THE FRONTIER. PUBLISHEl> ITF8Y THURSDAY By • Tw Fmhim Pmwwq Co. O’NEILL, -> NEBRASKA. NEBRASKA. A rr.Ainm flro near Wallace destroyed * Considerable property. . Tiie business men of Hartley hare organized a new bank. A Slew paper called the Bimetallist has been started at Nebraska City. . Titikvks entered a Blair shoe store and carried away twenty-five pairs. IVavsk county has doubled the acre age of wheat as compared with last yea*'. • EvKnr connty in .Nebraska starts spring operations with plenty of moisture. A i.i, tramps stopping off at Wymore . are given a job on the street, where they can work out a fine for vagrancy. Officers have been running down a gang of hog thieves in Nemaha county. A number of arrests have been made. Ciiari.es If. Brown, a prominent lawyer of Omaha, died last week. He had served the public in many official . capacities. Rev.. Dr. Wright, pastor of. the ; Presbyterian church at Wayne, has re ceived a call from Hastings, to which he will- make a favorable response'. • Vai.i.kv county farmers are putting: in more grain this year tlian ever be: fore, and there has never been a brighter prospect for a bounteous bar* vest. JonN Dennis qf Hutton was attacked “by a Jersey bull and severely but not dangerously gored before he-' could break away. ■ A voitng son of Arthur Connor, who • lives southwest of North I’latte, . got tangled up in a harrow and had nia left leg broken between the hip-and knee. TDK prospects for a large attendance at the Fifth district Sunday school convention to be held ih Hickman May SO and. 21 are daily becoming .more favorable. • • Captain Johst Carmichael, govern ? meat land office inspector, 'While in specting the land office at O'Neill, re ceived ,a-telegram ^reqaeaU0? him to ' . send id his resignation to take effect April 20. . . Tint plant, subscription, list, good will and advertising contracts of the Linooln Evening News were sold un ' dfer mortgage and purchased by Heetqr H. Tyndale, the representative of the • bolder of the mortgage. Word was brought to Schuyler from .Shell Creek,, that Herman Loseke bad hanged himself. He was well known In Schuyler as One of the well r* to-do Loseke family and is not known . to have had troubles of any sort.' A mx-LKQGKD pig, which has been an -Object of considerable. curiosity at the _ 'farm of V. J. Thomas, two miles north ’ 1 of North Loup, and which grew for ' ' some time after Its birth, ‘died and was ;,r sent to the state university last week.; The elevator of James Bell of David City burned. Loss; *3,000, with *3,000 insurance. Whon discovered the flames Were, beyond control. Thfr firemen '• saved the adjacent office and a large . shed'of lumber. Little grain was in the elevator. • Farming will be carried on extent ; alvely on the Cody ranch,’ at North ■ 'Platte, this year. Manager Goodman has in ShO acres of wheat, barley and1 oats, and will plant 800 acres of corn. There are Over 1,000 acres of alfalfa growing on the ranch., j An order has been i%ceived by" the^ supreme court from the United States , supreme court demanding that the records in the c*se of- the Capital National took against the Coldwater National hank of Coldwater, Mich., he forwarded so that it may be ascer tain^ whether or not the claims in the above suit held by the Capital National hank before its failure were preferred claims. .. . J, N. Jenkins of Kearney has; sent more than fifty \yild geese, brants, cranes and other fowls of this section to Europe during the winter^ They are sent to superintendents of museums nnd parks, who are willing to pay a good price for good specimens of such’ birds as they want. The birds are shipped by express and so far Mr. Jen kins has lost but two or three birds en route by death. Will McDonald of North Platte-un earthed on his premises an old car tridge shell, a relie of the explosion of the government magazine which oc i l"1™1 dearly twenty-one years ago. This magazine stood on the block-mow occupied by Messrs. McDonald and « Hlack, and at, the time of the ex , plosion, which, was c&uscd by fire, there were stored in the building 150, 000 cartridges and 580 six-pound shells. *The stalk cutter is becoming. more noted for crippling and killing people, saya the Beaver Crossing Review, than any other machine ever Invented for use on the farm. The old fashioned reaper and mower occasionally clipped * finger, arm or leg for some care less person, but they could not be v compared with the stalk cutter for the number of Victims nor for the horrible mangling of them. The stalk cutter should be remodeled. A' apple pest seems to have reached Pawnee, says the Republican. Dr. Collins exhibited some bark taken from several of his best bearing apple trees one day’last-week, which ap peared to have been attacked by myriads of Insects so small as not to be seen with the naked eve. They bnrv themselves in the bark and twigs and cannot be destroyed. The doctor is of . “■* opinion that they are of the sa e ■pcciea prevalent on the Pacific coast. Th* Richenback land and trust com may Of Rising City has filed articles of Incorporation with the secretary of state. The capital stock of the corn may is 950.000, aad the business U to "5 baying, selling and mortgaging , of teal estate. The i noorporation is to ran thirty yams. 1 . N.' C. Bouy^, popularly known as Orandpo Bonk, Was killed by the extra ? flyer on thebaaifi crossing of the B. & It. in Rim wood. .The man flagging at ths crossing ran hs front of toe train ?2***fP did »ot seem to ■ fiWtlOe that the train was so near, -lie ! *•*»>»» «Uty feet, being Jcflicd instantly - , • -fc » t:*£i ARE HANGED TO ONE TREE BY A MOB. HAD MURDERED A FAMILY. —--- • ,JS Lynchers Alan Warn Negroes—Serenth Unn lllialnf nud Jdny Hava Shared the Fate of the Othera—Killed an Old Han and Two Qlrla and Burned the Uodlea '—Criminal News,. Houston, Texas, May 2. —For the murder of an old man in his cottage, a child and a woman in the first flush of young womanhood; the assault of two girls; the burning of the home of the victims, two of the tiddies. being consumed in the flames, six young ne groes were last night sent to their doom by the , hands of an infuriated inob of negroes, the victims also being negroes, at’Suhnyside, Walter county. .Last fall a gentleman from Bren liam was robbed of 805. Suspicion pointed to the fonr Thomas boys, and they-confessed'to having committed, the theft, saying they had given 830 of tiie money to Henry Daniels. Daniels spent the money and on Sunday even ing last the four Thomas boys, accord ing to _ their confession, decided to either collect tiieir 830 or kill Daniels. They carried out the latter part of .the programme. 1 ' Henry Daniels, nn o}d negro, 'lived in a little hut with his step-daughteri Marie, and a 7 -year-old child. Wednesday night the house was broken open, Marie Daniels and' the 7-year-old child were* assaulted and | old man Daniels -clubbed to death while' trying to pi-otect,''those in ills charge. Then old man Daniels and his stepdaughter were thrown’into ■the house and the child was thrown intp the well. The-house was set on 1 fire and the devils capable of such a .crime left, thinking that they had cov ered'their inhuman deed from the sight of the world.' ’ ; "The local .officers-went* to WQrk,witkj 'a will and were ably assisted by the best citizens of the neighborhood. Before night they went straight into the place .where the Thomas boys re sided, and one by one they were se-. cured. Fayette Khone, SI years old; Will Gates, 35 years old; Louis Thomas, 30 years old; Aaron Thomas, 13 years end; Jim Thomas, 14 years old; and Benny Thomas 18 years old, were placed under* arrest The last four are brothers. Later on Will Williams Was captured.; When taken; they were smeared with blood, and a bloody shirt was- found hidden in Richmond’s house. After the boys were confronted with the. evidence they acknowledged the crime, and laid the killing on Lewis, the old est .All the seven prisoners were ' under guard last night About 13 o'clock the guards were . overpowered by a strong body of men And the p.isoners taken toward the Brazos bottom north of here. A little later forty or fifty shots were fired #nd all wasqulot. j This morning, dangling from the limbs of a large oak tree,’ wpre found the bodies of six negroes,.'limp and lifeless. f Hundreds of people from all over the country are surging back and forth, but always with them one tree is the center of attraction. All of them are there except Williams’ and he is not to be found, but the shots probably ex plained 1; is absence. At a late hour the bodies were still lianging'from the tree. As far as can be learned, the-mob was composed of white and bluqk men,-with the colored .element largely predominating. IliMlnMa la Disappointing. Nbw Yobk, May 3.—R. G. Dunn & Co.’s Weekly Review of Ti-ade says: "In spite of the moderate improve ment in most of the great industries, business is disappointing. Expccta tions of a speedy end of the war In | Europe through Turkish victory have helped to depress grain. Demands of Austria and China have caused exports t of 8*-.!>oo,000 i gold, merchandise im | por^s are greatly Increased and final action , o£i,CopgrbSs on the revenue question Uemi more remote. The cot ton market has advanced a quarter ot a cent, owing mainly.to a speculative , Impulse Horn England '" A. I), Hubbard la dull, TorKKA, Kan.* May 3.—A. D. Hub bard of thla city, president of the state A. P. A., was arrested last night on the charge of embezzlement and lodged in the-county jail. Ho was re ceiver in the Snow-Hamilton printing litigation and as such' got away with about 910,000. THE MARKETS. Kansas City Grain and Live stack,. . Baftl Wheat—Na 2. 80.81c; No. Na 3. 77c: Jib. 4, 70c: rejected. 6ie , Spring Whfeat -Na 2, 8014c: No. 8. 75 ©77c; rejcted. 60c70c Soil Whe.il—No, 2. 98c: No, 8. 90@93c; Na 4. 80 83c rejectee 7.)©75c ’ Corn—Na 2. 28.; Na 3. 2214c: Na 4. SlVic: no grade, 20c. White corn—Na % 94c: Na A 23c No 4. 22c ,,°at*“Na..a- 19®IOc: Na 8. 185819 Na 4. 17c: Na 3 white. 22*c. Na A 22c; Na 4, 19c. . Bye—Na 2, 32e Na 8. 80c: Na 4. 27c. Bran—54c per cwt sacked tlmoth7- W50; Na 1. *8.50© I *>Na 2,87.00@8.00; clover, mixed. Na 2 . .IKb0:t7.®V: Na3,,6.00486.30; ytapde prairie • i9.00487.aO; Na 1. •aGO^ai);* M* Uj50; Nof 8. 6l.00©4-50i • ® .cattle/recelpia 132; catvrs ' A shipped. ‘ M>9? c^tUc- 3 calves. Thcfniaeket was , nominally steady. v, 1 .* Bogs—Receipts. 5.719; shipped. 1.524 The market opened strong and clc sed weak. The top sale was tS.90 and the fcelk of sales from 83.70 to 83.75. , I Sheep—Receipts. »92: shipped xone. The 1 Harket was nominally steady. ' CREEK VICTORY. ■moletukl'a tlrlcad*. Bepglm the Turks , "x , at Voleaywp t^th henry LoU. Athens, May 2.-^ A battle has been fought at VelestluZi between a Turkish force of 8,000 and General Smolenski’a brigade. The dispatoh states that the Turks were repulsed ivith enormous lossea General Smolensk! telegraphs that the Turks will be. unable to capture Pharsalos because the Greek position is strong and.the' morale of the Greek troops completely restored. At a cabinet council it was' decided that the minister of war. Colonel Tos ainados, and the minister of the in terior, M. Theotokis, should proceed to Pharsalos in order to ascertain the condition of the Greek forces there! Mr. Skouloudis, minister of foreign affairs, says: “If Greek honor can be retrieved by continuing the struggle, the government-will prosecute the campaign with unabated energy.' If the "condition Of the army, on. the other hand, would render further fighting unodvisable, the cabinet will undoubtedly refuse to bring fresh dis asters upon the. country by persisting in a foolhardy war. The new cabinet, like that of M. Delaynuis, is prepar ing to deiqand a rectification of the frontier fn accordance with the terms of the treaty of Berlin, and to'reeall Colonel Vassos from Crete, the mo ment the powers have guaranteed au tonomy after the departure of the Turks.” ,, New York, May 2.—A special to the World from Washington says: The terms of peace .which Turkey has of fered Greece bavS reached the Wash ington legations, They are as follows: The restoration of the boundary fixed bv the treaty of 1831, which gave to Turkey all of Thessaly, including its extensive sea coast; the evacuation by Greece of Prevesa and other points in the province of Epirus; the withdraw al of the Greek troops from Crete and the acceptance of the plan of autonomy offered the island by the porte and the payment of h. war indemnity large enough to cover the expense of the mobilizing of the Turkish troops.' London, ; May 2.—It is semi ofheially stated- that there is rfea bou to Deneve mat itinropean inter vention between Turkey and Greece in the present position of affairs is Regarded as wholly impracticable, poth Greece and Tuckey having re solved to continue thenar. The pow ers are thus obliged to stand aside until one of; the 'combatants £s finally' defeated- i f ,■ -;-1- '• i UtIim U still Champion. New York, May 2.’—George Lavlgne of Saginaw, Mich;, is still the light weight champion of the world. Last night, in the Broadway Athletic club; before 3,000 people, lie met and de feated Ed Connelly of St. Johns, N. B. The battle was fast and, furious, but at 'the end of the eleventh round La vlgne had Connelly fought to it stand still, after sending him down five times in succession with 'right swings 'on the head and jaw. * STr*. Loose Galls It a Carso. Topeka, Kan., May- 3.—Mrs. M. E. Lease, .the Kansas oratress, yisited Topeka yesterday and talked in ah in terview about the awfulness of the Oklahoma flood. It It Sirs. Lease' sees the hand of an angry God, and de clares that the curse of the Almighty rests on that land. - ■ ' Calhoun to Start For Cuba. 111.,’ May3. —Colonel W. J. Qalhoun, who lias accepted the mte ! sioq to Cuba to assist in the hearing of the Ruiz wUe, will leave Danville for Cuba on fie it t Sunday or Monday. He will go first to Washington to receive Ills instructions. . O’Brien Moor« Buys a Paper.* Charleston, W. Va., May 2.—The Daily and Weekly Gazette was sold to-day by M. W. Donnally to O’Brien Moore, of Washington, ■ D. • C. Mr. Moore has been for some time the Washington correspondent for the St Louis Republic, ;• Earthquake In the West Indies, Washington, May 3.—The United States consul at Guadeloupe, West India islands, .has. telegraphed the State department, under date of April 20, from Point Apitre, as follows: “Severe earthquake; loss heavy; many injured.”__ Binding Twine From Marsh Grass. Oshkosh, \Vis.; May 2.—In thirty days Oshkosh will have in operation the'first grass twine factory in the world. It'will employ ^00 hands and will majee binding twine from marsh grass, something never attempted be fore. . ' - •To Hot Prise Fl*bt Pictures. LansiKo, Mich., May 2 —The House, of Beprescntatives passed a bill to pro hibit reproduction of prise fight pict ures by vitascopc, kinetoscope, etc. The penalty is a fine of 8500 to 81,000, Or two years’ imprisonment, or both. Smaller Tmm. oa Whisky* A Washington, May 3.—It is very probable that the secretary of the i treasury will soon recommend to con gress a material reduction of the in ternal revenue tax on distilled spirit* .and an increase on the tax on beer. . Howard C Hackctt Dead. Nxw York, . May 2.—Howard -C Ilackett, sporting editor of the World, died suddenly yesterday. He was. 38 year# old and one of-.the best known newspaper men in the United States. St. t°»1> Hr* war Qom Insane. Chicago, May 2.—Frank Schmidt, the St Louis brewer, who disappeared < in this city last Friday while on hU way . to Cincinnati, has been heard from at Rhinelander, Wis. He is be lieved to be insane. i Womau Killed by a Train. . ArptRTott City. Mo., May 3.—Mrs. j Sylvester House, wife of a prominent | merchant of this city, was struck by a | freight train about 6 o’clock last even 1 ing and instantly killed. THE MINISTRY' FALLS SUMMAHILY DISMISSED BY THE'. .. , V KING. Premier Orljtnnto Replaced by M. Mil, the Gam be It* of Greece—Impreulna fnnlral that Itevolotlon Qa« Only Beea Delayed. The Situation la Greeca. Athens,' April 31. — The ministry headed by M. Delyannis, which' is blamed for the recent disasters to the Greek army in Thessaly, has been dis missed summarily by Kin; George, and M. Ralti, called the Gambctts of Greece, has been summoned by the Kin; to form a new ministry. This has to a dc;reo quieted tile people and Athens to-day is far less stormy than it has beeu since Monday, but it is the general belief that a fresh defeat of the Greek army will inevi tably result in a revolution. In this city and the Pireaus are hundreds of tho lower classes and of the rabble driven from all parts of the Turkish empiro and these , are awaiting only for suitable opportunity to repeat the terribio days of Pafis' which followed the defeat of the French troops by tho Germans in 1871.. ,* J Yesterday volunteers, or would-bo volunteers, entered two shops and took all the firearms and ammunition under the pretest that the govern ment refused them arms. - This would easily have degenerated into whole sale plunder of shops 'if M. Ralli, leader of the opposition, had not rushed to, the shops and addressed the crowd, say in;: “You are mad! Why, . when Greece is surrounded by difficul ties and tho powers 'try to discredit the nation, 'who can think of crcatin; disturbances in the streets? Ybu say you want arms; let your conduct show you aro worthy of becomin; soldiers." A crowd afterward went to the pal ace, shouting and hissin;. The guard had been doubled and the people col lected beiore the palace and popular oretors addressed them. The noisy dembstrations of the day ended quite peacefully, however. • THE HOULE’S SESSION EXCITING. | Fully 10,000 people surrounded the parliament house >vhen the deputies assembled sod many of Oia 'outsiders swarmed up thejtcps an Oranges, per box....* g Hay—Upland, per ton.4 25 ADnles.per bbl.- 10 tt •#> tt 1 SO tt 3 75 9450 9250 Sheep—Westerns... Sheep—Lambs'.... • n Apples, per SOUTH OMAHA STOCK MAliKKT. Hogs—Light mixed. 3 75 tt * 80 Hogs—Heavy weights.3 HO tt 3 JO Beef Steers.. 3 (15 “ * Bulls. 2 r» ‘Milkers'and springers.2" ID Stags.i'-' Calves. 4 00 Cows.. 1 SO Heifers.2 40 Stockers and Feeders. 3 '.5 .4 l .V .4 35 _ CHICAGO. Wheat—No. 2 Spring. 71 _ Corn, per bu. ttHtt 24Sfe Oats, per bu. 17 tt 17J< Pork. 8 37 tt R 40 Cattle—Beef grades.4 :-0 tt 5 00 Hogs—Rough Packli g.3 Mi tt 3 75 Sheep—Lambs.4 2> tt 4 SO NEW YORK. Wheat—No. 2, red. winter.7) Corn—No. 2. 29 Oat*—No. 2. 31 Pork.0 50 Lard.4 33 KANSAS CITY. Wheot—No.2. hard—. 81 Corn—No.2. 21*15 Oats—No. 2_ _ ilVtJ Cattle—Stockers and feeders- 3 2v"| Hogs—Mixed..W..V. 3 60 C_ sheep—Muttons. 4(0 tt 4 IS,