NE0RA3KA NEW3 AND NOTES. llama of Intereat Takon From Hero and Thero Over the State. The Midwest Life. Tho Midwest Life Insurance com pany is an old lino lnsurango com pany organized under the laVB of the state of. Nobroskn whoso homo office Is located at Lincoln. Its premium rates are n8 low as thoso of caBtern companies and tho provisions of Us policies are fnlr and reasonable. All tho Investments of The Midwest Life aro mndo In Ne braska securities and tho money paid to it for premiums Is thereby kept hi tho state. Practical and experienced llfo insurance men avo back of Tho Midwest Life, it will bo threo years old Jn May next and has ovor $1,500, 000 of Insurance in force. The Midwest Llfo has plenty of ter ritory In Nebraska for good, active and capable agents who wish to tnke tip the work of soliciting llfo insur nnco either on full or part time. Lib eral commissions uro paid. For ad ditional Information wrlto to N. Z. Snell, President, Lincoln. A noteworthy occasion to the. Gor man Luthoran church at Tobias was the dedication on Sundny of their new pipe organ. Preliminary stops for tho opening of an interurban railway lino botwoon Sioux City and Hnrtingjtou, Neb., have been takon by Sioux City and Nebraska business men. George Warren, a leading -citizen and a democratic leader of Jbhnson county, was found dead in bin room, evidently having passed away ton or twolvo hours before of heart trouble. Tho city of Lincoln has won its suit for dollar gas. William and Charles Dockon, broth ers, between the ages of 25 and 30 years, wcro arrested in Sioux City on tho chargo of robbery" and brought back to Pender to bo given a trial. They nro accused of robbing Sydnoy Graves of $400. When arrested thoy had $165 on their person. Noal Bryan of Otoo county pur chased soven head of mules from Charles O'Brien on tho east sldo of tho river, and was sho-wlng a team of them on tho streets in Nebraska City when an nutomobllo frightened ono of the mules so that It roared up and. fell ovor dead. John, tho 15-year-old son of Chris Coffoy. ticket agent for tho Burling ton railway, Nebraska City, accident ally shot himself while out duck hunting in a boat. Ho was getting nut of the boat and pulled tho gun toward hlra. He died almost In stantly. Wllllnm L. Gottle, son of W. G. Gettlo, arrived in Humboldt from Washington, D. C, having boon honor ably discharged on tho 12th as first class electrician on the cruiser May flower, after a servlco of four years in the navy. Mr. Gettlo at onco re-, enlisted, and is home on a thirty days' furlough to visit IiIb parents. Louis Lnrscn, living ono mllo east of Kennard, mot with a very serious accident while hoisting hay into tho barn with a team and hay fork. Ho was walking behind tho doubletree, when a tug broke and the ond of tho. singletree struck him a terrlilc blow in tho stomnch. Ho is still alive, but no hopes nro entertained for Mb re covery. "We, the Jury, find for the plaintiff and assess her damages at $4,2S'3.75." Thla was the verdict of tho jury in tho suit or Lena Margaret Lilllo against tho Modern Woodmen of America to recover a $3,000 policy on tho life of her husband, Harvey M. Llllle. Tho Bult had been fought be cause of the allegation that Mrs. Lll lle was tho causo of her husband's death. Hov. Georgo J. Glauber, rector of the Catholic church at Hartlngton, died of paralysis at tho age of 55. Born In Buffalo, ho was educated at St. Joseph's college there and St. Jo romo's at Berlin, Canada, and gradu ated in theology at Niagara univer sity. In 1877 ho wan ordained by Bishop Ryan. The next year ho waa appointed to Lincoln and had charge also of missions In tho southwest of tho stato, building churches at Hast ings, Orleans, Whcatloy and Falrllold. Daniel Ducello, an old resident ranchman living In tho North Platto valley, waB arrested charged with ma liciously poisoning tho livo stock of Charles Henry, his neighbor. Tho wholconlo killing of Henry's property was reported two weoks ago, and Sheriff Beal haB boon keeping gunrds on watch for further acts, Ducollo was caught In tho act of placing snlt mixed with parls green and a sack of alfalfa hay dampened and sprin kled thoroughly with parls green in Henry's pasture Beatrlco bloodhounds did effoctivo work in trailing down tho murdororB of William Dillon, nonr Oxford. Tho dogs took up the trail, which was Bovcral days old, and as, a result two boys, Georgo Crltzer and Ben Hod dendorff, were arrostcd and have con fessed to tho crime. According to their story, Heddondorff did tho shooting, and in tho division of tho plunder Crltzer secured only $20 and a watch for his share of tho resultB of the crime. Tho man killed llvod alono on hlB farm. Word was received lu Tocumseh that Bon, tho 4-yonr-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Vanlcer of Sheridan, Wyo,, hud been drowned. Tho par ents formerly resided In Nebraska. Mr. and Mm M. M. Folk of Beat rice aro tho parents of triplets, threo boys, born last week. Tho babies are healthy and w61l formed and weigh 8, 7 and C pounds, respectively. The talent for tho 1009 Falrbury Chautauqua has tAl beon booked, and includes some of the strongest num bers tho local program has ovor em braced. Tho dates of tho assembly this year are Augaet 13 to 23. S-, mfiZ'MW W ' I tl.esnndfor yms w -g. by Edward B. Claris ASIIIN'GTON. In the last year or two congress has Shown a disposition to be generous to the army Among tho other measures passed with a special view to tho decrcnHlng of the number of desertions wnB ono which increased materially tho pay of en llBted men. The non-commlssloncd ofllcers particu larly were well treated by tho bill, for It was tho Intention to make army life so attractive for the scrgeantH and tho corpornls thnt thoy would bo willing to rc-enllst. Then again tho amount of pay glvon tho "non-coms" was Intended to act. as an Incentive 'to tho prlvntes to bohavo themselves well and to Btay In tho sorvlco bo that in time thoy might secure pro motion. Thero Is un army post at FortMycr close to Arlington, tho na tlonnl ectnotery just across tho Potomac from tho capital. A good urn r mmm&mwwBmimammmmm bibb LBaP DBmHBbk iiHrWf ivwH bbbbTwBBBp '.jbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb'bmb? a la 'Jbbbbbbbbb LjbbbT 'Br1iffBBBBBBflBBBBMMBBBBi'M THEL PYRAMID . JDP1JLL us. Holding hands wo crdwlcd dig ging our free hands a n d our knees In to tho ground until wo reached a point whoro tho w a v o b Btoppod our progress. "Thence wo turned by tho Hank a n d tolled along tho enttro length of tho scntry'B boat, but no sentry could wo find. I raised my volco and shouted. Tho man within two foot of mo did not know that I had IBaKIBI snuffor and toro his "Springfield" from his hand. ' Then tho garbage barrel wbb removed and tho meruit was threatened with death if ho made an outcry. Ho was forced to march nt tho bayonet's point to tho Blioro of tho lslnnd nnd then to run ovor the ice toward tho main land with IiIb former prisoners nt his hcols. When tho deserters and their victim nrrlvod nonr the New Hochello shore a nolo was chipped In tho lco by means of tho bayonet nnd tho rlllo was dropped thrttugli into tho waters of tho sound. Then tho recruit was told that If ho chose ho might roturn to tho garrison. Ho told Ms former charges thnt he preferred to throw In his lot with them, for If ho went back ho would bo cortnln to get a heavy doso of tho guardhouso for neglect of duty in suffering his prisonors to escape, and for tho loss of govern ment property In the shape of tho Springfield rlflo which was now nt tho bottom of tho BOtlUd. ' Tho deserters told Uio recruit thnt ho could OBI TRAINING to lie down . f rr,:. , :xmr&m many old soldiers are stationed at Fort Myer, men who have enlisted and rc-cnllslod until the sleeves of their dross coats are pretty well covered with the BtrlpeB marking tholr years of service. These old soldiers tell many stories of the old days when the army life was not as pleasant as it ia to-day and whon tho recruit's lot was far from a happy one. in thoso old days desertions wero many and some of tho EtoricH which the veteran regulars toll today of the tlmo when they wore recruits letB ono know readily enough why some men under tho old conditions did not care to follow the ling. Here Is ono Btory of recruit llfo In the army 20 years ago that Is rewritten with no changes of fact and with only a littlo change of lan guage from tho way that an old soldier told It: "In tho winter of 1888 I was stationed at David's island, Now York hnrbor, a recruiting rendezvous of the nrmy, Thero wore about 800 newly enlisted ones stationed there at that time. Tho Island is a lltllo affair lying fairly low In the water and without any protection from tho utorms which blow in from tho oast through Long Island sound. "Janunry nnd February, 18SS, wore months of sunshine, nnd Dowers wero peeping on tho stiuny sldo of thlngB before anyone could guess whether March was to roar In like tho Hon or to bleat liko tho lamb. Karly In tho second week of thnt March month Now York was over whelmed by a tempest of wind nnd snow. It was In that storm that Kohcoo Conkllug met with tho exposure which caused tho Illness leading to IiIb death In a few days. It was tho worst storm known to tho history of tho .east ern country. Tho Now Yorkers, however, did not experience its full fury, for their buildings gave them shelter. "it was loft for a few recruits of tho United States army, tho inon on gunrd, to boar tho brunt of tho blizzard and to face tlfo elements that gave them battle. On the night of March 11 the storm broke. At nine o'clock tho sky over tho Bound was unclouded, and there was not a whisper of wind over the water. Within ten minutes the black clouds had banked up, and in unother ten minutes thoy wero Blinking out their burden of snow, whllo tho wind which had sprung to Its full strength almost without warning, was roaring down the sound from the Atlnntlc. At midnight thero were great drifts of biiow against every obstacle whlph offered the least resistance to tho wind. Out of doors speech was Impossible for tho blasts tore tho words from oiio'b Hps and smothered them with their Jiowllngs. "On thnt night I was on guard as corporal 3f the first relief. Tho sergeant of tho guard i fow moments utter midnight stopped from tho doorway of the guardhouso and was swept trom hlu foot by tho wind. He saw what a ter rible night wub ahead of us, had already come to us in fact, and ho Bent n man to the quar tern or tho ofllcor of tho tiny to ask permission to take In tho outlying Bontlnols or to glvo or ders to thorn to sock such shelter us they couid find. Tho ofllcor of the day's quarters were sur rounded with heavy evergreen trees und tho il ofllcor, looking out, did not comprehendhow terrific tho storm really was, and so word was passed that tho clrtUn of scntlnols should not bo broken. "At ono o'clock my guard relief wns ordored out to relievo the men on post. No man who wns on that Is land thnt night hits In IiIb keeping words Btrong enough to descrlbo tho aw fill fury of that eastern gale. Tho combined thun ders of 20 mountain storms could not cqnnl tho noise of the roaring of tho waves as they pounded tho shore. ThoMvInd nddeil Its bellow ing to the uproar and ItB strength almost took awny tho powers of motion and of speech. "The relief started from tho guardhouse. No man through tho darkness brought by night and tho tempest could soo tho outline or his nenrost follow. Tho whltoness of tho snow would have rolloved tho blncknesB hnd not the lashing of the elements blinded tho vision. 1 ordered the men to unfix bnyonots because of tho danger of cutting ono another, nnd I gavo tho ortlor passing from ono mnu to tho other and fairly bellowing It Into tholr onrs. Tlion tho order wns given to 'securo arms' and to clasp hands. It wns only by Uio handclnBp thnt ono man could toll thnt ho had a com panion. "Into tho tooth of tho tempest wo edged our way. Twice within GO yardB or tho gunrd house tho little Bqund was thrown from Its feet. All sonso of direction wns lost and noth ing but n collision with ono of tho low-lylng bnrruckB buildings aftor ten minutes' tolling progress gavo tho littlo command knowledgo of its whereabouts. A half frozen sontlnol whoso post luckily was under tho loo of the barracks, wau relieved and took his placo at tho roar of tho hand-clasping column. "The hospital of tho gnrrison stnnds, or did stnnd at that tlmo, at the extrenio cast ond of the Island. Hack of It nlon,; tho stretch of bench runs a sentry's post. A man walking thero and looking strnlght eastward finds no land upon which his eye mny rest. That night the lashing fury of the waves was spent main ly on thnt lonely sentry beach. Tho first re lief managed to roach tho front or the hospital . which gavo some protection. I ordered all the innn oxcept the ono who was to rollovo tho sentry on the bench to huddle under the piazza while I took tho rollovlng recruit to find tho man on post. "Wo roundeJ the ond or tho hospital. Tho blast throw us down. Tho wind was tnnrlng down tho Bound nnd tho salt spray and tho snow commingled dnshod Into 0ir faces. Wo dragged our rlllos und edged our way through n wnlTof wind. A few foot r pi ogross nnd tho blast ugaln threw our feet fiom under 8. I mhm m m HMM RBBBJl locaaDB aai uttered a word. Back ovor tho Band wo went through tho howling and tho lashing. Wo lost our bcnrlngs nnd ran Into an obstruction. I traced Ub outline nnd know what It was. It was tho hospital niorguo, a wooden structuro not more thun 15 root square. Wo crawled around It until wo hnd reached tho west sldo, whoro the shelter gavo us breath; from tho doorwny of tho morgue ctuno a challenge that oven tho uolso of tho Btorm could not smoth er 'Who comes thero?' "The niiBwer, 'Holler,' wub yelled hack by two voices la unison, and we crawled into the dead houso. There, standing guard lu the growsonio pinto, was a colored lad, only four weoks a soldlor, and within touch of his hand, resting on Ha zinc blor, was tho corpse or a man. "Driven by tho Btorm to seek sholtor, that black recruit, rather than leave his post to got tho protection afforded by the hospital, had chosen In tho blackness of midnight, nnd with wind nnd wave raging without, to tako up his watch by tho dead, becauso tho placo whore tho body lay wns on IiIb poBt, which ho wnB under orders not to desert." Two army deserters convlncod a certain raw recruit thut thero wan something more than words In tho saying ho had onco heard to tho effect that republics always nro ungrnte fill. It fell on this wise: Tho recruit had marched on gunrd for tho first tlmo. Tho sergeant In chnrgo turned two prisonors ovor to him with Instructions to guard them whllo they drove n mulo tenm nnd collected tho garbage from the barrolfi In tho ronr of tho qunrtcrs. It was tho dead of winter, and for the first tlmo In years tho 'lanncl between David's lslnnd nnd the town, i.f Now Itochelle wns frozen ovor. The recruit plodded along nftcr his prisonors, but. being green to such work, he kept closo at their heels lnstond or trailing along nt a dis tance of llvn paces as he should havo done. Guard and prisonors reached a point near tho shoro directly In the rear of tho commanding ofllcer's quarters. Thoru one of tho douortors soueil an empty garbngo barrel and nn oppor tunity nt the ennio Instant. He threw tho bar rel over tho sentinel's head like a candle como with them ir ho chose, and they started for n saloon In tho outskirts of tho town, a place known to them, thero to wait until It was time to go under cover to the dopot to tulto a train which mndo no stop for many miles beyond tho plnco of boarding. About an hour before tho train was duo tho recruit told tho deserters that ho had "weak ened" nnd that ho would go-hack to tho Island to "tako his medicine." Thoy offered no ob jection und their compuulon started for the shore whllo thoy took a back roud to tho do pot. The recruit hnd soldler-maklng stuff lu him, Ho hnd been maturing a plan all tho tlmo thnt ho had been In tho Biiloon. Tho dosortorfi onco out of sight, ho mndo for a farm house, told his story hurriedly, secured a horse and rodo at ii cavalry pace for a hamlet a row mlloB east or Now Hochello. Ho wub afraid to go to tho depot to which the deserters had gono becnuso ho feared that thoy would see him and, suspect ing Ills motlvo, would tako to tho woods. At. tho littlo vlllago to which he had gono headlong on his horBO, he secured tho servlccB of a cotiBtnblo readily onough ror thoro was u reward ror tho nrroBt of desortors and by telling his story nnd by threatening tho station mnstor with all tho poualtlcs posslblo or Inflic tion by tho federal government, tho recruit In duced him to flag tho train. Tho deserters wcro caught, handcuffed and sent back to tho lslnnd. Tho board deliberated long If not wlsoly, and finally renched tho conclusion that tho coun try's treasury could not well hour tho burden of the loss or the mouoy represented by tho price of ono rlflo, nnd so It wns docrcod that the oobI or tho weapon should bo takon out of the pny of tho recruit who hud dono his duty by tho govornmont nnd hnd showed pluck nnd undorstuiidlng, oven If ho hnd lost a rifle. Thoro was a dlBgustod young soldlor on Da vid's lslnnd. He was not made of the stuff of desortors, but desort ho did. Tho channel was Btlll frozen and tho morning nftcr ho leu rued of the order stopping his pay thero was one soldier less to answer "Horo," at reveille roll call.