THE NORTH PLATTE 8EMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE. r FROM MANY POINTS EVENTS OF THE DAY HELD TO A FEW LINES. LATE EVENTS BOILED Personal, Political, Foreign and Other Intelligence Interesting to the General Header!. WASHINGTON. A piohlbltion utnondmont to tho constitution lias been offered In tlio icnafc. Tho president Is studying tho quos Hon of government ownership of tele- graphs mid telephones. Representative Kinkcnd of Now Jor ney has Introduced a hilt to mako moiinUiin laurel tho national flowor. . - Pnymastcr General Cowlo has told n commlttco It would require $7,71.'!,' 954 to feed the enlisted men of tho navy tho coming year. Tho house has passed the hill to ap propriate ono year's salary of $14,000 to tho widow of Lloutonant David D. Galllard, Panama canal comflsslonor. Representative ForUnoy of Michi gan has Introduced a bill to appro priate $2,000 each for portraits of Spoaker Clark and former Speaker Cannon. Chief Forester Graves has asked for an additional appropriation of $140,000 for extra Tangors for tho Bummor months when forest fires are prevalent. The avorugo pay of every man, wo man and child In tho United States who works for wagos or a salary will this yoar ho closo to $610. In 1900 the avorago pay was only $479, and thirty years boforo that, but $370. iRoprcflontatlvo Steoncrson of Min nesota, beforo intorstuto commerco commltteo, urged legislation to pro hibit postal transmission of newspa pers and periodicals publishing adver tisements of falsely represented arti cles. Postmaster General Burleson's pro posals to incrcaso tho weight limits of pnrcol post packages in tho first nd second zoiiob from twonty to fifty pounds, to admit books to tho parcel post and to reduco rates In tho third, fourth, fifth and slzth zonos wcro ap proved by tho lntcrstato coiuniorco Commission. . In order to facllltato tho handling of bulky parcols during tho holiday sea son, Fourth Assistant Postmaster Gen eral Elnkqsloo authorized postmasters jit second claBS postofllccs, hnvtng both city and rural dollvory service to uso rural carriers In tho delivery of pnrcol post mall within city limits wherever possible. Secretary of War Garrison told tho house committee1 on military affairs that tho total authorized strength of tho army was 85,000 against n total population of 100,000,000 pcoplo under tho Amorlcan flag, and that ho could not see how tho government could got along with less than that number of soldiers In times of peace. Amendments to tho Interstate com merce law, proparod by tho Llvo Stock exchaugo of Kim bub City, nftor con sultation with othor similar bodies, woro proposed by tho houso of repre sentatives by Hoprosontatlvo Bore land or Missouri. Thoy would make It unlawful for railroads to limit tho tlmo for filing claims for llvo stock mid have United States courts tako Jurisdiction of Interstate commerce caBos only where $3,000 or more wub claimed. DOMESTIC. Now York hnB bought and will main tain as a musoum of relics of tho poot tho cottage in that city onco tho homo of Edgar Allen Poo. In ordor to cater to his readers, who are of many different nationali ties A. H, 8onko, editor of tho Slavish. Dally in Gary, Ind., Is planning to publish it In six different languages. The Brazos flood, tho crest of which wns passing Columbia, In Brazonla county, threatened to swoop 300 rof fugoea who had found smelter In box cars, out Into tho Gulf of Mexico. Thoy wore saved from that peril by u spe clal train uont from hero which re moved them to safety. , Ben F. Moffatt, a proiuotor of Chi cago was lined $1,000 and sentenced to ono yoar and a day In tho federal prison at Leavenworth, Kan., by tho United Statos dlBtrlct court at St. Louis. Bankors of Nebraska and other liUBtneoB Interests that aro giving their Biipport to tho propaganda for better agricultural methods in Nobras ka, will try to raise $i!G,000 a year for two years to help puy tho expenses of farm demonstrators In countloB wolcomlng thou Cruelty to anlmalB by vlvlsoctors mid needless infliction of pain in any other form woro denounced nt tho opening session at Washington of the International Anti-Vivisection and Animal Protectlvo congress. Denver is debating tho appointment of policewomen. Approximately 333,000 pcoplo are employed In tho cotton, wood and silk Industries In this country. Adoption of resolutions calling upon congress to appoint n joint commltteo to Investigate vivisection and various othor forms of cruelty to animals brought to a conclusion the nnnunl meeting of tho International Antl-Vlv-(section and Animal Protection con gress. Tho eighteenth minimi convontlon of the Grain Dealer's National asso ciation will be held In Kansns City, Mo., In October, 1914. The association Includes In Ita membership representa tive grain dealers of Canada and somo of tho South American republics. There nro now about forty "psycho logical clinics" In tho United States, according to Dr. J. E. Wallln of tho Unlverslly of Pittsburgh. Tho first of such clinics, for tho purpose of Htudylng anil classifying montally un usual children, wns established in the Unlvorslty of Pennsylvania In 1898. Vesting of authority to pass on tho Isbuo of railway securities In tho fed eral Interstate Commerce commission, rather than In Btato commissions, wns urged as a means of restoring finan cial health to railways by Governor .lames M. Cox of Ohio In an nddreBO at New York recently beforo tho Hall way Business association. A whirlwind of fire, bursting from a partly drilled oil well, blew five drillers Into tho nlr at Taft, Cal., and scattered their tortured bodies about llko chips. All aro In a hospital, criti cally Injured. F. L. Brlttlan tho man worst hurt, lias no ears or linger nails and htu face mid hands nro frightfully seared. Officers' and directors of the Rose vlllo Trust company of Newark, N. J., wrecked to tho extent of $200,000, and oven depositors who knowingly and persistently overdrew their ac counts, may be Indicted by tho Essex county grand jury under the ruling by Chief Justice Gitmmero of the state Bupremo court. WarrantB for tho arrest of tho Uni ted Mlno Workers' ofllcers and mem bors Indicted by tho federal grand Jury at Pueblo have been placed In tho hands of United States Deputy Marshal Dowey C. Bailey at Denver. Mr. Bailey said that tho warrants would ho served aa soon as the usual clerical formalities wore gone through. Tho city of Denver has joined with tho street railway company and retail coal dealers to relievo a Ithrcatened coal famine. A section of the com pany's frnnchlso forbidding It from carrying freight was rescinded und coal will ho carried on flat cars to central depots In tho resldenco dis tricts, from where citizens will haul It to their homes. Labor organizations aro allowed to oxlst In tho United States, yet tho right of coalition, union and free Bpooch, Is denied them under tho Sherman nntl-trust law Samuel Gom pors, president of tho American Fed oration of Labor, asserted In an ad drosB at tho fourteenth annual meet lng of tho National Civic federation In Now York. More than one-fourth of thoso parolod convicts from San Quontln and FolBom prisons, who ahould now bo reporting, break tholr paroles and oscnpo, according to prison Toports mndo to the governor of California. Prisoners totaling 807, released bn parole, should now bo reporting to the parolo officers. Of these, however, 21W have run away. Jamos E. Flood and John B. Davis, presldont and treasurer respectively of tho Flood & Vanwlrt Engineering and Construction Co., of Hudson Falls, N. Y tostllled nt District At tornoy Whitman's John Doe inquiry Into Now York Stato highway graft, that their corporation had given $4,G00 to tho democratic stato com mittee because thoy feared that con tracts tho concorn had with tho State Highway commission' and tho Canul board would bo hold up. FORFIGN. Seventy per cent of tho world's cork Ib produced in Kpnin and Portu gal. According to tho host Informat tlon obtnlnablo thoro wero produced In Spain during 1912 approximately 8,000 short toiiB of cork. Moxlcan Interest In Washington Centered upon tho military opbrat'ons. Confldontlnl roporta indlcato tho lc toiioiis miirch southward of tho con stitutionalist army has received a check tho extent of which it not known. Plantation rubboi experiments In the Island of Mindanao show encour aging results, while wrnpplnga of 4 and 5-year-old trees on Bnalllan Island, adjoining Mindanao, compare favor ably with results In North Borneo. Franz Bachmnnn, a blacksmith who still works In tho locomotive shops at CasHol. Germany. Iuib boon o.lmnnn to fill tho loading bass rolo In "The Magic Flute" to bo given at tho Court opora houso on Deconibor 16. A contract for tho construction of C.000 mllos of rallwuy by a Belgian syndicate was finally approved in Mexico City by tho chambor of dopu-. tlcB. it ib expected tho act will bo ratified by tho senuto noxt wook. Congress has taken no action as yot on tho presidential oloctlon. BILL NEARLY READY EXPECT TO VOTE ON CURRENCY MEA8URE THIS WEEK. MAY BE SIGNED CHBIST1S Belief Among Democrat Leaders That An Early Compromise Can Be Effected. ' Washington. Tho long Btrugglc ovor currency reform is expected to como to an end In tho sepalo noxt Saturday. Administration IcaderB arc confident that an agreement can bo reached that will permit a final vote In tho senate by G o'clock Saturday. Republican senators probably will como to nn understanding with tho majority leaders. The democrats are naxlous to closo gcnoral dobate and dovoto tho remainder of tho tlmo to tho consideration of amendments to tho bill. If tho final vote can bo tak en Saturday, It Is believed tho differ ences between senate and house can bo adjusted and tho bill sent to Pre sident Wilson for signature beforo Christmas. Republican critics of tho measure probably will demand somo changes In It as a condition to giving their consent to a definite tlmo for a voto. It Is considered doubtful whether the guarantee of bank deposits to which many republicans object can be tak en out of tho measure, but a strong effort will bo made to ollmlnato that provision which authorizes the re demption of tho proposed now treas ury notes cither In gold or "lawful monoy." Many New Questions. Important cbanges In tho railroad laws, a comprehensive study of the trust question and a reopening of tho fight over a literacy test for Immi grants, are dividing attention of tho house with tho now economy program that has been launched "by the econo my conforenco" of the house loaders. Speaker Clark, Democratic Leader Underwood and Chairman Fitzgerald ol tho appropriations committee, sponsors for this latter movement, have called a second conference for noxt Saturday to tako anothor ac counting of tho situation and ascer tain what progress has been made In reducing tho proposed appropriations for the year. Increase In Exports. Washington. Foodstuffff3 coming in freo of duty under the now tariff bill ore bwoIUrs the total of imports Into the United States. Increase in exports nnd decrease in imports for the first four months of tho present fiscal year ub compared with the samo period last year was shown In statistics mado public by tho Depart ment of Commerco. Exports this year amounted In value to $838,904,843 against $771,011,792 for the first four months last year. Tho Imports fig ures wero $580,G77,0C2 against $020,230,987. "Thoro can bo no inference drawn from these hard facts," said Secre tary Rcdfleld, "that Is not both en cournging and complimentary to American Industry. Thoro haa boon no flooding of our markets with tho alleged cheap wares of Europe." $15,000 Taken From Postoffice. Wallace, Ida. Threo packages of registered mall containing $5,000 each and about $2000 in postofflco funds woro takon from tho safe of the local postofflco by burglars, no trace of wh6m has yot boon discovered. Tho $15,000 In currency had been con signed by a Spokano bank to n bank at Mullan to meot mining payrolls In tho Mullan district. Tho rcftibors aro bolloved to havo had Information of tho mailing of tho currency from Spo kane. Crete Annexed by Greece. Canoa, Croto. Tho formal annex ation of tho iBland of Crete to Greece has boon carried out with Imposing coremoulal, King Constantino person nil ran up tho Hellenic flag over tho fort People flocked to tho capital from all parts of tho Island and from Greoco and tumultuoiiBly greeted the king, tho crown prlnco, Premier Vol zeloB and tho othor ministers. Will Stop All Immigration. London. A dispatch to the Times from Toklo says tho Japanoso gov ernment has boon notified that Cana da intends to prohibit all immigration to British Columbia for three months, l'ho correspondent adds that as thoro was no discrimination ngalnBt ori entals Japan cannot object. Taking Troops From China. Poking. Tho Russian government has proposed tho withdrawal of all foreign troops from Peking and the entire provlnco of Clil-Ll, China, In eluding tho legation guards. "Mona Lisa" Found. Floronco, Italy-"Mona Lisa," Leonardo Da Vlnci'B great painting, which wub Btolon from tho Louvre In PnrlH more than two years ago. has boon found. It Is now In tho hands of tho Italian authorities and will be re turned to Franco. The 1913-14 Cotton Yield. Washington. Tho total production or cotton In tho United States for tho season 19.12-14 will amount to 13,677.000 bales of BOO pounds gross wolght.i not Including Untors. NEWS FROM STATE HOUSE Just 407 corporations of the Mate have reftiBed to dig up their taxes under the provisions of the Potts law. J. N. Miller, foremnn of the stato fish hatcheries at North Bend, died late last weok as the result of mi ac cident. Ho was G7 yonrs' old and left distant relatives in Ohio and Missouri. Ills body waB taken to the latter state for burial. Members of the newly selected board of secretaries of the stato board of veterinary medicine met in Lincoln Inst week to prepare for their work. Strict accounting of the secretnrlnl doings will hereafter be kept by the main board. Tho latter body for two years or more past has not known of tho existence of Its underbody. A total of 3,000 stnlllons and jacks have been Inspected by tho registra tion board Blnco the new law became operative. Of this number less than 3 per cent have been found defective. About 1,000 animals have been de ported from the state In tho past year and a half becauso of tho stringent provisions of tho Inspection law. Pcnltentlnry officials have dropped tho practice of reporting religious classification of convicts to the gov ernor and In other reports required by law to be made by them. Thus this long-continued part of the report goes into the junk heap alons with tho practice of giving a classification of the politics of the convicts placed behind tho somber, stone walls of the Institution. Professor Condra of tho conserva tion commission has Returned from Scotts Bluffs county, where ho has been taking motion pictures of the sugar beet industry In the interests of tho stato conservation commission. It Is tho plan of the commission to secure pictures of every industry of any account in Nebraska and to this end Mr. Qondra has been making fre quent trips about the state. Primary day next year comes on Au gust 18, the last day for filing for nomination Is July 20, nnd the gen eral election day falls on November 3, according to data set out In an election law analysis worked out by Secretary of Stato Walt. Tho Infor mation Is for Inquiring, ambitious men who are hatching up plans for next year's battles and who want to know when they have to announce themselves. School moneys belonging to coun ties of tho state amount to $325,078, according to a report just made by the state treasurer. These are classed as follows: School taxes, 32; interest on schopl and saline lands sold, $49,453; interest on school and saline lands leased, $84,G37; Interest on bonds, $184,055; interest on warrants, $1,363, and proceeds from tho game and fish commission licenses, $3,53G. Cost of operating the stato superin tendent's office totaled $31,079 during the half year, May 1 to December 1, according to a report tiled by J. E. Dolzell. Normal training in the high schools coBt $17,394; junior normal work, $6,997; office expenses, $9,556, and the board of Inspectors, $501. To foot these bills required a draft of $9,686 on tho cash fund of the office. Tho balance of tho expense came from special funds. Tho third best dairy judge among the students of American agricultural colleges 1b tho record held by H. N. Thomas, a Nebraska farm boy from University Place. The contest oc curred at tho national dairy show at Chicago this fall, when forty-eight students picked as the best dairy judges in the agricultural colleges In sixteen Important dairy states met to contest for prizes. The ontlro Ne braska team ranked fourth In tho list. Omaha and St. Louis police officers, or those who captured John Jones, alleged murderer of Samo Leono of Omaha, will not obtain tho $200 re ward offered by tho governor for tho apprehension of the person who com mitted tho crime. The executive has announced that ho would not approve a voucher for tho amount, as he bo lloved that tho officers know In ad vance where the man was. "Milking tho state treasury along this lino nhall stop, If I can bring It about," the governor said. Dr. W. D. BIgolow of Washington, D. C, representing tho Nationnl Can ncrs' association, was an official vis itor nt tho Nebraska food commission pfflccs last week. He Is Investigating methods in tho different Btatos of handling canned goods nnd of dispos ing of cases where spoiled cans are taken by food Inspectors. Tho Farmers' Co-oporatlvo Elevator company of Nebraska City has been .ncorporated with tho secretary of date with a $10,000 capitalization and shares worth $25 apiece. Total rec61pts of tho university dur ing the past six mouths were $132,079, Recording to tho semiannual report mado to the state treasurer by Chan ;ollor Avery. Tho largest single Item was $30,973.14 for hog cholera Berum, a product which Is mado and sold to farmers of tho stato at actual cost of production. Railway Commissioner II. T. Clarke, Jr.. hns gone to Excelsior Springs, Mo., where ho will tako a brief rest. Dur ing tho past weok ho has been unable to devote his full tlmo to his duties. FHE FAIRJUNABERS FARMERS WILL MANUFACTURE DENATURED ALCOHOL. GOSSIP FROM STATE CAPITAL Items of Interest Gathered from Re- liable Sources and Presented In Condensed Form to Our Readers. The program outlined by .V. II. Bmlth of Seward, secretary and treasurer of tho Nebraska Association of Fair Managers, has been an nounced. The gathering will be held durlnq the week of Organized Agricul ture, January 19 to 23. H. Mulenburg of Geneva will speak on tho "Rclatlou of Fair Officers to Horsemen." Honry Pickett of Wahoo will discuss "A Well Balanced Program." L. H. Cheney of Stockvlllo will give a paper on "Awarding Premiums'.'" "State Farm Exhibits at Fairs" will be tho theme of Prof. C. W. Pugsley'8 address. General discussions will follow theso addresses and papers, For several years gambling devices and all ques tionable amusements have been "cut out" by tho Nebraska state and county fairs, and a sharp lookout has been kept for progressive features. Consolidation Was Worth While. Consolidation of several state de partments, a move calculated to make for more efficiency In stato govern ment than tho primitive methods which have prevailed for many years, has been shown to bo worth while to the taxpayers. In the past year tho associated departments of food, drug, dairy, oil and weights and measures inspections have collected $15,000 more fees than under the old system and at the samo time have operated at a less outlay than under, the scheme of diffusing activities. Food anil oil Inspections for the year of 1912, un der separate departments, brought in fees to the amount of $69,100 while for the present year tho total has run up to $84,230. The November report of tho department shows that of tho $8,771 fees received, the oil division contributed $7,816. Inspections made Included 1G1 cream stations, 203 hotels and restaurants, 177 meat mar kets, 377 grocery stores, thirty milk wagons and dairies, most of them In Omaha, fourteen saloons, flfty-olght bakeries and forty-four confection eries. During tho month just past there wero 260 sanitary orders writ ten and 117 chemical analyses made by the stato chemist, A total of 1,994 weights and measures inspections were made, which brought in a total of $391 In fees. Wins Trip to Washington. Eighty-eight bushels of corn per acre, grown entirely by a boy, 1b not such a bad record for the dry season Just passed. Master Jess J. Correll of Cambridge, ago sixteen, la the boy, and ho lives In a western county, too. He left for Washington, December 8th. Twenty other boys In tho corn-growing contest grew over fifty bushels per acre, and these boys were from four teen different counties. Jess has won a total of $160 In prizes with his acre of corn this year. He won first In the Western district last year with a yield of 109 bushels. Walter Ptlug, age seventeen, of Sarpy county, has won first in tho Eastern district with a yield of eighty-four bushels. He has won a total of $60, and will make the trip to Washington with Jess Correll. The other prizes will bo announced at Organized Agriculture next January. Farmers to Make Denatured Alcohol. According to Information received by the stato board of agriculture, farmers in Arthur county aro prepar ing to prevent waste on the farms In that region by utilizing potatoes that cannot be marketed. Many of tho producers of Arthur county are far re moved from a suitable market. For this reason thousands of bushels of potatoes aro wasted each year. The farmers have conceived the Idea of manufacturing denatured alcohol from tho waste. Twenty-five farmers have banded themselves together to erect a denatured alcohol factory. A change has been mado In the denatured alco hol law and after January, 1914, farm ers are allowed the privilege of manu facturing the product from tho waste of the farm. Governor Feels "Frisky" as Ever. Governor Morohead stripped oft his coat and vest, rolled up his sleeves nnd skinned up a gymnasium climb ing pole, hand-over-hand, at tho Young Men's Christian absoclatlon at Lincoln, Thursday. No ono else In tho crowd could duplicate tho trick nnd there were several old athletes present. Including Superintendent R. V. Clark of tho Kearney Industrial school, Dr. Georo E. Condra of the university and Clarence Harmon, state food commissioner. The lattor three,, will pay for tho governor's dinner All Indications point to an Increased attendance In the winter course of the university bcIiooI of agriculture. This course is six weeks In length, begin ning January 6 and closing February 17. Many men of all ages tako advan tage of this short course every winter to gain new knowledge along agricul tural lines. Tho school of agriculture will offer lectures and demonstration work In soils, crops, farm machinery, farm motors, animal and dairy hus bandry, animal pathology, farm for estry, ontomology, plant physiology, horticulture and farm management BRIEF NEWS OF NEBRASKA The homo rule charter for Llncola was defeated. Stockvlllo suffered a disastrous Are Monday morning. Tho Omaha Woman's club has de clared a boycott on eggs. Tho Nebraska Stato Veterinary Medical association Is in session at Lincoln. Tho old Union State Bank building at Beatrice Is' being converted Into an eighty-room hotel. Over 1,000 birds -were entered for tho annual show of tho Dodgo County Poultry association. . Long Pine will hold a special elec tion to voto bonds for extending her waterworks system. Tho city council of Albion has au thorized the installation of a street nurber system for that place. A compressed air tank exploded at Omaha, killing Frank Krltz and seri ously Injuring several otliers. Fanners around Tobias have organ ized a Society of Equity, with a mem bership of forty on, tho charter. Tho bodv of Otto Guas. a Gorman farm hand 60 yenrs old, wns found flontlng In tho Blue river at Seward. Berg DurlnBky, a Russian, wnB elec trocuted when he went to turn on an electric light nt his homo at Norfolk. Tho Fremont Gun club has reorgan ized and leased acreage adjoining the Country club grounds, south of the city. J. E. Dennison, a Lyons plumber, was seriously burned by tho explosion of a gasoline soldering pot which he was using. Superintendent J. L. Fulk, who hat been at the head of tho Soward BchoolB for the past four years, bns resigned. Explosion of a tnnk of gasoline caused the destruction of the flue pounltry yards of Charles Bartz at Kearney. J. W. Bryant, president of an Omaha implement company, suicided by drowning in a cistern In the rear of "is home. Clyde Rolston sold ten acres of land adjoining Ainsworth for $200 per acre. This Is tho highest price ever paid for land there. Dr. J. W. E. K. Davis, aged 64. died suddenly on a street car while on his way, borne at Omaha. Death was caused by heart trouble. Clifford. Goff, a 16-year-old Gage county boy, raised 140 bushels of corn on five acre's of ground, and won a. handsome gold watch thereby. Miss Edith Llston of Fremont came near losing her life when she took a spoonful of iodine instead of the liquid she had been using to relieve a severe headache. The ladles of the Altar society of tho Catholic church at York have lust closed a very successful bazaar for the benefit of tho Ursullno Sisters school at thnt place. Tho public schools of Wayne closed during the funeral of J. W. Tombs, an old resident of that place, and whose daughter has for many years been the principal of thejilgh school there. Wlllard Butler, the 30-year-old son of tho old soldier, Jame3 Butler, whose body was found burled In the cellar of his home at Fremont, has been form ally charged with murder in the first degree. Dr. I. W. McEachron of Geneva was elected president; Dr. S. I. Alford of Lincoln, vice-president, and Dr. Carl Norden of Nebraska City, secretary treasurer of the veterinary associa tion at Its session just closed at Lin coln. Little Marie Murkadron, seven years old, and Joio Barnardl. the samo age, wero run down by an Omaha police department automobile. The boy escaped with a few cuts and bruises, but it Is expected tho girl will die. Seventy-elght boys In convention In Fremont Saturday and Sunday took the initial steps looking to -the forma tion of a permanent association of high school students, to hold annual conferences. Tho sessions closed with a meeting at tho Y. M. C. A. Sunday evening. Twelve-year-old Alice Bjorkman of Lincoln mny lost her eyesight as the result of a wound from a load pencil discharged from a toy spring gun. Forty-six yeats ago Joseph Minor came to Saline county and located on a homestead. Today he is living In a house constructed of lumber obtained from walnut trees which he planted -on his claim. Jesse Correll of Frontier county !s tho champion boy corn grower In Ne braska, according to tho decision or tho Judges in tho contest at tho agri cultural farm at Lincoln. He harvest ed eighty-eight bushels from one acre. Several cases of Incendiarism at Kearney have resulted In tho city council offering a $200 roward for the capture &f any one caught In tho net. Dan Heine of Beatrice is under ar rest charged with the theft of a lot or brass castings, on which it is alleged ho expected to realize money for tho purchase of Christmas gifts. Appearance of a case of smallpox at tho Lincoln city Jail caused three doctors to get busy at once and begin a vaccination crusade. Before It was concluded twenty of tho twenty-nine-prisoners wero given tho virus and re leased from confinement. An epidemic or hog cholera in the neighborhood of Fontanello in Wash ington county has caused tho farmors or that vicinity to lose sqveral hun dred head of hogs. While Evangelist Vawter was hold ing revival services at York, a short time ago, someono stole a rifle from him. Tho theft was traced to two boys, who confessed. After being pronounced dead by physicians at Omaha, Andrew Acker, a North Bond horso dealer, changed? his mind, got up from IiIb cat ami Btarted for home. Says ho gets that way often. .1MuAit 1 ''f f A hi 3