The Valentine Democrat VALENTINE , NEQ. 1. M. HICK , PabllHhcr IS BEKT IN TWAIN NATIONAL LIVE STOCK ASSO CIATION SPLITS. Cattle Growers Form New Associa- thjn , While Sheep Growers , Com mission Men and Stock Vard In terests Remain with the Old Jiody The National Live Stock Association \vus rent in twain at Denver , Colo. , Fri day by the adoption of a new constitu tion which admitted the packers to mem bership and piovidcd an open door through which the railroads of the coun try may at any time become factors in the control of the organization. The cattle , horse and swine growers , together with representatives of some if the alliliated industries , refused to a give i to the new constitution , withdrew when they considered its adoption probable , and Friday afternoon formed a new or ganization tinder the name of the Amer ican Stock Growers' Association , whose aim it wn be to wield a dominant influ ence in the interest of the cattle grower. Roughly speaking , the sheep growers , commission men and.the stock yards in terests remained with the National Live Stock Association , and the actual grow ers of all other animals for the market have gone with the new organization. The cattlemen from the fir.st were .strong ly opposed to the admission into their or ganization of the packers , and especially of the railroads. They claimed that these two interests would ultimately dom inate the cattle growing industry of the country to the detriment of the individ ual grower , and they refused to remain in an organization which included their representatives among the members of its central body. The cattlemen who had left the con vention gathered at the Brown Palace Hotel in the afternoon ami appointed a committee of fifteen to present a plan for a new organization. Its report , which "was unanimously adopted , recommended that a temporary president be appointed to hold office until May 2 , when a gener al convention for the purpose of a per manent organization would be held in Denver. John W. Epringer , a former president of the National Live Stock Association , was elected president. In the new organization the represen I tation is to be one of individual member ship only , and it will not be an .amalga mation of associations , as is the case with the old organization. FEAR A GREAT DISASTER. The Brooklyn Suspension Bridge Must be Rebuilt. New York advices state that the strain to which the Brooklyn bridge is being subjected will weaken it to such an ex tent that a great catastrophe might be possible. The engineeers of the department of bridges are reported to have deter- ininul that the structure must be almost completely rebuilt. Todo this will require at least two years , and meanwhile traffic between New York and Brooklyn will have to be diverted to the Williamsburg tunnel , now in course of construction. Four or five yearsmay elapse before this can be accomplished , as : i great traf fic problem will have to be solved be forehand. TRIAL NEAR CLOSE. Gebhardt Murder Case May Reach Jury Tuesday. A New Ulm dispatch says : The trial of Dr. Geo. R. Koch for the murder of Dr. Li. A. Gebhardt , a rival dentist , who was slain in his office on the night of Nov. 1 , 1904 , his skull being crushed by tne blows of a hammer , is drawing to .1 close. It is expected the taking of testimony in behalf of the defense will be com pleted Saturday evening and that the closing arguments will be made Mon day and Tuesday and that the case will go to the jury on Tuesday night or We J- uesday. Former Lawyer a Convict. A La Crosse , Wis. , special says : Fred Kingsley , now serving a term of seven years in the state penitentiary at Wau- pun for safe blowing , who was arrested here last summer with a gang of "yegg- men , " is a member of a prominent Min- Jnesota family. He was admitted to the jbar in the state of Minnesota , and is a graduate of a prominent Gopher state college. Cure far Cancer. Scientists who since 1899 have been studying cancer at the Gratwick patho logical laboratory of the University of Buffalo , N. Y. , are stated to be preparing a report , which indicates they are near- ing a solution of the great problem. Sioux City Stock Market. Friday's quotations on the Sioux City stock market follow : Butcher steers , < $3.75@3.00. Top hogs , $4.65. Wireless lor Trains. The managements of the Lake Shore and the New York Central railroads have .decided to install a iwreless telegraph system on their lines between Chicago and New York. Experiments to deinon- jstrate the efficiency and value of such an apparatus have been under way for sev eralmonths. . Pension Commissioner. President Roosevelt has appointed Congressman Warner , of Illinois , to be jcommissiouer of pensions. RUN UH A I-- . Exciting Scenes in Henrt 'of the < IlV F'Ve Persons I , f r Ml. Three policemen and ttro Hebrew wo men were injured in a run on the State Bank of Grand Street , iu the heart of i the business section of the east side , New York , Wednesday. The run was attended by some sensational incidents. The 5,000 persons crowded about the bank became so insistent that they broke down an iron railing around a light well in front of the building , and it was only by desperate clubbing on the part of the police that the excited and unruly mob was prevented from forcing many of its members into the well. The policemen and women were hurt at that point. The emergency police detail of the Delancey Street station was finally called out a'ld policemen were stationed at intervals if five or six blocks on either side. The rru was as extraordinary as the frenzied character of the rush itself. Tuesday there was a rush of the depos itors to get their money into the bank iu time to begin to draw interest at once , and the long line of waiting depositors convinced the excitable Hebrews that something was wrong with t'i. inslitu- tion. Five hundred persons waited in front of the building all n .t and their number quickly swelled to . > , < ; 00 when the bank opened Wednesday , though not all of that number were depositors. The bank , which has deposits of $1.500,000 and a cash reserve of $4,000,000 , and which Cashier A. V. Voorhis said earn ed 244 per cent profits last year , sent down street for money early Wednesday and 9250,000 was brought by the wagon load , largely in specie. At the sight of money those waiting became only more impatient to get at it. The bank officials paid depositors off : : s fast as the operation could be conducted. In all the bank paid out Wednesday $55,000 and received in deposits $440,000. Remarkable scenes attended the paying off within the bank. The officers paid off iu two-third specie and one-thud bills and some of the depositors were fairly overwhelmed by the amount of currency thrust upon them when they passed in their books. Immediately upon getting their money into their hands and becom ing convinced that the bank was able to pay them , the frantic Hebrews became equally anxious to get their money into uie bank again and several of them created scenes when the officers , refused to accept it. The depositors were paid in specie to prevent a rede- posit , as this is the sixth run the bank has experienced from equally trivia ) causes. DRUNKARD'S AWFUL CRIME. Chicago Cook Tries to Annihilate His Fnmily. With a pistol and razor John Miller , a : ook , killed his wife and infant daugh ter Wednesday iu Chicago and fatally wounded another daughter , 21years ; old , and then attempted to commit suicide. The crime was committed while Miller was in a drunken rage. The unconscious forms of the Miller family were found in their home by the police , who were summoned by neigh bors. The bodies were hurried to the hospitals. Mrs. Miller died on the way. Her younger child was dead before she was removed by the police. The older child survived only a short time after ar riving at the hospital. Miller will prob ably die. Mrs. Miller appeared to have made a terrific struggle for life. Her head was almost severed from her body. There was a cut four inches long in the back of the head and a six-inch gash near the heart. She also received a bullet through the lungs. TO BE CANNIBALS. Wrecked Crew Had Drawn Lots When Resciu-d. The steamer Zeno arrived at Water- ford , Ireland , Wednesday , with the cap tain and twelve men of the American steam diedger Texas , which foundered in a storm off the Hebrides. The crew entered small boats , but one containing flic chief officer and twenty- one men sank immediately , all the occu pants being drowned. The survivora drifted for several days before being picked up. The smvivors , who suffered terribly from cold and hunger , say just prior to sighting the Zeno ( hey had drawn lota to decide which should be killed to pro vide food for the rest. Bloody R-ice Riot. As the result of a fight between gangs of Italians and Finnish laborers employed in the construction of the Car- tier , Ont. . station , during which knives , revolvers and tools were freely used , three men are dead and thirty seriously injured , several fatally , Race animosi ty was the cause of the trouble. Defaulter is Forgiven. Former Secretary William S. Graham , of the Chicago board of education , who left Chicago for Central America five years ago with a shortage of some $25- 000 in his accounts and is now under indictment , has ben forgiven. The board voted to cause a nolle prosequi to be entered in his case. Great Strike in Germany. The coal strike includes now forlysev- en mines and over 70,000 men arc out at Bechum , Germany. The leaders have : ompletely lost control over their opera tives. Four German OflicerK Killed. In a fight between the German troops and insurgent Witheris in German South west Africa Jan. 2 , 3 and 4 , Maj. Baron von Naurdendorf and three other ofliccrs and fifteen men were killed and four officers and forty-five men wounded. Auto Company Bankrupt. The Chicago Motor Vehicle Companj , one of the largest manufacturers of auto- | mobiles in the west , was declared bank rupt by Judge Kohlsaat in tho federal court Wednesday WK. . r c. . Fivn Persons Killed ! . .r Wi > _ ; oii uoon'i , V. * ' . Santa Fe passenger train No. 4 , the California limited , collided head-on with a freight train early Thursday thirty miles south of Raton , N. M. Several members of the train crew were killed , among them a fireman on the limited. A barber was also killed. Mnny of the passengers were badly bruised and cut. The trains met in an unusually heavy fog , and neither engine crew had any warning of their danger before they came together. The engine crews did not have time to jump. Both engineers were in jured. A late report from Wagon Mound states that five persons in all were killed. A score are known to have been injured. The wreck is one of the worst that has ever occurred on the Las Vegas division of the Santa Fe system , both in the way of casualty's and pecuniary loss. Tho trains meti : a hill in a dense fog. The passenger train , which had the right of way ovu.e : ' freight , was bowling along at forty ; lies an hour. The freight was descendir.-r the incline and also was mak ing fast ti - > e in an effort to reach Tipton before tin limited arrived. The imi ict of the two trains was ter rific , and wreckage from the two engines , baggage ad ; express cars and freight cars was hurldl into the air in every direction. Both engines are almost totally mined , and the track and right of way is piled with debris. The passenger train was heavily laden and the occupants of the cars were hurl ed from their seats and berths with great violence. A majority of them sustained bruises by being thrown against the sides of the cars and the seats. Many of them vi re cut also'it the heads and faces by pieces of glass from the car windows , which were shattered into thousands of fragments. j The engine crew of the limited , owing to the dense fog , could not see the freight FIND STOLEN GEMS. $2:5OOO : Wonh ol Jewels are Re- Recovered. Buried in a glass jar in West One Hun- drtd and Fifty-fifth Street , between Eighth and Central Avenues , New York City , detectives on Thursday found more than $23,000 worth of jewelry , tiie prop erty of Mrs. Ambrose Clark , the daugh ter-in-law of Mrs. Potter , the wife of Bishop Henry C' . Potter , which was stolen from Fernleigh. at Coopers- town , the Clark home , on July 7 last. Lodged in a cell at police headquar ters to await the arrival of Coopers- town officers is William Coleman , the major portion of whose years have been spent in penal institutions. Coleman was arrested in New York July 20 last for the theft and held by a .magistrate at Cooperstown until November , when , the grand jury failing to indict him , he was set at liberty. From the moment of Coleman's release in Cooperstown he was kept constantly ! under surveillance. On Monday night last the detectives , guided by the myste rious actions of Coleman , found at the place named a glass fruit jar with a zinc cover wrapped in a piece of rubber cloth. RUN IS KEPT UP. Crush at New York Bank Not so ! Great Thursday. Throughout a freezing rain Wednesday night and a chilly fog early Thursday a score of depositors waited at the doois of the State Bank in New York City to head the line when the run on the bank was resumed. Apparently it is the wo men who are keeping up the run , and in the big crush Wednesday they predom inated. When the doors of the bank opened [ Thursday there was not nearly as great a crush as the day before and the crowd was orderly. About 400 people , mostly women , were in line. A truckload of 50,000 was brought to the bank early. It was announced $200- 000 in gold would be brought tip from the subtreasury and held in readiness if needed. HORDES OF MEN IN WANT. Hundred Thousand are Idle in New York City. Commissioner General Sargent , of th < bureau of immigration , has received a let ter from a prominent New York philan thropist , whose name he cannot disclose , in which a startling portrayal of the poverty in the metropolis is given. The latter says New York's proportion of the unemployed is the largest in the country ; that 100,000 idle men are in the city now , or 40 per cent more than last Ex-Mayor McCuo to Die. The Virginia supreme court of appeals Thursday refused a writ of error in the acse of ex-Mayor MeCue , of Charlottes- ville , convicted of wife murder and sen- need to hang on the 20th. Several Firemen Hurt. Several firemen were more or less hurt by smoke and a loss of $200,000 caused bya fire which raged for more than three hours in the center of Chelsea , Mass. , early Thursday. Steamer Stuck on Bar. While feeling her way through a dense fog eaily Thursday in an effort to reach port the sugar laden steamer Indus , from West Indian ports , struck Fire Isl- bar and is now stuck hard and fast. St. Louis Doodle Fund Judge Ryan , hi the St. Louis circuit court , ordered that the $00,000 fund al leged to have been used in connection with the suburban railroad boodle deal and now in a safe deposit vault box be used in payment of a note on which it was borrowed by a former president of the railroad company. Submarines Tor Russians. Four submarine boats have arrived at Libnu from the United States. They ivill be sent jx > Vladivostok bjr raiL | STATu ; NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON- DENSED FORM. Claim Another Maybrick Friends of Mrs. Lena Ijihie So In sist Supreme Court Has Rulfd Efforts to be Made for a I'nrdun A David City special says : The final decision of the Nebraska supremo court in the murder case of Mrs. Lena Lillie , holding that she must go to the peniten tiary for life , recalls the details of this , \vhich has been called the most remarka ble case of conviction on purely cucuin- stautial evidence ever known in the country. Harvey Lillie was a well to do grain dealer. He and his wife , who is an at tractive woman of 40 , lived happily. The night of Oct. 24 , 11)02 , Lillie was shot in the head in bed , Mrs. Lillie lying at Ins side. He was instantly killed. Mrs. Lillio roused others in the house , two young ladies who were visiting there , and told them what had happened. The murderer. Mrs. Lillie said , shot at her after killing her husband , missed , and escaped by the door. Her story was not doubted. As soon as neighbors could be summoned they started to search , go ing to the stable for Lillie's two blood hounds. They were found dead , poi soned. The first suspicion of Mrs. Lillie was when it was noted , several days after the killing , that she claimed the murderer , whom she described as a tall , dark man , stood on the west side of the bed. On that side lay Mrs. Lillie. The murderer , according to her story , would have had to lean over his victim , crook his arm and fire the bullet b-ick toward himself , through Lillie's head. This seemed so improbable that it caused investigation. Other features developed. Mrs. Lillie , it was shown , had been speculating , in her own behalf , on the board of trade , and had been pressed for money. Her husband had objected to her speculations. Pressed for more margins , it is alleged , she shot her husband in order to get his property and life insurance , amounting to 5,000. Out of this foundation the prosecution wove a case against the woman , and af ter a long and sensational trial she was convicted and punishment fixed at im prisonment for life. The people of Da vid City did not generally believe her guilty , and do not now. She remained in jail after the trial , and the supreme court was appealed to. It refused to or der a new trial. Application for rehear ing was turned down , and the last chance was gone. An effort will be made to secure a par don. The case is compared by Mrs. Lillie's friends to that of Mrs. May- brick , and they declare they will make it known nationally as a monumental in justice before they will cease their ef forts in her behalf. ACCUSED OF CRUELTY , .Xehama County Doys Charged with. I III Trent ins a Horse. A Humboldt special says : A story conies from Nemaha County to the effect that two young men. one from Ilum- boldt and one from Auburn , are being sought for by the humane element of Ju lian , a small town in that county. , witn a view to punishing them for leaving a driving horse out in the storm which prevailed the first of last week while they sought shelter from the elements. It is claimed the young men were driv ing from Nebraska City to Auburn when the storm became so fierce that they were compelled to stop at Julian , and their horse was so fatigued from the hard drive that it became exhausted when Hearing the village and was abandoned to its fate. The next morning residents of that neighborhood found the animal hitched to the rig sheltered by a hedge. The harness was loosened , but the animal staggered and fell into a ditch near at 1 hand and died there. HITS SALVATION ARMY. Its Plan of Relieving I'onr Assailed by Chancellor Andrews. Chancellor E. B. Andrews , of the state University at Lincoln , in a sermon at St. Paul's church severely criticised the Sal vation Army plan of relieving the poor. He declared it was ; unsystematic , unreg ulated , an imposition on the public and baneful in its results. lie said the army by dinner pot collections taught the im provident to expect relief , lie advised systematic giving to a charity organiza tion , i Hoy Uses Cartridges for Target. Sunday afternoon Harry Anderson , the 13-year-old son of John Anderson , a farmer living four miles north of Klair. placed a No. 44 cartridge on a post and I ! used it as a target for an air rifle. It I exploded , badly injuring the boy's face , cutting away part of the lower eyelid and into the eyeball , which will cause the loss of sight in one eye. Dr. E. R. J Stewart dressed the wound and he will ; be taken to Omaha. i Need of More Play Ground. I The board of education of the West ! Point school district has purchased halt' i a block of ground for the purpose of pro- j viding an additional playground for the I ever-increasing number of children in at- ' tendance at the public schools. This j step has been under consideration for : the last two years. I Accidentally Shot. A 36-year-old daughter , of Jones Gano. living in Fairbury. was wounded by th accidental discharge of a revolver held in j her own hand. The ball took effect be-1 low the right knee and was cut out above > the ankle , having passed around the bonr. | it was another case of not knowing it | was loaded. ; i McGreevy Rexvard is Paid. I James Coyle , one of the depositors of j the failed Elkhorn Valley Panic at ! O'Neill , acting as agent for Captain Hi McDonald , of Phoenix. Ariz. , has collect ed and forwarded to Captain McDonald the $400 reward due him for apprehend ing the ex-banker , Bernard McGreevy. To Teach in the Philippines. Miss Eva Cooper , of Humboldt , who is a student at the state university , has successfully passed the examination re quired of teachers who enter service at the PhiliDDines. i Wu .oNo ; TwoV .st'I * . : it V HitiiCommitted ' -rlioo' I two lit I ' - A West Point special says : Hi mer Peterson , a youth ol 14 years , was com- iritud to the state industrial school by County Judge De-vad ! and was taken 10 Ktaruey by Mieriff KloI.e. Peterson , to gether with a companion named Claude Cady , were charged with holding up a Chinese laundryirau iu this city and at tempting to rob him. Upon a preliminary examination the justice took a lenient vi w of the offense and found the noys guilty of merely an assault and battery. Sentence of thirty days' imprisonment was passed upon Cady , who is over 10 years of age and the principal offender. The case of Peterson was certified to the county court with the result as slated. Both boys are the children of highly respected parents. The downfall of the boys was caused l > y their constantly read ing pernicious literature of the Diamond i Dick and Jesse James variety. I WOMAN TRAVELS IN BOX CAR Disappears Before Trainmen Can j 1 -ntJl'v l H-r. ' When the night freight from Lincoln 0:1 the Northwestern pulled into the Fre- ! n'ont yards early Friday morning a ! brakeman heard someone pounding on j the closed door of a box car. lie went to 1 the door and a woman's voice asked , | "What place is this ? " On opening the i car he was surprised to see by the light j of his lantern a girl , probably about 20 i years old , standing in the doorway. "I live in Fremont , " she said , "and I have been in this cold box car since we left Lincoln. " She jumped out of the car i and disappeared in the yards before the trainmen could find out anything more about her. She was comfortaoly dressed and did not have the tough appearance of the female hobo. As the car was se curely fastened from the outside some one at Lincoln evidently kiew : of hr being aboard. MAY ESCAPE PUNISHMENT. Officers of Defunct O'Xi-ill Bant May Keep Out of Court. An O'Neill special says : It appears quite probable now that a definite and friendly settlement will soon be made between the depositors and officials of the failed Elkhorn Valley Bank , along the lines of the proposition submitted by Mrs. Ilaggerty. which proposition Avas published some time ago. O. F. Biglin. the receiver of the bank , j says that all of the 183 depositorswith i very few exceptions , have expressed not I only a willingness but a wish to enter in- i to a friendly settlement and keep the af- ! fairs of the bank out of court entirely , J if the officials of the bank will turn over tht-ir private property to the depositors. EX-TREASURER PAYS IN CASH , No One Appeared to Know lieYas Short in His Account ! . j Another sensation was sprung. Fri- j day at O'Neill when a former treasurer j of G rattan Township , who some two i years ago moved out of the county , came j forward of his own accord and turned J over to the new city treasurer $ (522 in , cash and warrants. Patrick Ilanley. the. { former treasurer in question , offered no , explanation except that when he went I out of office some three years ago ho | neglected to make a settlement. Former Mayor Gallagher strongly advocates that I an expert accountant be employed to j check up all kinds of public accounts at ! and near O'Neill in order that the tax payers may know where they are for mice at least. j SNOW COVERS THE STATE. t i Soil Was Very Dry and" It is Wel- j coined by the Farmers. j A heavy snow has fallen very generally ! throughout northeastern Nebraska to an ! average depth of twelve inches. The ' downfall was steady and the snow lays j where it fell , perfectly level , there being i an entire absence of wind. This is the i first snow of the winter which has com pletely covered the ground. It is very welcome , as the soil was re markably dry , traveled roads being six inches deep in fine dust , which blew in clouds with the high winds which have prevailed. Plenty of snow has fallen now to insure moisture enough for spring work. 31 ay Sue Former Treasurer. The county commissioners at Nebraska City have instructed the county attorney to recover $1.000 from former County ] Treasurer C. 1' . Lloyd or his bondsmen. ' When Lloyd's term of office expired he withheld $1,000 in office fees to pay of fice assistants , and it is to recover thia amount that the order was issued. A suit will be brought against Lloyd and his bondsmen unless a satisfactory settle ment can be made. Violate the Quarantine. As a number of new cases of s'mallpox have been reported to the authorities in I lea trice the last few days and the fact has become evident that some persons have been violating the quarantine regu lations , the city council passed an ordi nance declaring that failure to observe these regulations is a misdemeanor and that anyone convicted of violation of them may be fined not less than $10 nor more than $100. Gov. Garber Dead. Ex-Gov. Garber. of Tied Cloud , died Wednesday. Gov. Mickey was informed by telegraph and ordered the flag over the state house to be placed at half mast , lie had bcvn j-ick for a long time and his death was expected at any time as Ion : : ago as last summer. Commercial Club at O'Neill. The O'Neill Commercial Club has been organized iheie with Neiil Brennan. pres ident : Thomas V. Golden , vice president : O. U. Snydcr. tnasurer. and George A. Milrsj. secretary. C ; s < 4 County I2xp enses. At the regular meeting of the Cass County board of commissioners that body decided that the sum of $98.700 would be sufficient to pay the county's expenses for this year , although last year's estimate was $12.700 more than that amount. Gets Alleged Cattle Thief. Sheriff Schannan. of North Platte. ar rested Del Titterington. who is held on a charge of cattle stealing. It is said that Titterington is the owner of a section of laud in Nebraska , stocked with GOO head of cattle and thirty horsey. Mrs. Maigj-ret Lena Lillie must serve n life sentence in the Nebraska peniten tiary. The supreme court has overruled n motion for a rehearing , which leaves in force the judgment of the district court of Butler County , where Mrs. Lil lie was tried and convicted of the mur i der of her husband. The judgment of conviction wasaffirmed by the supreme court several mouths ago , and since that time Mrs. Lillie's attorneys have made strenuous efforts to secure a rehearing , hoping to get a reversal. Since the trial and conviction Mrs. Lillie has been iu the jail at David City , the supreme court having granted a stay of execution pend ing action by the court. Harvey Lillie , husband of the convicted woman , was shot and killed while asleep at his home in October , 1902. It was several week * before Mrs. Lillie was accused of the crime and placed under arrest. * * * No damages can bo collected by the estate of Charles Hopper , declares the supreme court , and the decision in the case of the New Omaha Thompson-Hous ton Electric Light Company againsr Ferd Anderson , administrator , has been re versed. In the lower court a verdict for damages was secured. Hopper was a member of a fire truck company. A lad der was hoisted , its metallic corners came in contact with a live wire and Hopper , who was assisting in the hoisting , was killed. In deciding the case the supreme court declared : "A member of a truck company , who assists to hoist a ladder with metallic coiners against an electric light wire , cannot in the absence of the- invitation or the expr ss permission of the owner , complain that the wires were not properly insulated and that he wa * injured becauue of such a lack of insula tion. " * * * When State Treasurer Mortensen clos ed up his booka at the end of his first term last week and opened them up to begin on his second term he had on hand just $502.30. He had on deposit , however , $233,464.23. From Jan. 2 to Jan. . " . he had received into the general fund $36- 580.91 and paid out of this fund $2,900.- 12 ; there had been paid into the perma nent school fund $17.4-14.90 , and paid' out of this fund $3,281.93 ; into the tern- porary school fund there had been paid $10,963.81 and paid out of this fund $5,541.53. Into the temporary univer sity fund there has been paid out of thisa sity fund there has been paid $7,5tM.O ( . At this time there is in the permanent school fund only $25,973.56 uninvested llie temporary school fund contains $90- 723.99. * * * It is not improbable the first reform to be instituted by the house of represent atives will be the publication of the time and place of meeting of all committees. This has not heretofore been done , though the senate adopted such a rule two years ago. The meetings of the house committees have been announced jT in the house , if at all , and those who , \ were not present knew nothing of the time and place of meetings and conse quently many people directly interested in pending legislation , failed to get before a committee. "With the place and time of the meetings scheduled and published it will be possible for those interested to keep track of the committees. * * * John A. Ehrhardt. judge advocate gen eral of the National Guard , has exoner ated L.V. . Colby , former adjutant gener al , of the charge of having in his posses sion $126 , money appropriated to pay the members of the company at Wilber. Special Examiner II. S. Wiggins made the charge against Colby in a report to- Gov. Mickejafter an examination of the books in the office of the adjutant general. The state banking board organized Fn- jlay morning by the election of Auditor Searle as president and E. C. Royse sec retary. These appointments were made : Bank examiners , C. II. Beaumont , of Madrid ; J. F. Ililennan , of Euro-hard ; E. E. Emmett , of Arapahoe ; Fred Whitemore , of Long Pine ; Adilison Wait , chief clerk ; Maud Hogue , of Lincoln , stenographer. * * o Gov. Mickey has refused to issue a re quisition for the return to Nebraska of Harvey Springer , who is charged with- stealing $15 and is believed by the Da kota County authorities to be somewhere in South Dakota. In view of the fact that he has not yet been definitely locat ed , and further that he is charged with a misdemeanor , the governor refused thr i requisition. * * * All the state officers have filed official bonds with Giv. Mickey. As fast as they were approved by the governor they were filed and recorded in the office of the sec retary of state. The bond of the govern or is approved by the chief justice of the supreme court. With the exception of the state treasurer's bond , which is iu the sum of $1,000,000 , the bonds of state of ficers are in the sum of $50,000. Deputy state officers are required to give bonds varying in amounts from $10,000 to $25- 000. * * * At a meeting of Lincoln zitizens Satur day night $50,000 was subscribed toward building a street railway. The company will incorporate and intends to compete- with the present company , which is man aged by outsiders. The present service floes not give satisfaction. * * * State Treasurer Mortenscn has issued a call for warrants numbered from 10 < j.- i49 to 10G.S49 to the amount of $00,000 , to be delivered Jan. 10. * * * William Washington , reported to be the- 5rst of the name to go wrong , Saturday morning at Lincoln had executive clem- sncy meted out him , and consequently ? vill not have to serve a year in the pen itentiary for forgery. Instead he will spend the time in the Douglas County jail. Gov. Mickey commuted the sen- tence of the man upon the recommenda- tion of Judge Day , of Omaha. * * * State Treasurer Mortensen has filed a. juaranty bond for $1,000,000 with Gov. Mickey and it was approved and accept-