/ | THE NEWS IN NEBRASKA^] NEBRASKA BRIEFS Tobias has let the contract for a sys tem of water works. Nebraska horsemen will be consult ed February 8 in regard to a speed program for the state fair. ' Women of the Methodist Episcopal •hurch in Plattsmouth have organized a women's foreign missionary society. Theodore Thomas, for the past six years traveling freight and passenger agent of the Burlington, with head quarters at Beatrice, has been promot ed, with headquarters at Denver. Several head of horses afflicted with the glanders have been shot in the vi cinity of Adams. Gage county, under orders from the state veterinarian. ' The disease is believed to have origi nated from a bunch "of bronchos brought to Gage county three years ■ ago. W. P. Norcroes. a capitalist of Be atrice, has made a proposition to the Dempster company to sink on his farm a well 2,500 feet deep for the purpose j of prospecting for coal and oil. For J this work he has offered $6,000, and it is more than likely that the well will he sunk. A fatal accident occurred fo Delmer. the young son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Illlan, who live near Juniata. The lit tle fellow was frightened by some dogs and in running from one room of the house to another fell in such a man ner and with such force as to break i his neck. Elmer Goss, a strange character, who has lived in the vicinity for a number of years, was brought before the examining board of Wahoo, ad judged insane and ordered taken to Dinooln. This is the same young man who appeared upon the streets of Wa hoo numerous times about a year ago in the role cf "Jack the Hugger." Tho Department of Nebraska, Grand Army of the Republic, filed its charter for record in the office of the secretary of state. The officers cf the depart ment are: Paul Vandervoort, com mander; Calmar McCune, senior vice commander; D. D. Wadsworth; junior vice commander; Joseph Neville, med- j ica] director; A. J. Combs, chaplain. The long-talked-of outlet from Stromsburg to Central City is a sure ihing now. for the men are on the ground buying up the right of way, and it will be but a short time before the dirt will fly, the rails be laid and Polk county will have an outlet to the main line of the Union Pacific on the west. a number of smooth fellows, posing as friends of the farmers, are inter esting the well-meaning farmers in a project which, they claim, will save all concerned barrels of money. They secure the farmers’ signatures to a joint note which is to be paid for out of the profits of a horse stock com pany. Owing to the many depredations committed in and about Wakefield in the way of horse stealing and rob beries In the past year, farmers and citizens have formed themselves into an organization known as the Hogan Valley Protective association, which j numbers nearly 50 members, including ' Concord and Laurel. John E. Hart, a resident of Sidney for more than, twenty-five years, was drowned at Alden, thirty-five miles north on the Burlington railroad. He had been in Bridgeport the past few weeks, where he had extensive con tracts, and had recently shown a dis position to melancholia. He left tha» town during the night and from com versations with the night clerk at the hotel it was feared he would kill him self. More than 500 miles from home and with nobody at his bedside save the trained nurse and a physician, Samuel J. Barrow, a Denver drummer .who had been on this territory for twenty years in the interest of a Cincinnati clothing bouse, died in a lonely room at the Pacific hotel, in Norfolk. His wife, who was traveling across the tr^anpt ^y//r. isA^cAdtU jnthe/eentXyund/vet/yewu/^tjt* ^.w^ww/aij^ywartS^ ■ 1 In by the peek are—well, they are ; yarns. Still, It is certain the pres ents to her will represent a lot of money in the aggregate. The President has decided to make public a list of the more costly gifts and those from organizations and for eign rulers.' Only three European monarchs thus far have given a sug gestion of their gifts. The Emperor and Empress of Germany will send a set of gold embossed china and ornaments for a dining room. The Czar and Czarina will send bronze ornaments and the President of France some Gobelin tapestries. PRESENTS TO BE MAGNIFICENT Tiffany’s Most Skillful Workmen Are Preparing Gifts. At the New York shop of Tiffany’s, as well as at their Forest Hill plant, skilled workmen are engaged night and day, under the direction of Super intendent Von Posai, on a bewildering array of jewels which friends of Miss Alice Roosevelt are having set in special designs as wedding gifts for the daughter of the President. One of the handsomest is a pearl collar of ten strands, the largest ever made by Tiffany, and worth $31,000. A diamond tiara, containing 500 stones, is another, and there are also two dia > WEDDING GOWN mond collars and two bow knots of diamonds. The names of the persons who will present these gifts - the mob settled down by degrees, ac. began to wonder whether, after ail, it might not be perhaps advisable to se what the new king might be worth be fore condemning him. The earlier part of Christian's re:?:, was filled with troubles. Simultane ously with his accession rival claim ants arose for the duchies of Schles wig-Holstein, which had been part of the possessions of King Frederick VII of Denmark. The extinction of hi-, dynasty, it was assorted, and the gut. stitution of a new one bad entiiei altered the rights of succession in these provinces. After diploma;: wrangles, which closed in an appr a to arms. Prussia, Austria, and Ger many all took a hand In the fish', an the first of these countries succeeding in taking from little Denmark th three duchies of Holstein. Sch!»»rw. and Lauenberg and attaching them to her own dominions. After this loss of one-third of • . kingdom internal trouble? am-> that portion of his dominion' wh still remained to King Christian Ki'.-t and parliament could never ngr* , characteristic that both retain most to tbe day of the king - d- . ; But in spite of the bickering- » his parliament. Christian bee an: to universally loved by the Dani.'h ; pie. His democracy, his simpl. - - his personal character, and h s fa all combined to make him fcapp; There was not a black sheep ;n fc family. Never a scandal shocked tfc Danish people. Tbe king's sons 4n daughters led simple lives untt! the were married—and when they marri generally it was to qscend a thrum King Christian was a familiar tignr in the streets of Copenhagen H~ went everywhere without a guard o: any of the fuss and trappings of royal ty. Dressed as an ordinary cit.zen of the middle class he visited the mar kets, wandered through the park stopped on the sidewalk to chat with acquaintances, or watched the erec tion of new buildings Frequently he would be seen at a table of one of the outdoor cafes, drinking a glass of bee and eating a black bread sandwriefc He rode on a street car ofteuer thau he did in a royal carriage. Has Served His State Lang. When Senator Blackburn of Ken tucky retires from political life i- will be to go -to the farm of 2:>0 acr-1' which originally belonged to Black burn’s family and has been given to the senator by a generous friend, the joted horseowner, r - Harper. Mr. Blackburn’8 service in the senate cov ;rs a quarter of a century and there ire only eight men left there who tave served without interruption dur ng that period. They are Morgan of Viabama. Barry of Arkansas, Teller >f Colorado. Cullom of Illinois. Frye ind Hale of Maine. Aldrich of Rhode sland and Allison of Iowa. , THE NEW STATES. AS PLANNED OLD AND NEW BOUNDARIES OF PROPOSED STATES. ARIZONA AND OKLAHOMA. On the Map Old Boundaries are Indicated By Light Dotted Lines and New Boundaries by Heavy Lines. The house statehood bill was report- | 3d favorably to the senate Jan. 29 by Mr. Beveridge, chairman of the com mittee on territories. The bill had been under consideration in the com mittee for three days. No announce ment was made by Mr. Beveridge in reporting the bill. Ball of the Dresamakers. A somewhat curious ball marks the jutset of the Paris season. This is is Washington home. Senator Bran legee's new establishment is in a sec ion of fine old houses and Secretaries Moody and Root. Senator Hale, Gen. draper and Representative Hitt live learby. Shower Kieses on Baby Prince. The young Crown Prince Olaf of Norway, son of King Haakon VII. is the object of much popular attention. In the charge of his nurse, he is usually taken out for a daily run in the Queen’s park, and has had to pay the penalty of fame in the form of kisses showered on him by assem blies of admiring ladies, who con front him at every turning- Tu such an extent has the practice been car ried that the park has been closed to the public by order of the queen. , Arrests in New York. Of 42,26