHES Is Arrested for Wearing Improper Ap parel. A petty girl, petite, brunott and Jaunty, walked Into the police court at. Otuahu escorted by an officer Frl clav. ;he wore a pair of ?orduroy trousers, a man's hut und she had her hands deep In the pockets of tho man's coat which tiie wore. , The girl was Net Gray, charged with wealing Improper apparel. She was arrested Thursday night at Thirteenth and Dodge street, whither she had come from the Lyons hotel to buy some sandwiches. T-atoj- her clothes wer sent to the police station and the male attire was demanded in ex chunge. She, however, refused to part with her neW gurmenta. When she walked Into the court room In her conic costume Judge Crawford quickly clapped a hand over his eyes and ordered her taken back to the matron's department. Later friends asked that the cuse be put over until the girl's parents can be com municated with in South Dakota, when It is said she wiil be sent to a convent. MAN COOLLY KILLS HIS WIFE. Turnier Commits Crime Wldoh-He W ill Not Explain. Frank Connor, a farmer living near Marion, Red Willow county, killed his wife Friday evening and is now awaiting his preliminary hearing la the county Jail at McCook. The mur der was most cowardly and cruel and w as witnessed by none but the two lit tle children of the couple. The bullets were fired Into the wlfe'a head. The murderer admits the (till Imr and offer nothing In extenuation. rat tier desiring to be hung for the terrible crime for which he shows no remorse than if he hud killed a dog. Auto I'uetory at Beatrice. "'e manufacture of automobiles In that city within a short time. He w" organl-.e a Mock ""!" capitalised i.i.u"". . ! largely or local capitalists. Work on i'the new factory will be started at once, und Mr. Jones says mat the act ual work of manufacturing autevmo biles will be started within the next thirty days. i Norfolk Superintendent I Kivd Hunter, now superintendent 6 I K(.iools al Ashland, and formerly a fa- i ,,11(UK football Mar from the Nebraska j mlv. rsiiy, lias been elected superln ,,.,,,;,., ,,r n,,. .urfolk schools, sue I crnllng Superintendent Bodwell, who got to lieulfice. Bruit I ; i in ii to Lincoln. William J. Iliyau, Mrs. Bryan and I ; ,.H lt., .avllt arrived In Lincoln i st,tv.rday ufternoon uud went Imme illately to KuirVlew. A lurge crowd coinpon il of re lullvcs uud close friends met ttie li!)uu party ut the depot PI-- Odd Fellow' Banquet. The K-b.il a'u lodge of Lyons, gave an entertainment uud banquet Satur day night. It -vus culled a "hard linos" purty und un investigating c. nominee w.ih appointed tu line all win, univ silk, broadcloth, jiiWelry, t ie. Ilici- :"i'.l guests ml down lo the , -un. ut-t table. Uc-1 point City Olhi-em. '1 lie i.t. i i' Hiliuliilstrutioii at West I'nii.t bus P.i-'i itino.'t'iiuteil. Eight uliiiii li' n.e., fo it- bi-tfiHcd for the t ilV f i t I l' Int. "PS! The employes of the state board ot regent are following out the rules laid down by the new board, recently pub lished, in the matter of the purchase of supplies. This information Is In the report of the university by State Ac countant Fairfield, who is still looking ever the books of the Institution, The lules were drawn by Charles Anderson, George Coupland and Fred Abbott, nnd adopted by the board shortly after the first two named became members of the board. In his special report tha itate accountant says No public Institution and probably but few private Institutions, If any, In the state has such an elaborate system f bookkeeping and accounting as the stnto university. It would he impossi ble to keep out of chaos without an accurate system In an Institution spending the money for the innumer able purposes required by the univer sity, it Is not clear that any less elab orate method than that In vogue would pioduce the results. It la not the ln- tintlon of this report to try to pick any Haws In the system, If Indeed there are any flaws. Competent bookkeepers ol up-to-date methods are employed, pnd a regular examination of the ac counts Is made by an expert account ant with a reputation well worth main taining. Vouchers are approved by every official who could possibly be ex pected to know of the debt which it 1 to liquidate. Some of these O. ICS are necessarily perfunctory, as will ap pear by the enumeration of the parties who affix their names to each docu ment." e Adjt. Gen. Schorr, has sent the fol lowing Information of the National Guard to Lieut. Col. K. M. Weaver, chief division of mllitlu affairs, Wash ington, D. C: "In response to your Inquiry of March 28, have the honor to make re ply us follows: "Average amount of time in hours of Instruction during the last few yeurs 98. .J . ...... . m lrcetnge of this time in Indoor Instruction, 56. "Percentage of this time In field in struction, 4 4. "Average term of service of commla slopvd officers, 1 year 7 months. "Average term of service of enlisted men, 2 years 7 months. 'Tercentngo of vacancies among of- I .Tccrs by resignation or discharge year- 'y.4. "Percentage of discharges among rr listed men, 4 8. 'i-( rentage of discharges among i n' Si ted Aien due. to expiration term c f service, 60, - "percentage due to sickness, very r.'ight. "Percentage due to personal desire t quit the service. 18. "Percentage duo to non-residence, ri. "Average total number commission ed olllcers during past five years, 114, "Average total number enlisted mes during past 9 ' years, 1,440." ttorney General Thompson was very much disappointed wnen ne re ived news that the United States su Tircine court refused to Issue the man lan-.us to compel the federal Judges to r mand to the state court cases in v.ilvlng the anti-pass law; the 2-cent fare law; tho Aldrlch bill, and the inilwnv commission bill. Mr. Thomn. ioii tiled suits in the state court to :ni.pel n, compliance with these lawa and the railroads secured their. trans- fr to th federal court. Mr. Thomp- son rulscd the point that the state was the real party at Interest, and, there- fore, the cases could not be trans- ferred to the federal court. The court ussumed Jurisdiction, however, and the attorney general then applied to the federal court for a mandamus to com - pel me reuerai juages to remana mi sults. The United States supreme court refused to pass upon the ques tion of whether the state Is a party of Interest until after tha case has been tried out In the lower court and ap pealed. The express companies doing bus! ness in Nebraska have filed with the Mate railway commission a new ached uie of rates, differing from the pres flit rates In that they are generally lower. So far as Nebraska is concern ed very little change is made In the rati, though tho Interstate shipments, from here to New York, for Instance, to. much reduced. The rates were filed for the approval of Hie commission. , .!.. . i i. f ihM cannot become effective in thi. state. For the present at least the approval of the commission will be withheld, for the reason If the commission permit these rates to go Into effect it mean they take the place of the rates fixed In the Sibley law. The commission does not know whether the express companies sought to catch It asleep one. have these rates approved as tha cftlclul rates in the state, and thus da- feat the object of the Sibley law. William M. cVbblson, sentenced to the penitentiary from Piatt county for two years. Is seeking relief through habeas corpus proceeding. It was alleged by his attorneys that the In formation filed against him was filed when court was In vacation, which on previous occasions the court has held ii sufficient grounds to nullify a con- ictlon. e . u . , I lI,r.l...V. wr.cr n. uci, i " -, cour ty, has filed a complaint with the ,mi. railway commission aralnst the Western Union Telegraph .company .1 .. . ami the Missouri racmc raiiroao. charging they have closed the tela- graph office at that place and it la impoKslble to get telegraphic cummu- ideation with the outside world. Mr, .Wlti! suld he ia now compelled to mive his cattle to another town for shipment by reason of the absence el the telegraph efflce at Wabash As the Senate vim shout to conclude .onsidcrallon of the naval appropriation bill Tliiirsilny Senator Pile of Washing ton proposed nn amendment InireRRing from two to four the number of new !nt tleship to be authorised. As several Senators desired to sjieak on the Amend Dient, the further consideration of- the bill was postponed. An amendment to )he nnvnl bill was adopt H Appropriating ?7,(MH).0)0 to brain construction on tluf two battleships outhoi-ik-el. An amend ment to remove the restriction of the pur chase of iiistorhiU for tli" construction of the battleship, submarine boa's, etc., to those of domestic manufacture was de- f,,n,71- Senator Ruyner of Maryland spoke on the constitutional rights of the State and executive encroachments. Iln insisted that the commerce act of the Constitu tion had been interpreted a applying to the industrial life of the ooun try to a fur greater degree than was contemplated by the framers of the Constitution. Hy the- overwhelming vote of 'J4."i to S the House, after several hours' discussion, adopted without amendment the Seuate joint reso lution Introduced by Senator Tillmsii au thorizing the Attorney Gener-ll to file suits against the Oregon and California ItnilrontI Company for the forfeiture of all or part of 2,HtM),tXJt acres of hind grants in the western part of Oregon. It is cloiiiied hy the government that by rea son ot breaches and violations of the net making the grants the railroad company had forfeited nil right to thn land in ques tion. Arguments in favor of the President' program for four battleships consumed most of the session of the Senate Fri- lny. Mr. Hale laid before the Senate a statement of hnttleship and other fea tures of the American navnl program, which he said showed that as large a fleet as is now In the Pacific can be kept there, mid at the sdiue time there would be ships for a still larger fleet for the Atlantic. Senator iteveridge concluded the debate for the day with a strong appeal for four battleships. The 'Senate passed a bill appropriating $100,000 for a survey of an inland water route from Boston to Wil nifiigton. in prowatW at , mington. The business of the House rapid gait, despite the fact that the Democrats forced six roll calls. Another day was spent by the Senate Saturday in considering the1 amendment to the naval appropriation bill, but a vote was not reached ut the close of the dis- cussion, which was partU-iiwted In by a dozen Senators. Mr.- Hale secured un agreement for a vole before adjournment of the Senate oa Monday. Much of tho' discussion was devoted to the improba bility of war being forced upon the United Slates. Senators Bevwldge and Piles were sharply criticised by Senators Al- , drich, Perkins and Mactimber for their statement Friday, and several heated col- . Implies occurred. At the conclusion .of the dehate a niimlier of bills were passed. The House wus In legislupve session only two hours, during widely time, after con siderable discussion, it passed the bill re classifying nnd increasing the pay of cer tain olticluls ntul employes of the custom siile. : :- By ni'over whelming vole President lioosevelt's four battle ship program failed in. the Seuate Monday, ufter w three days' debate. As finally passed tho bill appropriates $12.5,1 lo.llo'.l provide for ' lulp Knin. ,w colliers, pur- chose ot tnree auumonni comers, con- struction of oilier naval cratt anu a gen- eral Increase of pay. The House rules.. keyed up to meet a Democratic filibuster. reacted to prevent a message from Presi- dent ltoosevelt from being read. It was with an eye single to political capital that the House proceeded throughout the day. resolution was passed authorising the- news print pms-r investigating commit- - tl,r to spend the necessary funds to carry ,m tle investigation. The sundry civil' I Appropriation bill was debated for three- hours. Mr. Marshall. Norm Ihikota. at-- ,,,,.if.i ,u Aldrlch bill. Mr. Snlcht. Mis- sissippi, urged Congrats to refund to the Southern States the $10,0l)0,00t) cotton taxes collected in the Civil War, and Mr.. Shackelford. Missouri, took the Itepule llcans generally to task and criticised the- shortage In the St. Louis subtreaHiiry. -: : The pension and the District of Colum bia appropriation bills were passed by the Senate Tuesday. In addition, Uie special messuge of the President urging a legis lative program was read, and another chapter of Senator Warner's speech on the Brownsville affray was heard. 1 lie- resolution of the House to give govern ment aid to cyclone sufferers in the South was named. The resolution to extend the Dime when the commodity douse of the railroad rate law skull become operative was called before the Senate by Mr. Li kins, but went over uuuer uuirau ir...,r Mr. Culberson. Ostensibly considering the sundry civil appropriation did. rue House devoted most of its time to-day I to speeches covering a wide range ( mf Meets and concluded the session by giving gn attentive hearing to the President s nuocial message referring to the multi millionaire "whose son is a fool and his daughter a forejgn princess was reaeiie'i- Jier was a storm of applause. NATIONAL CAPITAL NOTES. A Joint resolution was adopted by the House committee donating to the State of Oklahoma "the first Bag bearing, forty- six stars, which for the first time floats over the capitol to-day." The resolution olacea the Hag in the custody of the Okla homa Historical Society. imim the bills uaiuej by the House I I . - i wa, oue appropriating uoc,tssj ior a I Clval staliou at IVarl Harbor, Hawaii. A limited free trude bill was introduced b. 1 ou uy Mr. nuuer or Aew I It provides for the placing on the free I .. - , ... ... . mtld ,,, . . i ei.ja ,ol,nies cheaper than in the l'uife.1 f states. T,lt- s,.niUl. ,.uuiiruied the nomiiiat imi A n.vi.i .lvn. Hill to be ambnsso.l ..- to Gerniauv. Spencer F. Eddy to be min ister to the Argentine Republic, and Ar thur M. Ileaupr of Illinois to be mini-, I ft to the Neilii'iian.U.