The Loop City Northwesters S. W BCKLE3GH. Publisher LOUP CITY, - • NEBRASKA rpITOilF EVENTS PARAGRAPHS THAT PERTAIN TO MANY SUBJECTS. ME SHORT BUT INTERESTING Brief Meet ten of What is Transpiring la Various Sections of Our Own and Fore 9" Countries. Congress. Tbe boose passed Par.-tra cucal COieraBJeo! bill, I« to <1. Tbe senate pensions comm.r re re ported annual appropr.-iitti. biil car ry ms SlSASMt.bWt. Tbe bo us i Judiciary i.mauti** continued its intestication Into • targ t» anainst Judce Arrbba.d W P Boland t« - lifted left:« tbe boose Judiciary ronnitlc :tieic.;ca: iN riarsH aaainst Judce Arcsfanld. Senator Cranford spe te favor.&p a eaastttaUonal amenctaetit te fix terms lor superior court judge* to tec ;enra. In the senate Senator Bose, b spot, ertti' »ed tbe metbe-c* of tbe aepubima presidential nomination aspirants Senator Smith acnounrec re woaid file Titanic taveeticatiBC totem.nee* teport next Tuesday when he uojid i peak sa the » object. Senator Cranford introd-red a pro posed osasritatMmai imcotust to mit terms of federal judge* of t.ten or courts to tea years Charyes of eftrnl miarcsdnet by E Q Valentine. Indian ctMBxt:«M« her. were renewed before tbe interior department expenditure* committee. la tbe boon*, by n vote d 117 tc IN tbe pm tsioa in Panama bill re fursy an tolls be rhsry'd roast m-.tied to pasatfoa siti a Colorado irrigation mmpsay. An an rto* at for a vote os the meant tariff toil next Monday *a* car maty f exd in the senate a* tbe re sult af object*** by Senat; r Hey: ora af Idaho, folios nr a lively tariff fit Genera!. hndes.1 Taft is confident cf U *ose vei: * defeat Roosevelt and Harmon are pro nounced high m*a in Ohio. There is no adjourstnent ye: in a-gfit for '-eagres* The *et.ate is tied ap lor a long time. George W. Parkins suggests that all letters an prosecution ci the tar totcr trust be made public Champaign >o selected tor the seventeenth annual meetine of the Il'inou Congregational conference. The proposed amendment to the eaastitutwa pr»< iding for direct elec ta* af senator* has bees mailed to the governors af the states by Secre tary Knox Ecprrimen* tag to find ways to make a aane Fourth of July in New York attractive. Mayor Gay nor* cox mittee arranged a sample electrical display on Riverside drive. A fight is on in the Chicago board af edaeaiioa to retire school teachers and principals of advanced years. They Mark the education of thou sands of teacher*, is one contention. Francis i McConnell, president of lie Pas* university. Greencastle. Ind. is the fifth bishop to be elected at The present session of the general conference of the Methodist Episco pal charch Ofhdaln of the Scbeniey iPm.1 Distillery rxsptt;. two of wboee warehoaaes mere h«roja a anit for $;<*•*•<«. dam age* died by Ed* in V. Smith, a wealthy business man. who alleged Shat Mania ' at ole hi* wife. Word *a» received at Halifax by the White Star oWciala that the •tea mer Mutrtmagsy bad been unable to ted aay more boo.es from the Ti tanic disaster and that she win rt tsrtict is Halifax. Warren * Stone of Cleveland, grand chief of the brotherhood of lo comotive engineer* since 1MJ. was re-elerted far six ysert Bat one bal lot «as tahea. and Stone had mi many of the T»1 votea east that the eiet tkoe on* made imaaimoo*. Two thward members of the grand lodge aad Rehalmh assembly of (he I. O O F met at Be Lcsit for their acnaai convention. James A. fWersor. of Minneapolis •aanani i i his eaadidac-y tar the failed Stales sens'# to socreed Sena tion Nelson at the September pri Anrrx* • demand for the luxuries cf life ha* not d miaished with the ever mounting com of necessities. Ar ticles listed as "luxuries" imported Sato this ceaatry daring the Bocal year coding Jaae 3* wtil exceed n value tS»>.MBJBB. The Episcopal church of Iowa will Jain the inter-church fed* ration, which will iarinde seven denomina thcr ia the state Lawremee L O Briea was sentenced at Mexico Ctty to suffer lb- death penalty for the murder a year aao of Hr. Hal f. Clack, a date tat, by atari Manager Dixon said the result in Ohio made certain the nomination of Roosevelt. The senate committee on commerce reported favorably the bill to permit the construction of a bridge across the Missouri river at Council Bluffs. The British bouse of commons ad journed to June 4. > Houston. Tex., had million dollai fire in business seection. The Ohio contest will be fought over at the coming state conventions. The Presbyterian general assembly took a strong stand against the liquor traffic. There will be an early report by •he senate committee on the Titanic j disaster. President D. B. Perry of Doane Neb > ccliege, died while traveling .n the east. Secretary Hayward is making up the rc!' cs.il of the republican nation , al convention. The bouse voted against levying of to Is on American-owned coast wise steamers. Koos-etelt said there would be no on.i remise at the republican nation al contention. Senator Root of New- York will be "eiuj^ rary chairman of the republican national convention. Francis J. McConnell, president of Depaw university, was elected a Methodist bishop Senator Oliver said the pending metal revision bill was to the liking of the steel corporation. President Taft sent to the senate the com.nation as rear admiral ot Capta.n Frank E. Beattie. Prediciticn of Roosevelt domination and a reign of mob law was made in ■he house by Dies of Texas. At Santiago. Cal.. C. H. Tolliver and w.fe were murdered Saturday. Tolli j ver was a well known airship inven tor and builder. Robbers entered the bank of Car | re;. Oti and escaped w pounds, the highest price ever paid in j that market for cattle. The twenty head averaged 1,433 pounds, making the total of the draft $2,479.09, or an average of $123.95 per head. CANNOT HOLD PLACE SENATOR LORIMER IT APPEARS MUST STEP OUT. REQUIRED VOTES IRE LICKING —i i ■ ■ Son of Senator Says His Father Will Not Give Up Seat Without a Struggle. ■Washington.—Senator Lorimer of Illinois will receive word direct from his friends in the senate that they cannot hope to save him in his fight for the retention of his seat. While it is not admitted that Lorimer will be urged to resign, it was said he might decide on that course. Vice President Sherman left Wash ington Sunday night for Chicago. It w-as said his mission was private bus iness. but it was rumored that he would see Senator Lorimer and com municate to him the result of a poll of the senate that has just been con cluded. That poll shows: Certain for Lorimer. 40; certain to jppose him. ;i9; doubtful, 16. There Is one vacancy. The attitude of the senators whose votes are classed as doubtful has given the friends of Senator Lorimer much concern. Although nearly a week has gone by since the poll was made the Lori mer supporters have not been able to add one name to their list. Those classed as doubtful have refused to give the Lorimer men any indication of their intentions. Lorimer men were forced to the conclusion that the list of doubtful votes was too large to give them any chance to win if the case were brought to vote. It was decided, therefore, to submit the exact situa tion to Senator Lorimer. There was no one of the Lorimer supporters authorized to speak for the junior Illinois senator, but it was argued that he should resign and not further uselessly embarrass his friends in what they felt would be a futile battle. It was argued further that Senator Lorimer should be con tent to rest cn his former victory and the fact that a majority of the com mittee which investigated the charges the second time had reported in his favor. finally u was agrees mat me only thing that could be done would be to present the situation to the senator himself. His health has been im paired throughout most of the present session and he has been unable to remain here to look after his own in terests. It was thought that he might be influenced to abandon the fight on that account. Chicago.—William Lorimer. jr.. son of United States Senator Lorimer. said his father would not give up his seat in the senate without a struggle. Denial of a rumor that Senator Lor irner's resignation had been taken back to Washington by Vice Presi dent Sherman also was made by Mr. Lorimer. jr. “It is no. likely that the vice presi dent cf the United States would make a messenger boy of himself," the son said. Clapp Will Oppose Root. St. Paul.—Following a conference by Ormsby McHarg of New York, one of Colonel Theodore Roosevelt's man agers and contest expert, Gifford Pin chot. former chief forester and lead er of the Roosevelt movement in Min nesota. Hugh T. Halbert of St. Paul, announced that United States Sen ator Moses E. Clapp of Minnesota will probably be a candidate for tempora ry chairman of the republican nation al convention at Chicago next mouth in place of Senator Elihu Root. Eulogy cf Latta. Washington.—The late Congress man James Latta of Nebraska was eulogized in a special memorial ser vice held by the house of representa tives. The speakers were Repre sentatives Stephens. Norris, Kinkaid and Maguire, all of Nebraska. In Serious Condition. London.—Dowager Queen Louise of Denmark, is in a serious condition, says a Copenhagen dispatch to the Daily Mail. She has been removed to Fruens Bcge. suffering from nervous shock. Exports for Aprii. Washington.—The monthly state ment of the Department of Commerce and Labor shows the total v^lue of exports for April to have been $176.- . IrtO.OOO as against $15000.000 for the j same month last year. A Kind Judge. Xew York.—When Daniel Walsh, arrested for stealing a ride on a i freight train, told Magistrate Kerno chan he was trying to get to work, j the magistrate gave him fare. Declared Net Guilty. Cleveland. O.—A verdict of not guilty was returned in federal court ; for the eight wall paper manufactur- t ers and jobbers who were tried for alleged violation of the Sherman law in conspiring in restraint of trade in the conduct of their business. New Order for Police. Chicago. 111.—The mounted police men in Chicago public parks must walk or learn to ride a motorcycle. 1 The commissioners have decided that ! he has become merely an ornament. I Succeeds Titanic Victim. London.—The announcement was made that Edson Joseph Chamber lain. vice president of the Grand Trunk Pacific railway, has been ap pointed to succeed Charles M. Hayes, who lost his life in the Titanic disas ter, as president. Battleship Nebraska Aground. Xew Orleans.—The battleship Xe braska ran aground Saturday in Southwest Pass, at the mouth of the Mississippi river, while bound from Xew Orleans to Hampton Roads. NEW JERSEY YOUTH A CHAMPION EATER j Frederick Binks Establishes World's Record in Art of Consuming Cream Puffs. Paterson, N. J.—Emulating “the young man with the cream tarts," from Robert Louis Stevenson's “Mod ern Arabian Xights.” Frederick Binks, sixteen years old, of 80 Ellison street, has established a world's record. He ate 42 cream puffs on a bet, hereby being the champion light weight cream puff eater of the world. As a grand finale and at the same time to prove there was no ill feeling, Binks. with great satisfaction, ate three cocoanut pies. The entire per formance took twenty minutes. Binks now stands ready to meet all comers j in the cream puff line. Louis Geng. a farmer of Wanaque. 1 and a close friend of Binks, came to ‘ visit the latter. During a conversa 1 The Contest Was On. tion about his fondness for cream puffs, Binks declared he could eat a dozen of them. Geng. who has a keen sense of humor, made a wager that Binks could not eat fifteen. Before accepting the bet Binks asked to be excused for a few min utes. He left the room and came back in ten minutes smiling. He an nounced that he would take the bet and the money, $10. was placed in the hands of Ernest Steinheibler of SO Ellison street, who was made referee by mutual agreement. Then the contest was on. When the fifteenth puff had been eaten Binks never stopped, but kept right on un til he had eaten all the puffs on the pan, 27 in all. There was nothing left to eat but three cocoanut pies. Binks finished these and smacked his lips. “Tell me." asked Geng after the bet had been paid, “why you left the room before you would 6ay that you would take the bet." “Well. I wanted to see if-I really could do it.” he replied. He had gone outside and eaten fifteen to make sure of things. LEGS BURNED AND FROZEN Section Hand. Camping Near Village. Has Fit and Falls Into a Bonfire. Norwalk, O.—Suffering from burns on his right leg, extending from the hip to the ankle, and with his left leg badly frozen. Joe Moyrock. aged thirty one years, a Polish railroad section hand, was brought to the county in firmary in this city recently from Greenwich. Moyrock started to walk along the railroad track from Shelby to Green- i wich. and when darkness overtook him he built a bonfire alongside the track just outside the village. He reclined beside the fire to spend the night. During the night he was seized with I—_-1 Was Seized With s Fit. an epileptic fit. and while in that con dition his right leg fell among the embers of his fire. When he regained consciousness. Moyrock says, he was unable to walk or to drag himself to : where he could receive assistance. He was not found for two days. Dur ing that time his left leg and right foot and ankle were froxen. Both legs were amputated. Talked in His Sleep. Detroit.—Because he talked In hi* sleep Greene McAdoo betrayed to his associates in a local boarding house that he was wanted in Greensboro X. C., for wife murder. He was ar rested. Required Two Graves. Xew York.—It took two graves to hold the body of Frank Larson. He weighed 465 pounds when he died ol fatty degeneration of the heart. The coffin was three feet four inches deep. STORMS TO PREDICT SELVES Wireless Stations tc Be Used to Make Tempests Send Their Own Warning Ahead. Storm centers move usually in an easterly or northeasterly direction. Hence the prediction of storms on the Atlantic coast is possible, since most of them come from the Mississippi valley. Some come up the coast from tea Caribbean sea, but even in this ease we have no warning. But western Europe is less fortu nate. Its tempests come from the At lantic, and with little warning. Euro pean weather men have made as much as possible a study of the paths of American storms across the Atlantic and are sometimes accurate in pre dicting the time of their arrival; the same has been done with storms com ing up from the South Atlantic. But It often happens that storms vary either their route or the rate of move ment, so that predicting cyclones on the coast of western Europe is more or less guesswork. As a possible help in this respect Director Andre of the Lyons observa tory is making a deep study of the galvanometer records of various wire less telegraph stations. He has found that the antennae are sensitiv to any stray electric currents as well as to messages, and he hopes to discover a way to make the storms telegraph their own warnings ahead of their arrival. Every storm is accompanied by elec trical disturbances, and already M. Andre has accumulated a mass of evi dence to show that each storm in this way gives warning. Just how to read this evidence is the problem to which he is devoting himse'.f. Simplest Way of All. The following story the Saturday Evening Post says is told of Col. George W. Goethals. who at the time it took place was an instructor in en gineering at West Point. One day. in a recitation he gave out this question to a class of cadets: "The post flagpole, sixty feet high, has fallen down. You are ordered by your commanding officer to put it up again. You have under your command a sergeant and ten privates of the en gineer corps. How would you get the pole back into place?” Each cadet, after long consideration and much figuring over the derricks, blocks, tackle and so on, evolved a different method. “No.” said Goethals. "you are all wrong. You would simply say: ‘Ser geant, put up that flagpole!’” Best Business Creator. As a business creator, what is there better than advertising? Have you ever asked that question of yourself? The millions that advertising has made for merchants are uncountable, yet there are business men who even now don't believe in advertising, just as there are people who still think it is safer and more convenient to travel in a prairie schooner behind a pair of slow oxen than in a Pullman palace car. Yet this type of business man is seldom rated in commercial rating books.—Exchange. On the Train. "Mercy. Laura, what do you mean by beginning to write just as soon as the train pulls out?" "Oh, I'm just writing a post card to my husband, telling him we arrived safely. • Judged by the Wires. Hostess (to her little guest)—So you den t burn gas tip at your house at all? Dorothy—Oh. no, indeed; every bit of light we use is sent by telegraph. Nothing Doing. The Cat—Come on down and I’ll show you a beautiful road. The Bird—A dark one. I suppose, and colored red. If You Are a Trifle Sensitive About the size of your shoes, you can wear a rise smaller by shaking Allen's Foot Ease. the antiseptic powder, into them. Just the thing for Dancing Parties and for Breaking in New Shoes. Sample Free. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. There is very little fighting done in the world, considering the cumber of men who go around with chips on their shoulders. Liquid blue is a weak solution. Avoid it. Buy Red Cross Bail Blue, the blue that's all blue. Ask your grocer. A North Dakota man has an 11-foot beard. Beware of Spring's sudden changes: keep Garfield Tea at hand. Drink hot on retiring. German silver is an alloy of nickel, copper and zinc. DoYou Need Help For your poor, tired stomach ? For your lazy and sluggish liver ? For your weak and constipated bowels ? For your general run down condition ? Then by all means— try HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS IT DOES THE WORK AT ALL DRUGGISTS DAISY FLY KILLER STSE Si ^ files. Neat, clean or namental. convenient, cheap. Lasts all season. Made of metal, can't spill or tip over; will not soil or Injure anythin?. (Guaranteed effective. Sold by d«al«r»«r • sent prepaid for ti. faintp ftOMSM, 1M DaAalfc Aye., Brooklyn. B. T.