The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, June 25, 1914, Image 6

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ENTOMBED III MINE
FIRE FOLLOWING EXPLOSION
TRAPS 250 COAL MINERS.
HAS MUCH MONEY TO LOAN
Federal Reeerve Banks Will Make
Available Half Dllllon for Farm
Loans Woodmen Insurg
ents Are Defeated;
Western Ncwapnper Union New Service,
Lethbrldgc, "Alberta. A terrific ox
plosion coming without warning, Fri
day entombed 250 minora employed In
mine No. 20 of tho Hlllcrest Colliers
compnny, limited. Of tho fifty res
cued only fourteen nro alive. Desplto
efforts of tho two score men laboring
among tho poisonous debris hope of
Tosculng alive tho 200 men yet In tho
mine Is waning. Tho explosion, which
occurred at about 9 o'clock, shook tho
countrysldo for miles, lifted tho roofs
of many miners' cabins nnd demol
ished numerous smnll buildings. A
moment after tho explosion n score of
panic-stricken surface workers rushed
from tho mine, followed by n dense
cloud of smoke nnd poisonous fumes.
Woodmen Insurgents Defeated.
Toledo, O. Election of ofllcers of
tho Modern Woodmen of America by
the trlonnlal convention of tho order
hero resulted In n victory for tho ad
ministration adherents. Tho Insur
gents of tho convention were defeated
In nil contests. A. It. Talbot of Lin
coln, Neb., was reelected head consul
over E. A. Smith of Sprlngflold, 111.,
tho Insurgents' candidate. 292 to
134. C. W. HawB, who has hold the
position of head clerk for twenty-four
years, nominated James MnNamarn of
Rock Island,, 111., who defeated Harry
F. Hooker of Tecumsoh, Okln., Insur
gent candidate. Daniel Horn of Dav
enport, In., was re elected head advisor
and John D. Wolz of Indianapolis,
Ind., was chosen head banker.
MUCH MONEY TO LOAN.
600,000,000 Available for Farm Mort
gage Loans.
Washington. Comptroller of tho
Currency Williams estimates that
about $500,000,00'0 In notional banks
throughout the United States Is availa
ble for farm mortgage loans under the
provisions of the federal reserve act
making it possible for national bank
ing associations to lend money on im
proved lands.
Scores of Inquiries concerning this
provision reach the treasury depart
ment dally and there does not seem
to be a general understanding that the
farm loan clause of the act Is now In
force and makes It possible for na
tional banks to make farm loans be
fore the" formal organisation of the
federal reserve booard.
The estimate of Comptroller Willi
ams Is based on reports showing the
capital stock and surplus of national
banks to bo 91,777,000,000. Twenty
five per cent of this amount, or 1444,
Z60.000, Is available for farm loans.
Ultimatum to Delegates.
Niagara Falls, Ont Justice Lamar's
memorandum to Emlllo Rabas, head
of the Mexican delegation, announc
ing that the United States "muBt In
sist" on the acceptance of Its plan for
the pacification of Mexico is an untl
matum. Unless the Huetra delegates
yield mediation will end at once. This
is the firm determination of the United
States as it was conveyed to the me
diators. Enough Harvest Hands for Kansas.
Topeka, Kan. "Kansas has enough
harvest hands. Between thirty and
forty thousand men havo come to the
state In the Inst two weekB," says W.
L. O'Brien, labor commissioner of
Kansas. Mr, O'Brien has sent tele
grams to free employment agencies in
St. Louis, Omaha, Lincoln, Chicago
and other cities requesting that no,
more men be sent to this state except
upon specific Instructions.
Kansas Coal Miners on Strike.
Pittsburg, Kan. Eight hundred coal
miners of the R. J. Crow company
have struck. The miners insisted that
-an engineer be kept at tho mine, which
iwaB temporarily down, which tho com
pany refused. United mine officials
aid that tho company had declined to
submit the matter to arbitration and
the strike resulted.
Hastings, Neb. W. W. Miller, a Ne
braska man, who was thought to have
ibeon killed by Mexican outlaw ban
falts during the guerilla warfare, has
(Joined his family near Juniata. He ex
pects to return with them soon to oc
cupy their deserted home thirty miles
Inland from Tamplco.
Washington. Senator Hoke Smith
has Introduced a bill to waive the age
limitations for honorably discharged
'veterans of either union 'or confeder
ate armies who seek appointment as
(fourth class postmasters.
Unveil D, A. R. Fountain.
Lincoln, Neb. A largo crowd as
sembled at Antelope pnrk to witness
the formal unveiling of tho fountnln
(presented to tho city by Deborah Av
iery chapter, Daughtors of the Amfiri
(can Revolution, in memory of the first
iregent of the chapter and organizer of
the society In Nebraska, Miss Mary M.
A. Stevens. The eighteenth birthday
lof the chapter bad been chosen for hA
presentation, and oror the fountain
inung we nag wnioh Miss Stevens pro-
neniea u ine enapter on June 17,
1816.
THE RIGHT
iCopyrlictil.)
TO VACATE FOREST RESERVE
VILLA IN8ISTS ON COMPLETE MIL
ITARY CONTROL.
Government Asked to Throw Thomas
County Reserve Open to Settle
mentNebraska Newspaper
Folks in Session.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Washington. Officials of tlio Wash
ington government characterize the
Mexican situation as extremely deli
cate. This comment referred particu
larly to the mediation conference,
which hns been resumed nt Niagara
Falls, but It also applied to conditions
In northern Mexico growing out of the
action of General Villa in Insisting
that ho should have complete military
control in tho cutnpalgn against Gen
eral Huerta. Hope for the success of
mediation, however, was by no moans
abandoned, according to persons in
close touch with tho administration,
and this hope was said to be largely
based on tho developments in the con
stitutional ranks, the view being
held here that intcrnlclno squabbles
among Carranza's followers had been
nipped and that this enhanced the
chance of an agreement being reached
upon a provisional president of Mex
ico and that internal Mexican hosltlll
ties might be checked.
Nebraska Newspaper Folka In Session.
'Lincoln, Neb. The forty-second an
nual sesslonfof the Nebraska State
Press association was Inaugurated
Thursday night In what was declared
by old time members to have been the
most auspicious opening In the history
of the association. The registration
was the largest of any opening day.
All during the afternoon and early
evening cars and automobiles carried
the editors and members of their fam
ilies to the grounds. It was like a
homecoming. The parking in front of
the registration and reception tent
was turned into a quarterstretch. It
was the time for handclasps and greet
ings. Editors. gathered in groups and
told yarns. Some of them were ac
cused of telling the same tales they
had spun one' and two years ago, but
age put no damper on tho applause.
Every one was in a happy frame of
mind. .
TO ABANDON FORE8T RE8ERVE.
Want Government Reserve in Thomas
County Thrown Open to Settlement.
Thedford, Nob. Abandonment of
the government forest reserve In
Thomas county, Nebraska, with the ex
ception of a 10,000 acre tract to be
used for experimental planting of
trees and furnishing them to settlers,
Is being advocated by some of the
people in and around Halsey. Other
residents of the county are opposing
this step and Insisting that tho forest
reserve be kept intact.' A petition
stating the views of those favorable
to cutting up tho major part of the
government tract nnd throwing it
open to homestead entry has been cir
culated in the county.
Santo Domingo, Dominican Repub
lic The Dominican government has
asked .the United States government
for the immediate withdrawal of tho
American consul at Puerto Plata, on
the ground that he had sided with the
revolution.
Safeguarding Royal Family.
London. Never before have such
precautions been taken to guard mem
bers of the royal family from tho suf
fragets as were taken at the Ascot
raco courso. The opening of the lead
ing society race meeting found more
than 1,000 London policomen and hun
dreds of detectives from Scotland Yard
assembled on the historic course, rein
forcements for tho regular Berkshire
county police force, which had been
mobilized in full strength.
Investigating Empress Wreck.
Quebec, Quo. Inquiry Into the loss
of the Canadian Pacific liner Empress
of Ireland, and tho loss of more than
one thousand lives when the vessel
was rammed by the collier Storstad
opened hero Tuesday before a royal
commission presided over by Lord Mer
sey, who also probed the Titanic dis
aster. Lawyers from Loudon, Now
York, Ottawa, Montreal and Quebec, a
whole battery, were present when
Lord Mersey opened the Investigation.
OF WAY
MEXICAN DELEGATES INCLINED
TO CRITICISE.
Charces Fraudulent Possession of Call.
fornla Lands Ocean Steamer,
Collides with Big
Freighter.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Niagara Falls, Ont. The Huerta
delegation to tho mediation confer
ence hns issued a statement charging
that the Insistence by the United
Stntcs on a constitutionalist for the,
provisional presidency as opposed to a
"neutral" was "tantamount to abetting
and oven exacting fraud and violence
at tho elections." The publication of
this statement was unexpected by tho
American delegates. When they
learned of It their attitude was that
the Huerta delegation was acting en
tirely within their rights when they
criticised tho American plan for es
tablishment of a provisional govern
ment In a communication -addressed to
the Americans themselves, but they
wcro greatly surprised bv the Mexican
delegates' action In giving it out
Another Collision at 8ea.
.Southampton, Eng. The North Ger
man Lloyd steamer Kaiser Wllhelm II,
which left Southampton Wednesday,
bound for New York, with a thousand
passengers, lies at anchor off Nettley,
three miles to the southeast, with a big
hole In -her sldo amldshlp caused by
a collision with the Liverpool grata
steamer Incemore, bound from a Black
sea port for Antwerp. The Incemore,
a much smaller craft than the German
steamer, or 3,000 odd tons, Is la dock
here with her bows badly smashed.
The collision occurred in the English
channel thirteen miles south of the
Nab lightship in a dense fog. Just how
It occurred and on which vessel lias
the responsibility cannot be ascer
tained at present.
8UIT FOR LAND RECOVERY.
Government Charges Fraudulent Pos
session In California.
Los Angeles, Cal. Suit has been
filed by the federal government in the
United States district court here to re
cover oil lands, valued at more than
160,000,000 In Kern county, California,
from the Southern Pacific Railroad
company, the Standard Oil company
and fifty other corporations and indi
viduals. The land area Involved Is
107,799 acres. This is one of the series
of suits in equity Instituted by the gov
eminent to recover lands which it
maintains were fraudulently obtained
by the railroad company In violation of
tho provisions of an act of congress In
1866, supplemented ;by a Joint resolu
tion adopted In 1870. The act of con
gress of 1866 granted large tracts of
agricultural lands to aid the building
of transcontinental railroads but with
held mineral-bearing lands.
Athens, Greece. Greek refugees
from Asia Minor have brought reports
of the massacre by Turks of 100
Greeks, including priests, old men and
children, in the town of Phokla, twenty-five
miles northwest of Smyrna. The
town, according to report, was invaded
by a horde of armed men, who looted
and then-set fire to air the buildings.
They are said to have been assisted by
tho Turkish police. j
Song Service of Thanksgiving.
New York. "With more than 650 per
sons on board, the liner New York, a
gaping hole torn in her side, where
tho Hamburg-American liner Pretoria
struck her In a fog off Nantucket,
docked here Sunday. The passengers,
thankful at having escaped a disaster
similar to that of the Empress of Ire
land, held an Impressive service of
thanksgiving as the liner steamed Into
port. There was scarcely a dry eye
among the congregation while "Nearor
My God to Thee" was being sung.
Will be Wet and Dry Issue.
Clinton, Mo. Predictions that the
next national campaign, in the United
States will bo fought on a "wet" nad
"dry" Issue and that the year 1S20
wll) boo a nominee of the prohibition
party In the White house were made
by H. P. Faris of Clinton, treasurer of
tho national prohibition committee in
welcoming delegates to the o inference
of tho prohibition party here. The
conference will last all week and will
bo addressed by leading advocate! of
prohibition,
MUST SAUUTE FUG
DEADWOOD EDITOR DEMANDS
ITS RECOGNITION.
SUFFRAGETS IN ILL FAVOR
Crowds at London Threatening and
Police Protection Necessary Fire
Breaks Out in Alberta
Coal Mine.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Deadwood, S. D. Intense patriotism
and respect for President Wilson has
found expression horo In an odd way.
A short tlmo ago in a public address,
a local citizen Is nllegod to havo
branded tho president a "coward" In
connection with tho Mexican affairs.
This so roused Edward McDonald,
former mayor and well known demo
crat, that he resolved to teach the of
fender a lesson. From a second story
window on hla building on Main street,
ho Busponded an immense American
flag, which hung directly over tho side
walk where tho orator was accustomed
to walk dally. The ox-mayor announced
that ho would insist on tho offending
orator saluting the colors the next
tlmo ho passed, but friends of the.
other evidently got word to him of
the impending "scene," which was
awaited by a numbor of Interested per
sons, and to dato tho alleged traducer
of the president has not put In an ap
pearance, but tho big flag still waves
and tho Incident has attracted much
attention.
Flames Add to Mine Horror.
Hill Crest, Alborta. Flames broko
forth in tho tunnel of Hill Crest mlno
No. 20, wrecked by a terrific explo
sion Friday, and all rescuo work was
discontinued. Men who have been
working on tho debris and carrying
out bodies, rushed from their work anc
barely escaped with their lives.
SUFFRAGET8 IN ILL FAVOR.
Crowds at London Threaten and Po
lice Protection Necessary.
London. Suffrage t baiting has be
come the regular Sunday amusement
of London crowds. The police wero
kept busy In Hyde park protecting the
women and escorting them to places of
safety. Various suffraget meetings
were broken up and the speakers
hustled from platforms with threats or
ducking In the Serpentine. From the
temper of the crowds these threats
probably would ..have been put Int6
execution except for the energetic ac
tion of the police.
Rosa Hammond Makes Transfer.
Omaha. Instructions have been re
ceived from the commissioner of In
ternal revenue at Washington to Col
lector Ross L. Hammond to transfer
his office to E. w. North. The trans
fer will be made at once. Collector
Hammond submitted hla resignation to
the department May 21 with a request
that It be accepted at the earliest con
venience. The notice of its accept
ance waB received by him several days
ago.
Mission Building Burned.
Shanghai. Reports have been re
ceived here that the White Wolf bri
gands had captured and sacked the
city of Taochow, massacrelng 10,000
Chinese. There was no confirmation
of the report, but uneasiness was felt
among foreigners because the report
also said that the mission buildings
there were burned. It is known that
the White Wolf band has beep operat
ing in that vicinity.
AgeLlmlt Reduced.
Washington. President Wilson has
Issued an executive order reducing
from sixty to fifty years the maximum
age limit for admission to civil service
examinations for appointment of un
skilled laborers in federal offices out
side of Washington, D. C. Veterans,
however, may continue to be exam,
lned without regard to their age.
Lincoln, Neb. There Is prosperity
In Otoe county. ( This cheerful state of
facts Is proven 'by the roport of the
Otoe assessors- to the statistical de
partment of the state board of agricul-
Jture. Twenty thousand citizens of
woe county own ao auiomomies. tuib
la an average of an automobile for
every twenty-four people.
Millions of New Money.
Washington. Millions of dollars of
paper money of a new type will be, put
Into circulation upon the establish
ment of tho federal reserve banks
within the next few weeks. Under the
federal reserve bank act each of the
twelve federal reserve banks will re
ceive advances from the federal re
serve board in the form of federal re
serve notes, a distinctly new sort of
paper money. Commercial paper will
be the collateral advanced by the vari
ous banks as security for these notes.
"Back to Africa" Steamer In Port.
Galveston, Tex. Tho steamship Li
beria, on which Albert C. Sam, leader
of the "back to Africa" movement
among negroes in this country, pro
poses to take several hundred negroes
to the gold coast of Africa, has ar
rived hero. Tho arrival of the vessel
was the occasion for much rejoicing
among several hundred followers of
"Chief" Sam, who have beon here for
several months. It Is not known when
tho Liborla will sail for Africa. "Chief"
Bam is said to be on board.
BRIEF NEWS OF NEBRASKA
Tho Bloomfleld Masonic order will
erect a $10,000 hall and business'
block.
Pioneer and territorial day was ob
served at many places over the state'
last Sunday.
Mrs. Nicholas Henrccy was serious
ly Injured when thrown from a buggy
near Hastings,
The board of Cotner university has
decided to employ an athletic coach
for next season.
Registration figures" for tho univer
sity summer session far exceed those
of any former year.
Over 6,000 visitors attended tho an
nual convention of state stock growers
at Alliance last week.
Roy Fox, a school teacher, was held
up at Falrbury nnd robbed of a watch
and articles of jewelry.
Thomas Flnnegan was held up by
footpads noar Falls City, and shot In
tho arm when ho put up n fight.
Omaha is to havo an ordinance pro
hibiting "movies" In any of the resi
dential sections of tho city.
One hundred nnd fifty-six Fremont
people own diamonds valued at$17,000
as shown by tho assessment roll.
Moro than $200 has been subscribed
toward the establishment of a public
playground nt Hastings this summer.
Johnson county apple growers are
seriously worried over nn Insect thai
Is destroying tho buds In tho orchards.
"Chick" Shedd, onco prominent in'
state university football circles, died
at Kenwood, Fla,, last week of malarial
fever.
Rev. A. L. Brombaugh, pastor of the
Vesta Christian church, has accepted
n call to tho pastorate of the church at
Firth.
Walter Henry, twenty-two years old,
commtttod suicide nt the family home
near West Point, while temporarily
Insane.
Kenneth Greene of Inland will prob
ably lose the sight of one eye, the ball
of which was penetrated by a sharp
pointed knlfo.
John Foster sustained injuries thai
necessitated tho amputation of his left
leg when he fell under the wheels ol
a train at Salem.
Twenty members of the university
Y. M. C. A. are spending vacation al
the western college conferonce In
Estes Park, Colo.
Rev. R. B. Favorlght, who haB been
filling a .pastorate at North Bend, has
received a All from the First Baptist
church at Beatrice.
Tommy Shrive, n six-year-old Lin
coln boy, was seriously hurt when he
was struck by an auto as he was
coasting on a walk.
Wesley Beeson, a local air man, will
make an ascent In an aeroplane of his
own construction at the Fillmore
county fair this fall.
Sunday baseball is again agitating
the minds of the residents of Syracuse
and a petition has been circulated
calling, for an election.
The university teachers' bureau la
receiving many calls from over the
state for Instructors in various de
partments of the schools.
Merrit Whttten, a 12-year-old Te
cumsoh boy, had both arms broken
when he fell from a trapeze on which
he was doing some acrobatic stunts.
Recent heavy rains killed the pine
seedlings Bent out by forestry students
of the university, and they will be re
placed by seeds from eastern
nurseries.
Miss Esther L. Stock, one of Kear
ney's leading young business women,
Is the first woman in Buffalo oounty
to file for office. She is seeking the
nomination for registrar of deeds.
Water from the Jordan river,
brought to Fremont by a resident of
that place on returning from a tour
of the holy land, was used in baptis
mal services at several local churches.
A number of Infants wero baptized.
The Security State bank of Curtis,
with $30,000 capital, has secured a
charter from the state banking board.
The pootofflce at Hoag,- a little town
eight miles northwest of Beatrice,
which was discontinued some time
ago, Is to be reopened.
In a test of strength' at Genera,
Professor Le Roy had'the bones of his
right arm broken with a snap that was
heard fifty feet away.
Mrs. John Slama of Lincoln suf
fered a severe case of ptomaine poison
ing as the result of drinking the milk
from an over-ripe cocoanut.
Nate Carey was arrested at Pali
sade, charged with setting fire to the
Burlington hotel at Falls City, which
was destroyed a few days ago.
Mrs. Karl Mlchow, near Loup City,
was painfully burned about the face
when a bottle of carbolic acid explod
ed, throwing the liquid over her.
Old's jewelry store at Hemlngford
was burglarized and watches and Jew
elry worth over $300 stolen.
William Adair of North Platte was
seriously Injured when his automobile
turned turtle near Big Springs.
Four-year-old Nellie Erldla of Kear
ney was fatally burned when her clo
thing was set on fire from lighted
matches with which she was playing.
Nebraska G. A. R. veterans who go
to Detroit for the national encamp
ment this year will be free to choose,
any route of travel they wish to take.
No official train will be run' this side
of Chicago.
A camp meeting and annual confer
ence of Mennonlte brethren will be
held at Weeping Water, August 13 to
24.
A farewell party was given at Hast
ings in honor of Rev. J. E. Holley, who
will take a year's vaactlon from his'
work with the Christian church, tour
ing the west In an effort to regain his
health.
Prisoners In the county Jail and
county officers at Fremont collected
$40 for the hospital expenses of John
Carey, convloted of stealing brass. He
kad been 111 for some time and his
condition critical " '
THE WHEALGONTEST $
GOSSIP FROM STATE CAPITAL
Items of Interest Gathered from -Unliable
Sources and Presented In
Condensed Form to Our
" Readers.
Western Newspaper Union New Cenrtee.
The cultivation of tho soil and the
work of orcharding will never go
hand in hand. The two industries
need, attention nt tho same time and'
tho, practical farmer will not give up
his crops to spray and prune his or
chards. There must bo a practical
separation of tho two industries or
this state will nover bo a fruit state.
At the present tlmo there aro prac
tically 2,000,000 apple trees In the state
which produced about an equal num
ber of bushels of tho fruit last year,
which Is about one-tenth of the
amount of fruit that tho number of
trees should produce under the least
bit of cultivation, was tho statement
of Prof. J. R. Cooper before the Rural
Betterment society meeting at the
state farm.
Flve-Acre Winter Wheat Contest.
The Nebraska Corn Improvers' asso
elation Is again conducting a five-acre
hard winter wheat-contest. Tho beau
tiful $200 Mlllors' club trophy will bo
awarded for one year to the contest
ant growing the flvo acres of winter
wheat scoring highest In yield and
quality. This flvo acres may be a
part of any larger field. All that is
necessary I to measure off flvo acres,
thresh and report the yield. A repre-
sentativo one-half bushel sample muBt
also be exhibited at tho show. A re
port giving tho jleld, signed by the
contestant and two disinterested wlt
nesses, will accompany the samplo.
Clean the Separator.
No one should place any confidence s
in an agent's claim of separators being
able to wash thomselvcs by Blmply
running water through them, says the .
dairy department of the Nebraska col
lege of agriculture. "Such claims nr
not made by men who have tho dairy
ment's interests at heart. Washing a
separator Is not a very difficult task
lit done soon after separating. The,
water for washing should be warm,
but not hot enough to cook the curd
on any of the parts. If it Is not con
venient to wash the machine lmmeql
' . after separating, the bowl should
I ken apart and immersed In water.
This will loosen all tho curd and make
washing comparatively easy. If the
parts are scalded-wlth hot water t
steam after washing and left Id a v
clean, sweet place to dry, no wlpiag
with a cloth will be necessary. .
To Kill All Stray Dogs.
Health officers of Cass county hare
been ordered to kill all stray dogs
there and to muzzle all remaining
dogs who bave owners. The order
was promulgated by the state bac
teriologist, following the report that
two cows, two steers, two horses and
twenty-five dogs bare been killed there
during the past month on account of
affliction with rabies. The "disease
has been transmitted from one of these
animals to another through bites. Thus
far the disease has been confined to
Cass county, as far as the state health
authorities know. They believe that
by attention to their orders from now
on all trace of it can be wiped out.
Half of the swine pens at the state
fair grounds have been engaged by
exhibitors. Superintendent E. Z. Rus
sell of Benson, who Is In charge of the
swine department of the state exposi
tion, has reported this rush of busi
ness to Secretary Mellor. "This is an
unusual condition of affairs," said Mr.
Russell. "Three months before the
fair is scheduled to open half our
space Is gone. We will be crowded to
the limit In the swine department this
year.
Under the blue sky law of Nebraska,
companies which operate under It
must not only pay a fee of $25 to the
examining bureau when thoy apply far
permits to do business, but must pay
a fee of $10 per year thereafter. Bo
far, the bureau has not yet received
any payments for renewal of the first
year's certificates. These wll begin to
run out in July.
The enrollment of the university
summer session has already reached a
figure which Is above the final enroll
ment of any preceding summer ses
sion, and as a usual thing students
enroll for this work during the whole
session, so that the final number is
not known until near the close of the
cummer. There are now 520 enrolled;
the largest enrollment heretofore has
seen 511. This figure doesnot In
"lude 125 students taking summer
Trork In the Temple high-eelnjolrf6"rfy
jr fifty of which aro teachers taking
evlew work.
Although It will cost In tho neigh
borhood of $48,000 for two regiments
Df the Nebraska national guard, to
gether with the medical troops, the '
hospital corps and the signal corps, to
go to Canip Dodge, la., in August and
participate in a ten days' training
camp and maneuvers under the In
struction of regular army officers,
only about one-sixth of that amount
will be borne by tho stato of Nebras
ka. The remainder of the oxpenso will
come out of Uncle Sam, through the
medium of war department funds al
lotted to Nebraska.
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