Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905, November 06, 1902, Image 3
THANGED HER OPINION. Irate Mother Forn.it the Fcoldtag She Intended to He liver. The woman who figures la the fol lowing tit of real life, from the col umns of the New York Times, Is not the first mother to form hasty conclu sions regarding the teacher of her child, nor will she be the last. The point wherein she differs from many in her readiness to admit that, after all, the teacher may not have been at fault. The woman had pro in feed herself to administer what she called a "tongue iashlu' " to the young principal for dar ing to "put buck" her Carrie. Ho alio sped up the stairs to the principal's of fice, aad gjleutix pushed open the door that led to the pleasant little room with Its homelike carpet anil businesslike desk. As she drew a long breath be fore announcing herself by a belliger jnt "Aliem!" a diversion occurred, and he stepped aside Into an alcove that ommauled a view of the Interior of ihe office. The diversion was the entrance through another door of three children. The woman knew them all. One was Mrs. Ktumpf'a Otto, another Mrs. Wo kel'g Nina, and the third was what she termed the "dago's little girl." They were all muddy, all damp, but happy; nd each small fist clutched some dilap idated wild Uowers. The principal swung round In her chair and smiled earnestly at the car pet, and three guilty-looking little chil li ren scrambled for the mat and began a vigorous scraping of muddy feet. Then they returned and paid tribute with the flowers. "You gotter put 'em In water," said Nino. "They come outer Hurden'g woods," ald the "dago's" little girl. "I showed 'em how to get back; they was lost!" boasted Otto. The principal received the gifts with appropriate gratitude. She placed the lejected-looking "Jnck-ln-the-pulplt" be side the fainting violets and the dande lions with microscopic stems, and eyed he disreputable-looking result with sat isfaction. Then the trio beamingly tarted to depart. At the door Otto topped. "The rain was first in the sea before ft was In the sky," he volunteered. "You don't say so!" exclaimed the principal. "Yes; It was in the nature story to lay." "The sun brung It up to the sky," cut jn Nina, Jealous of Otto's glibness. "When it falls down again," said the "dago's" little girl, "it's 'cause the :louds bunk their heads together and (hey have to cry. I know a song about If "Can you sing It " asked the princi pal "Yes'm;" and In a treble as shrill as I grasshopper's she began: "Two little clouds one summer day Wag fly in' thro' the sfty; They went so fas' they bunked their beads, And both began to cry." "How lively!" said the principal. "The cunning little toads!" said the woman, softly, and stole forth again, smiling. Not until she reached home did she remember the "tongue-lashln' " she bad Intended to deliver. "It niust have been that Carrie wa dumb," she commented. "I don't be lieve that principal would put anyont down a class for spite." How He Snved HI Lung. A young Itostonlan, reared In the lap of luxury, had Lout a lung and physi cians Informed his father that If he ran not sent on an ocean cruise or to 4e far West he would die of con unrption. Accordingly the father put Urn aboard ship, with $1,400 In cash, tnd started hi in off to .Samaria, being id vised that the dry country betweer the Kiver Jordan ami the Mediterrav lean was good for consumptives. When p reached Quecnutown the boy mad fhe acqualifctance of a hard-headed, tenalbie Chop, who told him that Sa oaria was sure death; that the only fmj to save big lungs was to go U (Vlcklow County, near Tlnahely. am! Mt to work on a farm. The adv'lc m taken and for nine months the Klon of Back Bay aristocracy did Acres for a man who owned a castle it the end of that period he was aj tasty an a bull moose, with a pair ol ktnrs like a blacksmith's bellows. Th lonner gave him 20 and an bonorabli Max-barge. Be returned to Boston wltB Us $1,400 and bla health. He Don tvea In New York, a modern Hercules A fluccenefal Antrlrr. 'He wag a beauty, plump threi sounds, and as handsome a Qsh as eter ame out of Long Island." "Where did you And him?" "In my own brook." "I thought aa much. In these days oe Hoes not catch three-pound trout Long Island waters unlets be owns a stream or knowg somebody elae who goes and will let him In for an hour sr two. It Is a condition of things which tu ma le an entirely new definition of (he successful angler." "Yes 7 What do you call a successful tngler?" "A successful angler Is one who sac tessfully fishes for an Invitation to go shlng In a prescrred stream." "Do you call yourself successful f That Is for you to say." "Well, com down next Wednesday, guess therQs anotlssr three pounder where I got that one." DM you ever see policeman In a fcastrlcal lithograph who did not look Iks a stage band In a company sultt foolda't It bo Just as easy for Ue ar Kat lo draw a teal poUoasaaaT SWEEP OLD WORLD FEARFUL RAVAGES OF CHOLERA AND THE PLAGUE, EPIDEMIC IN PHILIPPINES CASES RUN INTO THOUSANDS. AND MOSTLY FATAL. 4.329CASES 1,650 DEATHS III apprum at On Vine- lm I'.rrak Ont lr Another .Inpan, ( lilimand l).lrlct in Kg-ypi nelng Scourged. Washington, Oct. 29. The tearful ravages of plague and cholera in the old world are set forth in mall Hd vices received by the marine bosplv.il service. From Manila Chief Officer Terry makes a estimate that the cs-! that have actually occi Philippine islands sin. Quarantine unservatlve of cholera ed lo the March 2i last, aggregate scventy-ii d thousand, with a mortality of 75 per cent. He says under date uf September 19, that the disease bag piacticaily disappear ed from those provinces first iiifict ed. Those most recently aCected are suffering severely. , Toe province of Iloilo and the ad jacent Island of Nebros are badly In fected. The situation is alannlD;. Some of the towns in these pr i vlnces have lost 10 per cent of theii population The epidemic continues severe. In Japan the latest aivices show that there have been 4,320 cases and 1,650 deaths from cholera. The cholera situation In China has been summed up. Provinces of Hu nan and Sharisl, the cities, report as follows: Nankin, epidemic, forty thousand deaths; ShouyaDgbsleo. ep idemic, '.bree thousand csaes per day; Hslnchou, epidemic: Talyuar Fu, epidemic; Jisiaotientzc, epi demic; Shouyang, epidemic, Sbilleh, epidemic: Klnkiang. reported; Nau clhangfu. reported; .Mieoyang, report ed; Coo Chow, reported; Tien l'sln, rcporled. Id Hong Kong since the beginning of the outbreak there have been 459 cases and 3!)G deaths. .Not withstanding this the local author ities declare the colony free from plarue Infection. According to a report of the di rector general of the Egyptian depart ment of health the cholera epidemic continues to claim a large number of victims. The number of Infected plates Increased to 1,557. The num ber of cases registered during the wceit ended September 15, amounted to 9.407 with 8, ITS deaths. Of the 2" 520 cases of cholera reg istered between July 15 and August 15, 23.(584 were fatal During the four days from September 15 to Sep tember 19, there were icgiitered 4, ! 048 cases and 3,7fll deaths. In Suez, between September 15 and September 19, twenty-nine fresh cases were reg istered. In Dainletta the daily num ber of cases reccrded Is said to be thirty. Karnak and Luxor are also infected with the disease. . In Alexandria during the week ending Septerubor 15, sixty-four cases of cholera occurred among Europeans, with forty-one deaths. During the following live days thirty live cases and twenty live deaths were recorded. Bill Posters Have a Riot. Chicago, Oct. 29. In a riot caused by the American Posting service'; attempt to post bills on a board a'j Morgan and West Monroe streets, by the use of nun-uuion labor, seven men were severely Injured. Service on the Morgan street car line wai suspended and a riot call was sent In. A large crowd gathered at the con er and many of them assisted the union men in stopping the wrk. Wben tl.e police arrived the non-union men had deserted their wagons and es caped from the showers of stones, bucks and other missels. Thecrvd dispersed upon the appeuraote of the police, and n ) arrests were made. A bill of Injunction was issued by Judge Chytra ii today on Dchalf of the American posting service against the bill posters' and LI 1 It rs union, No. 1, restraining the union from maintaining pickets In front or in the vicinity of the plant of the American posting service. Il ulso restricts the union from interferl g wltb men who are working on the b ards of the company posting bills. Willing to do H ill Way. " Chicago, Oct. 29-KepreKcntatlvoa of the various riillioarig ccritcilng In Chicago met today and took up the demands tiled with them on Saturday hy thu brotherhood of railway train-1 men These demands are for t'..e men employed In the yards, and are for an Increase In wages aveiuglng about 10 per cent It was understood I hat the demands are willing to agree to a If .per coat Increase. Joseph W. Folk is looked upon as the man of the hour hi St. Louis. He bus brought to bay the men who are allea"d to hove robbed the city by resorting to bribery, arid uow he declares he will land them in the peniten tiary. Mr. Folk was born in Tennessee. For years he was a struggling; young lawyer in St. Louis. Then he wan elected circuit attorney. There is nothing particularly toLe'jt- JOSEPH W. FOLK. intt about this posi tion. It consists of supervising the prose cution of ail criminal trials in his county. Lut Mr. Folk proceeded to make soni thing out of the place by getting after the boodlers who have infested St. Louis for :he last twenty years. At first he w as laughed at, but now he is feared by those who jeered nt him and is being courrat- nlated by the respectable eiemeut in St. Louis. To Marquis Ito, both in and out of Japan, is ascribed the credit for the nezo ciations of the Auglo-Jupanese treaty of mutual protection against the agres sion of Hus-siu in the Orient. Though the marquis in re signing the premier ship of Japan soeni ed to retire from politics, it is evident that he resigned to perform an eveu greater political mis sion. He mado his tour of the world, passing through this country and visiting UAUcjuis no. London aud St. Petersburg. The trip leeraed Uiaocent enough, but he was blaz ing the way for Japan. Before he reach ed home, the negotiation of the treaty was announced. Congressman Charles Edgar Little field, who will be requested by President Roosevelt to draft an anti-trust hill for consideration next Congress, is the representative of the Second District of Maine and wns elected to fill the vacancy.- caused by the death of Con gressman Dingley Mr. Li 1 1 k-field is a native of Lebanon, Me., and is 51 years old. He was ad uiitted to the bar In 1870, became a member of the C. E. UTTLWllXD. Maine Legislature in 1S85, and Speakej in the following year. He served as At :orney General of Maine from 1889 to 1893. "Little Hell." in Chicago, is to have i church. Kov. Dr. John n. Boyd of Jio First Presbyterian Church of I1vni ton, has told the members of his congregation that the lowly are too niuch overlooked by the high. He believes that mis sion work should be undertaken hi the dark districts of the city. Ills congregation thinks as he does, for the preoaratory stens have been taken to uv- utt- uuxu nstitute a new mission in "Little Hell" md to carry on settlement work, Dr. Boyd has been head of his present church (or the past seven years and has inndo wonderful strides In his work. He was born in Mississippi. Admirers of Mr. Hosewater, who is the tdilor and publisher of the Omaha Bee, tluim that he la one of the great news paper men of the country. He has come into promi nence by bolting the nomination of Con gressman David II Mercer, who has represented the Omaha district since 18112. The sensa tional action of the editor is Interpreted E. BOSEWATEn. variously. Some ill Ink he was actuated by party loyalty, ithers are of the opinion that the bolt vas adopted as a means of "getting tven" with a personal enemy. So much s certain, however, the action bus caused , stir of more than local Interest. Interest in Senator William P. Fryo if Maine is revived by the rumor that he 0 again to marry, his wife hnvlnif died about 18 months ago. His first wife was Caroline Bneare, and the Isdy to whom he is sow reported to be ingaged is Miss Klleii May of Port land. Me. The Sen itor Is now TZ years )ld. Forty-one years go he made his de but in public life ss s member of the kK.NA'iOit til ft. Hnl ne Legislature. lit wss a presiden tial elector In 18(14, wss first elected to Congress in 1871 and bss represented Uslne la the Senate for twenty-one years. Mas Ethel Veitel, otherwise known at "rixie, the girl who met with the sccl Ant In the slide-for-life from the water vorks tower st Stillwater, O. T., died rom her injuries. Slit wss 10 years old Jul lived at Joplin, Mo. Fire wiped out the entire business t or Inn of Qervsis, Ore., two blocks of frame mlldings being destroyed. The loss is 00.000. New trial granted James Wllcoi, Ells ibrth City. N. C, under sentence re be sogea (or tke saorder of Nellie Orvpsejr I '4J 1 4 WORST OF THE LOT AGENT ERWIN CALL8 EDUCATED INDIANS A BAD SET. THINK SCHOOLING WASTED MEN FROM COLLEGES RETURN TO LOAF AND DRINK. MANY ADDICTED TO DRINK ftverely Arrnlgnn 9h Wlio'e Svat'in and W 'nid hang-- It I- igurea on Coat Pro duction and CouHumptlun. Washington, 'Nov. L A severe ar raiugnient of the Indians on the Ponca. Otoe and Oakland reservation In Oklahoma Is made by Agent Er win, in charge of the reservation, in his annual report to the commission er of Inldan affairs. He says: "Hardly any of the young Indians, those who have graduater from non r 'solvation schools, as well as those who have attended for a number of years, do any work at all. It can be set down as a perfectly safe rule that as a class the young educated In dians are the most worthless ones in the whole tribe. Nearly all of the work done by the tribes is performed by the middle-aged, able bodied ones, who cannot write or speak English. "The educated Indian coming from the schools usually gives the excuse that he has nothing with whirh to work, neither money, implements nor stock of any kind. Thip is true, I notice that they manage to live nn their annuities and lease buy horses, buguies. etc., and borrow money from money and on credit the banks with very little prospect of ever be ing able to pay their debts. Any able bodied man or woman is able lo obtain work at fair wages. Many of the peolpe are addicted to drink and both men and women are inveterate gamhleis. They have practically nothing to do. Their days are spent In almost utter idleness and vice a-id debauchery are rampant. The degradation of those people will con tinueand increase until they are made to work and live by the result of their labors." As a remedy for this condition of affairs the agent recommends that ti e Indian children he educated only at reservation boarding schools, further education being 90 per cent waste of effort and money, and that the schools u ider the jurisdiction of the Okla homa government be established among those Indians so that the lat ter can come Into constant contact with white children. He says that the payments by the government from their trust funds now in the United States treasury should be used to enable them to start in farm log and stock raising. Lovely Lady Proves a flan. Chicago, Nov. 1. Expecting to meet a "rich arid lovely woman who wanted a kind husband," John Val entine Kaiser came from Festur, Mo., to Chicago yesterday. He had been corresponding with the "rich and lovely," whose name was supposed to be Mary Martin, and says he had paid six dollars to secure an intro duction. When lie went to the ad dress given by Mary, 2!ii Wells street, Instead of finding the residence of the bride-to-be he discovered a sa loon.' Kaiser'told of his troublcs"at police headquarters, and the result was a search of the premises in Wells street and the arrest of Jacob Struts sir, who was found in the basement of the saloon writing letters, which. the police say, were similar to those received by Kaiser, and signed Mary Maitio. A number of these letteis were secured as evidence. Strosser is charged with obtaining (Looey by means of a confidence game. Recover Burled Treasure. Miles City, Mont., Nov. 1. Ware, en MoTegoe of the state penitentia ary and Fred Morrow, a convict, were here yesterday, and following Morrow's directions recovered $4,500 Id money which Morrow s'.olc on May 29, 1900, froro the Northern Pacific Express company and concealed near the Tongue river bridge. The pack age originally contained (5 000. but Morrow bad used 1500. It Is proba ble that his sentence will be com muted now that he has given up tbe money. Dies to Preserve Peaco Norfolk, Va., Nov. l.-John A. Morgan, a leader of the "straight out" democratic party In Norfolk county, which faction has been light ing the organization of fuiloulsli for several vears. blew nut his brains thlsnornlng On a table was a note which stated that It had been said that bis death would sni"th the suiters of county politics sod If stu b was the case It could te roowd dow. "Settlement of the coa strike removes the only Be rious handicap to indusiria New YorL progress. Five months of restricted fuei production bad begun to check the wheeli at many manufacturing centers, whil there was a perceptible diminution ir consumptive demands, as the purchasinj power of the wage-earners steadily de creased. Savings have been extiuuBteth and much money hug gone out of th country because of this struggle, hut th nation's remarkably strong position cs Bnres a speedy restoration of prosperoui conditions." The foregoing is from the Weekly Trade Review of It. G. Dun & Co. It continues: Transportation is now the worst fea ture, and threatens to continue disturb ing. While the grain crops are being moved the supply of rolling stock und motive power will prove insufficient, al though every effort is made at the shops, liberal premiums being offered for earlj delivery. That the railways are well oc cupied is evidenced by earnings for the first week of October 3.5 per cent larger than last year and 10.9 per cent above VJOO. Inadequate supplies of fuel caused fur ther banking of furnaces, but the effect it a decreased output of domestic pig li on has been purtly neutralized by larger ar rivals from abroad. Practically no yri can be named for immediate delivery ol borne iron, and there is no disposition to make concessions for distant contracts, awing to the abnormal coke situation. Fortunately there has been little inter ruption at finishing mills, and the output of rails, structural material and kindred lines is well maintained. Consumers not only find difficulty in securing steel from the mills but encounter a further dcluj on the railways, which are unable to han dle freight promptly. Orders come for ward freely for the heavier lines, numer ous contracts being offered for steel rails for next year's delivery, and the plans for buildings and bridges keep a lot of busi ness in sight in beams, channels and nn ;les. Plates for shipyards are also sought freely, prices tending upward on tank !teel. Higher freight rates have check ed imports of finished steel. The railroads eontjiun piling up earnings not withstanding the great de Chicago. clines naturally to be expected in the re portg of the anthracite coal roads, tbf forty-three leading lines show an aggre gate increase for the first week in October of C.18 per ceut over the corresponding week last year. The Great Westoru re mains an uncertain factor in the westerr rate situation. The Milwaukee is be lieved to he contemplating on extensior to the const, although the latest repor ays traffic arrangements have been per fected with the Union Pacific and that tbe Milwaukee will not build, at least not nt present. There is some grumbling on the part of railway employes in the West, but nothing has occurred to war rant any uneasiness or apprehension of any trouble. Cooler weather has helped retail trade Moderate advances are noted in man; commodities, while iron and steel are ma terially higher. With coal obtainable many furnaces that have been crippled for a month or more are expected to resume operations on the former large scale. The Northwest is making sub stantial gains in the general volume ol business. The Northwest leads the cout try. Last week Minneapolis broke every previous record with a production of 443,-S-'IO barrels of flour. The flour demand ii good, with inquiry coining from everj quarter and the prospect favorable for heavy grinding by the Northwestern mills to the turn of the year. Grain receipts are increasing somewhat. Jobbing nnd manufacturing lines are doing a satisfac tory business. The banks report th financial tone very favorable. The wheat mnrket has been continu ously Btrong, partly in sympathy with the strength in corn. There is little wheat in Minneapolis and not more than enough corning to supply the mills, while millers selling flour freely have been bid ders every day for wheat to arrive. Chicago Cattle, common to prime, 4.()0 to 17.50; hogs, shipping grades, H-25 to 17.15; sheep, fair to choice, $2.00 to $3.50; wheat. No. 2 red, 70c to 71ci , corn, No. 2, 55c to 50c; oats, No. 2, 2Cc to 28c; rye. No. 2, 48c to 40c; hay, tim othy, $8.50 to $13.50; prairie, $0.00 to $13.00; butter, choice creamery, 21c to 24c; eggs, fresh, 18c to 22c; potatoes, ( Hoc to 42c per busheL Indianapolis Cattle, shipping, $3.00 to ; $7.50; hogs, choice Ught, $4.00 to $7.00; j sheep, common to prime, $2.50 to $3.50; ' wheat. No. 2, 70c to 71c; corn, No. 2 white, GOc to Glc; oals, No. 2 white. 31c to 32c. I St. Louis Cattle, $4.00 to $7.25; hogs, $3.00 to $7.00; sheep, $2.50 to $4.00; wheat, No. 2, G8c to 60c; corn, No. 2, Mc to 50c; oats, No. 2, 20c to 30c; rye, No. 2, 47c to 48c. Cincinnati Cattle, $4.50 to $0.75; hogs, $4.00 to 77.25; sheep, $2.50 to $3.20, wheat, No. 2, 74c to 75c; corn, No. 2 mixed, 62c to 63c; oats, No. 2 mixed, 80c to 31c; rye. No. 2, 01c to 02c. Detroit Cattle, $3.00 to $0.20; hogs. $3.00 to $0.00; sheep, $2.00 to $4.00; wheat, No. 2, 74c to 70c; corn, No. 3 yellow, 05c to 00c; onts. No. 8 white, 84c to 35c; rye, 40c to 50c. I Milwaukee Wheat. No. 2 northern, ' 72c to 73c; corn, No. 2, 01c to 02c; oats, 1 No. 2 white, 32c to 33c; rye. No. 1, 00c to 02c; barley, No. 2, 03c to 04c; pork, mess, $17.40. Toledo Wheat, No. 2 mixed, 74c to 70c; corn, No. 2 mixed, 42c to 43c; oata, No. 2 mixed, 27c to 28c; clover seed, prime, $0.75. Buffalo Cattle, choice shipping steers, $4.00 to $7.70; hogs, fair to prime, $4.00 to $7.25; sheep, fair to choice, $3.25 to $3.75: iambs, common to choice, $4.00 to $5.00. New York Csttle, $400 to $7.00; hog. $3.00 to $7.00; sheep, $3.00 te $3.75; wheat, No. 2 red, 70c to ?7c; com. No. 2. 05c to 00c; oats, No. 2 whit SAr sa Me: batter, eresmar. 2Ba In 24ai oua, western, 20c to 2S& ( 4..40S IHHII cHEBRASKA tt 1 1 1 Dr Stephen S. Miller, coroner oi Dawson county, died suddenly. Miss Laura Gregg, organizer and lecturer of tbe State Suffrage associ ation, addressed a large audience at Humboldt last week. J.M. IlaDna of Alnsworth, received an abdominal wound by trying U rope a calf with a knife in bis band. He is seriously hurt. West's grocery store at St. Paul was badly damaged by fire Sunday morning Most of the stock was saved. The loss is covered by Insur ance. The 14 year old son of Daniel Moe cebll, residing five miles west of Be atrice was badly injured by being thrown from a pony. Tbe chances for the lad's recovery are favorable. Articles of incorporation have been filed by tbe Roman Catholic cathe dral building board, which baa beea organized to erect a catherdal la Omaha. While threshing near Ellis. Gage county, Chris Knocbe, a prominent German farmer, bad tbe misfortune to run tbe tine of a pitchfork In ble right eye. The doctor bas little hopes of saving tbe injured optic. Conductor Kothiock, Brakemaa Wormslcy and another brakeman were badly bruised by a train on tbe Missouri Pacific near Nebraska City, plunging through the bridge in tbe creek twenty feet below. Tbe ordinance allowing W. J. 0. Kenyon of Omaha to purchase tbe abandoned lines to tbe old stock yards as withdrawn by the councR anda Dew one Introduced, requiring a $100 forfeit as a guarantee. P. W Dirbhouser was showing ble friends a second growth of straw berries that he picked from bis farm south of Papillioo last week, lite berries were well formed and well ripened. A man named Young was stabbed by a fellow flour Schuyler at a dance given at tbe borne of David Kluck. near Richland. Young's conditlOB is serious. His assailant is being pursued. Many improvements have been made at Yutan during tbe last vear. Fifteen new houses have been built.a $5,000 church erected, two other churches repaired, and many brick sidewalks laid. Coroner McCabe of Lincoln county will examine into tbe cause of death of a man at Wallace, found under a wagon box, and of the death of R. A. Brown, a mail driver between here and Gandy, who, from all appear ances, dropped dead on bis route. Robert Thompson, alias Joy, who bas just completed a year's term Ib the pententiary for burglary in Oma ha, was met by a detective when do stepped from prison and taken t Canada, where be bas a ten years' sentence tu serve. John Wilson, an old implement dealer of Trumoull, was severely and probably fatally injured by being kicked by a horse. One of his 1 gs is broken, some teetb knocked out and iie vas rendered unconscious for sev eral hours. Charles Ogoms, a prosperous farm er, committed suicide with a 22-cali-ber rifle at his borne eight milea northwest of Gibson, because ble threshing was delayed and tbe pay ment of a few small debts retaraed.; His borne relutiuus were pleasant. i Harry A. Dlsher, a young farmer! living just east of Falls City bad j fine horse, new buggy and harness! stolen. He lied the horse to a hltchj rack in tbe main part of town ana? went to do some trading. He was gone less tban thirty minutes. Ob bis return the horse was gone. At a special meeting of tbe board of directors of tbe Wahoo Luther academy it was decided to erect a. 'new school building at a cost of $18,i 000. P. L. Ply oi, an architect frtttaj Lincoln, was appointed to draw opt the plans and specifications. Work will be commenced as soon as the plans are ready. The site for Um building wa selected at sunrise with proper ceremonies. Tbe persecution brought by Oover-no.- Savage against Harry Harris, carpenter whu Is charged wltb smug gling opium into tbe pententiary,! likely to be dropped, as the two nine Important witnesses have disap peared. Tbey were short term cob-' nets who had been discharged, An order bas been Issued by Adju-j tant General Colby mustering oafj Company I, Second regiment, Ne-! br.iska National Guard, stationed at Tecjmseh. The principal officers re signed some time ago and tbe uom-, pany failed to elect a captalo, Doding no one who cared for tbe place. Tbaj Millard Rifles of Omaha may be as signed to Hil tbe vscsncy created. ! sew men die from overwork. Worta Is almost at harmless mi Frcata duel.