The Valentine Democrat VALENTINE , NEB. L M. RICE , Publisher COLORADO'S CONTEST SUPREME COURT ORDERS ALL BALLOTS EXAMINED. Id a IMS' Petition is Granted Entire lienver Vote is Under Suspicion Neither Adams IVor Pcabody Want the Ollice Unless Ijr.gnlly'Elected Stretching its hand so as to cast a shadow over every man and woman in any way implicated in election frauds of the city and county of Denver , Colo rado , on , before , or after Nov. 8 , the su ordered aninvesti preme court Friday an- gation so sweeping in its scope that ev ery phase of the election may be scrutin ized and everything that bears in any way upon the election may be made known by judicial inquiry. Alva Adams , Democratic candidate for governor , who appeared from the returns lo have been elected , but who has de clared that he does not want the office laintcd with fraud , asked the court lo open every Denver ballot box , but the order of the court goes beyond the mere examination of flic ballots and provides for an investigation of the registration lists , the campaign expenditures , and , in brief , of all election matters. Attorney Samuel W. Bedford , for Ad ams , and Attorney Henry J. Ilersey , for the Republican * , asked the court to make its order of such breadth that the court need not stop at anything in the investi gation. The court said that was what it intended to do , and instructed the law yers to agree upon the wording of the or der and present it lo the court for ap proval within a few days. As there are 204 ballot boxes , it is evi dent that several months will be con sumed in the examination of their con tents by the two handwriting experts to be appointed for this work. It is expected that the supreme court will be asked to make an order placing special watchers at the court house to guard the registration books until such time as the investigation is made. What effect , if any. the court's action Friday will have upon the course of the legislature in respect to canvassing the vote for governor and determining wheth er Pcabody or Adams is entitled to the seat has not become apparent. BOSTON TUBE OPEN. Public is Using Great Submarine Tunnel. The submarine tunnel connecting Bos- Ion and East Boston. Mass. , was opened to the public service Friday. The tunnel is a mile and a quarter long , double tracked and partly laid un der the harbor waters. The cost of con struction was iJO.OUO.OOO. : Four and a half years was consumed in building. In arranging the stations the builders made use of historic ground-the entrance near Washington Street being directly under the old Massachusetts state house , and the Scolley Street entrance under the old court house. It is estimated 8.000,000 people will use the tube annually. GETS "ICY MITT. " Nebraska Bankers Chilly to the State Treasurer. A Lincoln , Neb. , special says : When State Treasurer Mortensen asked the Omaha bankers to sign his personal bond they one and all proffered him the "frig- Id mitt. ' " So he returned to Lincoln dis couraged and slum. He may icsign. "My plans are all upset , * ' he said , "I do not know whether I will qualify or not. " He stated that under the present conditions no business man could afford to bother with the oflice. The dilemma resulted from Hie recent supreme court decision making void the guaranty bond law for public officials. Two Firemen Killed. Fire Friday night completely destroy ed the repmr barns of the Chicago Union Traction Company , at Fortieth Street and Western Avenue. Chicago , entailing a loss of 5U."i.OOO. The llames had gain ed much headway when discovered , and the high wind prevailing rendered it im possible for the firemen to save the building. Two firemen were killed by falling walls. Convicts Shot Up. At Folsom , Cal. , seven out of nine con victs at the state prison who made a break for liberty Thursday , were almost riddled w.i.i bullets , three being now dead and three in a critical condition. Imquois Fire Damages. Judge Charles M. Walker dec-idea Fri- that the city of Chicago is not liable Cmdamages growing out of the loss in connection with the loss of life in the Iroquois theater fire. Sioux City Stock Market. Friday's quotations on the Sioux City slock market follow : Butcher steers. 'O. Top hogs. $4. . " . " . Great Russian Loan. St. Petersburg dispatches stale that ar rangements for the issue of aI per cent loan of $ lir , . > 00,000 have been definite ly concluded with a group of financiers. There will be no drawing of bonds' for compulsory redemption or conversion for .twelve years. Oil Prices arc Cut. At Fittsburg. Pa. , the Standard Oil Company Las made a reduction of . " > cents in a1 grades of crude oil except rairlan. which was cut 2 cents MAlV 8c RELEASED ON BONDS Said Cassic Chndwick Can Get Bail if She Will. A Cleveland , 0. , special says : It wis reliably stated Thursday night that Mr * . Cassie L. ( "hadwick will be released on bail within a few days. At least an effort will be made in that direction. Mrs. Chadwick herself has expressed her desire to terminate her residence in the county's hostile , and according to her attorney , Jay P. Dawley. she alone has the deciding vote in the bail question. ' 'Bail can be given in ample time , " declared Dawley. ' 'The minute she wants to she will be released on bail. " Mrs. Chadwick is reported to have said that her original reason for refus ing bail no longer exists , and that she is now ready lo avail herself of the prof fered aid. Mrs. Chadwick , when she was arrest ed in New York , was quoted as express ing a preference for the quiet and seclu sion , to say nothing of the security , from intrusion , afforded by the jail. She is reported to have said that she wanted to complete something on which she was engaged when arrested , and that this was finished last week. Mrs. Chadwick Thursday 1-Id rn oc- quaintance at the jail that the day sh was arrested , or shortly afterwards , she was given assurance that bail v.'ould he forthcoming as soon as she wanted it. She also said , according to this person , that when the bond was signed it would be by four of the "biggest men of Cleve land. " Mrs. Chad wick would not tell who these were. Mrs. Chadwick said that it might be a week before sne went out on bail. Mrs. Chadwick's nervousness increases with each hour of delay in brinsring her husband to American shores. The ma tron of the jail declared Thursday the woman was on the point of a break down from nervousness. Quite obviously Mrs. Chadwick is in a poorer physical condition now than at any time since her incarceration. The woman's hair has whitened quite perceptibly since her incarceration. She has lost flesh , and her face shows the effects of it. DROUGHT IS BROKEN. Thousands of Men are Ordered Back to Work. The drought which paralyzed indus tries in western Pennsylvania , Ohio and West Virginia , has been broken and more than 2o.OOO workmen who had been laid off in western Pennsylvania because of it have been notified to return to work. Fifteen million bushels of coal , one- half of the amount loaded in barges and boats at Pittsburg in the Monongahela River , are being prepared for shipment south. This will relieve a fuel famine. The coal dealers having a few tons of coal in their bins were preparing to ask for big prices , but the price of coal in Cincinnati , Louisville and other cities along the Ohio will now be normal. TROUBLE IN MOROCCO. Cause of the Anti-Foreign Poliry of the Sultan. The correspondent at Tangier of the London Times learns that the anti-for eign policy of the .sultan of Morocco was the outcome of a meeting of the principal Fez Moors. who. fearing French designs , sent a deputation to the sultan demanding the rupture of rela tions with France , the stoppage of thr French commission and the dismissal of Europeans in the sultan's service and of pro-European viziers. The Moors are so angered that any at tempt to arrest the deputation would be the signal for a revolution. GIVEN SIXTY LASHES. "White Man is then Ordered to Leave Mississippi. Ned Lewis , a white man. " > . ' , ' years old. whose home is in Chicago , was lashed in the woods near Natchez. Miss. , and ordered out of the state. L'wiwas be ing taken to the county convict farm to serve a sentence for insulting a woman on the .streets. As lie was being taken to the farm a crowd of six white men ok him from the guard. They entered the woods , three miles from town , strip ped him and gave him sixty lashes across the back , then placed him on a train and ordered him to leave the state. Faces Water Famine. Owing to an immense jam of ice in the Missouri River , north of St. Joseph , Mo. , a water famine is threatened. The ice has diverted the water from the in takes and lowered the level of the river five feet. Three hundred men are work ing on trenches to bring the water in reach of the pumps. France May Use Fleet. Owing to the crisis in Morocco the navy yards at Toulon. France , are in a state of greatest activity. Prepara tions are making to equip a cruiser squadron for immediate sailing. One. Death from Blizzard. A Calumet. Mich. , special says : The blizzard which has been rairing in north ern Michigan the last three days caused one death , numerous accidents and par- alvzed business. Zero Weather in Kansas. Zero weather was recorded in western Missouri and throughout Kansas Wed nesday. In Oklahoma and Indian terri- y it averaged 2 degrees warmer. .rain schedules are badly interrupted. Mystery in Shooting ; . William O'Brien was probably fatally shot while standing near where Robert Brennan was killed by Patrolman Mal- lun at New York last May. O'Brien was the principal witne.-s again > t Mallon. O'Brien's assailants escaped and he re fused to make a statement. Steamer is Wrecked. The Richmond , Va. , life saving station has dispatched a crew to the unknown steamer stranded on Diamond shoal , ejght miles distant. - > \ FACES THE GRAND JURY. Senator Mitchell , of Oregon , Gix-es Testimony. Bent with his three score years and ten , and leaning onhis law pr.rtner , tne white-haired senior senator from Ore gon , John II. Mitchell , who for nearly a quarter of a century has represented hK state in the federal congress , Wednes day went into the federal grand jury room at Portland. Ore. , to tell what h" knew concerning frauds which the gov ernment believes have been perpetrated upon it in the acquisition of its public lands. Tired and careworn , he came from the jury room at the noon hour only to rc.- tnrn in the afternoon. Later , when the senator left the court house , apparently nervous and worried , it was stated that the investigation , so far as Mr. Mitchell was concerned , had ended. What transpired in the chamber is un known , further than that Mr. Mitchell went into it with no more favor than would have been extended the humblest citizen of his country. Neither his re quest that he be confronted with any testimony that the government may have found to his detriment nor that he be furnished with the names of his alleged accusers was granted. Congressman Ringer Hermann appear ed shortly after - o'clock in the after noon and went into seclusion in the in ner ollice of the district attorney. When he was called to the jury room he shook hanjls with those whom he knew in the corridor and patted Mr. Henri heartily on the back. When the session had clos ed for the day Mr. Hermann remained in the inner room for some time , cou- versimr with Mr. Henri and jurors. Some of the men indicted Tuesday afternoon have appeared and .will siivc the $4. < H)0 ) bonds fixed by the court. 15. Ormsby. of Salem , was given five days in which to enter his plea , and was al lowed one day to secure bail. In the meantime he was released on his own recognizance. The federal grand jury has returned seven indictments in connection with the land fraud cases now under investiga tion. FOR BIG SWINDLE , Xew \ ork Banker is Arrested in Philadelphia. A Philadelphia special states : Charges of consipracy. false pretense and forgery involving $1" > 0.000 are made againt John Bough , a banker , who was commit ted in the city hall police court to await a requisition from the New York authorities. New York detectives ar rested Bough as he was leaving the coun ty prison , where he had served six months for swindling operations in the name of the Boyer Sign Manufacturing Company , of Philadelphia. According to information in the hand ? of the police department. Bough and oth er persons , who have since disappeared , established .111 insurance company under the name of Lloyds Insurance of Amer ica. The concern , it is alleged , wrote $4.000.000 worth of fire insurance and collected $1.10.000 in premiums , the in sured ha/ting been led , it is charged , to believe/that Bough was the American agent of the Lloyds of London. Sic months since a collapse followed. WANTS BALLOTS EXAMINED. Governor-Elect of Colorado Files Pe tition in Court. According to a Denver dispatch , the counsel for Alva Adams , Democratic governor-elect , has filed a pel it ion in the supreme court , asking that a commis sion be appointed by the court to open all of the04 ballot boxes used in Den ver at the late election and examine the contents. ( lov.-elect Adams said he believed if all the frauds in Denver and outside , were unearthed it would show his plur ality was 120.000 , and said he would not accept the seat unless shown conclusive ly he was elected. TO SEAT PEABODY. Colorado Ilepubllcans Said to Have Made Plans. A Denver. Colo. , special says : By ating State Senators Darels and Mil- lard the Republicans have gained such control of the assembly that it is be lieved in Democratic circles that ( Jov Peabody will be icseated. . The Republicans plan this , it is said. by throwing out the vote of all the Democratic wards in Denver and count ing the votes of the Republican wards. Some doubt exists in regard to the position of the slate canvassing hoaid going behind the returns , although there i < believed to be some opposition. Indiana Stokers Scalded. An explosion of a l'00-horse power boil er in Brower fc Love Bros. ' cotton mills at Indianapolis , I ml. , seriously scalded W. A. Watts , Curtis Boyd and John Per kins , three stokers : reduced to wreckage two batteries of nine boilers , blew down the walls of the boiler house and crushed in the front of a one-story brick house. Named by President. President Roosevelt has appointed J. Hamilton Moore , of Philadelphia , chief of the bureau of manufacturers of the department of commerce and labor at Washington. Drop in Temperature. At La Crosse. Wis. . a drop in temper ature of 40 degrees followed Tuesday's Hzzard. The snow is drifted eight and ten feet deep. President Sun : Condemned. At Port au Prince. Hayti. the court has rendered a judgment in default , con demning former President Sam to im prisonment for life at hard labor for the alleged issue of fraudulent bonds. Mad ame Sam is sentenced to fifteen years' imprisonment. New Venture in Whaling. The Orton , a new steam whaler from Christianin. left Dartmouth. Hug. . Wed nesday for Victoria. B. C. . as a new venture in * { yrtli Pacific wliule livery. STATE OP NEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON DENSED FORM. Delay Work on Building Now Nor- I'olk Asylum May Not fie Com pleted Until Next .1 tine Trouble Between State and Contractors. A Norfolk special says : Instead of being1 allowed to come hack "home" for their Christinas this year , as they had planned , the patients who were burned out of the Nebraska tate hospital" for ! the insane in the Norfolk fire several years ago , and who have since been : crowded into the institutions at Lincoln [ and Hastings , will have to wait for at least another six months'stretch. . Al though promised by the contractors that the building should be done by the first of last October , the state board of pub lic lands and buildings has no indication that it Avill give receipt for the recon structed building before the lirst day of next .June. There is going to be something doing when the settlement for the work is finally made with the Capital City Brick Company , of Des Moines. According to leading members of the state * board of public buildings , the company owes a forfeit of i > 2. > per day for every day after the first of October. According to the company oflicials. the state changed plans and thus annulled the contract , so that the forfeit clause is thrown out. And the state has to pay the money , r When completed , the institution the 1 only state institution north of he Plattc ! River will consist of the lirs-t cottage system hospital inaugurated hi the west * : There are three handsome cottages and a magnificent main building. The finish in them is most superior , and Nebraska may well be proud of the job. The con tractors freely admit that they're mak ing no money at the work , though paid over $0(5,000. But the Avork on the state's property will not end with these buildings. Standing to the west of the cottages , is the massive shell of the former west wing , a four-story brick structure , dam aged by the fire , but still perfectly sub stantial about the walls and absolutely practicable for reconstruction. This , standing in the cold and the rain and the snow , is slowly injured by the elements , is losing value every day of its life. Put to use , it would save the State of Ne braska many thousands of dollars. It is probable , too. that the coming legislature will see the necessity for appropriating a fund of about $ (50,000 ( with which to complete this work. NEBRASKA BANK ROBBERS. Cracksmen Found Good Field in Northeastern Corner. The annual report of Pinkerton's De tective Agency to the National Hankers * Association shows that a field for most effective operations among the bank bur glars and robbers during the year ending Sept. 1 was a circle including Nebraska. Iowa , South Dakota and Minnesota. Northeastern Nebraska was struck about as hard as any quarter. Kwing , McLean. Martihsburg. Naper. Lyons riubbard. Farnam , Firth , Byron. Edi- "son , Kennard , Murdoek , Pleasantdale and Raymond are all included in the list. A few were caught. Others escaped. Lyons burglars are serving time. At | Martiusburg a battle ensued. At Mc Lean there was also a light. The robbery at Platte Center occurred too recently for the report , llolden is already serving time for that. MILLIONAIRE AS CLERK. H. 31. Hnrriman Toils at a Desk in Omaha Oflice. Wearied of social pleasures and the life of the idle. IT. M. Harriman , mill ionaire , of New York , son of the late Oli ver Harriman and cousin of E. H. ITar- rinian , the railroad magnate , has entered the otlice of the Union Pacific Railroad in Omaha and is earning his living and subsisting on a clerk's salary to learn the business with which his family for years has been intimately associated. Young Harriman is an ordinary clerk in the auditor's ollice. draws an ordinary clerk's hire and lives as an ordinary clerk lives. It is the ambition of Mr. Harriman to succeed in his chosen employment , and he has begun at the lowest rung of the railroad ladder to gain success and rec'ig nition of his talents. BITTER AGAINST M'GREEVY. Many Threats Made at O'rvcill Against Banker. Whether Sheriff Hall , of Holt Coun ty , has been delayed by the storm or is purposely keeping Bernard McGreevy in seclusion , is a matter of conjecture at Lincoln. The feeling against the former presi dent of the collapsed Elkhorn Valley Bank is bitter in O'Neill and many threats have been made. The authorities have not been advised of McGreevy's whereabouts. Hall left Phoenix , Ari. , with his prisoner Sunday morning. Attacked by Vicious Horse. Patrick Shanghnessy , a horse trainer at Tecumseh , was attacked by a vicious animal. The horse bit him severely on the arm , knocked him down and no doubt would have more severely injured him but for the fact that Mr. Shaugh-i nessy was able to roll under a fence and get away from him. Celebrate Golden Wedding. .Toy reigned supreme at the home of Mr. and Mrs. N. F. Peterson , on < Jospel Ridge , on Thursday evening , it being the fiftieth anniversary of the wedding day of Mrs. Peterson's mother and father , Mr. and Mrs. ( ! nstat Nelson , theJive children of the old couple being preit. . Block at Columbus Destroyed. Fire Avas discovered in the department store of E. B. Dunham at Columbus Thursday. An alarm was at once sound ed and the firemen were soon on the ground and battled hard with the flames , but the large store , with its entire con tents , was totally destroyed. JurjExonerates Reynolds. The coroner's jury completed its work ; it Tecumseh Thursday and found that Frank E. Brown came to his death from gunshot wounds inflicted by Reynolds ind that Reynolds acted in self-defense. C. A. REIMERS RETURNS HOME # Former Neli b Banker at 1'lcrco After Scrvinjc Tiiiiu. With a feeling of mingled 31 y at hofng once more a free man and gr ef nt ing back to find his son beneath and at the fact that this is tae : mnv"ar- | sary of his conviction , Chris Rehnyrsf afc i one time a foremost citizen of that jKi'rt of Nebraska , and formerly presidunt of the Neligh National Bank , arrm'u'nion'.e ' at rieiee. after having ceived a tivu-year term in the federal penitentiary at Sioux Falls. S. D. . to spend hi * Christmas day and the rest of his life. Although now ISO years of age and bent with the coiitinemcnt of more than four years behind stone walls , Chris Iteimeix looks hale and hearty , and is delighted to be again among bis family anil friends. A little more than a year ago his son. Chris Riinters , Jr. . Avho had been found guilty with him of wrecking the Neligh I tank and who was serving alongside the father , succumbed to pneu monia and was brought back to Pierce for burial. BROWN PAYS WITH LIFE. 'Biood Poisoning Sctg in and His Wounds Prove Fatal. I"rank K. Brown , the man who AA--IS shot by Charles C. Reynolds late Sat urday night at Tecumseh , is tioing to die and probably within a few hours. The attending physicians worked diligently to save the man's life , but the worst has happened , blood poisoning lias set in. Monday night the patient was very IOAA- . Brown Avas asked Monday afternoon whether or not he cared to make a state ment and he stated that he did. An at torney was sent for and the dying man's testimony reduced to writing. Reynolds is still in the custody of the sheriff. He expresses deep regret at the occurrence , and insists that he acted in soil-defense , and * he public believes him. him.A A later disp.itMriys Brown is dead. NEWSIES FORM TRUST. Organize to Fight Competition or "Rich Kids. " Fremont is to have a newsboys'union. . George Williams , city circulator of the Bee , and Harry Hauser. of the Lincoln Journal , are in favor of the boys in their employ organizing for the purpose of maintaining uniform prices and rates , thus benefiting the boys as well as them selves. About twenty-five boys and young men sell papers there on Sundays , and as one of the small boys said : "Some of 'em is rich kids what don't have to work , but just sells to get a little spend- in' money , and they just everlastingly knocks the stullin'out of the regular trade us regular salosmen has worked up. If we has a union the business cau be rim regular. ' ' SHERIFF WAITS FOR HAGERTY Sheriff * Hail Thinks Missing Cashier is in Hiding at I'hoeni.v , Ariz. Sheriff [ Tall , of Holt County , arrived at Phoenix , Ariz. . Saturday with a re quisition for Bernard W. McfJreevy. ab sconding president of the Elkhorn Val ley Bank , of O'Neill. Neb. 'ine sheriff is impressed with the story that Cashier Patrick llagerly is in hiding there and hopes to capture him. Sheriff Hall does not think the two bank otllcials have much money in their possession , and says the .S(5 ( * > ,000 lost in tiie failure is probably irone for good. President McGreev.v told the sheriff he was not a defaulter and that the book ? would clear him. Horsethief Brenks .Tail. Another jail delivery occurred at Stan- ton the other night and the man await ing trial for horse stealing is again at liberty. The fine work was done from the outside. Five of the best locks made were broken in the successful effoit to liberate the piisoner. From the manner in which the locks were twisted and broken it is evident that" a small crow bar was used. Sheriff King was out of town at the time. Farmer Charged with Forgery. William Maynard. a young farmer who was married only three weeks ago. was arrested at Grand Island on the charge of forgery , brought by John L. Johnson , a farmer whose name had been fraudulently put to several checks un wisely cashed by merchants recently. Maynard claims he only indorsed the checks for other parties and had no bene fit from them. Free Mail Delivery at Coin minis. Postmaster Kramer , of Columbus , is in receipt of letter a from Congressman t McCarthy which says that the' fourth I assistant postmaster general as Wash- ! ington has directed a pustnfHce inspector J to come to Columbus and look tlie ! ground over preparatory to the estab lishing of free mail delivery. Diphtheria at Pawnee City. At Pawnee City the public schools dis missed last Friday for a three weeks' va cation. The vacation is one week longer I than customary , but was given on ac- i count of the prevalence of diphtheria { ; unong the pupils and in families where I pupils come from. One week of this will be made up next spring. Library for West Point. The want of a public library has long : ) oen felt in West Point , nothing of the < 5nd having been attempted there for the ast twenty years. The Catholics of the . ommunity have taken the matter up uid the nucleus of a library for the mblie has beeen seemed. Liberal sub scriptions are coming in. rlospital for Insane Quarantined Tile state board of health Monday rave orders that the Nebraska hospital 'or the insane be quarantined for an in- lefinite period , oil account of the pres- nce of smallpox. Superintendent Greene .ays there it but one cae. . and it is mild. Storm Destroys Roundhouse. The new I'nion Pacific round house vas blown down diirimr tlie storm at Norfolk W Hlne.-day. No one was hurt. Havnlock May Get Library. Correspondence between Andrew Car- legie and the Havelock Library Asso- iation has led to the belief that a dona- ion will be made for a library : it that dace. Carnegie has asked the Havelock teople for a statement of what they are villing to give towards the project. Business Houses at Gofhner. The hotel at Goehner. Seward County , vas burned on Monday night. The inilding was the properly of W. Q. Dickinson , of Seward. and had but re- ently been repainted and papered. The lejislitsre will convene nt Lin-1 coin at lli o'clock noon Tuesday , and av the memberwho make up this legisla ture Save to select a United States ? eu at or , the procedure in the matter may 1 of sonic interest. The proetediiitj * incident to the election of a senator be gin on the second Tuesday after ' icr meeting and organization of the legisla- tire. This will be Jan. 17. Each liottso- v < tes separately on that day and th& n me of the person voted for who re- ciives a majority of the votes cast in cv-h house must be entered on the jour nal , or if either house fails to give such * majority that day , the facts must be en- terjd on the journal. At V2 o'clock : nodii o * the following day both houses ; mci-t in joint convention , the journal oC earn house is read and if the same per son has received a majority of the votes in 01 eh house he shall be declared elected sentor ; otherwise the joint convention shail proceed to an election , and the per son who receives a majority of all the- vote ; of the joint convention , a majority of al the members elected to both house * boinj present and voting , shall be de- claml duly elected. In this election * each'member ' votes viva voce. Atei having been through a siege oC" diph-heria , measles , scarlet fever and ? othei diseases that nffiict children in par- ticnljr and other people in general , tho- liomq of the friendless in Lincoln has- emeied | at the end of two years witta only , ten deaths charged tip against it. : One f these was a little colored girl 11 , years old. who had heart disease. ancC. anoth'-r had long since lived out her al lotted1 time on earth , being 84 when sum mons came for. her. Old age was tho- catise of ln-r death. Of the others thatfr died one A\as under 8 months old , oner under ; ; months and six le. > s than 2t month. * . Dining the IAVO years three chil-j dren LadH.litheria , three had scarleti fever , four pneumonia , thirty-seven mea- sles. - ' . ' 'he average number of patients * ' duringf he first year of the . . " .fv.nimn was * seventj-seven , and for this year seventy eight. jThe per capita cost for mainte * nance , > ased on all expenses , for the first : year Avis $ IM3.11 , Avhile for this year it' . ' was ? 2io.Jl. * * * Late [ 'Yiday night young George CoiE/ of Daw s County , walked from the peni- [ tentiary at Lincoln to the trolley carr station , t Lancaster a free man. benefit ciary of one of Gov. Mickey's Christmas-- commutstions. Coil Avas convicted livoj- years ajo of murdering a sheepmani named tyan , Avitli whim he and Iris- father. : cattleman , had had trouble- over the ange. Thejury found him guilty : of murd > r in the second degree , but ? recommcaded that he be given a five- year sentence. Avhereas the statutory term is tin years. In pursuance of that- recommeMation and that of District Judge AYistover , the commutation Avas- issued to take effect at this time. CoilS left for LAOHS , where he spent Christmas- with his yramlmother. Later , he wilh return to ) aAves County. The man has- been a molel : riMiier. After si : , years of litigation and Avait-- ing young Uttrty O'Donnell. the crippled1 newsboy , vill get the SlMJOU awncd ! him by a jn-y in Lancaster County dis trict court rgainst the Chicago. Rock Isl and and IVi-ific Raihvay. The supreme - court has inally decided that the boy. did not lost his cause of action becatise- several yestu after the institution of the suit his attirtiey.s had amended the peti tion so as to charge that the engineer of the freigit train which caused th ' in jury saw hin when in a perilous posi tion. One dy in November. 181)8. ) Young O'Donnell , then a boy of 7 or S years , . , was retnrn'njr to his home from school , . . along Vine Street. According to the pe tition filed 10 fund the street blocked by a very IcUg freight train which haili' neen standing Ou the track an long time. The state print inir board lias let contracts foi jrintinthe senate amU' house bills aii tjie bni titles. The State- Journal Conijany got the contract for the legislative. stuv { for these prices : Bills. TiOO coi , ; cs % ror ijnti , the senate amiV house. S1.44 a page ft Iris is 2 cents high er than tiie [ , rico 1 > : , ; , i ilsr Cession , but was the Iinv st OLtiv bidders ) ; : ' 0l > copies of bill titles at 'M cents ( last year this pri - < j Avas Til ) cents ) ; food com missioner's rt-i.ort. . 1.0(10 ( copies , Clatling $1.0:5 : : state librarian's report , CiIi ! < Tie-- & I'hill'nc. . - ! > copies. $1. ± > .L' . * * - * The recomiiondation that the Ifome-- for the Friendless in Lincoln be made it part of tiie Mi fOrd Industrial home may be so strongly urged before the next leg islature that tlie chnnire may be accom- - plished. It i < Relieved that f'ov. Mickey favors such a move , not only because it " would be niuci , better for the inmates- but as a niattet Of economy a * well. Ile.- did not desire to diVcn s it. but it is not improbable that he will make such a rec- - ommedation in his forthcoming message. . . * * * State Superintendent Fowler said Sat- - urday that he luul been told by a Iarse - number of members Of the State Teach ers' Association that the next meeting ' will be held in Lincoln. Several of the - Omaha memberwho were instrmnentafc' in taking the IHQ-l session to the inetrop nlis have tr.ld hiin that Lincoln may hav.r it i-xt .year. * * * Louis F. AVoriniff. of York County. : . . onvicted in the lower court of sratutory ussault upon M-npl Kerwood and sen tenced to the penitentiary for four yea r.v will have to sei.V4. hN tinu > . The sn- [ ireme court has .decided that he secured ! . l fair trial in thlower court and allirin- ccl the decision of that court. lv * * T'ov. Mickey mj , Saturday assured Su perintendent ( . ; r ' fou of the Lincoln hos pital for . that there is abso lutely no need foi\ \ ! Uy investigation into- the affairs of th executive department 'or a conference and was assured that : he governor ha perfect confidence in liim and the inn grity of his nuuiage- nent. He said tl at he would not have * .vritten . the letter asking for an investi- nation had he l > f n in Greene's place. 'You are all ri 'i t. DCreeue. . " was he governor's coi-dial statement , "am ! our management Of rhe hospital jeen splendid in verway. . "