WILSON GIVES OUf RULES EUR DRAFT President Insists on Equality in the New Army. BE FEARLESS AND IMPARTIAL Ado an it ion to Exrmqtisn Boards Askt Greatest Impartiality and Least Personal Hardship— Each Case on Its Merits. Washington. I'. <\—Uegulathms to govern llu- tutl step toward selecting a uii' i .il war army from tile tuil Hot - reg.-refed f..r service on June o. were »«tie he pre M-rtl’ed later the manner of determin ing tie .-nier iff liability of the men registered, hut *s-f forth In gr.-at ile tat J the nM little to the terms "f the draft law. the ques tion of whether a man between the kg*- of tw••nty-oiie and thirty is en titl'd to exemption be population or « :•>• of .tti.fMl. with x :•* -leiia! Inotrds where necessary for fs ■!> »dd:*i<1! he promulgated so that the pr riay lie put underway without ':.y. Ti e present intention 1* to ■ : Tile then *. leeted to the eol or* about September 1. It. a stat.-ta -nt • otuj.ar jing the an t»»'Ut.< .it.. tit of the regulations, the f r<• - •l»-nt id up-*n the boards to «h» th- :r work fearlessly and impartially at <1 to reti ■ -t.b.-r that “our armies at t!— fron' « ill b strengthened and sus Ta r..*t if they t-e cntt)|«.sed of men fri-e fhf an; *•'.*•• of injustice in their ISi-rJe of selection " All Force* cn Equal Footing. Th. - - a amrat follows: "The regu ,-ition* wh: -it I am today 01 •;*.!.C be • "igated. pursuant to the direction of the -elective service law. ever th- remaining step* of the | lan for t-t-bring into the service of the Tt.i-ed State* qualified men from th -e w ho hate registered; those se - ‘*-d tis th- r.-s*:1* -»f *!ii* pr*«-.**- to con-’ • rre. with the regular artny. the National ctu r-l nvl the navy, the fight ing force* .,f th. nation, all of which foto-* are under the terms of the taw placed :n a position of equal right, dignity and responsibility with the Baeti.'—r* of all other military forces. "The regnla>:tirtial and fearless performance of the deli cate and difficult duties lntrtist*-*i to them They should rctnemlter as to each indivt-iuai case presente*l to them that they are railed uf*on to adjudicate the tie*st sacred rights of the individ ual and to preserve uutt-rn1*hed the honor of the nation. ~t*ur armies at the front will he strmgtiieticd and su*tainetn any sense of Injustice In the ttKsle of selection, and thev will l«e inspired to loftior ef forts in leialf of a country in which the citizens railed tj;*m to perform high public functions perform then with justice, fearlessness and impar tiality.” Methods of Waking the Draft. f>*n organizing -»e- local l«»ards will take ov*-r from the registration l**ard* nil reel strut inn cards, which they will number ** -ialiy and list for posting to public view. Then, after having been advised of the method by which the order of liahtitty for service shall be determined and of the quota to be drawn from its territory (minus credits for enlistments tn *he National Guard er regular army), each hoard will prepare a Hat of persona designat MEN WHO ARE EXEMPT | * Officers of United States, *■ states, territories and District of :*• Columbia. >! * Ministers of religion and stu- $ ♦; dents of divinity. £ * Persons in military or naval ♦: service of United States. '•*] J Subjects of Germany and ail * aliens who have not taken out >i * first papers. >; * County or municipal officers. * * Customhouse clerks and work * men in arsenals and navy yards, t*: * Pilots, merchant marine sail : * Married men with dependent Jj wives or children. -J * Sons of dependent widows, $ * sons of dependent, aged or in * firm parents, or brothers of de , pendent orphans under sixteen * years of age. . Men morally deficient. Members of recognized relig- :*• » icus sect existing prior to May * 18. 1917, whose creed forbids ' • participation in war. >i «: >. ■ i for service in tin* order of their lia bility. post the list, give it to the press, and within three days send notice to each designated person by mail. As tin* men so notified appear the hoard- lirst will make a physical ex amination In accordance with special regulations to lie provided, hearing in raiml that all persons accepted by them will he re-examined by army surgeons. If tie* physical examination Is passed sueeessfully. then comes the question of exemption. Those Entitled to Exemption. IVrsop* who must be exempted or discharged by the local hoard include: < tfficers of the United States, of the *tati * territories and the District of Columbia: ministers of religion, stu dents of divinity, persons In the mili tary or naval service of the United State*, subjects of Germany, all other aliens who have not taken out first paper*, county or municipal officers, •ustomhoijso clerks, workmen in fed eral armories, arsenals and navy yards, persons in the federal service designated hy the president for ex e-iiptieii. pilots, merchant marine sail or* those with a status with respect •o d« pendents which renders their ex clusion desirable (a married man with dependent wife or child, son of a de p- rab-nt widow , son of dependent, aged or iiitirm parent, or brother of depend ent orphan child under sixteen years of age), those found morally deficient, and any member of any well-recog nized religious sect existing May IS. 1:*17. whose creed forbids participation in war and whose religious convictions accord with the creed. Man or Wife May Make Claim. claims for exemption because of de pendent' may be made by the man be *-*!f. his wife or other dependents, or by a third party who has personally investigated the case. A claim made 1-y the husband must be accompanied b\ supporting affidavits signed by the wife atid by the head of a family re siding In the same territory. A claim b; the wife or a third party must he accompanied hy two supporting affida vit* signed hy heads of families. Sim ilar rules govern claims on the grounds of other dependents when the depend ents or third parties being authorized to fib- claims with supporting affidavits. In each case the board must be satis fied before it grants exemption or dis eharge that the dependent or depend ent* aetuaily are supported mainly by the fni’t* of the man's mental or phys ical labor. Local boards are required, subject to appeal, to pass upon claims for exemp tion or discharge within three days af ter the filing of affidavits. Must Decide in Five Days. District hoards must decide appeal eases within five days after the closing , of proofs and their decisions are final. If the ruling of n local board is af firmed tlte person in question stands finally accepted for military service. In passing on claims for exemption ■ in** . i * *>i fiiipim meut in neces sary industrial and agricultural occu pation' tin district hoards must he cou vinci-d that the particular enterprise affording such employment actually is ne<-e"ury to the maintenance of the military establishment of national in terest during the emergency. “The evidence must also establish.” the regulations say, “even if the par ticular industrial enterprise or particu lar agricultural enterprise is found nec — cry for one of the above purposes, that the continuance of such person therein i> necessary to the maintenance theri-of and that he cannot he replaced by another person without direct, sub ' ■ :i tit in 1 material loss and detriment to the adequate and effective operation of tie- particular industrial enterprise ot agricultural enterprise In which he is engaged." May Designate Certain Industries. I-ater the president may from time to time designate certain industries oi 1 i-Iji — ' of industries that tire necessary and tin- district boards will he so no tified. It will he the duty of each beard however, to ascertain the avail able labor supply for such industries t’- c- tin- men called for military -i n ice and to take the result into con sole am in determining such things. "If. in the opinion of the district board tld' section of the regulations I concludes, "the direct, substantial, ran t- a! I**'' to any such industrial or ag ricultural enterprise outweighs the loss that would result from failure to ob tain the military service of any such person, a certificate of discharge may be 1'sued to him X X X.” • Ynitk-ates of exemption will not necessarily he permanent. They may Ik* revolted with changing conditions, or may be granted only for prescribed periods. SOME POSTSCRIPTS Of Fretwh invention i* a n»l«ber stop prr with a flexible projection which ran he folded down around tic- neck ut a bottle for additional serurtty. EJerfrt* besid lainjw for tulaers. sup plied with current hy batteries worn on the sides of the cap- have been patented by a Pennsylvania inventor. Telejtniiih pales have born dispensed with entirely In one Welsh town in which the resident* have permitted the wires to be stmnjr from house to bouse. mt wasntngio*. I an*1 So that violin music will be Jieard more clearly by an audience, a tone reflector has been invented that is fas tened to the back of an instrument. In Sweden articles sotd as gold mu-? contain not less than 75 per cent of the pure metal, and those sold cs silver at least 82 per cent of pure silver. A specie- of cactus growing prolifi cally in Algeria has made by French scientists to yie t * 13 per cent of sugar and about Co f & coL't of al cohol. i Ult*U. i»V «uuitru auu i\A> I ■*.»» I TV 1—French officer and his dog both wearing gas masks while crossing a dangerous zone near tin* Chemin-des | Dames. 2—Stretcher bearers taking a practice case into Columbia war hospital, the first one built in the United ! States. :{—Sidney D. Walden, former president of a big motorcar company, who is giving all his time and knowl i edge to aid the aircraft production board. 4—Chinese troops likely to be involved in another civil war; they are ! doing the goosestep taught them by their German drillmasters before the war. NEWS REVIEW OF THE PAST WEEK Kerensky Leads Russia's Army in Renewed Offensive on Galician Front. CHEERING NEWS FOR ALLIES Work of German Spies in America Re sulted in Futile Submarine Attack on Pershing’s Transports—At tempt to Restore Manchu Empire in China. By EDWARD W. PICKARD. Second in importance only in the ar rival of the American army in France, in the eyes of the allies, is the suc cessful resumption of tin* offensive hy the troops of the Russian republic. Led by the lion-hearted Kerensky himself. ' the Muscovite soldiers on Sunday be j gnn a tierce attack on tlte Austro-Ger i man lines in eastern Galicia near 1 Brzezany. In tlte first two days tlie Russians drove the enemy out of a triple line of trenches and captured tlte town of Koniuehy and 1S,31HI men. this great number of prisoners indi I eating a breakdown of tlte morale of tlte Teutonic troops. Tlte tigliting con tinued all week and the losses on both ; ^ides were very heavy. The wondtT fully efficient work of the Russian ar tillery in the preparatory bombard ment shows this arm of the service is better equipped titan ever before. Lemberg Is the immediate objective of this Russian advance, and at tlte | same time an attack is in progress further north which threatens Kovel. While vast importance attaches to the result of this battle, it is the re ; newed willingness and even desire of the Russian troops to tight the Teutons that is most cheering to the allies. The ! army at least on that front now is well I in hand and is better supplied with i munitions than at any previous time. Ail the regiments that took part in the tigliting of Sunday and Monday have been officially designated “ISth of .June regiments,” that being the old style J date. Kerensky’s presence inspired i the men to almost unanimous ac ! tion, the few laggards being punished by being removed from the ranks and sent home. General Scott, American chief of | staff, was fortunate enough to be at j the front and to witness the Russian attack from a vantage point. A by-product of tin* successful Rus sian offensive was the granting by Em peror Charles of Austria of amnesty to all civilians convicted of high trea son and other offensives. This attempt of the emperor to win all parties to the support of the government, it is predicted, will not succeed for the Czechs especially are still obdurate, and the opposition is becoming strong er daily. Work of German Spies in America. With tlie safe arrival in France last week of the last transports of the American expeditionary force, carrying the horses and ammunition, the gov ernment let it be known that the previ- J ous sections, carrying the troops, were twice attacked by German submarines. The U-boats were driven off before they could do any damage, and at least one of them was sunk by gun fire. Tlie successful combating of these attacks enhances tlie feat of the navy in transporting the expedition without loss, hut tlie fact that the submarines waylaid the transports far outside the war zone lias aYoused the authorities at Washington to tlie truth that Ger man spies in this country must have told Berlin when the expedition was to sail and by what route. Secretary I lauiels and Admiral Benson were the only persons, supposedly, who knew the route selected. Admiral Gleaves sailing with sealed orders which "he did not open until he was out several days. When the expedition was well on its way a wireless was sent to Ad miral Sims, in command in European waters, to pick t:p the transports at a ; specified rendezvous outside tlie war ! zone. This message was in the navy’s | most secret and recently revised code. '• _™__ Many persons on the Atlantic sentwiard knew when the vessels sailed, and that infonuation presnniahly was sent the Berlin by a German agent by wireless in some roundabout way, hut how the route was discovered seems to he u mystery. President Wilson has given orders that the German spy system he wiped out before any more troops sail, and many a Teuton is likely to be interned for the period of the war. Until now the government l as been unexplaina bly lenient in it' treatment of Ger mans and their sympathizers, in the country generally and in the city of Washington. We are not at war, offi cially. with Austria-Hungary. Bulgaria and Turkey, and the diplomatic repre sentatives and agents of these coun tries are still fro. to serve their ally in any way they can. The German press of America also is still unmo lested and continues its sinister cam paign against the successful conduct of the war. In view of the confiden tial information from their Washing ton correspondents available to the Gernian-American editors, ami despite their protestation' of loyalty to Amer ica. it is not beyond the bounds of reason that some of these editors should be doing spy work for the kaiser, to whose cause they have shown themselves devoted. German plotters and their friends also are credited by the government with devising and in part executing a plan to cripple shipping on the Great Lakes by sinking or disabling vessels. The federal officials, aided by those of Canada, are getting after these mis creants. Having received their munitions. General Pershing’s troops were j promptly moved forward to their in- j te .fcive training camps back of the j fighting lines, where they can hear , the roar of the great guns. The otli- | cial review of one battalion was the j chief feature of the Fourth of July cel ebration in Paris, and the people of that city went wild with enthusiasm over the American fighters. Dniisri Mgam navancc. Field Marshal Haig again swatted the Germans on Thursday, beginning a resumption of the offensive in Bel gium, where there had been comparn tive quiet for a week. The British made a considerable advance south west of Hollebeke. The Germans made a tremendous at- j tack on the French lines east of Corny Tuesday, hut were repulsed by Petain’s men with great slaughter. While j they were demoralized by this defeat j the French made a clever counter-at- I tack, capturing a stong salient. Another slump in the number of U boat victims was shown in the weekly report of the British admiralty, and the naval officials of the allies are con- 1 vinceil that the submarine warfare has failed. The Germans are sending 'heir U-boats far afield, one of them 1 naving shelled Pontn Delgada, a city in the Azores. An American trans- ; port helped drive the submarine away, i On Wednesday a dozen or more Ger- j man air raiders appeared over Har- I wich, a seaport in Essex, and dropped many bombs, killing 11 persons. They were driven oft* with gunfire and air planes. and two of them were brought I down nhluza. German Unrest Increases. On the eve of the meeting of the reichstag its committees were told by spokesmen for various groups that j further proffers of peace such as Ger- 1 many is willing, even anxious, to grant will he harmful and that all the em pire can do is to hold out and mean time “democratize” the country: that it might have peace this summer if it were willing to abandon all annexa tions and indemnities and to drop the idea of a separate peace with Russia; and that the peace formula of the Russian council of deputies was im possible. The so-called democratizing of the empire, it appears, will take the form of reforming the franchise so far as the reichstag is concerned, which means mighty little so long as the German senate, composed of ap pointed members, has full control over the lower house, and there is no cabi net responsible to the parliament. Meanwhile unrest is increasing throughout Germany, displaying itself in food riots in Stettin. Dusseldorff and other cities, and in other forms elsewhere. Evey some of the "intel lectuals," like Professor Iielbrueek Privy Councilor Harnnck and others, ‘ _ * Have issued a call for governmental iefortr. in Prussia. The pan-Germans. sa\e for a few of the most rabid, are singing smaller day by day. Serious ri 's occurred in Amster dam last wee in which armed women raided the market places. These dis tui hnuces wer. due to the exportation of potatoes to England, to which the government is . • mniitted under agree ments to pres, we its trade relations "itli lioth Ger; my and the entente nations. Preparations : r speedy participa tion in the war . cupied Vetiizelos and ht-s government n <.recce last week. Tlie premier has declared that the treaty with Serb; disregarded by Con stantine, shall h. faithfully executed. Senate Discuss-s Taxes and Food. 1 he revised wur tax bill was report ed to the senate on Tuesday. As it stands, it will ra.-e a revenue of $1, (hO.inhmkk)—a r» action of $130,000, from the house bill. The tax on war profits was increased so as to raise $.-.^3,000,000 The discussion of the food control I 11 continued in the senate, the prohil ion forces refusing to accept the plan of eliminating the provision for the oinmnndeering of the existing supply .if whisky for the manufacture of ammunition. The Southern senators, characteristically, rushed to the defense of cotton, to pre vent its inclusion among the articles to l>e controlled. The combat between the council of national defense and certain senators and representatives who have not dis tinguished themselves by broad-mind edness and patriotism, ks deplored by those who desire to see the war needs <>f the country supplied in the quickest and best way. Accusations or hints of profiteering against members of die council, unsupported by facts, are foot less and gain little sympathy from per sons of intelligence. It is a pity that so many of our national representa tives are too petty to be able to grasp a great occasion China Going Backward? W hiie most of the civilized world is battling for the security of democracy, the republic of China, which never was a real republic, is about to relapse into its old state of monarchy. Out of the tangle of circumstances in the Ori ent has cotne a new revolution which aims to restore the young Manchu em peror. Hsuan Tung, to the throne he abdicated. With the guidance and Mipport of Gen. Chang Hsun. the youth has established himself in the palace at Peking and is in a fair way to gain control of north China. President Li Yuan Hung took refuge in the Japan ese embassy and ordered the vice president to assume the presidency and establish the government tempo rarily at Nanking. This was done, Enron Feng Kwo Chang being named president, floth sides have assembled large forces, and the latest advices in dicate war will break out at any mo ment. The general opinion is that Gen. Chang Hsun is endeavoring to set up a dictatorship, using the young em peror as a catspnw. So far Japan seems inclined not to interfere in this Chinese embroglio. Shocking Riots in East St. Louis. East St. Louis, III., wrote itself on the roll of disgrace and dishonor last week with race riots in which more than 100 negroes were butchered and the negro quarter of the city was burned. Several white men met death in t lie rioting. The National Guard was culled to suppress the grave disor der. hut met with little success, and the brutal murders continued day af ter day. Thousands of -negroes have tied from the city. Superficially, the cause of the riots was the importation from the South of great numbers of negroes to work in the packing plants and other industrial concerns, hut the real cause lies deeper, in the disgrace fully corrupt political mismanagement of the city for many years. The decent < itizens of East St. Louis have handed together to redeem the place, and already have forced the mayor to dismiss the chief of police, the fire marshal and other officials. Death took two prominent men last week. Sir Herbert Beorbohm Tree, the eminent British actor, died in Lon don. and William H. Moody, former attorney general and former associate justice of the Supreme court of the United States, passed away at his home in Massachusetts. SEE REUNION OF NATIONS London Newspapers Join in Rejoicing Over the Wide Celebration of Independence Day. The prominence given Independence day by the London momipjr newspa pers suggests a recurrence of a Brit ish rafhtr tlmn an American anniver sary. Besides fully reporting :he cel t' ration, incidents, banquet speecnes lid '-ill- r things, lire principal papers I'hnuvmirts. i - u>tr>r Due ba. sneaking from the Tt devote the finest editorials thereto, emphasizing the sentiments expressed liy Foreign Secretary Ralfour. The Morning Post, which often in the past lias been critical of America rejoices that “the anniversary ofr es. trnngement has become u festival of reunion.” and declares: “Not the least of manifold benefits the Germag un wittingly conferred on Great Britain is the liftiug of Anglo-American rela tions to a plane of more Inti mate and cordial friendship than a century of time has been able to achieve.” e re-establishment of Poland. j of >1 The Times says there are some Britons “who still do not see American belligerency for what it is. one of the miracles of the war and its crowning mercy.” It contends that American intervention swept away bickerings such as over the Mack lists, which at one time threatened Anglo-American estrangement. It adds: “It has stamped th? justice of the allied cause with the authority of the most power ful of neutrals and with the prestige of acknowledgment by the leader of the western hemtsnhoro ” . aeedonls. [minor notes from all PARTS OF NEBRASKA Mrs. Ralph Muemullen. 19. resident of Fontenelle, and John Jackman, aged 1C, of Fremont, were killed in ! stantly. and Ralph Muemullen was ! badly cut and bruised when a fast ! Northwestern passenger train struck i ihe a.tioniohile in which they were j riding, a mile north of Fremont. The impact v as so great that one of the 1 wheels of the automobile was thrown more than 200 yards. Scottshluff county raised $35,000 as its share in the Red Cross drive. Del egates from the county at the meet ing in Denver insisted on raising the first appropriation from §10,000 to $17,000. The result of iho campaign was the raising of practically twice the sum of the apportionment. Of ; this sum Scottshluff itself raised , $13,500. tiering. $5,600 and Mitchell. $.3,200. Lincoln has a community drying plant, said to he the lirst of its kind anywhere in the country. It is locat ed in the liutler Avenue Presbyterian church, and people in the district are charged the nominal sum of 2 cents a tray for drying their fruits and vege : tables. The plant was constructed at a cost of $150, which was met by the Lincoln Rotary club. tin- spying oi an oversnoe protruu 1 ing from the sand in the river at Butte by two small children resulted in another extensive search for the hodv of Sylvia Wales, who was lost in the river near Butte several months ago. The mother of the dead girl is ; in a serious condition from the effect of the long strain. A change is being contemplated in the pian for the dependents in Sew ard county. Since the recent fire a; tlie county farm a large sum of mon ey will have to lie expended in putting up buildings and investigations are being made as to the cottage plan or a community house that will lie self I sustaining. Madison county is to have a woman ! county agent, the second in Nebraska. A County Homemakers' association with a membership of more than 200 country women has been formed to assume local direction of the county agent's work. Seward is the only j other county in the state having such an official. A large real estate deal was closed at Neligh when John 11. Rittscher of Clearwater became owner of the 560 acre farm known as the- Wood broth ers' farm, tic - miles southeast of Neligh on A’ • creek. The con sideration was "..400. A 3-year-old son of Edgar Garner | of Platte Center was caught in a belt attached to a gasoline engine and be fore the engine could be stopped had received injuries that caused his ! death. Mrs. Fred Vogt of Elba was found shot in the head close to the road five miles south of St. Paul. An in vestigation is being made. It Is thought she was murdered and thrown from an automobile. Five people, all of Lincoln, were seriously injured, when the automo bile skidded and turned over three times at the bottom of a bill eleven | miles west of the capital city. It is announced that Saunders county will' undertake now to raise S35.000 for the Red Cross fund. Saunders county is one of the rich est counties in Nebraska. By a vote of 3.700 to ”00. citizens of Pender decided for the proposition of a new drainage district. The needed improvement, it is said, will greatly benefit owners of lowlands. Loans to the amount of $322,660 on farm land in Nebraska had been ap proved hy the Omaha farm loan hank np to July 1. A movement is on foot at Beatrice to establish a laundry plant in th« city. A Kansas capitalist is behind the project. The total assessed valuation of Cuming county is placed at $!>.504.300. an increase of nearly $2,000,000 over 101(5. Horses in the county number 10.8(14. valued at $00.21 a head. Cat tle number 40.000. worth a little over $2.000.(K">. and automobiles number 1.4(53. valued at $437,330. • A yearling steer ealf donated by two farmers was auctioned off at Te cnmseli for S1SS and the proceeds given to the Red Cross fund. The j calf was again donated and auctioned off. bringing nearly $200. which was also donated to the Red Cross fund. As a means of providing for Fre mont's poor next winter, surplus veg etables from Fremont gardens are i being canned at the Fremont High school. High school boys are picking j the vegetables without pay and school i teachers •ire canning them. ! The city council of Red Cloud let ! the contract for paving the business j district to a Lincoln firm on a bid of j $2.58 per square yard, material to be I brick. The work is to begin im ! mediately and is to be completed by 1 September 15. A branch of the Kanssis City Fed I eral reserve hank will be located iu ! Omaha, according to a dispatch from Washington. The establishment of a branch bank in Omaha is almost ns I good ai' having the parent institution, it is said. A -special election has been called ! at Wayne for July 31 for the purpose of vntirg on the question of issuing $30,000 in bonds tor improving the streets and draining the wet land. The city council at Greeley has j voted to issue $13,000 in bonds for a new electric light plant. Miss Margaret McRae of Lincoln has been engaged to teach in the Rratton Fnlon consolidated school, ten miles northwest of Stella. The school open ed Ju*t after the holidays this year. Th.’eo teachers were employed. The Omaha automobile speedway, sail to be the fastest one and a quar l tei vmle tracks in the world, is to be i tom down. The last race on the track was held July 4. Potato blight is causing growers in the vi -inity of Seward considerable worry. Fears are expressed that the crop will be badly damaged. Ilalph Mulford carried off the )l,,u. ors and the first prize, $3,200, in the 150-mile auto race at Omaha July 4th. He maintained an average sp- d "f 101 miles an hour for the distune despite two stops. Joe Thomas. Wal i ter Haines. Tommy Milton, Eddie j Hearne, Dave Lewis, Andy Burk and Billy Taylor finished in the order named. Dave Lewis won the 50-mile event, averaging 103.27 miles an hour, with no stops. Mulford finish ed second in this race and Milt--a third. The race was niajTed by tin overturning of one car. but fortun ly, no one was seriously hurt. Nearl $11,000 was given the winners of tie two events in prize ... Completed figures on registration in Nebraska of men subject to draft showed that out of the 11 107 men listed 110,596 are white Am. an cit izens; 1.434 are colored citiz- »;.!S9 are aliens, and 938 alien w ; ; -s. More titan half tlie number is d as having relatives dependent n them for support. The number corded as 56.870. The number of : whose occupations might exempt tb is shown by the revised figures to !->* 7.392, while those claiming to be to tally disabled number 1,191. Alto gether there are 65,577 who have pos sible grounds of exemption, while 46.641 make no claim of that kind. IJoy Hilt of Beatrice literally walk ed into the United States army after lie had once been rejected on account of a weak heart. He failed to pass a physical examination at Fort Logan. Colo., and was furnished transporta tion only as far as Lincoln on his way home. Hitt, being without funds, walked the forty miles from Lincoln to Beatrice in one day and applied To join Company C, Fifth Nebraska. Captain Brewster decided Hitt's heart was strong enough and a< pt ed him. •John r entroetis. age 20 years, a farm laborer living near Dunning and said to be th'e chief of a quint* i Germans who enticed a young ; open in his loyalty to America and German birth, away from home tud then gagged and poured turpenti: • over him, burning him severely. - arrested and taken to Lincoln on an alien enemy charge ordered by tic* government authorities. Fentrochs has been placed in jail, where lie wi 1 remain until the duration of the war. Decatur citizens flatly deny pub lished reports that the town is in danger of being eaten up by the .Mis souri river. It is said that the river cut into Mud lake, two miles north of Decatur, on the Nebraska side. : . •> weeks ago, thus changing the «•** *■ of the stream and that since it s not cut into the town. It is min tt *1 that 100 feet of Decatur was voured in the spring, and it was t.. essary to move the big elevator, I. it the site still remains. Nebraska is now included in the roll of honor of states which have fur nished their full quota of enlisted men for the army in compliance with President Wilson’s call. A total of 2,3516 has been secured, while the state's quota is placed at 2.351. But ten other states have furnished tie ir required number. Recruiting is -till going on. Women of Box Butte and Dawes counties are taking university in struction in home economies in their own halites, under Miss Mary Rokahr I of the Agricultural Extension Service of the State University. This is vir tually a woman county agent's work and there is much talk of placing such an official In Box Butte comity permanently. Omaha-Decntur Missouri Itiver Nav igation company, which will maintain a line of boats and barges for passen ger and freight traffic between the two cities, has filed articles of incor poration with the Douglas county clerk. The company is capitalized at $10,000. Venlon. Richardson county, mm a population of 500. raised $1,750 for the Red Cross in one night. June 30 completed the fifth year of municipal ownership of the Omaha water works. In the five years water rates to patrons have been cut 50 per cent. Resides paying the cost of op eration tile plant set aside 8500.000 for depreciation and has a surplus of 8503.500 on hand. Hurled through the windshield of his father's automobile when a front wheel came off. the three-year-old ^>n of Everett McWilliams of Genoa was cut nearly in two by the broken glass. The child lived several hours. M< Williams is a storekeeper in Genoa. All June records for cattle receipts and high prices at the South Omaha stock market were broken this year. Receipts totaled 100,010 head, which is 35.500 more than for the same month last year. Prices soared dur ing the month and reached the high level of $13.85 per cwt. Axtien. a stallion, owned by Sara Harris of Aurora. 111., set a new world’s 2:11 trot record for a stallion in a race con a half-mile dirt track at Lincoln, covering the distance in 2:09*4. A $500 fire loss to machinery and * alfalfa in the granary of " • Toap. a farmer, residing two miles south west of Bladen. Is believed to have been the result of spontaneous com bustion. C f. Waldo, a stock raiser of De Witt. sold twenty-eight head of young Duroc Jersey gilts recently for $950. Hogs are in great demand around DeWitt. Contract has heen let for York's new hotel, which is to cost In th - ncighhnrhood of $150,000. Work on the structure is to begin at once. Applications for loans rrnm the fed eral land bank of Omaha now total more than $12,000,000, and officials of tho bank predict that by September 1 the applications will reach a total of $20,000,000. After many unfortunate and dis couraging accidents, the process of boring for oil in the vicinity of Table Rock has again been resumed. The well is down nearly six hundred feet. Stockholders of the Farmers' Co operative Elevator at Merna gave 2 per cent of its net dividend. $020. to the Red Cross.