: -3 f , .40 TERN NEWSJJEMOCRAT I- L JMe ars , P arm ana stocR jrournai. \ i VOLUME XI ? . VALENTINE , NEBRASKA , MARCH 80 , 1899. NUMBER 10. AROUND THE EARTH } / OCCURRENCES THEREIN FOR A WEEK. FATAL MEMPHIS FERE BOARDING HOUSE BLAZE RE SULTS IN FOUR DEATHS. The Business Outlook as Reported by 11. G. Dun & Co.'s Mercantile Agency Failures Show Marked Decrease Other Items. Hoarding House Fire. In a fuc which broke out in the boarding 'house of a Mrs. Nolan , at Memphis , Tenn. , March 25 , four people lost their lives and several were seriously injured. The dead are : MRS CIIAPIX , a widow. ROY CIIAPIN , her son , aged 10. CHESTER CHAPIX , aged 4. SMITH. The origin of the fire is not , known. It was the second fire in the same building during the night , and it is thought the earlier blaze was not entirely extinguished An unknown woman is missing and it is feared she has perished in the llames. Th6 fire was a remarkably rapid one , and had made considerable headway-by the time the firemen arrived on the scene. THE WEEK IN TRADE. The Business World as SeenbyDuii & Co.'ri Review. K. G. Dun & Co's Weekly Review of Trade says : Business is not frightened , either by the great capitalization of new companies or tLe wild fluctuations in Wall Street. Xo matter how stock operations in Xew York may count , business else where is large enough to warrant a won derful expansion of industries , and that is the thing most important to observe. In no considerable branch has production diminished , but in practically all it has been increasing during the past week. Wool is at the doubting point , with large sales expected from the interior by tired holders , and some concessions made to se cure transactions in Philadelphia and Boston , though quota'ions show only moderate decline , and sales at the three chief markets are almost as large as in 1892. Manufacturers make many inquir ies , but the prospect of combination is potent to hinder transactions. The goods are in better demand than a year ago , but 110 large class of mills can claim to be fully employed. The demand for cotton goods is still strong , but this week has not materially advanced prices. The wheat market is just now somewhat stronger , western receipts for the week Icing 3,359OCO bushels , against 2,557,665 last year. Failures for the week have been 200 in the United States , against 251 last year. KID M'COY WINS ON POINTS. Choynski Stays with Him Twenty Rounds , hut was Outclassed. With a superiority in cleverness , quick ness and ring generalship , which was ap parent from the first round , "Kid McCoy" was very properly awarded the decision over Joe Choynski at the end of the twentieth round before the National Ath letic Club in San Francisco March 23. It was a very pretty fight , but it was almost entirely in favor of the younger man. Mc Coy AVOU and won easily. He had the fight in his hands , and at any one of half a dozen palpable opportunities he could have ad ministered a decisive and knockout blow. But he failed to follow up his advantage , and Choynski was declared lucky to be able to stay the twenty rounds. SHERMAN SAFELY MOVED. Sick Statesman Transferred from the Paris to the Chicago. " John Sherman was safely moved from the steamer Paris to quarters prepared for him on board the cruiser Chicago at Santi ago Friday. Sherman was carried on a stretcher and laid on one of the boats of the Paris while it was fast to the davits. The boat was then lowered into the water and taken in tow by a steam launch. Um brellas were placed over the sick man to prevent the sun overheating him. Sher man was hoisted on board the Chicago in the same manner. He was accompanied by F. B. Wiborg , Dr. Magee and a nurse. The start for the States was made at once. INSURGENTS BEATEN. York World Reports a Sweep ing Victory for Americans. The World printed the following Manila cable on Saturday morning under date ol March 24 : "A sweeping victory over Aguinaldo's forces has just been won by the United States troops. "The total American loss is estimated at about one hundred including both the killed and wounded. "The Filipino loss is between three and four hundred. " Reunion of Rough Riders. Arrangements are being made for a rt- uuion to be held at Guthrie , Oklahoma , n June next of the Rough Riders who it in the battles about Santiago. A letter has been received from Gov. Roosevelt of Xew York , accepting an invitation to attend. Famous Cocoa Maker Dead. . The death is announced at Jerusalem of - " Richard Cadbury , head of the great cocoa manufacturing firm of Cadbury Bros. ) ARKANSAS IDEA OF JUSTICE Seven Negroes Xiynclicd Because One Killed ri AVhite Man. The wildest excitement prevails among the negroes of Little River County , Ark. , and seven negro men have been .lynched , by the citizens of that section. The affair grew out of the lynching of a negro named General Duckett , near Richmond , in that county , on March 21 last. On March 18 a prominent planter named James Stockton was murdered at his home near Rocky Comfort by Duckett. The negro escaped at the time ljut was captured , taken to the place where he had killed Stockton , and after making a confession he was lynched. After the lynching "it was learned that Duckett had frequently tried to get the negroes in the county to join him in a race war against the whites. A few hours after he had killed Stockton he passed several negroes at a farm house and told them he had killed one white man , and if they would follow him he would kill more. It is now believed that the negroes had banded for a race war. Among those who have fallen victims to the wrath of the whites are Edward Good win , Dan King , Joe Jones , Ben Jones , Moses Jones and still another whose name could not be obtained. The last three named were brothers , were intimate with the assassin of Stockton , and ityvas dis covered that they were leading a scheme to avenge their comrade's death. The as sault was provoked by the unearth ing of plots that the followers of General Duckett had concocted , and when the revelation was made , the citizens began their search for the principals.l All of the victims that have fallen before the whites were pursued singly over the country , and met their fate at different times and in different localities. TELLS OF AWFUL CRIME. John Moore , Who Killed His Five Babes , -Makes Signed Confession. John Moore , the Hutchison , Kan. , mur derer , on Thursday made a signed state ment of his horrible crime at McPherson. Moore murdered his five children with a hatchet and a knife , then burned the house over their heads , lie and his wife had quarreled , and he claims they were about to separate. In the statement Moore says : "I had been feeling pretty bad for the past two or three days. The children were all in bed and asleep. I turned the lamp down and went to bed. I then had one of my worst spells and my head hurt me awfully , and everything seemed floating before me , and the next thing that I re member after this was in trying to get out of the house. I have a recollection of going through a struggle like a dream that I half remember. All the recoiled ion I have about this is that I would rather see my children dead than to leave them in the hands of my wife's people. It was like a dream to me that I did something to the children , but I do not recollect using the knife or hatchet. I loved my children and I lived for them/ ' them"t MAY FREE THE YOUNGERS. Prospects of Their Getting Out of Prison Are Bright. The prospects of the Younger boys being released from the Minnesota State Prison are much brighter. The bill which permits the parole of life prisoners after twenty years' imprisonment , with uninterrupted good behavior , was on March 22 defeated in the Senate , but Thursday Senator Wil son had the bill reconsidered , and after an amendment was adopted requiring the ap proval of the board of pardons of such paroles , and by the board of prison man agers , the bill was passed by a vote of 48 to 5. The board of pardons has heretofore strongly opposed a pardon for the Youngers. but their friends hope fora more favorable disposition towards a pro posal to parole the prisoners. ASSEMBLY TO DISSOLVE. Way Will Soon Be-Clear for Adjust ment of Cuban Affairs. Advices from Cuba to Delegate Quesada in "Washington regarded as trustworthy , are to the effect that the Cuban assembly will dissolve in a few days. This in his judgment , will clear the way for a pacific adjustment of affairs in Cuba. Populist Tries Bribery. J. C. "Wailes , Populist member of the Territorial Assembly , has been placed under arrest at Guthrie , Oklahoma , as a result of the Grand Jury's investigation oJ the Territorial Legislature. lie is accused of having offered $75 to Senator Frank C. Hutlo , chairman of the special committee on revision of the Senate calendar , to ad vance two bills in which he was interested from Committee of the Whole to third reading. To Advance Wages of 5OOO. The engineers of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Company's mills at Pittsburg , Pa. , have been notified that their wages would be advanced 10 per cent. April 16. A rep resentative of the firm is responsible for the statement that on that date there will be a general advance in all departments , affect ing fully 5,000 men. Arms to Be Returned. The ordnance bureau of the War De partment has sent a circular to the Gov ernor of each state in the union stating that the arms and ordnance stores furnished the volunteees during the Spanish war will be returned to the state in kind. Shayne Will Recover. John T. Shayne , the millionaire furrier and prominent Democratic politician of Chicago , who was shot and seriously wounded by Harry II. Hammond , is re- ported as having good prospects for re covery. ASKFO TO LAY DOWN ARMS. American Commission Issues an Ad dress to the Filipinos. A Manila dispatch says : The address drafted by the American commission eni- 3odyingthe views of the President has been made public. It'assures the Filipinos that the intention of'the Americans is to develop the powers of self government in the people. It explains that the United States has assumed international ob- igations which it must fulfill. The commission , it is explained , is to in terpret the purposes and intentions of the President towards the -natives and suggest the establishment of a government suited to the capacity and requirements of the Filipinos and which will be consistent with the interests of the United States. The protection of the United States will not be exercised in any spirit of tyrany or ven geance , but , having destroyed the Spanish power and accepted sovereignty of the islands , the United States is bound to re store peace in the Philippines. To this end all the insurgents are invited to lay down their arms. A majority of the commis sioners are inclined toward giving the Filipinos pines a sort of tribal or provincial local au tonomy under a central government , which will be military until a purely civil sys tem has proved feasible. ENTOMBED THIRTEEN DAYS. Big Water Pipe Saves the Iiives of Two Colorado Miners. The two mine pumpers , Charles Reuss and Burt Frey , who were imprisoned in the Bon Air mine near Leadville , Colo. , about two weeks ago , were rescued Thurs day. They show little effects of their ex perience. They were on the 430-foot level when a cavern near the top of the shaft cut them off from the outer world. Fortunately - nately , the big water pipe was not broken by the cavein , and by blowing a hole in it with dynamite the men were enabled to communicate with their friends , who kept them supplied with food while a new shaft over 200 feet deep was sunk. The cost of rescuing the men has been over $3,000. POWDER MILLS BLOWN UP. Two Men Killed and One Fatally Hurt by a Series of Explosions. Two men were killed Wednesday after noon by an explosion in the Dupont powder mills at Carney Point , X. J. The killed are : ISAAC LAYTOX. CHARLES FORD. Fatally injured : Frank Magill. There were five mills all blown to pieces. The first explosion occurred in the gun cotton room , and was followed rapidly in succession by four others. CAMBON TO ACT FOR SPAIN. Frenchman to Represent Dons at Exchange of Peace Ratifications. The Queen Regent of Spain has signed the decree giving Jules Cambon , French ambassador at Washington , full power to represent Spain at the exchange of ratifica tions of the treaty of peace with the United States. Four Victims of Wood Alcohol. James H. Dildine , a tramp , is dead at Princeton , Ky. He had been with a party of twenty or more tramps at Paducah , who had obtained wood alcohol , and his is the fourth death of the party. One is unknown. The other two were Joseph Corn of St. Louis and W. D. Morrison of Baltimore. A $75OOO Stallion Killed. The famous thoroughbred stallion Han over was put to death by chloroform at Lexington , Ky. , Thursday. Gangrene in the foot made his death necessary , Seventy-five thousand dollars had been re fused for him. He was the sire of a num ber of famous racers. MARKET QUOTATIONS. Chicago Cattle , common to prime $3.00 to $ G.OO ; hogs , shipping grades , $3.00 to $4.00 ; sheep , fair t choice , $3.00 to $5.25 ; wheat , No. 2 red , G9c to 70c ; corn , No. 2 , 35c to 3Gc ; oats , No. 2 , 2Gc to 27c ; rye , No. 2 , 52c to 54c ; butter , choice creamery , 20c to 21c ; eggs , fresh , lie to 13c ; potatoes , choice , GOc to G5c per bushel. Indianapolis Cattle , shipping , $3.00 to $5.75 ; hogs , choice light , $2.75 to $4.00 ; sheep , common to choice , $2.50 to $4.50 ; wheat , No. 2 red , G7c to GOc ; corn , No. 2 white , 34c to 35c ; oats , No. 2 white , Sic to 32c. St. Louis Cattle , $3.50 to $6.00 ; hogs , $3.00 to $4.00 ; sheep , $3.00 to $4.75 ; wheat , No. 2 , 70c to 73c ; corn , No. 2 yellow , 33c to 35c ; oats , No. 2 , 27c to 29c ; rye , No. 2 , 55c to 57c. Cincinnati Cattle , $2.50 to $5.75 ; hogs , $3.00 to $4.25 ; sheep , $2.50 to $4.50 ; wheat , No. 2 , 71c to 73c ; corn , No. 2 mixed , 37c to 38c ; oats , No. 2 mixed , 28c to 29c ; rye , No. 2 , 58c to GOc. Detroit Cattle , $2.50 to $5.75 ; hogs , $3.00 to $4.00 ; sheep , $2.50 to $4.50 ; wheat , No. 2 , 71c to 72c ; corn , No. 2 yellow , 34c to 35c ; oats , No. 2 white , 31c to 33c ; rye , 5Gc to 58c. Toledo Wheat , No. 2 mixed , 72c to 73c ; corn , No. 2 mixed , 34c to 36c ; oats , No. 2 white , 27c to 28c ; rye , No. 2 , 54c to 5Gc ; clover seed , new , $3.45 to $3.55. Milwaukee Wheat , No. 2 spring , 67c to GSc ; corn , No. 3 , 31c to 33c ; oats , No. 2 white , 29c to 31c ; rye , No. 1 , 55c to 56c ; barley , No. 2 , 4Gc to 47c ; pork , mess , $8.75 to $9.25. Buffalo Cattle , good shipping steers , $3.00 to $5.75 ; hogs , common to choice , $3.25 to $4.25 ; sheep , fair to choice weth ers , $3.50 to $5.00 ; lambs , common to extra , $4.50 to $6.50. New York Cattle , $3.25 to $5.75 ; hogs $3.00 to $4.50 ; sheep , $3.00 to $5.50 wheat , No. 2 red , 81c to 82c ; corn , No 2 , 43c to 45c ; oats , No. 2 white , 35c to 38c ; butter , creamery , 15 ? to 23c ; eggs "Western. 14c to 15c. STATE OE NEBRASKA Frank M. . Dorsey , Former Ponea Banker , Sentenced to Six Years in Sioux Falls Penitentiary Case Ap pealed to a Higher Court. Dorsey Gets Six Years. Judge Garland of South Dakota , acting for Judge Hunger at Lincoln , on March 21 , sentenced Frank M. Dorsey to six years in the penitentiary at Sioux Falls. Dorsey's counsel has appealed the case to ( the Court of Appeals at St. Louis and the defendant's bond has been fixed at $10- 000. 000.It Oiti is almost five years since the First Na tional Bank of Ponca failed , which failure resulted in the indictment of three of its officers George W. E. Dorsey , president ; Cashier Higgings and F. M. Dorsey , form erly cashier and acting manager of the bank. The president and cashier both were tried , and both were acquitted. F. M. Dorsey was tried once before at LinC coin , but the jury failed to agree , and therefore , as the Government was anxious tlt tlJ < press the case , it came up again before Judge John E. Garland of the South Da kota ' District , in the Federal Court in Omaha. This time the jury has found Mr. Dorsey guilty on all the thirteen counts as charged. The crime with which Mr. Dorsey was convicted and now has received sentence was fraudulent banking as set out in thir teen different counts in the indictments against him. He was chiefly charged with having made false entries in the books , false statements to the Comptroller of the Currency and with placing in the bank paper signed by worthless persons and which he knew to be worthless , but repre senting them to be good. This last con stituted the abstraction of moneys of the bank and converting them to his own use. In case his appeal should be dismissed , only the clemency of the President of the United States may be thought of now for Dorsey by those friends who have been steadfast and true to him through all his years of trouble , following his years of affluence , when he was the most prominent figure in a small town. It has been said that every effort will be made to induce President McKinley to consider the cuov , and it is hoped by Dorsey's friends that the President either will pardon Dorsey or commute the sentence to a short term of imprisonment. JESSE TOOMAN GUILTY. Bloomingtou Jury Fixes His Penalty at Life Imprisonment. The jury in the case of Jesse Tooman , charged with the murder of J. P. Keitch- baum on Dec. 2 last , returned a verdict at Bloomington of guilty of murder in the first degree , and fixed the penalty at life imprisonment. The jury in the case of W.l S. Cole , accused of being an accomplice , tried just previously , failed to agree. Keichbaum was killed and buried in a hog pen , the two men taking posses sion of his property and recording a bill of sale which was proven to be a forgery. They accounted for Keitchbaum's absence by saying that he had gone south for his health. When arrested the two men were living in Keitchbaum's house , but they had disposed of most of his personal property. A brother of the murdered man from Bur lington , Iowa , was largely instrumental in developing the facts of the killing. INDIAN AGENT UNDER ARREST Charge With Detaining a .Winne- bago Without Warrant. Howell Morgan , chief clerk at the Win- nebago Agency , and acting agent in the absence of Agent C. P. Mathewson , has been arrested for arresting and detaining for one clay without a warrant Henry Holt , a Winnebago Indian. Holt is said to have made an assault on Morgan because the latter had refused to give permission to Henry Fench , Albert Hensley , and Henry Holt to visit Washington , and Morgan at once directed the police to arrest Holt and detain him until a warrant could be ob tained from United States Commissioner T. L. Sloan of Pender. Mr. Morgan was given a preliminary hearing before the county judge , J. M. Curry , who held Mor gan to the District Court of Thurston County at its next term under a $300 bond. Regimental Band Mustered In. Adjutant General P. II. Barry has mustered in the Second Regiment Band at Hastings , twenty-one members answered to roll call and were duly sworn in. As soon as the military ceremony was finished Gen. Barry spoke at length to the members of the band and complimented their work most highly. He said : ' -The part band took in the late war was a noble -/ne , a credit not only to the city from which it came , the state it represented at Chickamauga - mauga Park , but to the nation at large. " Smallpox at Platte Center. A case of genuine smallpox has de veloped in Platte Center. A woman and her son went to Cheyenne , Wyo. , to see a second son , who was returning from Manila. The soldier was found to be sick with smallpox. On the return to Platte Center the other son immediately was at tacked with the disease. The house is quarantined and every precaution is teing used to prevent the spread of the malady. Farmers Will Use Telephones. The Plattsmouth Telephone Company has just received 100 feet of new cable and two new switchboards. Within a few weeks the company will commence extend ing the line until each town in the county has been reached. Many farmers , it is said , along the line and within a few miles of it have made arrangements to have 'phones placed in their residences. Measles at Osmond. Over twenty-five cases of measles are being doctored at Osmond , Two cases have already proved fatal. Admitted to Practice. Sylvester O. Campbell of Madison has been admitted to .practice before the In terior Department. PLANT TREES ON THE PLAINS Governor Anounces Arbor Day and Advises Concerning It. Gov. Poynter proclaimed Saturday , April 22,1899 , as Arbor Day. In part the Gov ernor says : UI would most earnestly call upon all our people to give it special observance this year. Let each school boy plant at least one tree , which may be a shade for his noontime of life. Let every young man plant a tree which may be a comfort in after years. Let every man of middle life plant a tree , which may grow into a monument of his foresight when his other work shall have been forgotten. Let all our people give up the day to tree planting. Plant shade trees. Plant ornamental trees. Plant fruit trees. Beautify the plains with trees. Lay aside the cares of every day business and engage in a work which shall render our already beautiful State more beautiful and more desirable. " Lawyers Arrested Tor Embezzlement A. and C. Wilson , who for the last year have been engaged in the practice of law at Johnson and at Hebron , have been ar rested in the latter town. ; They are charged with the embezzlement of several hundred dollars , Mrs. Hickey and her son being the complaining ( witnesses. Defendants were held to the D'strict Court , their bonds be ing fixed at $700 each. Prairie Fire. A prairie fire did considerable damage near May wood last week , tall grass , which is now dry , giving it a full sweep. Many stacks of unthreshed grain and hundreds of tons of hay were burned. Small farm ers , it is feared , may be burned out. Mayweed - wood , which is poorly protected , was only saved by everyone turning out and beating back the flames. Real Estate in Demand. The last year has been an active one in Dixon County real estate. One dealer has sold 2,000 acres alone. This item is only one of the many sales in that county. The prices for land range from $15 to10 per acre. Rules on Bartley Bond Case. The Supreme Court has overruled the motion for a rehearing in the Bartley bond case and the case will have to be retried by the District Couit of Douglas County. Xebraska Short Notes. The city of Hastings is again infested with burglars. Bloomfield is agitating the question of building a town hall. Xiobrara has organized a militia com pany with 100 enrolled. Kelby Richardson of Plymouth shot his thumb off while cleaning his gun. It is the intention to have the Ogalalla creamery in operation by April 1. Complaint is made at Burchard that there is too much petty thieving going on. Mrs. J. H. Reigel was killed in a run away accident at Wahoo a few days ago. The Methodist Church of Edgar cele brated its twentv-sixth anniversary March 17. Burglars robbed aSnyder hardware store the other night of $100 worth of cutlery and $10 in cash. E. J. Weir of O'Neill has been arrested , charged with tampering with a jury in a case involving a calf. The carpenters and masons of Atkinson are all busy. There is not a vacant house or store building in the city. School bonds in the amount of $19,000 were voted upon at Tekamah last week and carried almost unanimously. Two colored boys have been sentenced to the Reform School from Xebraska City for assault and battery upon another young ster. Judge Keysor of Tekamah sentenced John Oden , convicted of burglary on two separate counts , to ten years in the State Penitentiary. S. H. Graves of Kimball says that he has lost less than fifty head of sheep from his band of 4,000 , but he has fed a large amount of hay and corn. Elmer Coleman , son of Hiram Coleman , living six miles south of Craig , committed suicide by hanging himself in the barn. No apparent reason is given for the act. The Kearney High School oratorical con test was held a few nights since and Miss Josie McXee will represent the school at the district contest to be held in Geneva on March 81. There is a rumor afloat that the Missouri Pacific Railroad intends to extend its line from Presser to Wood River some time this summer and that a survey will be made in two or three weeks. The executive committee of the Xorth- east Nebraska Bankers' Association had a meeting in Wayne recently totirrange for the association's annual blowout , which comes off in that city on Arbor Day. It is announce ! that railroad improve ments will be made at Oxford at once. The roundhouse is to be enlarged to a capacity of twenty stalls , the roundhouse at Red Cloud having been ordered moved there. Gen. Lloyd Wheaton. who is command ing the United States forces in the front of Manila , is an old acquaintance of the Greed wood Recorder editor , Gen. Wheaton being captain in the regiment in which the Recorder man served as first lieutenant. Word has just been received from Oak Hill that Phillip Deiter was accidentally shot in the leg by his brother Charles , and died from the effects some hours afterward. It seems that the two brothers were about to start on a hunting trip and as one took down the gun , which was loaded with buckshot , it was discharged with the above result. A novel way of providing for the liquida tion of church debts has just been inaugu rated by a Ladies' Aid Society of Stuart , by which the women have leased a farm near the city and propose to receive dona tions of seed , grain and work , hoping that Providence may bring forth a crop that will place the church upon a sound finan cial basis. The women of the Presbyterian Church at Wayne recently held a sample sale which netted them a handsome sum to be applied toward paying for the $10,000 church building which is in course of con struction. Articles of every description donated by the business firms and manu facturing establishments throughout the country were offered for sale. NEBEASKA CONGRESS DAILY REPORT OF WHAT IS BE ING DONE. Pleasures of More or IJcss Import ance Arc Being Introduced at the Present Session of the Legislature Gist of the Business. Wednesday , March 22. \'an Duseu of Douglas offered a resolit- lion regarding the bad condition of State House. It went over tinder the rules. Just before the noon recess Schaal of Sarpy offered a motion that the President of the Senate appoint a committee of three to act with the House committee in the investi gation of the Supreme Court. Senator Curric moved to take a recess till 2:30 , and Senator Talbot to table the motion of Sen ator Schaal. "One at a time , ' ' said the Chair. He consulted Roberts' rules of order to ascertain if a motion to lake a re cess took precedence- , and decided it did. The motion prevailed and no action on the Schaal motion , which was really in the shape of a resolution , was taken. II. K. 197 was passed during the afternoon. At X o'clock Senator Van Dusen called for the special order , the Van Dusen revenue bill. Schaal of Sarpy insisted upon taking up his motion to appoint a committee for the purpose of investigating the Supreme Court. After a parliamentary debate the Chair ruled the special order took prece dence. Talbot of Lancaster wanted II. R. 137 also considered , but was not successful. Senator Prout was called to the chair. The afternoon was spent in considering thu revenue bill , several sections being stricken out. The committee arose with the under standing that it sit again from 7:30 o'clock gt until ; 9 o'clock to finish the consideration of the bill. The evening session was spent ci in i Committee of the Whole. After routine business had been dis posed of , committee reports read and acted upon the House resolved itself into Com mittee of the Whole which consumed the entire session of the day. The general appropriation bill was under discussion. Thursday , March 23. The Lower House of the Legislature passed the bill permanently locating the State Fair at Lincoln. The fair at present is at Omaha , and Douglas County members worked hard against its passage.'r' final vote was 5t > to 37 in favor of the b. The bill was introduced by Representative Weaver early in the session , but would have died on the general file had not the sifting committee advanced it to the front. The bill failed to pass with the emergency clause in it , due to the fact that a number of members who said they were in favor of it voted negatively because it authorized the purchase of site without limiting the amount to be spent for that purpose. This amendment would have been made by friends of the bill , but they did not take kindly to the suggestion to send it back to the committee of the whole , and asked unanimous consent to amend it on third reading. Caylor of Custer objected and then the bill went through. The Senate devoted itself to committee reports. The Committee on Railroads re ported Senate file 51 , by Talbot , providing lhat railroads shall acquire title to the right of way over school , university , saline and other lands of the State by paying only for the ground used for depots and shop buildings , for passage was adopted. The same committee reported for indefinite postponement Senate file 290 , a resolution by Spohn calling upon the State Board ot Transportation to take such steps as are possible to bring about the reduction of "reight rates within the State. The rep - < > f the committee was adopted with refei- cnce to this bill also , after a motion to non concur offered by Mr. Spohn had been voted down. Friday , March 2-t. The bill in the Lower House of the Legis lature permitting saloonkeepers to give bonds in a surety company brought out a long and exciting debate. The chief argu ment of the men who favored it was that it would do away with the giving of straw bonds. One member said the bonds as now given were , in the smaller towns at least , not worth the paper upon which they were written. Mr. Clark wanted to know why , if the object sought was to compel saloon keepers to give good bonds , the liquor men svere pushing its passage and asking for votes for it. Mr. Beverly said that in Omaha they had about 300 saloons , and this meant that there were about GOO men who were compelled to go on the bonds of saloon men. The bill passed by a vote of 50 to 37. In the Senate eleven bills were recom mended for indefinite postponement , and only two revenue measures escaped the general slaughter and went on file. These were Senate file 266 , a bill by Talbot , pro viding the manner in which railroad and telegraph companies shall return property for taxation , and Senate file 291 , by Mc- Carger , and creating a State Board of Ap praisers and Assessors to tax express com panies. The bills postponed were to enact various amendments to the laws governing the assessment of taxes and the collection of the same. The following bills were passed : Senate file 1 by Xoyes , establish ing a bird day for appropriate observance in the schools ; Senate file 99 , by Fowler , providing for quarterly examinations of applicants for appointment as teachers by the county superintendents and requiring ten daj's' notice by publication In counties where a newspaper is published of the holding of the examination ; Senate file 213 , fixing rates to be paid for the publication of legal notices. Chinese Soldiers Despised. Soldiers are despised in China. They belong chiefly to the coolie classes. The German officers engaged some time ago by the Chinese government found that their most important task was to overcome the soldiers' own feelings that they were a lower order of beings than other Chinamen. An Exception. Singly I tell you it's the little tilings in this world that count ! Burkley Oh , I don't know We've got an expert accountant Tjrt nearly 250 Douna ° .