, MONO-RAIL SYSTEM : . TO REVOLUTIONIZE i , RAILROAD , TRAVEL , . . May Relegate Steam Locomotives and leavy : Coaches to the . ! : . : . Scrap Heap. ' . FINANCIAL GIANTS ARE . INTERESTED . . Men of Millions Stand Ready to Test Practica. bility of Schem of Howard Hansel runis- Speed of 150 Mil . s an Hour Is AmoPlg I Promises Made. . - Now York.-A younl ; meehnnlcal en. 'glneor , for a little more than three years , hus been mystlf 'lnl ; and amusing - ing persons living near his father's homo at Windsor HllI just outside of Baltimore , by his experiments with a single rull railroad that he has con. ; atructell. Hecontly all the newstlapers In the city contained the authorltatlvo an. nouncement that.John H. Starin , who has malle millions In trans11Ortation enterprises ; Charles St.owart Smith -and Woodbury Langdon , all members , of the Rapid Translt.oommlsslon , were to back a compan : ; which will build this young englneer'a slngld rail rail. real from Jersey City to Newarl" Formal announcement of the Incor- voraUon of the now "mono-road" company - pany Is expected soon to bo- made in Trenton , and tl1is , It Is announced , Is to bo followed in the next four or 11\0 weolS by' the announcement of a deal f by which thy new company has ac. quircd a franchise and terminal sites in the two cities-rights presumably owned by some existing compan . Iu- side of a year , it is promised , mono. rail trains will bo skimming across the marshes from , lm'sey City to Newark - ark , realizing the newest slogan in modern rapid transit. : "To Newark In ten minutes , " Idea Is Revolutionary. If what the young Baltimore en. glneer confidentI ' claims for his "mono-road" be ti'uc-and he has con. 'Vinced such hard-headed business men as Starin , Langdon and Smith tha it is true-modern raiJroading wUl be revolutionized' by his invention , It will relegate to the scrap heal the two-track railroad , the ponderous , coal. eating locomotive and the big , heavy elght.whoeled care along with the stage coach nnd the paddle-wheeled steamboat , His new invention , if his , claims arc well founded , is as far ahead of the locomotive-drawn train , running on two tracks , as the fiylng machine is ahead of the balloon. That trains wlJ1 run easily at a speOI ( of 150 miles an hour on a single rail in perfect safety , without vibration - tion and th swinging side-wise mo. tion of the present day railroad trains , . and that tracks and cars can be built amt operated at less than halt the cost ! PERc5PECTIJlE ' Or TilE \I1E1'I - mnkes p08slblo and because of the I ' , 'fistly diminished cost of building and operation. Negotlatlonf\ under way to obtain - tain the rights needed before building of the tmck can be begun and , although - though secrecy is maintnined on this 110lnt and the precise route selccted is closely guarded , It is understood that the hackers of the ComlH1UY are ne. gotlatlng for fmnchlse rights and tor- mlnal sites nlreadr possessed by 'an existing corporation. Easy to Lay Tracks. ' According to au int1'vlew printed In the Newark newSllaperS , the lInlting of the new "mono. rail" line with the ! McAdoo tunnel it ! a possibility. mon' ' L , Durrows sars ; that It would bo a mntter of the greatest case to run the trains from the "mono. rail" road right Into and through the McAdoo tunnel without interfering with the operation of trains over the t.wo rail line , All that would bo lleceHsar ' would be the la'lng of a single rail between the two rails , and the installation of the neces- sarr overhead rails to preserve the equilibrium of the "mono.rail" trains. If this Is done , It Is asserted , passengers - sengers can bo carried from Newark to the heart of Manhattan in ten min- utes. 1.'hat : ho is wi11lng to ent.er Into an opemtlng agreement with the "mono-ran" ornpany , 'Vi11lam Mc. Adoo , head of the unnel company , is quoted.as . saying. 'fhis now "mono-rail" srstem : , invented - vented hy tI.le young Baltlmorian , is fotally different from the various other "mono.rilll" systems , some of which are in practlcai operaUon in England , Ireland , Germany and Austria.Hun- gar ' , and others of which 11.1'0 . seeking a foothold. It Is enth'ely unlike the s 'stem , for instance , for which F. B. Behr , an Englishman. has been seeking - ing a franchise between Atlantie Ferry , Brooklyn and Coney island. On Mr. Behr's road the cars "straddle" n single trlnngular rail , In Germany the "mono-rail" system which has been successfuily opocated is ono from which the cars hang suspended. In l1'eland there is a system In operation vbry slmllal' to the Behr s'stem. ' 1'he young Baltimore ongineer's plan , hQwever , differs radically from all of these , and is , according to his . ' &JJ = = H8 l OY.I'1 fJf1ad-ffff . .1ff.fP' , ro'fE cv.r'F'liWI : - : : ; : : - , , 'Jf'/JJI ' . " /:1 f1J":1 : ' : d' : 'f ; . : } \v < IJ'U/o v I.Vo'r.f 1 ; r'IU " 'UN " CN 11JJ. . . ' - . or the present cquhlll1ent-thls , in bl'icf , Is the younJ ; engineer's claim. I 'fhllt he can do what ho sars is not only believed by a practical transllor- tatlon man o [ 010 years' experience , like John II. Starin hut b ' a big firm In 'VaJI street which has agre dto - un. derwrite all the honds required to Imt , through the , Jcrsey City to Newark "mono.road , " nnd hy scores of others who ha.ve h1\'estlgat.ed the 110W plant and 11.1'0 anxious to become 11naneillJIy Intel'este in It. - First Practical Test. ' Starting on a short half-mile stretcher or tl'uck inside the cxposltlon grounds at , Jamestown , the first IlrI\ctlcal test of the new road was made in public , , although for three 'enrs the young in. ventoI' , Ho vard Hansel 'funis , has been experimenting in tIlO suhurb or Daltlmoro. Moro than a doz'n noted engineers. among them Chle [ Engineer Geurge S , , Rice , of the Uaphl Transit commission , , have Investlated , the now invention nnd hl1.ve pronounced it practical. 1 Bomo of them Hssert that 1\ will rov- , . ,1 , . . . ' olutlonlzo modern ruilrondlng because ' - - , t\IO \ tromend us speed w'ltlch , It } o , . . . . . H : ' ; " . ' . ; H ' " - ' , , I / i fJERe5PECflJlE / / lf/D /J/IICRIII1 't9C Oc5l P ( llt/V & ; : JOORIJ/L on . . . . . . . .1 . > _ _ _ / - . . " . - , claims. safer , fastel' and cheaper by flu' to hull ! ! , Construction Details. 1.'ho single tl'ack Is laid across tics about three and a hulf feet in lenlth -the l3am sort of tics used in the construction of the Ilrcsent day. two. rail tracks. except that they are shorter - or , SlxtY'IIOUllIl mils instead of the stullIlal'd 100.pound rails arc used. O\'OI'hoal1 , :10 : Inches apart , ' are sus. JlOIuletl two parallel rails , I..shalled on the Inside , These overhead rails are supportel1 b ' steel Ill1Iars placet1 at intervals along the side of the road I\1Hl connected hy steel beams stretched across the tracl" On tOil of each car at both ends is attached an inverted truck , This is raised from the car by a strong steel arm , corresl10ndlng to a trolley polo , and the Cour wheol8 attached to the inverted truck fit into the "L".shapod Inner surface o { the overheal ( tracls. The trucks are in the form of an X , with II. wheel' at each of the four points of the "X. " ' 1'he "X" Is flexible. ol1Cnlng and closIng to ncc01mhodate ' , sel ! to t.ho curves. It Is lhls overhead truck arrauJo , . - , ' . . iI'A' ' ' . , i I . . ' ' . , - - - - UI"l1t whir h ( ( . ti t I ( II the dltlncth'o ! ft'nt 1\1" \ ( ' of till' tm''nLioll DC U1l ) ' 0\111 ( ; BalLimort' mall , anti marks It ! ! grt'atcst dlfferellco fmlll tla > ollieI' "mono-rail" lt1\'ontlons. 'l'ho uv\'hNu ) truck 11.1" l'IIn cmeut , with the four wheels , horl- zOlltall ' setl\nd worling on the Inshlo of O\'l'heatl ' , steadies the the \ ( ' t1'l\CIII , cur and glvos It Its 'equilibrium. Pow. er Is also trllnsmitted [ rom these overhead - head wires Cor ho ol1emtlon o [ the cars. cars.Ono oC the clnlms made Cor ; the Tunis "mollo'rall" is that trains running - ning on it will ho pM1ctlcally nolsele-s , One rel1son given for this is that the ( ; ulde wheels on top , which run In the overhead rails , nro oC cast Iron , oak und leather mHI are so constructed as to mnke but lIttle noise. They also 1111\0' bl1ll.bearlnga m\d tIlls malOs tremendous - mendous speM p08sible. 1.'ho guldo wlll'els are onh' el ht Inches in dlan1l101' and less than two Inches thlcl , . Another Ceaturo of the car which contributes to its noiselessness Is the use or the dh'ect current motor. Engineer 1.'unls claims that the enl ) ' prollel' s 'stem of railroad construc' tion Is the l1inglo track , because the double trl1cls 1\1:0 In oPllosltion to the laws of grav1t - , and make necessary - l1'emOlHlously heavy cars , In his Cat'S , ' 1'unls explains , thQ bot. tom will bo but 20 Inches above the ruil , and thus the conteI' oC gravlt . will he ver ' low. The cars will have un uh lOst perfect equilibrium , even . . TIlE # O/ORIIIL ELEf//'TEj ) IIBQVE .5I/Rfi"/lCE Rill L R ALJ I " { . .F\ , /0- . . . . . . , . , . , . . . , . : : - - - - - complrto the c'lIpso of the pres'nt ! ! 'sl\m oC l'al1road cOllstructlon amI establish the "mollo.rllll" S pre-om' humt , still auothol' tremendous ntl. \'antage Is claimed , and , this is the most Important of all-tho matter ot cost. It Is the cheapness' the C09t or the 8 'stom , which , It It Is what Is claimed for il , thr(1l\ten9 to revolu. tlonlzo railroad construction. MetnB ; Immense Stvlng. ; According to the ostimatCR mnde for the Now York baclters oC tha project , n tour-truck , elo\'ated lIuo , such as It Is pro1101l0l1 to build be. twecn Jersey CIt ' I\tH ) Nowarl" CRn bo coustructecl Cor ' 75,000 pOI' mile. To tmlhl a [ o\ll..traclt novated ! 1'011.(1 . , similar to the f1resont ele\'aio(1 s 'stom in this elt ) ' , would cost $ ! IOOOOO pOl' mile , This docs not Incltlde th" cost or IIOWCl' or equlpment-only the structure 'and tracl,8. The IIl'ojecto(1I of the neW ontol'- prlso figure \1110n building the olght miles oC elo\'ated tracl\ between .Jor. se ' Clt ' I11Hl N wl1.rk for $3,000,000. To build the ordinary t 'II of elevate ( ) road , with four trauls , would cost lJO- tweon $7,000,000 and $8,000,000. It Is this cheapness o [ cost which Inspires - spires the bacl\Ors of the entorprlso to hOllo that they will reap tremendous - deus profits , and thut t.ho success oC this inltlnl road bot.ween the two Jor- 80Y cltlos will be followed.quleltl ) ' b ) ' . J _ , if1 . - iff ; J 21 I : [ ( - : f t , I I II II I I / " - - " ' " : : : : ; : = - : " - . . ' :2 1 : - . I T I' , without being steadied by the over. head arrangement. Cars Will Be Light. ' 1.'hen , the cars are to be extremely light as compared with modern railroad - road curs-another element contrihut. ing to high speed.tl'hey will not weIgh o\'er seven tons. Right hero , in the t.wo points just referred to , Is the great. advaptago clalmod by the backers of Engineer Tunis's system. Mr. Burrows in describing - scribing its advantages said that on- glneers ht1d long recognized the fact that the great sprawling cars of the present , with their immense weIght , are theorotlcally wrong. . " 'f 1Cse big heavy cars are in effect houses set \1110n wheels , " " he said. "These wheels arc placed fotlr Ceet el ht and one-half inches alll\1't , with the center of gravity bet.ween them , The 11rst and greatest essential to the whole system is that the cars must bo heavy in order to remain on the tracls. Here , then , is the whole 1 , ( ; ' ) ' to railroad Ine 1eiencr' that in a system - tem whose only oXClmo for heing Is the ability to lUa'l , speed the principal - cipal requisite should be great weight. In short , ha\'lng to overcome gra\'ita- .tlOIl , they statt out by lUakin it im- posslhle. It requires no great mechanical - ical ahllit ' to discover that a one-rail tracl , is greatly sU)1erior ) to a t.wo-rall track , if one goes no further than to see "that ono wheel will only have half the obstacles to o\'ercome that two ha\'e , " I Etonomy In Operation. Still another claim for the nlOno.rall trains is that they can be olloratpt ! I very much cheallOr becmso : of the economy in power it is ] Josslhle to . roalize. According to railroad mon , from 15 to 30 ] Jel' cont. of the 110W'I' I used to ollOrate trains is lost in the sidewise , swinging motion of cars , i The 1.'unis mono-mil 'tralna , It Is declared - I clared , Imvo a stmight ahead motion , without an ' slde.swlng. ' Nothing which eVCl' , moved on wheels can equal the speed claimed for the 'funis "mono-rail" trains : One hundred miles an hour is : m eaay matter - ter , I1.nd the cars can be Ilushed to 1riO miles without an ' dl 1culty. And. while the cars are going at this slleod , It is claimed that the moUon is so. I . gentle that passengers are bareh' I aware of the fact that t1(0) ' are mov- ! Ing. ' 1'he jerk ) ' , swinging motion oC two-rail trains is declared to bo entirely - tirely absent , , As if all lhls wert' noL 'Utough to " . - I I J , . the building of slml1ar roads 11.11 over tIlO U lted States. The overhead U'uck system used in the Tunis 'S' tpm Is patented. Much Interest Aroused. How active intero t in "mono.ral1" ral1roads is , is shown by the fact that . following the .unnouncement . of the plnns to build tho. New Jersey line , the promoters of the company have been besieged with inquiries from persons - sons who want to introduce the system - tem In other places. Ono inqulrol' was a capitalist who holds the concession - cession for a 400-mllo railrond in South America , much of the route of which runs through inaccessible coun- try. ' ) 'ho Tunis "mono-rail" is os. peclally adapted ror use in a rough country because of the fact that t.he Jlghtness of the cars makes it 1108slblo to operate the tl'l1lns up almost any reasonable grade , To all those inquirers the promoters - tors say they have replied that they are not in the field for the OXllloltn- tlon of the new system , or even for money Jl1aklng. 1\11' . Starin , the leader in the onterprlso , has announced that his ohject Is not t.o make money so much as to put into Ilractical use an in\'ention wlHch he boJleves to be the coming railroad system of the futuro. No Stock to Be Sold. 1IIs hope to ha\'o a railroad which w1l1 carry 11eople from this city to Nowarl , In almost an Inappreciable space of time , and to give an example to ether railroad companies in the good treatment of en1l110 'es. It Is announced - nounced that no aleck or the now com- pany Is , to bo Il\It Oil the m.urlwt , nd that nIl the money that is wanted to pU8h the entorpl'ise w1l1 lle I'ealizeu by an issue of honds at the right timo. A hig Wall street 11rm has already agreed to undorwrlto . them , Expert System to Be Popular. 'l'hat they ultl1nately expect tholr system to he whloly introduced the promoters of the now road do not at. tempt to conceal. 'rhis , they oxpoet , wilJ speedily follow a practical dem n. stratlon of Its success , Howard Hansel 'rl1l1is , the young inventor - ventor of the s'stem , is at Jamestown - town , where ho is Iuperintendlng tl10 runulng of trains over the experimental - mental haIr.mile track. 1.'LVlis wanted 11. , much longer track , but It is said that the trolley companies of Norfolk - folk were too influential with the exposition - position management and ho was 1'0- srl ted , - " . . . . . - . , . . - - NEBRASA ! { IN BRIEF - - - NEWS NOTES OF INTEREST FROM VARIOUS SECTIONS. ALL SUBJECTS TOUCHED UPON , Religious , Social , Agricultural , PolitIcal - Ical and Other Matters Given . Due Con lderatlon , - n'arvcrt bnnds In Gnge county are sottlng $2,60 POI' day atHl 1Iol\rd. JI\D1es Bl\xter uml Uobert Corby have been 10dgCd ! In jail at Dloomlng. Former Governor Mlclo ) ' has decld. ed to return to Osceoll\ , which place Was his hO\11O before ho was olocled .governor. Soollnor Bros' . Clothln and" Cur. nlshlng store at Scotts mUff ! ! , WIlS 11.1. most destroyed by fire , The stock was valued at 0\01' $10,000. The Carroll I.umber and Gmln com- pan ' has filed Its articles oC Incorpora. tlon with Seeret.ar ' oC State Jonltln. The capltnl stocl , Is $00.000 , Seventeen new memhors were 1'0' celvod into the Presh .torlan church nt L 'ons on Sunday , three oC them being received b ' 10Uer' lUlIl fourteen tin contm3slon of fnlth. Treasurer Drllm has I'ecelved word trom eighteen hanlts whleh'rofuse to pny the 3 per cent intet'ost on state deposits nnd ho Is t10 \ ' withdrawln1 ; the state mono ) ' from tlleHo hanls. 1.'ho Prlml'ORO Uecyrd scores farmers - ers nnI ( otherR who drl\'o Into town and hitch their horHoH In the scorchIng - Ing hot 8nn , leaving the animals with , out shnde . or wnter for 110ur'3 at 1\ . time , Franlc Sohlegter , proprlotor of 1\ tl'ult stand at IInst Ings wus serlonHl ' ntHI perlmlls fatally Injured hr falling lttn the elo\'ator HhnCl of u wholesal\ 'louse ' , where ho hall gone to pIneo un . ardor. state SUllorintcndent Mcnrlon hm ; one to Los Angeles to uUent ) the Na. ilonnl Education nssoclallon mopthi , , at which he Is to al1Poar twice oiuil. ' . . prornm. ! lIe expects to bo gOllo nt least ton days. Peace reigns again at the brlclc . plant In 11l1mh01llt and the machlnl1ry i In nrnln runnln at full hlast. Vrac tlcally nll of the Rtrllors have been tn'ken hnr.on \ apllllcaUon and 11.1'0 011. In th"lr old placos. Monday morning 'Vllllam VaI\lI - berg' , of Nehraslm City , who was sl'nt to the nsylum some time ago as a drl. ! _ Boman lac , was tnlwn to Ilncoln a a.in . , I\S hB hAd vlolntod his parole. HI ) i9 .a resident of Tnlmago. . Alexander I\InrlJ \ , n Bohomlan farm. er who lived near 1\Iorso BlUff , lost his IrCe on the Superior IIno of the \ Northwestern \vhen CI'eight train No. 204 rnn over him , Marll was asleep , on the track. lIe had been drinllng. At n. mass meeting of the citizens and business men of Deatrice Itvns voted to hold three ' a days' celehrll- tlon and trade carni\'al In commemo. ration oC the fifteenth annl\'ersal' ) ' oC the founding oC the cll ) ' of Beatrice. ton , chnr ed with crimillally nssault. ing I\Ilss \ 'Mary Koehn , The story oC the alleged crime as related by a younger brother of the victim , is that one of the men held him while the ether bound and guggod his sister und then committed the crime with which , they are charged. A rO)1ort ) was received in BOlltr.lco from Mar 'svlllo , Kan" to the uffeot that the first new wheat t1\arlelel at that pIneo tested sixt ' .fonr pounds to Ute bushel , Farmers In Gage county nro o [ the opinion that there III 0 a numher of fieldH which w1l1 ylold as high as thirty-five bushclf ! to t o : ure. It Is said that the hlg cuI of the Burlington near Milford Is nenrln completion , and that hut allout 50Y : ontr thousand yards of dirt 'et 1'0 main to be moved on that parl1cular vnrt oC the worl , . ' 1'ho big steam sho\'o ola have heen burrowing Into this h11l for a year , with the rCsult that n great gash has been cut. All Nebraslm dairrmon have , hoon asled by the StlltO railway commission to attend a puhIlc hOJrinr : : on August G when the now prol1osed 1'l1toS on mille and cream will ho discuSSNI. The commissioners 111'0 of the 01111110n . that the new schedule Increasln the rates on crenm will dlscrlmilll1.to agnlnst the smaIl creamery. I Herman Boche , awallln trial nt , Mallison for m lII'dC\l'ing \ Ji''t'anl , , Jar. mol' at. Norroll" tried to commit sili- cide four times during the day , hilt lived. Three effo.ts wore by 11I\to'inr. one br hatterlng his head n ainst the cement floor of the jail. Eh1ier , noche nlso trl ( > d to run nway whllo wallting about the jllil 'ard with Sheriff Clem. ents , ; I A traveling man who sIlent 'I'hurE ; . : day ancl Frida ) ' along the line of the Union Padllc in Nehraslm salt ! he sa ! I n carload of hogB turned out of a sto"l , car Into the 'afls at a IIttJo way ! ntion , ancl tllat haIr fJC the llO"I'fI ' (11I'd from lieat floon aftor. When tlloy wore unloaded some oC the animal ! ! I wpre almost exhausted , and they died ( ; eon after , I A , , J , Anderson , plIo driver foreman Cor the nurlln ton rnilrond , lost his lire by drowning , whiio at worl , 110111' Ollison , four miles south ot Omnha. Ho was working on tllo driver and'ln somt : ' mnnner lost his footlns and fell Into the ri\'er. The State Doard ot gqunllznton ! " , ,111 meet this \\'e'l , to bc h\ work ot equalizing between the yalnes of the , varIous countieR as fixed 1) ) ' the county - ty assossors. So far onlr thlrty.fi " " countlos out ot the ninety hnvo re. ported , hut all 11.1'0 expected to be In' I within the next tow da 'o. , . , - - MUR EREn ON THE STAN Sl lycr 01 Brother and Sinter-In-Law Tello H 'S ' Story , I.lncolll-A solfconfosso\l murderer on lho Rland oXlllnlnlng hili own emo- lonl\l humility ' ' 'Ill ' rovlowlnc hla own reollnls wlwn tOlJllltcd to murder was the stronso situation in the dlstrlot CO\\1't \ \ or 1.OnCI\8tl1 ( ' county. li'ranlt Dnrltcr , who 1(1I1J(1 his lIrothor and his brothor'H wlto two 'Ou1l' : go ill Wohstor ( 'o\lIlty , wns coiled t.o thy witness IItalHI Ilnd mudo to toll the 'Itorof his cI'imo. no did this Cl\lm. ly IUHl without any hcsltntlon Or die. play of Ceellng. ' 1'ho first ( IUostions ndtlrossetl lo Dnrter { were Intended to Ahow that. a tondencY' tOWl\1'1 insanity Is horedl. tary In hlH family. 110 told or the slcle , dizzy headaches with which hlA molhol' uod ! ! to suffer ( \Jul o [ her enrly ( hmth , The fact. that. his 1Irother murdered his Aweethoart , her mother I1IHI daughter I1.nll Ulon ItlIled I11m801 [ WI1.1 brought out. ' On the night of the murdOJ' Darker said thnt ho nttended cl1\1fc1l , aCter which ho tool , his Bweothol\rt home. Thou ho went tn his Cathor'a homo , on the wa ' meeting his brother Dl1.n and resisting a deslro to Idll him , I-n.ter ho dro\'o to his brother Dl1.u's farm , put his team oWI\Y h\ the lIarn , cnterel ( the house nnd shot. hln brolh. 01' . llnrlccl' docltu''s that ho roment- burR ( ) JII ' thl shooting oC hla brolher IIHI'olnte(1 ( hlH surprlso when , on I\wallng In hlH hml next. morning with his clotlws on , ho wont. down ItalrR und fO\llH1 \ hlH slslor-In.lnw also Iyinj.t dead on the fIoor. 110 loft. the hOllies there all dn ) ' , ho suhl , nnd oceuiliod hlmsolf with the mllll\l choroR alJout the Illnco , hut that night he dug a 'holo ' In tllo cattle ohed carrlorl , . the two hodlos out , throw thom in nnd covered them Ull. When aslted why ho donled all Itllowledgo oC the murder lmtll the hodles were found , Barker flnld that ho did not Imow. During the ( 'l'OHS ( Jxaminlltlon Attorney nlacl- ledltl'loll ! 10 show tItnb there was Imfllclent motlvo for a aano man tel l olJ1mlt the crIme , but , Judge Hnmer , Dal'lwl"s uttornoy , lI\et noarlr every CIICHtlon ) with ohjoctlons , doclarlng thllt the ' did nol ( Jm'o to try the old ( 'aso o\'er agnln. Ml\nr of the objec. tlon ! ! WOI'O HlIstained. When nsled to 1011 of uny IlCclllhu oXllerienco , Darlwr 01t1 of ,111:1 : Inahlllt . to flnll his way homo onCH whclI he was hunllng IIheelJ a quarter of It mile 1rom th ( ' house , AnoUwl' time hu wan unublo to lI1alto 11. IIAtm' worl. w\en ) llantln CIrlI , but when \'elui'ned to it arlor a Cew hours absence , ho could man. ( \ge \ It l1el'foetly. ' . CHEA ' SUPPLIES.FOR STATE. - Bo.ard of Purchase Adopts New Meth. od of Doing BUGlness. Llncoln-'rhe ) llan adopted by U\O Slnto Doard of Purchase nnd Supplle8 to huy 8uPII1IeH for the state insUtu. tlons tl'om dealers having the lowest hid on the indivhlul1.l itema , ralher than stlclclng to the old Illon of givIng - Ing the bidder with the lowest total the onth'o contract [ or un institution , has proven ontlroly satIllfactor ' to the state hOl\l'd at least. At the 1'0- cent letting moro than a few thou- sl\l1l ( doUnrs was savod. While it is imllosslblo at this tlmo to figure jUHt what I1.II\0unt was sl1\'ed , rotorenco to n few ItemfJ shows that the aavlng , was a largo sum , On one Item ulono there was a difference ot $308 , and the highest hid on the item was only $ GOO. Thia was for IIllricots for a state insttutlon ! , 'l'ho highest bid was $ GOO and the lowest $2U2 , ' 1'ho totul bids mnde h ' theBe two firms wore vor ' close together. On twenty five Hems the dlfferenco was from $ Z to $3 , and on fifty Items , in 80mo In- stanceH , the difference was $14 and $11i. . 'Resort to U. S. Court. I..incoln-'rho eXpl'eS8 compl1.nles ( m\'o sought refuge in the ederal court rom the threatened state sue premo court injunction , command ! ng them to obey the Slblo ) ' rate reduc. tlon law , The express companies' cases are now on the same basis as the railway cases and will bo talwn Ul for argument In a few days. At- torno ' 1 ! for the corporations 11111ge that statu c ul'ts have no , jurisdiction. Prize Boozer nt Taylor. ' 1'a 'lor-Emory . . . .uyd r got Intoxi. cated July 3 , drifted into canyon sout.hwest oC Ta 'lol' nnd omptled six quart bottles oC whlslt ) ' hefOl'o ho came out on the morning of the Gth. Shorlfr Evaus has charg-o of him now , 1\(1(1 ( will hold him for Sheriff Richard son or 'CuSt"I' county , who will talre him to Lincoln to be treated for dip. somania. Sail for Alleged Slayer. Pawnee Clty-El'IJest It'ranl , , under urrest here charged with the murdOl' o [ his wife , was admitted to bl1.11 br . /udl'O / Hnl10r in the sum of $15,000 to alll1el\1' at the October term o [ the dlstrect court. 'l'ho amount of hall wus readily fUl'l1ish.ed y old neighbors Jf the accused. . , Irrigation Case Argued. Attorne 's Cor the Dolmont Canal companY who Homo time ago made application for niore water to he t.\Ien from the North Platte ri\'er and who argued their application before the . .tato Board of Irrigation , have been notifled to flle briefs with the honrd. rhis complln ' ollorutef : the Cho'ell e ; : anl\l and irrigates 3G,000 acres of land , It was tlwarlled 270 feet or \'lmts 0100 cubic feet. Parllos down the stream filed objections to the rQ4 -Iuest , as IUd partloli at North Platte. ' "