ggps THE O’NEILL FRONTIER D. H. CRONIN, Publisher. i’NEILL, NEBRASKA *.. " . * Although it Is allegal to grow to bacco in the British Isles, Colonel Ever ard, with the permission of the chan cellor of the exchequer, has been ex perimenting at Randalstown, county Ueath, and It is said that there is quite good hope of a new industry being found for Ireland In this branch of cul ture. Professor J. N. Harper, of the University of Kentucky, an expert on the weed, declares that the crop is as good as anything that Kentucky and Virginia can grow. The moisture of the Irish climate Is claimed to he admirable for tobacco growing, and the Emerald Isle also affords plenty of the right kind of soli. It is symtomatie of the age we live In that a people unprovided, as the Italians seem to be, with a national an them, should seek to supply the need’ by way of the familiar newspaper com petition. The contest is open to all Italians, and manuscripts are to be submitted not later than December 31, next. It is stipulated that the “na tional hymn” shall be "short, but full of animation and thrill, popular in ex pression, but artistic In spirit.” First prize Is a gold medal, and to every com petitor adjudged worthy of such a dis tinction will be awarded a diploma of honor. Sir Horace Plunkett, presiding at a conference of fruit growers lield at Ballsbridge, Dublin, said that the farmers of the north of Ireland, where the soil was not the most suitable, had built up a fruit industry which was an object lesson to the rest of the coun try. From the one station of Anna more, county Armagh, the strawberries dispatched by rail had risen from 100 tons to 700 tons in the course of a few years. A novel application of the Roentgen rays to the testing of submarine ca bles has recently been made In Europe, and has been found useful In determin ing defects and imperfections which might cause a break down of the cable arid involve considerable expense for repairs. Foreign substances, air bub oles or bad Joints in the rubber or gutta-percha Insulation are readily de tected, and may be remedied at the works. A young Irishman who had lived In New York for seven years and had been employed all that time as a clam i opener In the cafe of a hotel near the Battery at a small salary, sailed for the Emerald Isle the other day with a draft for $6,000, representing his sav ings. He said he was going to buy a farm in Ireland and stay there. “How \ did you get all that money?” he was asked at the pier. "Tips,” was the re sponse. t "My resignation has been mostly 1 brought out by the gossip at after noon teas," said the Rev H. de Trevelec, preaching at Holy Trinity, Claygate, England, from which living he lias re cently resigned. The text of his fare well sermon was this: "And withal they learn to be Idle, wandering about from house to house; and not only idle, j but tattlers also and busybodies, speak ing things which they ought not.” D. and W. Henderson, Glasgow, have launched the twin screw steamer Cale donia for the Glasgow and New York service of the Anchor line. The vessel is the largest yet built for the Ciyde trans-Atlantic route. Her tonnage la 16,000, she Is 616 feet long, 68 feet broad, and her reciprocating engines Will develop 30,000 horse power. She will carry 800 steerage, 400 second und 800 first class passengers. It Is estimated by experts thnt the era of American coal fields, at present open to mining, is more than five times as gTeat as that of the coal fields of England, Franoe, Germany and Belgium; the great ooal producing countries of Europe. While practically all the available ooal areas of those countries have been opened to mining, ours have scarcely been estimated. The persons who expect to be tipped in a London hotel nowadays are; 1. The head sitting room waiter. 2. The head table d’hote waiter. 3. The eof fee room waiter. 4. The smoking room ' waiter. 6. The head porter. 6. The gvalter. 7. The chambermaid. 8. The valet, 9, The cloak room attendant. 10. »The night porter. 11. The house por The liftman. 14. The page. On the new North German-Lloyd liner Print: Eitel Friedrich, which leaves Southhampton for China and Japan, is a gymnasium, twenty-five feet long, twenty-one feet wide and fifteen feet high. It oontains machines for rowing, swimming and cycling, machines that will exercise every muscle in t'lie body, and two Swedish electrical health ma chines. witn reference to the growing Scot tish demand for home rule for Scot land, theX/ondon news remarks: "Hav ing already acquired, by lapse -of time, the prescriptive right to manage Eng lish affairs for'Englishmen, It may that Scots, young and otherwise, will find their hands almost too full If they be gin meddling with their own as well.” An expedition to the Ndam N iam country will be England’s next r’llttle war.” The country is SO miles south west of Khanoum and can muster a fighting force of 25,000. The expedi tionary force will consist of 2,000 Sou danese troops under British officers. The start Is to be made next month. The ameer of Afghanistan, recently, in public durbar in Cabul, related a dream he had. In which the hadda mul lah had appeared to him and given him permission to act as his deputy. AH present thereupon congratulated the ameer on hia appointment as spiritual as well as temporal head. ■ - *■ -—— The Austrian Meteorological society has received from the emperor of Aus tria the right to use the letter "K. K.,” equivalent to royal imperial, before its name, so that its official designation now'becomes the "K. K. Oeaterreichia che Gesellschaft fur Meteorologte.” Johnny Barwic. a Canadian bov. who has been attending school at Pomona, Cal., refused, the other morning, to sa „ lute the American Hag when it was raised on the school building and was expelled, dhe board of education subse quently approving the expulsion. The story was published in Washing ton lately feat the Guatemala ant had toiled as an exterminator of boUV wee vil. Dr. B. T. Galloway, who haAjust returned to Moustan from a visit, to orchards In Victoria, says he is Well satisfied with work of the ants — ■■ Residents of Paonla, Colo., claim that the largest apple in the world was i raised, in that district this year. It is of the Wolf river variety and weighs thirty-one-’sod a quarter ounces. Fine j large strawberries were picked In Pa iewU* the third week in October. CLERK CREMATED IN BURNING STORE People in the Street Hear His Cries but Were Unable to Assist. WAS BURNED TO A CRISP Inly ths Trunk of Hi* Body Remain? —Hardware Store of M. A. Madsen at Dannebrog Destroyed. Grand Island, Neb., Nov. 22.—The hardware store of M. A. Madsen at Dannebrog, was found to be afire and hnd made such headway that nothin^ could be A>ne to check the flames. n Nela CnrlHtlansen, a clerk, slept In the store. People who gathered about the burned building heard him within but could give no aid on account of the Intense heat. Christiansen evidently had tried to make his way to a rear window. It Is stated that he was In toxicated before retiring, and the sup position Is that he knocked a lamp over. He was burned to a crisp and only the trunk of the body was recovered. The loss Is $6,000 with $3,000 Insur ance. _-A._ LONG PINE MAN MISSING. Belief Thai He May Have Committed Suicide. Norfolk, Neb., Nov. 22.—Long I’ine, Neb., has been thrown Into a bit of excitement over the mysterious disap pearance suddenly of one of the prom inent business men there. R. P. In galls, a jeweler, has not been seen nor heard of since midnight on Wednesday and searching parties are working in vain to locate him. It Is believed that he has wandered away and committed suicide. Just before he was last seen he bought a razor. A week ago his wife died. Once before he attempted '■o kill himself, hut was prevented. —♦— FRACTURED SKULL. Holt County Farmer Falls and Kill* Himself. Norfolk, Neb., Nov. 22.—Austin Hynes, a prominent farmer of Holt county met an extraordinary death. Attempting to push open a swollen door that stuck, he threw his whole weight against It, swung the hinges suddenly and fell through. Pitching forward he struck on his head, frac turing the skull and dying. FIVE ARE INDICTED. 'Charged With Bootlegging on Winne bago Reservation. Omaha, Neb., Nov. 22.—As the result of the work of Jtev. Father Joseph Schell on the Winnebago Indian reser vation and those whom he was able to call up to substantiate his charges be fore the federal grand Jury, Indictments charging bootlegging were returned this morning by the federal grand jury against the following: Frank Orr, Alonzo Shaw. Joseph Adams, Charles Mcany and Abner QU strap, all of the Winnebago reserva tion. In default of bonds the five men were put In the government cell of the Douglas county Jail. The United States district attorney’s office has Issued a statement that a vigorous investigation of conditions on the Winnebago reservation will be made. It Is stated that no dis crimination will be made on acc count of social, financial or political standing. It is expected that many more Indictments will follow and the real promoters of the liquor traffic and swindling on the reservation brought to justice. Agent Wilson, George Cain, P. J. O’Connor and John Ashford, were among those who were examined by the grand Jury, besides Father Schell, and from testimony given by them the 'ndiotments resulted. DEFENDANTS ACQUITTED. Alleged Murder* of Dave Monnett,, a Tekamah, Neb., Not Guilty. Onawa, la., Nov. 21.—In the case of the state vs. Ella Brown, Felix Richey and Matilda Fleming, charged with the murder of Dave Monnett, September 3, near De catur, Neb., the jury at Tekamah, Neb., brought In a verdict of acquittal. The evttlence, which was about the same as before the coroner's inquest, showed that Monnett undertook to enter the wagon of the defendants against their wishes and was shot, which, under the circumstances, was held Justifiable. r A Hunting Accident. Humboldt, Neb.. Nov. 22,—While out hunting with a companion, Earl Uffner received a charge of shot from the gun of Robert Reid, both lads being en gaged in an endeavor to shoot [he same rabbit. The animal was running at an angle and brought the Uffner boy Into range of the other lad's gun, the latter being quite a distance behind the victim of the accident. Fortunately no serious ■damage was done, the bulk of the shot striking hint In the forearm which was quite badly torn and required the ser vices