Mb. fr K .? l 1 DECIDE (ASES United States Supreme Court Hands Down Opinions. MAKES EWKH IN COUNTRY'S HISTORY Membe xpress Convictions on Extent to Which CONSTITUTION MUST FOLLOW flAG Dri'luliiii In u Men Mini llhi-t Comfort In llotli Nltlc Untie- In Del.liiiu Cum H'riwiKfullj l.rtlcd -lltiicrntiiciit SiihIiiIiipiI In Diiivim I'll Kf - Philippine ("me Neil In the United States Supreme court Monday last opinions were handed down In all but two of the eases before that court Involving the relation of Un united States to itslnsitlur possessions. The two eases in which no conclusion was announced was those Known as the fourteen diamond rings case and the second of the Donley cases. The undecided Dooley case deals with a phase of the Porto Kican question and the diamond rings case involves the right to the free importation of mer chandise from the Philippines to the I'nltcd States. Of the several cases decided the two which attracted the greatest share of attention from the court were what is known as the dc Lima ease and those known as the Downes ease and of those two the Downes ease Is consider ed the most far-reaching as it atloots our future relations. The de Lima ease dealt with a transitional phase of our insular relations. Thedc Lima case was the tlrst to re ceive the attention of the court and as it appeared to be quite- sweeplngly op Msed to the government's contentious, many persons precipitately arrived at the conclusion that the government had been worsted all along the line. I Ins view mi tiered a decided change when the conclusion was announced in the Downes case. The court was very evenly divided on both eases. The de Lima ease involved the power of the government to collect a duty in goods imported into the I'nltcd States from Porto Kico after the rati fication of the treaty of Paris and be fore the passage of the Porto llican act. The court said the government's contention in the ease was substantial ly a claim that Porto Kico is foreign territory. The entire en si' turned up on that contention. The court held that the position was not well taken; that Porto Kico was not at the time foreign territory and that therefore the duty which had been collected must tai returned. The decision of the Downes case fol lowed the history of the dealings of Un united States with Porto Kico a step farther. That case dealt with the legality of the exaction of duty on goods imported from Porto Kico Into New York after the passage of the Foraker act pro viding for n duty upon goods shipped from the I'nited States into Porto Kico and also on those shipped from Porto Kico to the I'nltcd States. In this case the court held that such eviction was legal and constitutional. The point of the two opinions con sidered collectively is that Porto Kico was never after the acquisition of that island foreign territory; that until congress acted upon the question no duty could be collected, but as soon iu congress outlined a method of con trolling the island's revenues that ac tion became binding. In other words, that congress has power under the con stitution to prescribe the manner of collecting the revenues of the coun try's insular possessions and has the right to lay a duty on goods imported into our insular possessions from tin; United States or exported from them Into tlic I'nited States. It holds, in brief, that for taxation purposes they arc not a part of the United States to the extent that goods shipped between their ports and the United States are entitled to the same treatment as though they were shipped between New York and New Orleans. Justice llrown delivered the court's opinion in both and there were vigor ous dissenting opinions In both. In the Downes case four of tho nine mom Iters of the court united hi an opinion characterizing in strong language the opinion of the majority in that case. In this opposing opinion the chief jus tice and . I ustlees Harlan, Krewer and Peckham united, and the chief justice and Justice Harlan presented their views in written form. Justices (!ray, Shlras, White and Mclvonna. also. while agreeing with the conclusion announced by Justice Drown, an nounced that they had reached the conclusion by dill'erent line of argu ment, and Justices (Iray, White and McKcnna announced opinions outlin ing their respective positions. Justices Shiras, White and .McKcnna nlso dissented In the do Lima case. Justice (Iray also presented an inde pendent and dissenting opinion in that case. Children Killed by Hcur. The three children of U. P. Porter field, a mountaineer residing about twelve miles southeast of Job, Wyo., wiiilo gathering (lowers In the woods near their home, wore killed and par tially devoured by 11 bear. Tho re mains were found by a searching party which had been out since Sunday even ing. Tim bear was discovered later and killed, The best dressed man in Dodgn City is an editor, and ho wears real dhi-uiondb. DE LIMA CASE THE FIRST Court Until 'Unit Untie IVcre miiR full Drclilril. Tin' Ih'-t ease decided by tho supremo court was that of Kilns S. . ilt Kiinu ft al.. platutilfs In error against Ceo. I!. Kltlwoll, collector f tin' port of Now Vorlt. Tho decision was rendered In behalf of tin' innjority of tho court Justice Krown. tin' opinion being con curred in ly all the justices, except Justice MeKetina. Shims anil VhlU TIip decision liuii"; upon the levying of SKI. 001) In duties on goods imported from Porto llleo into the I'nlteil States the eolleetlon of the duty having been Mistaineil hv the lower court In ef fect the decision was that territory no quired by the United States is a part of the I lilted and not foreign territory mid that such Import duties could not be levied. The decision of the lower court was reversed. i'liK Outturn' 1'nor. Justice llrown also delivered the opinion of tlio court tu the ease of Downes vs. Collector llldwell, of the port of New York in which suit was brought by Downes to recover back duties to the amount of SO.V.i.'i.'i exacted and paid under protest upon certain oranges consigned to the plaintiff and brought to Now York from Porto Kico during the month of November, 11MM. This case involved the question whether merchandise brought into the Port of New York from Porto Kico since the passage of the I'orakcr act is evempt from dut.v. notw ithstandinc' tlie third section of that act, which re quires the paj incut of "l. per cent of the duties which are required to be levied, collected and paid upon like ar ticles of merchandise imported from foreign countries." The circuit court of the United States of the southern district of New York .sustained the government In this position in imposing a duty. The supreme court aftlrmed the opin ion of the circuit court saying: 'We are of the opinion that the Isl and of Porto Kico is a territory ap purtenant and belonging to the United States, but not a part of the United States within the revenue clause of the constitution; that the i'orakcr act is constitutional so far as it imposes du ties upon imports from such Island and that tho plaintiff cannot iccover back the duties exacted in tills case."' state'schoolfunds Amount Due Kuril I'oiiut.v I'rcmi Ihtt Apportionment. State Superintendent Fowler has up poi tinned the temporary school fund 011 a basis of 'I77.H?' persons of school age, that being the census of one year ago. The total found for the semi-annual period is S.'i.-.u.S.VI.UO and the rate is a little less than lt.'l cents per scholar. The following statement prepared by the state superintendent, shows the amount apportioned to each county Am't Am't Due (i.HK'.Ot' Johnson.. . :i.SM-.2f Ke.irnev. .. iHO.ir. Keith. . t:is.;ui Kevu Palm il,lM1.7T Kimball . l.WKI.Iil Knox '-',44:1.111 Lancaster . !,ir7.(HI Lincoln.... 7.(14.0'.) Logan I.2IU.21 oii MTil.27 Madison . T.'.'imJ.OT McPliers'n. L22.V..M Merrick... 8.V.1.IHI Niiuce .... 1,414.00 Nemaha . l,ar(!.trj Nuckolls .. ,-.,W7.4:i Otoe. . . l,UX."i.l2 Pawnee. . r,lS.4S Perkins. .. T.attl.N) Phelps 'J.'JO'J.U Pierce . .. 1.SIW.17 Pl.itto. ... 1.21 1.2S Polk . . iMKJliT Hod WIl'w. il.lWI.iW Wiil'dsoti.. 7,r.03.0,.l Hock :is,-l!l 50 Sallim 7(11.47 Sarpy ft.lsi.tio Saunders.. :i.!!77.IW Seotts H'lf 'I.Ouii.Ol Seward.... l.it-lt'.Sii Sheridan . (1.841.411 Sherman... 1Mb. 17 Sioux LS07.0S Stanton.. . W7.7S Thayer J.Mu.'VI Thomas-. . . 5,1118.14 Thurston.. 4,('ks:i.i:i Valley .... il.'8.'J4 Wasirton .. WJ.lil Wayne. l,(Kr2.7t Webster .. 4,0.71 Wheeler .. r.l.OS York :i,(l77.'-'7 n.KW.o'i Total ., Due. .'I,70.to il.lV4S.54 ISM).04 (IK4.7II Aihinis. . Antelope . Manner.. , ninlne. .. Doonc Dx Butte. Hovil Drown.... Dnff.do.. . Hurt Duller . . 1'asn . .. Cedar . .. Chase ... Cherry. .. Chy'inio, . Cl.iy . . . CnlfllX... Cuming . Cii'iter Dakota . . D.ivves .... D.i w. son .. Dcul. . ,. Dixon. . Dodge. . . Douglas. . Diimly.... Fillmore . Franklin Frontier . Furnas.. 221.01 .-.,UW.(H 20,420 ill :i,8.v.ia iU'-Mir. 422..'2 .-.,s7:i .v 'J'.I.SO 2,040.01 2,402.41 4.'.I0S.C.8 4,:w.7i 0,7WMN ;i,(im.i ,Vi:i.24 :i,tii7.i :i,oi2.44 11,154.88 :,74!i.: :i,'J74.:il ll.fcll. (K) 51.4() n,MM.:n '-',70 1,42 7,750..J 822.7(1 n,225.V4 2,100.10 2,400.8:1 5K5.li.- 2,400.8!! 4,8.V.).4(1 J57.b0 1.B04.8S 2,031.71 Cape Gnrtiolil . Gosper.. . C.rant. .. Greeley... Dull Hamilton . Harlan.... Hayes. . .. Hitchcock. Holt Hooker ... Howard .. Jefferson .. 4,370.ftS 11,407.40 :i,(HJ7.(S 427.17 5,71 !.. U50,85.,.:u A Year at Solid Alliance. The missionary work of the Ameri can Sunday School Union in the year closing February 28, P.iOt, exhib ited two most gratifying features. Wliile 1871 new Sunday-schools wen) organized in destitute places, only 0 less than in the previous year, there were.'i'Jt reonranlwd. airalnst 51(1 in in the yer before, and II.'i'M schools vis ited or otherwise aided, against 2087 of the previous v car; and. better than all, Itr.'.l cases of visit and aid toold schools against 7I8." lu the year before From this It appears that while as groat an advance as usual was made in the plant ing of new s'diools, there was a very great advance made lu tho important work, of reviving and strengthening and confirm lug schools already iu ex isteuue. .Mlirrlr ,MI K.lllil. Announcement has been made iu New York of the marriage of Prof. (Joorge I). Ilorron and Miss Carrie Kami. Miss Kami, prior to her marriage, devoted considerable time and money to so cialism and it Is the intention of .her husband and herself to devote their lives to socialism. Company A, Harry Tukcy, captain, of the University Cadet llattallon, won the competitive drill, while First Ser geant, A. 1C. Karnes, of Company 1) won the individual prize. (RASH AT CURVE Frightful Collision of Street Cars At Albany, N.Y. fIVE ARE KILLED- EORTY ARE INJURED 1'hhi Meet While KiliinlliRllt Villi spent lloth .Motorntcii limit - Mrn inn! Women lie. ilte llroken Ann nml I.cei CiilnrNiil Know 11. Ulectrio cars 1 acini' for a switch while running In opposite directions at the rate of forty miles an hourcost live lives Sunilnv at Albany, New York, by a terrllie collision iu which over forty people were Injured, some fatally iimf others seriously. The lobby of the local postotlloe. Itl'lcd with dead and wounded, hysterical women and children looking for relatives and friends, surgeons administering tem porary lollef and ambulances lining through the city taking the wounded to hospitals weic the eaily Intimations of the accident. The scene of the disaster was a point alsuit two miles out of (Ireenbush, on the line of the Albany .' Hudson. The point where tho cars met on the sltiL'le track was a sharp curve, and so fast were Itoth running and so sud den was tho collision that the motor men never had time lo put on tho baeaks Is'forc south bound No. 22 had gone almost through north bound car No. 17 and hung on the edge of a high bin ft" with its load of slirieking.uialined humanity. One motorman was pinioned up against the smashed front of the south bound car, with both legs severed and killed instantly, while the other one lived but a few minutes. Fully 120 men, women and children formed a struggling, shrieking pyramid, mixed with blood, detached portions of human bodies and the wreckage. Some, of the more slightly injured of the men extri cated themselves and began to pull people out of the rear ends of the two cars and almost every one was taken out in this way and nearly all were badly injured. The women and children who had escaped Injury and death were hyster ical and added their cries to the shrieks of the dying and niutllutiul. Men with broken arms and bones, dislocated joints and bloody heads and faces tried to assist others who were more helpless Help had been summoned from Uast (licebiish and vicinity and In a little time the bruised mass of humanity, with tho mutilated dead for 11 gruesome and silent company, were loaded on ex tra cars and taken to Albany. 'I here ambulances and physicians had been summoned and the postotlice turned in to a morgue and hospital. As fast as tho physicians could teinoriiril.v tl.x up the wounded they were, taken to their homes or to the hospitals. With both inotormen killed It is hard to get to the real cause of the accident but It is supposed to have been on ac count of the south bound car passing a meeting point instead of waiting on the switch. INCREASE IN THE SALARIES roKtiniistei-H In 11rln1iH .Nebrinlui Tntwm In lie HfiK-nttrd. F. II. L. Willis has been appointed postmaster at ltattlu Creek, Madison county, Nebraska, vice C. F. Montross, resigned. The salaries of the post master atCreighton, PavvnceC'ity, I'eru, Pierce, and Pouca have been increased one hundred dollars per annum. Kural free delivery service will be established July next at North llcnd, Dodge county, with one carrier, C. H. McConnell. He Is to serve a popu lation of oni), senttered over an area of forty square miles. The. postofllce at Mapleville is to bo discontinued. The salaries of these postmasters are to be increased one hundred dollars per annum after .Inly 1: Franklin, Havclock, Lyons, McCook, Madison, Norfolk North llcnd, North Platte, Oakland, Omaha, O'Neill, and Osceola. Netv Ainnrlran lljrran. At the Chicago audhorium Friday night during the eighth annual May festival concert of the Cook county Sunday school, a new American hymn, "Hail Thou Land, by (Jod Selected," was sung for the first time in public. The composer is W. Con nidi of that city. The hymn was sung by a chorus of 1,000 female voices, assisted by an orchestra and grand organ and was enthusiastically applauded by the au dience. Hoy KIIIh HU sinter. Thomas Kyau, aged sixteen, of Toronto, Out., shot and killed his ten-year-old sister, Olive. Kyan says he tried to frighten his sister by pointing a revolver at her and pulling the trig ger. He forgot that the tlfth chamber was loaded. The bullet hit the girl squarely In the forehead and she died shortly afterwards. Kyan is charged with murder. liner I'nri ch lire Aetlve, i'he commandoes of Krltzluger, Van Kcencn and Fouche debouched .Sunday before dawn and crossed the railroad. They dashed southward, rein vailing the most populous districtsof Capo Colony. Fouche's commando has been resting many weeks lu the .uurburg moun tains. hulTeM .Sfiinid Stroke, lienrilc Ibsen, tho Norwegian dra matist, has suffered a seccr'l stroko of apoplexy and his condition Is almost hopeless. passes house of kings I'rcik Iri'iil) Onljr l.ml signature uf Hie lien erniir. dispatch from Okmulgee, I. 'P., says: The Crock treaty passed the house of kings Friday by a vote of 2.1 to 17. and It now awaits tho slgmitutu of the governor to beeoiii" a law. The passage of the tiealy inal.es one. of the most Inipoitaut epochs In the hlstorv of the territory, removing as ltdoes. tho uncertainty that has made waiting capital timid. Tho town is wild with enthusiasm over the Until passage of the treaty. Hundreds of thousands of dollars will bo furnished imiiiediatiiy to build bridges, railways and other enterprises that have been planned on paper for mouths For twenty .vears the fcdeial govern ment has been trying to make a tienty with tho Crocks, but has failed until now GUN EXPLODED IN HANDS. V. mini; M III Killed While lliiilllni: Neur orl. Payson Iturnctt. youngest son of K. 1'. Ilurnett. a lawyer of Sutton. Neb., died recently from the otVeots of an accident with a shot gun. Mr. Ilur nett was in tho employ of D. K. Klnne, 11 farmer, had. together with Klnno's son. left the Held at an early hour to do a little duck hunting on a neigh tailing pond. The gnu used by Ilur nett was an old one, not having ta-en used for some time, and instead of sending the charge out of the muzzle, threw it out of the rear, sending the charge and pieces of the breech in Jtuinett's face, a piece of steel pene trated the skull, making a hole the sleofa dollar and lodging in the brain. TRY TO WORK UPPREJUDICE I'roieHi In ('oiiiiiiiinit AkuI'ihI I'm ' Aiiierleiin .Miii'lilncr). Sir Alfred IHckinan. conservative, former president of tiie llrltish iron Trades' association. In the house of commons the other day protested against railroads which were con trolled by the government, and espe cially lii'llurinah, in I'gypt, continu ing buying American locomotives, when the report of tho Inspector of Iturinah railways, mentioned by Lord Hamilton, the inillau secretary, In the house May 7, showed they required more repairs and more coal than loco motives of llrltish make. Sir Alfred Hickman also made alle gations against the way an American Jinn is constructing the great viaduct In lliirmah. EXONERATES CAPTAIN HALL Wiih Ai-eiiHfil or ('ottiirdlcr, Hut llerlnrril Nut (lulll). The record of the court martial in the case of Captain Newt Hall, United States marine corps, who was charged by Minister Conger with cowardice in connection with the defense of the le gations at Pokln, has just reached Washington. Admiral Kemey has pro mulgated the llnding In 11 speelnl order which completely exonerates Captain Hall from the eharge, and tlnds that the only matter of substance sustained lu the eharyes Is an errorof judgment in connection with tho withdrawal of his troops at 11 critical moment froiv the Tartar wall. WILL REST NEAR LINCOLN John It. Tinnier lo lie Hurled I'Iiimi to Murljr I'roldenl. 'I'he remains of former (lovernor Tanner, will remain almost beside those of President Lincoln in Oak Kldge eeinotery, Springfield, 111. Mrs. Tanner, his widow, has purchased 7,000 feet, located on the driveway from the gates to the Lincoln monument and alMiut midway between the gates and the Lincoln monument and probably ilOO feet from the latter and directly south of it. In this lot the remains of Governor Twiner will be laid to rest. The price paid for the. ground was 8.1,000. Dentil From Morphine, Hdgar A. McCraeken, an attendant at the Lincoln asylum committed suicide in Lincoln, Neb., by taking 15 cents worth of morphine. The im mediate cause for Ills deed lies lu the fact that he had discovered that his wife, also an attendant, had been clandestinely meeting Krrett Kigclovv, who has for several months been an employe at the institution. (iirl riilufiill) Injured. Annie, the twelve-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Kelmer of Platts mouth, Neb., mot with a painful acci dent. She was running across the. street towards her home, anil, in at tempting to step upon the. sidewalk, fell against the picket fence, sustain ing n painful fracture of the bone lu her left wrist. MlKtukiK Wife fur HiirKlur. F. It. Klcharilson of Louisville, Ivy., shot and killed his wife, mistaking her for 11 burglar. It is thought she was walking In her sleep. Klehardson was paroled by the coroner. War llri lured on I)nj;i. The marshal of Table Kock, Neb,, has been instructed to kill every dog found running at large on the streets after June 10, and which does not wear wound Its neck a license tag, showing the payment of tho canlno tax. Merchant CoiiiiiiIIh Suit hie, Claud W. Iluilnall, aged thirty-two, a clothing merchant of St. Joe com mitted suicide at an unoccupied house, southwest of tlio city. Ho loft a noto saying his death was due to Uoincstlo illillcultles. WINS BY ONE VOTE Platt Amondment Adopted by tho Cuban Convention. RADICALS MAKE A VERY HARD EIOIIT V liiillrllte In Vrtulciuiii til of supporter llri lure I'rlt'iiilx of Aiiieuiliueill Trillion In I'liiintrv Muut llni imiiiIi r tirlril. Havana dispatch sa,vs; The Platt iimeuduient was accepted b the Cuban I'onstltutioiial contention Tucsdav by 11 vote of i:. to 1 1. The actual vote was on accepting themajoritj report of (he committee on relations, which em bodied tho amendment with exceptions if certain clauses. The tadicals made a hard tight at (lie last moment, and Sciiors Pordinilo, liiune and Taiunvo hlMcilv arraigned the conservatives. Senor laiuayo was partieularl.v vindictive, and doiiarcd that overybod.v who voted iu favor of the Platt amendment was a traitor to his country. The convention coin polled him to retract this statement. On several occasions personal encount ers seemed Imminent. Senor dome spoke for more than an hour and his speech won over Senators Castro. Iiohaugh ami Maudoloy. lie appealed to the patriotism of the delegates, ami 1 ehearsed the long light for independ ence, denouncing us perjurors all who favored the amciidtiiciit 011 the ground that thc.v had sworn to draw up a con stitution for an independent republic. Several conservatives usl.ed Senor 1 ionics- to letract. but ho refused. The follow Ingdelcgates voted against the majority report; (ionic, (ienere, Port undo. Lacret, Mandala.v. Clsmeros. Forrero. Fortiiu, Kobaugh. i'aina.vo. Stlva, Castro. Znyas and Alemau. Senors Itivern and llravo wore ab sent. The convention will continue its sessions which will bo devoted lo draw ing up the election law . La Discussion, lu an extra edition exclaims, "Now will come limned! ate Independence." KILLED IN A PRISON CELL Mini Held for Sufe Keeping Aeruseil uf Murder. A dispatch from Memphis. Tcuu., .says Alexander llcdcn, a well-known citicn of Pluaskl, Tenii..' was murder- ed lu a cell of detention at the police station, and N. A. (illlis of Ctiuiby, To.xns, Is under arrest. Ileilen had ta'on arrested for safe keeping, having imbibed too freely lu strong drink. (Jlllls was also arrested for the same cause and put In the same cell with llrileu. One of the guards In milking the round late lu the night found Hod en lying on a cot with his head crushed in. " P.xaminatloii showed him to be dead. As no one but (illlls was with llcdcn he was charged with the killing. Oil lis, who was Intoxicated, says he knows nothing of the crime, whatever. BAD FIGHT IN SAND HILLS. tjiinrrt-l Over limine KcmiUh In Mumllug A ffruj . A shooting scrape in which the vic tim barely escaped death, occurred about fifteen miles northeast of Al liance over a range iu Deuel county. John and Henry .erks, it is charged, both shot P. J. Sturgeon at the same time. One shot struck a rib directly over the heart and glanced, coming out lit the hip and the other in the left arm. K. P. Sweeney, the sheriff, of that county went out and captured the Zerks and lodged them in jail at Alli ance to await justice, i'he wounded man though seriously hurt, will per haps recover. Particulars of the quar rel are meager. SAMPSON MAY RETIRE Admiral l.lkelj loAnk Keller 011 Account or III llrullh. According to a Washington dispatch to the New York World It Is reported in naval circles at the. capital that Kear Admiral Sampson may ask for volun tary retirement on account of his health und that the navy department will grant his request, lie will not regularly be discharged under the statutory clause until late next winter. No ofliclal application has been re ceived at Washington from him nml ho may make none until after Secre tary lying's return. ACCUSED"OFBANK LOOTING Lieutenant (liiterinir of Vermont I'uiler Am l. Lieutenant (ioveruor M. F. Allen, vice president ami director of the Far mers' National Itankat Vcrgciiucs, Vt., which recently suspended, and J. W. Ketcham, a representative of the leg islature from that place, wcie arrest ed by United Mates olllcers under indictments charging them with com plicity with Cashier I). O. Lewis, in wiecktng the bank. I'lilul KIkIiI Willi I'ruiiipi.. In a fight with a gang of tramps at Carrolltou. Mo.. Charles Mclv'lnucy. a hiii of Policeman McKlnney, was killed while assisting his fatli-i' to arrest them. Throe of the gang were rounded up by the she till', i'he others escaped. J'ell Thirl I'eel. h. II. llerdnian of Central City, S. I).. whose wife was murdered at Harden City a year ago, became overcome while working In tins Stanley mines, and fell 11 distance of thirty foot lauding astride n pipe, lie is badly disabled from the accident. OTHER CASES GO OVER. Uliimoiiil Itlnc noil si.iiiiil lluiile.r Cnr lit Otrr Till Oilnl.rr. The United States Snpiome Court has adjourned until the second Monday lu October. Tho Philippines dinuionil ease and the seeoiid Dooley case, con sequent I go over till then. PRICE OF DEPARTURE. foil cm Vollfj I'IiIiih of 'I heir llr.t TerniD. Wiring to the London 'limes from Pcktn Dr. Morrison says: "The powers will agree to the evae uatlou on the Issue of an Imperial edict iHlinitllngChlna's Indebtedness- is (Ml 000.000 tnols, plus Interest, and that, China will willingly comply." It seems probable that ( 8 rout lliilain's posltlon limiting the Indemnity t be demanded from China I.Mi.OOO.OOOtaols will be agiecd (o by the end of the week. United States Special Commis si r Koekhlll thinks this may lie considered an American victory. Though his proposition limiting in ileinnjty to .llti.noo.ooo tuels was not accepted, still It was tho cause of tho other powers considering the idea. Tho only point likely to cause further delay In' a decision by all the miwci-h except America Is that regarding the raising of the foreign customs to 5 per cent. Mr. Koekhlll told the ministers at 11 recent meet inc. that rather than tnke, this stop America would relinquish all claim to Indemnity and oven make a mom y piosent to China, as American ooninierclal Interests would suitor far more thereby than (hose of any other power with possibly one exeeptlon DECIDE FOR REVISION New I'niifemhin uf I'ullli fr (lie I'rcnlij trrluiiK. Ily a unanimous vote the Presbyter Ian 'general assembly recently adopted the report of the special committee nil the revision of the confession of faith. 'I'he debate 011 this Important question had extended Into (ho fourth day and to Kev. James D. Mo If at Isduetheorod it of having brought thocommlssloners to such a harinoiilou'i conclusion. When iccoinmcmlatloii "U" was on Saturdav adopted by a eoinparatlvoly small majority Dr. Mo if at aiinouneed that In view of the divergence of opin ion lie would olTor an amend ment which he hoped would meet witU the apptoval of tho entire assemiiiy. When he presented this amendment it was Instantly aocepted by the com missioners and the adoption of tlio re port as a whole followed with but lit tle delay. A viva voce vote was taken and when (ho 1140 ayes responded to the question the commissioners arose and snntf "Prase (Jod from Whom all KlosslngK Flow," which was followed by 1 pray er of thanks given by Moderator Mill ion. YOUTH SHOOTS HIMSELF. Mil ki' llrllhcriite IIITiirt In liiul lll Own Life. Uric Olson, a young Swede who has been living In the neighborhood of Fairmont, Neb., for the past year, at tempted to commit suicide by shooting' himself In the breast. The bullet did not penetrate the bone, but passed around the left side and hslged under tho shoulder lilaile lie was taken to the hotel anil the bullet extracted. Tho physician thinks that If no com plications set in bo will recover, ixo cause is assigned for the deed, hut tho young man was evidently temporarily deranged. . PAPER MAKERS' COMBINE t'liiiHilliin IJovcriiinent l liinlllulti n IiivcrHkiHIoii. A Toronto dispatch sujs the Cana dian Press association hasbcen advised by Hon. Mr. Fielding, minister of fi n'aneo. that the government will con duct the Investigation and summon all necessary witnesses iu the inquiry in to tlio alleged paper makers' combina tion. The association had intended prosecuting. Mr. Fielding's communi cation meets all the claims of the press association. Kmliieut counsel will be employed in the Inquiry, which will open before Judge Tasohercau In MonU real. HIII-rontluK TruM. i'he Chicago Chronicle says: "Fol the purpose of ooinbattlng adverwi legislation, as well as regulntlngpriccs and putting down competition, a gi gantic trust, to consist of all the prin cipal bill-posting companies In tho United States and Canada, Is In pro gross of organlation. A meeting will be held In lluffalo, .Inly 7 to 10, to per feet the combination. II11II11I rirrci'H Her Henri. At Niinlln, Okl., a party of young society people went pieulcklnjr and whoii'a picture was being made of the group, Miss N'ora Wolfruin asked Mlss lllshop lo point a rifle at her, addln- to the romance of the scone. Miss Ulshop did so. The rifle was dis charged some way accidentally und Miss Wolfruin was Instantly killed, the bullet piercing her heart. 111111i; YViiiii'iii 11 Suicide. Miss Nina Whitman, agcil twenty, two, committed suicide lit tilcndive, Mont., by drowning. She was a trim mer in a millinery store. Her mothei resides at (ialena, ill., and a sister is 11 pilnclpal In tho Oak Park school ol Chicago. Ilusiiiess reverses was thu cause, smallpox at Norma! School, The Odcll club at Cedar Falls, la., composed of twenty-seven state nor mal school students, was nuar- I untitled on account of smallpox. l