THE WORLD OYER fix I ATEST NEWS FROM EVERY LAND PEOTEST BY THE BOSS COMPLAIN OF AMERICAN F1LI BUSTERING EXPEDITIONS threaten to So arch all American Vessels Unless a Stop Is Put to It Tropical Hurricane Sweeps the JKaetcrn Coast Other News Items Threats by Spain A dispatch from Madrid dated October B says A government note protesting against Filibustering will be handed to Uaited Slates Minister Woodford today Cl Tiempo publishes with reserve the an aotmcenient that the reply of the Spanish government to the United Stales pre sented to Gen Stewart L Woodford the American minister at Madrid declares that if the United States does not stop the sailing of filibustering expeditions from Amorican ports Spain will re establish the right to search vessels anchoring in Cuban waters In the special note to Woodford accord lag to El Tiempo the government declares that Spain has done all in her power to nd the w ar in Cuba and cites the many sacrifices which have been made by the nation the number of troops senMo Cuba aiid the reforms which are to be carried out in the island which are fully de scribed The note ends with the state ment that Spain will not admit the right of any foreign power to interfere in any of Her affairs LUETGERTS NEW TRIAL New Evidence of Great Importance Has Been Discovered The time for the opening of Luetgerts pecond trial has not yet been set Now ridence has been discovered by the pros ecution which it is said impugns the tes jfimonj of three witnesses for the defense The discovery of this new evidence was inade too late to get it in at the first trial JDeneen says It is acknowledged on all sides that the greatest trouble in retrying the Luetgert case will be the tremendous labor of get ting a good jury States Attorney Deneen Jfc eager to force the case to trial again within two or three weeks In that case the witnesses will be easily got at and it is even said that the impeached testimony of the Schimpke girls need not be relied on that the state lias a creditable witness -who will swear to seeing Mr and Mrs Xuetgert enter the factory on the night of May 1 BIG STORM ON ATLANTIC Tropical Hurricane Sweeps Eastern Coast of Several States The northeaster which prevailed for five days developed Sunday night in the worst torm which has struck Cape May N J in nineteen years Tides covered a third of the town and surrounded the mammoth Stockton Hotel and all the section north east of it Train service to all beach resorts had to be abandoned The tele phone service to the life saving station is interrupted An unknown steamer sail less is at the mercy of the elements two miles off shore- A Washington dispatch on Monday said The tropical storm continues near the Virginia coast where the barometer fell xapidly during the night The storm is apparently moving north slowly attended fcy a hurricane on the North Carolina Virginia and Delaware coasts KIDNAPED BY REDSKINS Kansas Society Leaders Carried Off to the Reservation A hundred and -fifty Cheyenne aad Ara pahoe Indians led by Chiefs Roman Nose atnd Gray Horse left the reservation in In dian Territoryjmd drove to Harper Kan Saturday where they gave their famous war dance Roman Nose who had no partner grabbed Miss Mabel Hunter a school teacher of the town and forced her to dance with him about the circle in the oenter of which Standing Rabbit a blanket Indian stood chanting and beating a drum Another big Indian seized a young society deader by the arm and with difficulty com pelled her to join in the dance The sig nal was then given and the band started for the reservation with their victims Two Perish In a Well Frank Moonaged fiftyand MrsD Wells were found dead at the bottom of a thirty foot well on Moons farm near Derby Kansas having been asplryxiated Moon had been overcome while working and the woman went to the well late to investi gate and fell in Fatal Shooting in Kansas City William N Allen manager of the Kan sas branch of the Keeley Institute Kansas City Kan was shot and fatally wounded fjy C E Riley a traveling salesman Rileys action was prompted by the belief that Allen alienated his wifes affections Bishop Perry Arrives Among the passengers who arrived in New York on the Lucania Monday nighl were Bishop W S Perry of Iowa Prof Darcy Thompson W K Vanderbilt and iliss Maud tionne the Irish Joan of Arc Prancis Palgrave Dead U t Francis Turner Palgrave the poet and -essayist died -Sunday in London He was - 73vcars old Disastrous Landslides A telegram from Ancona on the announces that severe floods there caused several landslides interrupting railroad communication Count Richotti was swcot away aud drowned Since this nessage was sent the telegraph lines have leen broken Fortune for Breaehof Promise Mrs Carrie Corbett a widow 82 years old of Danville III has been awarded 5133333 damages for breach of promise John Germand 71 years old being defend ant THE WEEK IN TRADR T he Business World as Seen by Dun Co R G Dun Cos Weekly Review of Trade says After the heaviest buying ever known in many branches during September and the first half of October it was both natural and desirable that a more quiet period should give time for testing the size and temper of retail trade and for distributing part of the enormous quanti ties bought In textile goods the rush of orders went far beyond all distributive de mand in August and represented great replenishment of stocks and the similar rush for goods has been correspondingly great in other lines during the past two months Some large offerings of wool were made at Boston to realize profits before prices fall but quotations remained unchanged The produce market acted with as little apparent reason as -usual Although At lantic exports of wheat were 8576607 bushels flour included and for three weeks of October 10309908 bushels against 7742214 last year with western receipts not half a million bushels larger the price advanced 2K cents Corn with smaller receipts and exports barely a quarter of last year declined a small fraction REPORT FROM GOV BRADY Official Account of Gold Operations in the Territory The report of John G Brady governor of Alaska for the past fiscal year has been submitted to the secretary of the interior It estimates the present population at 30 000 natives and 10000 whites Reviewing the gold operations Gov Brady says Shipload after shipload of gold seekers and their freight has been rushed to the extreme limit of salt water navi gation Lynn canal and there have been literally dumped upon the beach some above high water and many below as they learned to their sorrow when the water covered them as they slept As a class gold seekers rank far above the average manhood of the country Skaguay is being built up rapidly Lum ber is in demand and lots are selling as high as 1500 Americans are anxious to secure a route to the Yukon which shall be entirely upon United States territory This is the third season of the work in Cook Inlet The excitement over the Klondike has drawn many away from that district nevertheless the output of gold this year will be no mean sum Liil Hasnt Abdicated In reference to reports to the effect that former Queen Lilioukalani had formally abdicated in favor of her niece Princess Kailulani the ex queen in person gave to the Associated Press the following author ized statement There is no truth in any report that she has abdicated No official action has been taken during the meeting of Kailulani with her The question of politics did not pass their lips Kailulani came to Wash ington from New York to see her aunt before going to San Francisco where she will stay a week Such reports are spread by her enemies with a view to injuring her The foregoing was dictated by the ex queen who requested however that it be used in the third person Runs Amuck with a Gun Frenzied from liquor Thomas Cooper fired his own house at Baldwin Pa Sat urday and afterward -shot and seriously wounded three men who were fighting the flames He then took to the woods He was reported roaming about the country and shooting at everyone in sight At one time he ordered a telegraph operator from a railroad tower at the point of a revolver and blocked the trains At another point he fired at an unknown man and seriously wounded him Gilbert the Victor With the Dupont cup and the worlds wing shot championship at stake Fred Gilbert of Spirit Lake Iowa and G A P Elliott of Kansas City made phenomenal records in their match at Kansas City Gilbert was the victor Out of 250 birds but one was missed Six others fell dead out of bounds For 100 birds the two cracks tied with 97 each Out of the shoot off of 25 birds Gilbert won the match with a clean score Corsets Save Her Life Miss Daisy T Coulters a pretty Brown University student 21 years old was mys teriously shot while seated at the front window of her fathers home in Auburn a suburb of Providence R I The charge entered Miss Coulters right breast and but for the deflection caused by her corset stays would have caused instant death As it is she is in a precarious condition since the surgeons dislodged the bullets which work took three hours French Paper on Silver The Journal Des Debats published in Paris commenting on the answer of the British government to the proposals of the United States monetary commission says The British reply lias completely decided the question of free silver which was brought to the front in such a way that in spite of the probability of a different solu tion it produced a feeling of uneasiness in the business world Dual Spokane Tragedy Mrs C W Kessler of Spokane Wash Was found at her home dead from a ghastly wound in her throat and near by lay her 4-year-old son with a bullet through his head The husband and father is in the city prison half insane and under suspi cion of having killed his wife and child He protests his innocence and claims that his wife killed the child and committed suicide - Moses Handy Much Improved Maj Moses P Handy special commis sioner of the United States to the French exposition in 1900 who was seriously ill Friday started from Paris Saturday for Davre on his return to the United States much improved Weekly Bank Statement The New York weekly bank statement jhows a reserve increase of- 8250000 The banks now hold 22900000 in excess af legal requirements A NEW YORK H0RE0K TRAIN PLUNGES INTO HUDSON RIVER THE Twenty Eight Persons Reported to Have Liost Their Lives Retaining Wall Along the River Undermined by High Water Other News Items Horror on the Hudson The Buffalo and New York special No 40 on the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad due to arrive in New York at 730 oclock Sunday morning was thrown from the track into the Hudson River one and a half miles below Garri sons station Twenty eight lives were lost The retaining wall along the river had been undermined by high water in the river and the tracks caved under the weight of the train The train consisted of the engine a combination baggage and express car a smoker two ordinary coaches and four sleepers The engine and two forward cars were submerged in fifty feet of water The only eye winesses of the disaster were the crew of a tugboat passing with a tow They saw the train with Its light as it came flashing about the curves and then saw a greater part of it go into the river A porter jumped from one oMhe cars that remained on the track and ran into the yard of Augustus Carrs house near which the accident occurred and stood screaming for help and groaning In a few minutes Carr had dressed him self and getting a boat rowed with the porter to the scene As they turned a point in the bank they came upon the ex press car and the combination car floating about twenty feet from shore but sinking every minute One man was taken from the top of the car and efforts were made to rescue those inside A few were gotten out the passengers left upon the track making a human bridge to the shore to take the wounded on The day coach and smoker had gone down in the deeper water and rescue was impossible In the latter coach the conditions must have been horrible The car turned completely over and the passenger end of it was in the deep water while the baggage end stood up towards the surface The men in the lower end must have fought like fiends for a brief period for the bodies when taken out were a mass of wounds At the time of the wreck there were in the smoker in addition to the baggage man Herman Acker eight Chinamen en route from the Canadian border to New York and a middle aged man supposed to bo Thomas Reilly of St Louis All of these excepting the baggagemaster perished The day coach contained eight een or twenty passengers many of them women and children llow many of these escaped is not known but at least twelve were drowned or killed in this car Behind the coach was the four sleepers with about sixty five pas sengers The total cargo of human freight consisted of something over 100 people PLOT TO KILL MARTIN Alleged Conspiracy to Assassinate the liattimer Pa Sheriff An alleged conspiracy to murder Sheriff Martin who led the deputies who fired upon and killed a score of strikers at Lat timer Pa on September 10 has been dis covered by the arrest of John Seplak who was wounded in the riot The complain ant was the sheriffs son William who says he overheard Seplak threaten to kill his father On Seplak was found a razor wrapped in a printed circular describing the shooting and calling for vengeance From a talk overheard it is said that the prisoner is one of a gang of fifteen detailed by the foreigners to murder the sheriff He denies the charge SALISBURY TO QUIT In Spite of His Denials It Is Be lieved He AVill Soon Resign In spite of the official denial of the Marquis of Salisburys approach ing resignation of the premiership of England belief in its truth is very strong in political circles where it is considered that his retirement is inevit able within a few months This view of the undercurrent was confirmed by a cabi net minister on Wednesday Oct 20 who privately remarked that the Duke of Dev onshire had declared that he means to have the premiership when the Marquis of Salisbury resigns Thirteen Seamen Drowned Thirteen seamen comprising almost the entire crew of the steam schooner Casper w ere drowned by the wreck of the vessel off Hie California coast last week Two men from the shore went out in a small boat and picked up Capt Anfindsen and Sea man Chris Larson who had been floating about on an impromptu raft for more than fourteen hours The steamer carried fif teen men but the captain has no doubt he other thirteen have been drowned Anfindson and Larson had almost suc cumbed from cold exposure and exhaustion and were with difficulty saved by their rescuers Chance for a Lynching Miss Kate Swabb a young lady of Xenia Ohio was the victim of a brutal assault by William Carter colored Carter accosted the girl while on her way home from the fuse factory and after beating and chok ing her cruelly dragged her to a lonely place Mrs George Thornhill heard her cries and going to her rescue beat the negro with a club until he fled The girl was covered with blood and presented a horrible sight If the negro is appre hended there may be serious trouble Slaughter the Somalis News from Somaiiland is that the Abyssinians are devastating the country They have already disposed or wiped out four great Somali tribes stolen all their live stock and committed horrible atroci ties All prisoners are mutilated Two Burned to Death Patrick Gollopy engineer and Henry Haight foreman were burned to death on the upper floor of Gardiner Yails laundry in New York City Monday BICYCLE CONCERN FAILS Assignment Made by the Fowlci Company of Chicago An assignment was made at Chicago Friday by the Fowler Bicycle Company one of the largest bicycle concerns in the west The company has not been doing a flourishing business for some time and has keenly felt the competition of cheap wheels The officers of the company are reticent regarding the amount of assets and liabilities but the best information obtainable gives the liabilities as close to 500000 and the assets much less The concern employed about500men It has been rumored for some time that the company was in financial difficulty The action taken was precipitated by the employes Wednesday was pay day but the firm asked the men to wait until Sat urday October 23 for their money A committee of the men called on the treas urer and asked him if they would be paid on Saturday the wages due them up to a week ago Saturday or whether they would be paid to date The difficulty of raising another weeks pay roll decided the officers of the company to give up the struggle and assign MEANS AN INFLUX OF CHINESE No Certificates Required for Wives and Children Judge Hanford of the federal court at Seattle Wash has made a decision in a Chinese case holding that the wives and children of Chinese merchants doing business in the United States do not have to have certificates from the Chinese gov ernment to entitle them to enter this coun try Government officials say if the opin ion is upheld by the higher courts it means an influx of Celestials FACTORY BOILER EXPLODES One Killed and a Dozen Hurt by a Detroit Accident A boiler in the Detroit Mich Cabinet Companys factory exploded Saturday morning At least two men were fatally injured one of whom has since died and1 ten more or less seriously injured The dead man is Laurent Tunner foreman fatally hurt Moses Peltier engineer The cause of the explosion has not been ascer tained The front and rear ends of the building were blown out Schlegel is Acquitted John Schlegel who one afternoon in July last in the center of Kansas City shot and killed Dr A L Berger one of the most prominent local men in his pro fession was acquitted The jury reached their verdict on the sixteenth ballot The announcement of the verdict was greeted by shouts and applause by the spectators John Schlegel is a German grocer whose wife and two children had been attended by Dr Berger Mrs Schlegel told her husband that Dr Berger had criminally assaulted her while she was in his office Schlegel came across Berger on one of the busiest corners in the city and without warning he shot the doctor twice The physician died on the way to the hospital Car Robbers Sentenced The most remarkable car robbery cases on record in the south came to an end at Dalton Ga Saturday The men were charged with systematically looting cars of the Southern Railway The ringleader Walter Bohannon was convicted in two cases and was sentenced by the court to five years in the penitentiary His gang Tom Kinneman Ben nearse Sam Painter Lute White Bill Long and Ed Morris the latter colored received sentences from three years to one year Ten merchants convicted of receiving stolen goods from the robbers were sentenced to pay fines ranging from 1000 down to 20 and one year on the chain gang Storm on the Lakes Dense fogs and heavy seas all over the great lakes brought disaster to several vessels Sunday Eight men reached Chi cago after a terrible experience leaving their vessel as it sank out of sight in Lake Michigan Four vessels ran on rocks and banks and one suffered from a collision ii the fog Turfman Knox Suicides James Wallace Knox the well known turfman and former owner of Nutwood shot himself dead at Kenosha Wis Sun day Business reverses was the cause DIAKSET QUOTATIONS Chicago Cattle common o prime 300 to 550 hogs shipping grades 300 to 425 sheep fair to choice 200 to 475 wheat No 2 red l3c to 94c corn No 2 25c to 26c oats No 2 17e to 10c iye No 2 46c to 4Sc butter choice creamery 21c to 23c eggs fresh 14c to 15e new potatoes 3Sc to 45c per bushel Indianapolis Cattle shipping 300 to 525 hogs choice light 300 to 425 sheep common to choice 300 to 400 wheat No 2 91c to 93c corn No 2 white 25c to 26c oats No 2 white 21c to 22c St Louis Cattle 300 to 525 hogs 300 to 400 sheep 300 to 400 wheat No 2 97c to 9Sc corn No 2 yellow 24c to 25c oats No 2 white 21c to 22c lye No 2 45c to 46c Cincinnati Cattle 250 to 525 hogs 300 to 425 sheep 250 to 425 wheat No 2 93e to 95c corn No 2 mixed 25c to 26c oats No 2 mixed 20c to 22c rye No 2 46c to 48c Detroit Cattle 250 to 525 hogs 300 to 425 sheep 250 to 400 wheat No 2 93c to 94c corn No 2 yellow 25c to 27c oats No 2 white 22c to 23c rye 4Sc to 49c Toledo Wheat No 2 red 95c to 97c corn No 2 mixed 25c to 26c outs No 2 white lSc to 20c rye No 2 47c to 49c clover seed 3o5 to 345 Milwaukee Wheat No 2 spring S6c to 78c corn No 3 24c to 26c oats No 2 white 21c to 23c rye No 1 47c to 48c barley No 2 40c to 45c porl mess 775 to 825 Buffalo Cattle 300 to 550 hogs 300 to 425 sheep 300 to 475 wheat No 2 red 95c to 96e corn No 2 yellow 28c to 30c oats No 2 white 24c to 25c New York Cattle 300 to550 hogs 350 to 450 sheep 300 to 475 wheat No 2 red 101 to 102 corn No 2 32c to 33c patsNo 2 white 22c to 24c butter creamery 10c to 24c eggs Western 16c to 18e 1 STATE OP KEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON DENSED FORM Mrs Frederick Schrievcr of Dakota City Found Dead with Her Throat Cut from Ear to Ear and by Her Side a Bloody Razor Found Dead with Throat Cut With her throat cut from ear to ear her body thrown face downward across an open trunk filled with letters of her de ceased father and by her side a bloody razor Mrs Frederick Schriever wife of the ex postmaster of Dakota City was found a few days ago on the old home stead fifteen miles southwest of that city At the present time the farm is operated by Mrs Charles Voss a sister of Mrs Schriever At about 11 oclock or an hour before she was found dead Mrs Schriever went up stair3 to the room which contained the old trunk She evidently read some of the old letters which were in the till Whether in a fit of despondency induced by the revival of memories of other days or whether the idea of killing berself had been considered is not known The fam ily did not know the razor was in the trunk Mrs Schriever was 86 years of age and is survived by her husband and three children the youngest of which is a baby of 5 months NEBRASKA EXPRESS RATES Temporary Injunction Against State Transportation Board In the district court at Lincoln Judge Cornish granted the application of the Pa cific Express Company for an injunction preventing the state board of transporta tion from meddling with the affairs of the company as it is empowered to do under the law passed by the last legislature which allows the state board to lower rates Complaint has been made to the board that the rates are 33 1 3 per cent too high and a hearing was to be held in a few days The injunction is only temporary and the company is required to give bond in the sum of 5000 BIG PRICE FOR LAND Forty Two Thousand DoIInrs Is Paid for a Burt County Farm The real estate firm of Hunt3berger Clements of Lyons has just closed one of the largest real estate deals in the history of Burt County whereby Joel S Yeaton disposes of his farm three miles south of that place composed of 840 acres of land to David Reed of Omaha for the considera tion of 42000 or 50 per acre Mr Yea ton bought the most of this land twenty seven years ago for 250 to 5 per acre Promises Them a Million The Omaha Tndian Council of Twelve met recently at the home of John Springer in Decatur one of the influential members to consider the proposition of Dr Potter from the borders of Oklahoma who claims that 1000000 is due the Oraahas by the government and that he will get it for them for 10 per cent of the total amount Potter does not appear personal ly but has sent an agent J D Atkins to arrange ar ticles of agreement An eminent attorney of St Louis is the one who will push the matter through They ask the Omahas to put up 2500 as expenses for carrying the claim to a successful end The tribe is unaware of any such sum being due them from the government but if it is a legiti mate debt and can be collected they shall certainly accept the proposition Ordered to Admit Young Majors The mandamus case brought by Thomas J Majors against the board of education and the faculty of the Peru Normal School to compel them to admit Thomas A Majors into the school was taken up at Auburn by Judge Stull and a peremptory writ al lowed The respondents did not attempt to show that the boy was not a fit person to attend the normal nor did they give a reason why they expelled him other than that it was for the good of the school but relied upon the point that mandamus was not the proper remedy and that they had aright to summarily dismiss a student without a hearing or giving a reason why The case will be appealed to the supreme court as soon as the transcript can be pre pared Wriil Sow More Wheat That section of the country tributary to Farnam has been subjected to heavy rains recently some of them of several hours duration Only about one half the wheat is thrashed farmers having been busy sowing fall wheat the area of which is nearly double that of last year it being generally thought that wheat will be the prosperity crop for the coming year About 50000 has been disbursed for wheat at that place this fall Infectious Disease at Columbus The residence of C F Curtis at Colum -bus was quarantined the other morning a case of scarlet fever being reported there The attending physician says it is a very mild type and no serious results are ap prehended A son of Mr and Mrs August Iffland died Sunday Cause diphtheria There are now seven cases of diphtheria and four of scarlet fever in the city all under quarantine Boy Sent to the Penitentiary Fred Wilhoff a minor was arraigned in the district court at Nebraska City on the charge of assisting Parezzo and Rice in the robbery of the Missouri Pacific depot at Talmage a few days ago He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to two years in he penitentiary Lightning Strikes a House During a severe thunder storm light ning strur k tiie residence of Ed Orrof May Center passing through the rocf and breaking the bay window to pieces No one was injured Busy Husking Their Corn Farmers in the vicinity of Bancroft are misy husking corn which is not yielding as well as was anticipated The crop is estimated at from twenty to the acre Waterworks for Bancroft Fairbanks Morse Co the Omaha firm vhich is pntting in a system or water works at Bancroft has a large force of nen at work digging the trenches By the erms of the contract the system is to be ready for operation by December 1 Organize in Grand Island A command of the Union Veterans Union has been organized at Grand Island organizer as Lincoln Island by T J Dunlap of Erie Pa the national The command will be known Command No 8 of Grand Sells a Bicycle and Steals It Charles Long a stranger in tho locality of Dakota City with a specnlative turn ot mind is in the county jail awaiting his preliminary hearing on the 23d inst Long rode into town on a bicycle which he sold to J C Riddle who placed it in the rear of his saloon A few hours later when Long took his departure he also took tho bicycle with him Riddle in company with Sheriff Borowsky overtook the man and bicycle on the outskirts of town and Judge Ryan placed him under 100 bonds pending his preliminary hearing Nebraska Odd Fellows The grand lodge of Nebraska Odd Fel lows in session at Lincoln elected the following officers Grand Master C M Patterson Omaha Deputy Grand Master J E Arnold r Schuyler Grand Warden O O Snyder ONeill Grand Secretary K P Gage Fremont Grand Treasurer J M Clay Lincoln Grand Representative G W Norns Beaver City Omaha was selected as the place of meet ing next year On His Way Back to Hawaii Mr E H Waity of the firm of Bishop A Co bankers Honolulu has been the guest of W W Barney and family of Kearney Mr Waity is a native of Illinois and lived there until about ten years ago butfor the last three years has been a resident of Honolulu He left home August 31 on ac count of the sickness and death of his father and is now on his return to the islands He expects to arrive in Honolulu November 9 and is visiting friends on the way Overturning Supreme Court Judge Cunningham R Scott of thd trict court has been cited to appear Ijeforo the supreme court November 3 in connec i tion with one of the series of restraining orders he has lately issued Recently he disbarred an attorney and regretted that he could not disbar Judges Baker and Powell In this case Judge Scott was overturning a decree of the supremo court which has taken cognizance of his action Railroad Doctors at Hastings The annual meeting of the physicians and surgeons of the St Joseph and Grand Island Railroad was held in the parlors ol the Bostwick notel at Hastings the other day There was an attendance of over thirty physicians and the meeting was very harmonious An interesting address was delivered by Dr Farley of York who spoke upon Therapeutics of Thunder in a very clear manner Hog Breeders in a Libel Suit District court is now in session at Wilber with Judge Hastings on the bench A verdict for 400 for damagc3 by libel was given in favor of Philip J Gossard against Sylvester Andrews The parties are rival hog breeders near Friend and brothers-in-law The defamatory matter consisted of reflections upon the methods of Gossard as a breeder in a circular sent out by An drews Back from Klondike with a Fortune- Charles Raymond bar arrived home at Gehring from the Klondike country He has been there ahout three years and owned claim No G on Bonanza Creek He was credited with 30000 in the dispat hes when he landed at San Francisco but whether he has that much or not he has a nice stake and had nothing when he left Gehring three or four years ago CtrftA Collapses Under Weight of One of the spans of the North Loup bridge at St Paul went down again Thurs- day night occasioned by the weight of a number of cattle being driven across and the north part of the count is again cat olf from communication with St Paul The bridge had but recently been repaired after having been washed out last summer Bequest for York College York College has received a bequest of 1500 President W E Schell has lately been working hard to adjust the financial difficulties of the institution and his suc cess in securing this recent bequest is evi dence of his zeal and efficiency The at tendance at the college this year is larger than foiseveral years past Has a Mania for Burning Straw The county commissioners of insanity have found John Jones aged 20 years oil Fairfield to be insane and ordered him taken to the asylum He developed a mania for burning every stack of straw in the country and would ride from one farm to the other at night setting fire to any thing he could Pontoon Bridge Barge Sinks One of the barges of the pontoon britJgo sank at Decatur Friday while a smallLJ bunch of cattle was crossing A number of the cattle slipped into the river ami had to swim ashore The water was shallow wheie the boat went down and it was raised to its place without great culty i Hartleys Bond Invalid Judge Powell before whom the sufc against the Bartley bondsmen was tried has ruled that the bond was invalid on a technicality and thus leaves the state nothing but an appeal to the supremo court Dedicate a New Church The dedication services of the Swedisi Lutheran Church was held at Greeley on Thursday The church is a nandsome structure Old 3Ian Killed by a Train An old man by the name of Cade was killed in the railroad yards at Scribner Thursday night by a train He was gathering firewood Nebraska Short Notes Scarlet fever in a mild form is prevaic u in and around McCook Frank Johnson of Duel County drowned himself while in a fit of despondency Tuesday morning Rankin Brothers ele vator at Cambridge caught Are on the east side of the roof and only the timely an quick work of the bucket brigade saved the building and its contents The Swift Company of Omaha dnne through Kimball County several trail h rd of sheep last week numbering 1J0J0 lie to fifty bushels 1ln ali which were purchased -from tin v arren Lave btock Company of Cheyenne Over 43000 of outside capital is invested in sheep feeding in Hall Countr repre senting 23321 head of sheep and over 142 000 of foreign money invested in cattle feeding representing over 5000 head of cattle These figures are taken from the records in the county clerks office and wfienitis remembered that onlv about one fifth of the cattle and sheep fed in tbrv county this winter will be on loaned Hal uic nuuieusiiy oi me lnuusiry lor si comparatively young one can bereahz Minnie Smaha a Ravenna girl fell on a picket fence and the point of one of tha pickets penetrated her thich about three- J inches making a dangerdu wound i r V