The Valentine Democrat VALENTINE , NEB. I , M.RICE , Publisher FATAL AUTO CONTEST BARNEY OLDFIELD KILLS TWO MEN IN ST. LOUIS. Old field "Was Blinded by Dust from A. C. "Webb's Machine and Ran Through a Fence in the World's Fair Speed Contest. Blinded by the dust thrown by the swLftly moving machine of A. C , Webb , of Toledo , O. , Barney Oldfield , of Cleve land , O. , lost control of his machine in n false start of the fifth event of the World's Fair auto'mobile speed contest at St. Louis , Sunday , and crashing through the outer fence of the course in stantly killed John Scott , a watchman- employed at the park , and inflicted injuries - , ries upon Nathan Montgomery , a ne gro , from which he died a few hours lat er. Oldfield was painfully injured anfl 'his machine completely demolished. The accident occurred after a false start. The flagman vainly attempted to signal Oldfield and Webb , who were lead ing , that the start was not allowed , but 'they ' did not see his flag and continued around the course at a high rate of speed. ' * Shortly after passing the first turn of the mile track Webb secured a lead by a narrow margin , and the men were in relatively the same position when pass ing the three-quarter pole. In making the turn Webb's machine skidded and raised a blinding cloud of dust that com pletely blifrled Oldfield and half smoth ered him. Not being able to see that he Lad completed the turn Oldfield complet ed his course and crashed through the fence. When Oldfield failed -to appear after Webb had emerged from the dust cloud there was considerable excitement , but it was announced that he was not se riously injured- , and shortly afterward he was driven to the club house in an au tomobile. It was not generally known that the accident had resulted fatally. The race after a short delay was run , .being . Avon by AVebb by a large margin. It was the most important event of the day , the prize being the Louisiana Pur chase Exposition trophy , valued at $500. MURDER AND SUICIDE. Cincinnati Man Kills Paramour and Then Himself. Mrs. Amanada Harter , aged 38 , and James Leonard Druein , aged 20j were found dead tin their flat in the Norman- die on Race Street Cincinnati , O. , Sun day under circumstances that indicate .murder and suicide. With them lived jFannie Harter , aged 14 , the niece and " 'foster ' daughter of the woman. Letters iwere found showing that he had been in- 'timate with Mrs. Harter and afterward jbccanie infatuated with the young girl. The girl said that she was sleeping 'Saturday night with her foster mother when Druein carried her to his room , locked her in and killed Mrs. Harter. Then ho unlocked his room and asked 'her to go with him. When she refused he begged her to commit suicide with him and threatened her life , but finally bid her good by and shot himself. WILL DIVULGE NOTHING. Members of Butchers' Union Refuse to Discuss Strike. The members of the national executive committee of the Butchers' union held a ( meeting at Chicago Sunday to discuss ; the present condition of the stock yards istrike. After the adjournment of the meeting , those present would not divulge Avhat 'they ' had done , but made the announce- iinent that nothing definite had been set tled and that another meeting will be held. held.The The object of the meeting was to for mulate a proposition that can be laid be fore the packers. Follow Carrie Nation. Four joints , or illicit saloons , were wrecked by women at Cuba , Kan. , and much liquor destroyed. Mrs. E. O. Fites and Mrs. William McDonald , wives of prominent business men , and twenty oth er women , armed with hatchets , smash ed everything in sight , breaking the bars and fixtures and destroying all the li quors. Assaulted a. Strike Breaker. At Aubuquerque , N. M. , Marinan , pres ident of the Albuquerque Central Labor Union , has been giveu a sentence of sev- t-enty days in jail , and four other striking 'Atchison ' and Santa Fe machinists have been sentenced to sixty days each for assault - sault upon a strike breaker in violation of an injunction. Refused Him Her Earnings. , Stephen Tendick , of St. Louis , Mo. , jaged 41 , a mechanic , killed himself Sun day night after fatally wounding his cvvife , Mary , because she would not pa/ over to him her earnings. Sioux City Stock Market. Saturday's quotations on the Sioux iCity stock market follow : Cattle , 10@2oc 'lower. ' Hogs , $5.10 < g5.3Q. Disease is Not ITellow Fever. An interview was had with a prominent - nent physician connected with the Marion - r rion hospital service who is at present stationed at Brownsville , Tex. , in which he stated that many cases of sickness sus pected of being yellow fever had been diagnosed negatively. Police Bar Naval Cloaks. The prefect of police of St. Petersburg , ( Russia , has forbidden the ladies to wear Ithe naval cloaks , which have become l&ishionable since the Chemulpo fight. > ; EXPECT A SETTLEMENT. Leaders Believe the Strike Will End in a Few Days. Conferences of the committee appoint ed earlier in the week to attempt a set tlement of the Chicago stock yards strike , with the parties'to the dispute , resulted in nothing. There is no present prospect that they will result in anything in the future , and the chances of an agreement between the packers and the strikers appear very meager. The. strike leaders appeared before the committee Friday morning and stated their side of the case. They did not sug gest to the aldermanic committee that it make any overtures to the packers , bnt simply gave their side of the case. Rep resentatives of the packers then appeared1 before the committee. After a session that lasted three hours Mayor Harrison said : "The packers have said jr.st what they said before , that they are running their plants and have nothing to arbitrate , and that there is no reason why they should confer with the men. "We heard a review of the entire strike trouble , and the packers say that in ev ery city except Chicago and Omaha , the strike is over , and thejr assert that with 70 per cent as many men as they em ployed in Chicago before the strike they are now turning out 92 per cent of this normal output. " Labor leaders assert that in all proba bility the butcher strike would be set tled "peaceably" * before next Wednes day. They declined to explain the cause of their belief , and are positive in their statements that the strike will not be called off. President Donnelly , of the Butchers' union , has called all the members of the butchers' executive boaid to meet in Chicago cage next Wednesday. PEACE IS SOUGHT. Negotiations to End Strike Resumed in Chicago. The union leaders and packers at Chicago cage Friday conferred with a committee appointed by the city council lo seek terms of settlement for the stock yards strike. Separate sessions were ar ranged. Eight Catholic clergymen , afier hold ing a conference with President Donnel ly Friday , decided to offer their services towards a settlement of the strike. President Donnelly telegraphed the members of the executive board of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen asking then to come to Chica go. go.The The board will meet early next week to discuss the strike and advise as to future procedure. BIG JUDGE IS DEAD. Julian Bennett \Vatertowii , S. D. Weighed -13O Pounds. Judge Julian Bennett , of the Third ju dicial circuit of South Dakota , who was well known as the largest judge in America , weighing about 450 pounds , died suddenly of heart failure at Water- town , Friday morning. He was feeling well up to the time of the attack , but died in a few minutes , before a physician could be summoned. He was elected to the bench in 1897 , serving one term , and was re-elected in the fall of 1901 as a Democrat in a circuit heavily Republican. He was personally very popular. GREAT ANTWERP FIRE. Tanks Containing Millions of Gallons lens of Oil Burned. The oil tanks at Hoboken , three miles from Anwerp , Belgium , belonging to the Russian and Standard Oil Companies , containing 20,500,000 gallons of pe- .troleum , are ablaze , together with the sheds , wagons and paraphernalia. Troops ' are assisting the firemen to localize the conflagration. A London special says : An Antwerp dispatch says seven workmen perished in the oil fire and only two out of forty tanks escaped. The loss is estimated at $1,230,000. Saw n Grave Robbed. Kay Deever and Dondridge McRae , of Searcy , Ark. , the two young men who made affidavits that they witnessed tlTe robbery of Edd Pitts's grave at Searcy , have returned from St. Louis. McRae is a grandson of the late Gen. Dondridge McRae , for many years one of the most prominent citizens of Arkansas. Both are about 25 years of age. Santa Fe Train Ditched. A Santa Fe passenger train was wreck ed about midnight Monday night six I miles east of Topeka , Kan. , The entire train , with the exception of the engine and rear sleeper , was ditched , but only four people were injured. Hundreds Near Starvation. Cloudbursts in Tonapah , Nev. , and along the lines of the roads are the most : disastrous in the history of these dis tricts. People in Tonopah and Goldfield are on the verge of starvation. Arrested for Big Forgery. Louis Benz , bookkeeper for Pendas Alvarez , cigar manufacturers on Pearl Street , New York , was locked up at police 'headquarters ' charged with forging checks to the amount of $25,000. Oil Field on Fire. A message from Jennings , La. , at 1 p. m. Thursday , says three oil wells are on fire and five others are in danger. Assassin Sentenced to Death. It is reported Samsonoff , the assassin of M. von Plehve at St. Petersburg , has been sentenced to death and that the sen tence is now before the emperor. The reports that Samsouoff had either es caped or is dead are declared to je false. Master Bakers lor "Open Shop. " At the final session of the convention of the National Association of Master fBakers at St. Louis , a decision was reached declaring for the "open shop" policy. _ 530,000 PURSES AND PREMIUMS Interstate Live Stock Fair at Sioux City , IaM Sept. 5 to 1O , Inclusive. Sioux City is making great prepara tions for the entertainment o a large crowd of people which , it is expected , will attend the Interstate Live Stock Fair to be held Sept. 5 to 10 , inclusive. Thirty thousand dollars in premiums will be distributed. The railroads have con sented to make a half fare rate , and on some of the days will run special trains. In connecton with the fair visitors will be given an opportunity to see the Patter- son-Brainerd Carnival Company , which consists of Blackman's Glass Blowers , Professor Frank , in Hindoo mystery , with all the late oriental tricks ; the Lon don Ghost Show , Fire and Serpentine Dances , Electric Fountain , the Edison Kinodrome , and various other acts and performances. They have also just com pleted arrangements with the Intrepid Death Defier , Carlo , who performs the Barnum & Bailey feature which it is claimed is several stunts better than loop the loop. He indeed loops a loop that has a gap of about twenty feet in it. It is de cidedly the most dangerous stunt ever devised. Every day during the races various acts will be performed in front of the amphitheater ; among these will be Diver Johnson , who dives from a 100-foot lad der into a shallow tank. The light-1 winged flying Dunbars , the marvelous Kinsners , equilibrists ; the Oliphans , comical Parisian eccentriques , and the trolley car trio. Lovers of speed trials should bear in mind that there will be seven big trot ting races , seven pacing races and eleven running races , and in addition forty'ama- teur horses in a new relay race ten-mile dash. Some of these races are for $1,000 purses. Exhibition speed trials will also be given by the celebrated fire team , Corbett and Sullivan. Large premiums are offered for stock exhibits , agricultural , orchard , house- household , dairy , poultry and other kin dred exhibits. The management antici pates the finest exhibition of live stock ever gotten together in the west. Autoists will be interested to know that preparations have been made for three big automobile races , in which the swift est machines made will test their speed on OHS of the fastest tracks in the coun try. TO FIGHT LAWLESSNESS. Vigilance Committee of Sarpy Coun ty , Xeb. , Incorporates. An incorporated vigilance committee has made its appearance for the first time in the history of Nebraska , says a Lincoln special. The Sarpy County Mu tual Protective association has been or ganized , with no capital , to protect the members from theft and lawlessness. The executive committee may levy such sums as are made necessary by the dep redations of thieves and criminals. The incorporators are : August Leaders , A. L. Lund , J. M. Ward. N. C. Snider , J. M. Martin , James Tannehill , Charles Leader , J. L. Sutter and W. H. Fase. AMBUSHED BY BANDITS. A Captain of Constabulary is Killed by Guerrillas. A detail of native constabulary has been ambushed on the island of Leyte , P. L , by a superior force of bandits. Capt. II. Barrett , of the constabulary , was killed in the fighting. There has been trouble in the province of Misamie , island of Mindanao , where the bandits looted several towns. The native authorities Avere defied , and the pablo of Mercado and family kidnaped. Three Chinese stores were burned , four natives murdered and the rest of them burned alive. SHAREHOLDERS HARD HIT , Hundred Per Cent Assessment A gainst Grinnell Bank Stock. A Washington , D. C. , special says : The first report of the receiver of the First National Bank of Grinnell , la. , was filed with the comptroller of the cur rency Thursday. The comptroller authorizes the state ment that owing to the great amount of forged paper among the assets an assess ment against the shareholders is neces sary and has been levied. Chicago Glue Factory Burns. Fire in the glue factory of Armour & Co. , at Benson Avenue and Thirty-second Street , Chicago , just north of the stock yards , caused a loss estimated at $100- 000. The blaze originated in a small building containing the liming vats and spreading to the main structure. The cause of the fire is not known. Big Fruit House Fails. A receiver has been appointed for the Rogersou Fruit and Cold Storage Com pany of Leroy , N. Y. Liabilities , $95- 000 ; assets , $40,000. The Rogersons were large buyers of apples and other fruits and their embarrassment , it is said , will result rather disastrously to fruit dealers in that vicinity. Victim of the Plague. An autopsy on the body of a Korean who was a steerage passenger on the steamer Coptic , and who died after being landed at the quarantine station at Hon olulu , H. I. , shows that he died of the plague. Fire in Oil Fields Unchecked. A fire which started in the Morse oil fields near Crowley , La. , is still burning , but it cannot spread further. The oil being burned each hour is worth $400. Car Meohnnio.9 Quit. At East St. Louis , 111. , one hundred union car mechanics employed at the packing houses quit work Thursday in sympathy with the striking butchers and meat cutters and other unions belonging to the allied trades. A Sensational Report. Advices from Las Palmas , Canary Isl ands , state : Fishermen report three Russian cruisers coaling from tfye Ger man steamer Valesia at Cape Juby , off the coast of Morocco. STATE OE NEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CONDENSED - DENSED FORM. Apples May Prove Expensive Wo man Shoots at Three Boys Hus band Slashes Neighbor with Knife for Referring to it. A 'very serious shooting affray took place at the Cook farm west of Ravenna a few days ago , which was again brought to mind by a cutting affray recently. Monday last Frank Kozel , a farmer liv ing near the Cook farm , was passing near that place and climbed over the fence to get an apple. He had no soon er entered the orchard than he was scared by the discharge of a shotgun'by Mrs. Cook , whom he had not seen before. He ran and was not injured. Soon after Ihree boys , Harry Jungles , Frank Myers and Robert Holmes , who were working with a thresher , passed the Cook farm and stopped to get an apple. They had gone a short distance in the orchard when they were startled by the discharge of a shotgun and Holmes fell. Jungles ran to his assistance and as he passed within fifteen feet of Mrs. Cook she shot at him , but missed. All three boys were quite seriously injured by the first shot , and as soon as Holmes recovers they in tend filing complaint against Mrs. Cook. Saturday Mr. Cook went to the farm of Mr. Hunker to secure the services of Hunker Bros. ' thresher. During the con versation Mr. Hunker referred to the shooting affray and Mr. Cook became so enraged at the mention of it that he flreAv a knife and attacked Hunker with it , inflicting a slight wound across Hunk er's abdomen. All parties concerned are prominent farmers. BIG ROBBERY AT CHADRON. Woman Attacked and Four Thou sand Dollars Taken from Her. The house of ill repute conducted by Mae Johnson at Chadron , was entered through a window by two masked men. Miss Johnson went in the hall and called out to know who was there when an arm was thrown around her and the robber with his other hand choked her so she could not make an outcry , while the other man robbed her of ยง 4,000 in greenbacks which she had in an inside pocket Of her dress skirt. The men then went out of the back 3oor , leaving Miss Johnson so stunned she was hardly able to call for help. As soon as possible the police wore called , but the robbers had made good their es cape for the time. No one but habitues of the place , it is thought , could have done the deed , and the sheriff and city authorities are conducting a thorough search. Miss Johnson has offered a $300 reward. CAUGHT HOG THIEVES. Ranchman Finds Two Hired Hands Stealing Shoats. B. M. Barber , whose ranch is two and i half miles south of Bloomington , no ticed for the last two months that some of his hogs were being stolen. He placed a constant watch qn his ranch and Sat urday night his vigil was rewarded. Accompanied by the sheriff he kept watch all night and about 4 o'clock in the morning observed two of his hired hands , brothers , loading a wagon with young shoats. He and the sheriff head ed off the team , which was being driven into Kansas by one of the thieves. They arrested the thieves , who are now in the county jail for safe keeping. Mr. Barber claims he has lost over 101 ? ehoats during the last two months. These two brothers are supposed to be a part of a gang who make this a regular business. WAS NOT MURDERED. James Hanslip , of Decatur , Victim of Heart Disease. The reported murder at Decatur of James Ilanslip by being choked to death by Arthur English was proven at the coroner's inquest to have been a mistake , and that Hanslip's death was due to heart disease. Dr. Nesbit , of Tekamah , was called to conduct the autopsy , which showed con clusively that the heart was much enlarg ed and fatty. Ilanslip and English had a quarrel over a horse trade. Hanslip became enraged , struck at English and fell to the floor , dying instantly. Four witnesses were present when the quarrel occurred. The coroner's jury exonerated English from all blanje. Card Game Ends in Fight. ' As a finish to a card game at Tecumseh George Chastine made a murderous as sault upon James Halepeake , r young hamessmaker , and in a plunge for his heart with a largo pocket knife he pene trated the case of Halepeake's watch , which was in a shirt pocket. Chastine succeeded in inflicting two or three slight flesh wounds. No arrests have been made. Alleged Bank Examiner in Trouble J. C. Goggius , the man who represent ed himself to be a bank examiner at Ta- mora a couple of weeks ago , was taken before Judge Gladmish at Seward on Monday and bound over to the next term of the district court , which convenes in November. He was placed under $300 bonds , which he failed to furnish Child Drowned in Well. The 2-year-old son of John Foster , of Greeley Center , was drowned Monday in a well. The father had gone to town two miles distant and the mother was powerless to save her child. The little one in some way removed one of the boards on the platform and fell through. Elevator Burned. The fine elevator at McLean belonging to the Atlas Elevator Company , of Minneapolis , burned down Thursdcry about 2 o'clock. Named for Legislature. E. P. Voter , of Laurel was nominated by the Republicans for representative from the Ninteenth district at the conTention - Tention at Randolph. The district is 'composed of the counties of Cedar and Pierce. Old Soldiers to Meet at Kiverton A Sidney special says : The old soldiers of this section of Iowa will meet at their sixteenth annual reunion at Riverton. The reunion will last four days , begin ning Tuesday. A good program has been prepared for each day. DOMESTIC BURNED TO DEATH Young Girl Who Starts Fire With Kerosene Meets Common Fate. Miss Henrietta Staak , a dome'stic in the employ of A. F. Kendall , of Syra cuse , was fatally burned by an explosion of coal oil. Miss Staak had built a fire in the kitchen stove as it did not burn well she took a can containing a gallon of oil and commenced to put the oil on the fire , when an explosion occurred. He : clothing was saturated by the burning oil. Mr. Kendall heard the girl's screams and hastened to her assistance , extin guishing the flames , but not before she was terribly burned on the bods' , face and arms. Her injuries were attended by a physician , but she died. Her entire body had been burned and in many places the flesh fell off the bones. Inhalation of the heat caused her death. SERIOUS BLAZE AT HASTINGS Implement Stock and Second-Hand Store Destroyed. At an early hour Monday fire at Hast ings destroyed the N. F. Damron two- story brick building and damaged the Herpolsheiiner Implement Company's stock to the extent of about 50 per cent. The building was valued at $5,000 and was insured. Robert Tressneider's second hand store was almost completely destroyed. No in surance. The fire broke out in the Ilerpolsheim- er rooms at 2:30 in the morning and had a big headway before it was discovered. It took four streams of water and three hours of hard fighting to extinguish the flames. The origin of the fire is unknown. HOLDREGE MAKING A SPREAD Intends to Have n Carnival which Will Outshine Its Neighbors. Arrangements are about completed for the holding of a harvest jubilee and ag ricultural exhibit in Holdrege from Sept. 5 to 10. The business men have bee untiring in their efforts and have spared neither pains nor expense to make this the greatest carnival ever held -in that part of the state. The live stock exhibit is expected to * be a strong feature. The Parker Amusement Company has been secured. Preparations are being made for a floral parade as well as a traveling men's and military parade. Something new is arranged for every day. Liberal premiums are offered for agricultural and live stock exhibits. JUDGE SOAKS BRUTAL FATHER Given Three Months in Jail for Abusing His Daughter. Herman Nolte , a farmer living near Roseland. was brought before County Judge Dungan at Hastings on the charge of assault and battery. The charges were lik'd by his wife for cruel ly beating their 1. i-year-old daughter , evidence in the case brought out the fact that Mr. Nolte had forced hi.s daughter to work in the harvest field while he sat around and took it easy. Last Saturday the defendant flew into a violent rage and struck the girl and then chased her about the farm with a pitchfork. lie was found guilty and sentenced to three months in the county jail. CAMP IS DESERTED. Tents Fall Promptly at Firing of Signal Gun. A David City dispatch says : The firing of a cannon promptly at (5 o'clock Tuesday morning was the signal and ev ery tent of the First Nebraska on Camp Victor Vifquain fell to the ground. In a few minutes after the cannon's roar ev ery tent of the Second Nebraska fell. In a short time fifteen drays were busy loading and hauling the baggage , and the various companies wen- marching to the different depots. During the forenoon the soldiers left on regular and special trains , and one or two companies did not get out of the city until evening. < CHARGED NEGRO WITH MURDER Wife of Alfred Uoister Says He Killed His Child with a Saw. A Norfolk special says : Alfred Bois- ter , a negro aged 72 , is in jail at Niobra- ra on the charge of killing his child with a saw last month. His wife says he killed the child and buried it. His wife has been afraid to reveal the facts be cause he had threatened to murder her if she did. They have existed in a tepee three ' miles from Niobrara on the Santee res ervation all summer. Citizens of Nio brara are intensely furious. Seriously Injured. Chas. F. Junkeu , of Bancroft , an old soldier and a carpenter , 7G years of age , met with a serious accident Tuesday. He , with some other laborers , was en gaged in raising a roof on a dwelling , a section of which dropped and caught Mr. Junken , one leg being crushed af the knee , one arm was badly torn , besides being badly bruised on the body. He is not expected to recover. Sheep Killed by Heat. The intense heat of Wednesday after noon was disastrous to the sheep at the Union stock yards of Grand Island , 100 of which were killed. It is stated that at the same time the animals were water foundered. They had been ship ped in from a cooler climate and after a lone journey drank too much when let to the water. Finds Chloroform in Bedroom. B. F. Kleeberger , of Nebraska City , has reported that late the other night be and his wife were awakened by a myste rious noise and found their bedroom fill ed with an odor of chloroform. He made a thorough inspection of the house * but was unable to find anything that would indicate how the drug got into the room. Aged Woman Suicides. Mrs. Krema. a Bohemian woman liv ing at Niobrara , stood on a chair , put a rope around her neck , jumped off and was found dead by her children. She was SO years old and despondent. Severe Sturm at Fremont. The Thomas Fox house at Fremont was struck by lightning during a heavy thunder and rain storm early Sunday morning. The building was shaken up and a bed on which one of the Fox. chil dren was sleeping was set on fire. It was easily extinguished Boy Drowns in River. Alvin Walworth , aged 14 years , only son of George E. Walworth , of Edgar , was drowned while swimming the Blue. Other boys with him saw him go down , but efforts to rescue him failed. Gov. Mickey has/issued the Labor day proclamation : " 'A nation's greatness may be mAsured by its capa city for labor. Other elements of power are supplemented to it and only become important when the genius of toil has given them direction. Nowhere is per fection attained without effort. Our owu nation , greater than any other , has corre ; spondingly dignified labor in many ways and has also set apart a special execu tive department which has to do with all questions pertaining to the great army of wage earners. Further than that nearly all the states , Nebraska included , have by legislative enactment , designated a particular day in recognition of labor , as a public tribute to the importance of toil and the results achieved by it. In obe dience , therefore , to the mandate of law and to established custom. I. Jvhn II. Mickey , governor of the State of Nebraska - braska , do hereby designate Sept. 5 , 1004 , as Labor day , and earne i ly request all who toil , whether hand or brain , to take a brief from their ordinary avocations and pis the day in. such i\ way as will best pro mote their special , intellectual and phys * ical enjoyment. " * * * Notwithstanding the dull times which have been experienced in the .state treas ury during the past month , the treaM'rer has managed to collect enough money in the general fund to warrant him in mak ing a call for $50,000 general fund war rant for Aug. 20. A large percentage of this money will go to the pernanent school fund , thereby adding to the treas urer's ability to care for newly issued warrants. With the redemption of war rant 103,000 , which will take place Aug. 20 , the oldest registry will be Jan. 20 , 1903. This will leave the state just nineteen - teen months and six days behind in tha payment of its debts. Ten months as < the state was more than two years behind ) in the payment of its debts. The expenditures - ' itures by the last legislature were larg er than usual , so that notwithstanding : the gain in point of time the debt hover * around the $2,000,000 mark. * * * State Superintendent Fowler , who ar-j rived in Lincoln Saturday afternoon af ter making a tour of the junior normals- in the Apestern section of the state , re-i ports that the work accomplished this ! year far exceeds that of 11)0 ) : : . While * the attendance was only slightly greater , a larger percentage of the 1,100 tcaoh'-r who registered for the work stayed f > r the time necessary to secure certificate $ which will entitle them to credit in otlK-r state institutions. A rule was establish ed this year at all of the schools that at tendance for efcht of the tem weeks of the session was a pre . requisite to the granting of this certifi cate and the consequence was that better average work was done. The number of certificates will exceed by far the number issued last year , although the su perintendent is not yet able to give tho- exact figures. * * * Saturday Secretary Royse , of the stato- banking board , issued his annual report showing the condition of building and ! loan associations of the state for -the- year ending June 30 , 1004. The total r- sources of the fifty-eight association show an increase of $873,921.02 , of about 12 per cent , bringing the total up to $ G- 217,350.40. There has also been an u crease of 2fl,59S in the number of bringing the total to 174,922. There 23,499 shareholders , of whom GGO are minors. Secretary Royse stated that he- was highly pleased at the showing made- fa the report. * * * Friday afternoon the state board of ed ucational lands and funds met for the- consideration of an offer of $15OOOt Keith County bridge bonds , bearing 4 * per cent. They were offered directly by the county officials without the interme diation of a broker , and the offer was- accepted. The bonds run without option for six years- , and thereafter $1,000 is to- be paid each year until they are paid. The purchase leaves only $22,000 in available cash in the permanent school funds. * * * Because of a failure of the railways to grant further harvest rates , the Ne braska labor bureau is not supplying lu.r- vePt hands for the North Dakota whf-.r fields , although it is claimed thousands of men are needed. It is believed that the failure to grant rates is due to the- fact that there has been very large traf fic to- the laud openings at Bonesteel and Devils Lake , and the railway managers were fearful that the rates would e-a- able land seekers to evade the published tariffs. * * * The lands belonsin to the permanent school fund bringing in a big incomeor the schools of the state , the entire- amount being distributed from the tem porary school fund for the benefit of ail schools in the state in proportion to tue- number of scholars of school age in ea k county. The income for the bieunjam ending Nov. 30 , 1902 , the only available- Sgures until the report for the past L Vn- aiuffi is compiled , show that the reve nue from this source was $1,564,979.13 , * * * Attorney General Prout. for Auditor Westou , has a brief in the state supreme 2ourt in which he contends that the stat ute of limitation has run on $288 worth 3f wolf bounty claims filed by the Lincoln Safe Deposit and Trust Company ; of Lincoln. * * * Elijah Filley , the superintendent of : he live stock section of the state fair , reports to S. C. Bassett , who has g A1 ! charge of the arrangements , that lieLJ ipplicatious for four times more spa' e- Lhan he ever had before. * * * According to Lincoln grocers , flour at ? 2 a sack is not an improbability in the * icar future. Standard brands that have- old as low as $1.25 a sack are now Itioted at $1.45 , an advance of 10 cenfs. n two weeks. A year ago the samr. jraiicls were to be had on the local mar- iet for $1.15. The grocers say that wholesalers insist millers are putting up ie price purely from speculative mr- aves. Wheat is higher than it ever ivas , but none of it has yet been traus- "omed into flour , and that therefore tney : aijnot understand what excuse the mili- 5rs have for Jacking up prices now.