The Valentine Democrat VALENTINE , NEB. L M. RICE , - - - Publisher NO P-ROG-RESS MADE CHICAGO STRIKE APPEARS FAR FROM SETTLEMENT. Further 'Efforts to be Put Forth Neither Side , However , la Hopeful of Ucaults Mayor Dunne Refuse ? , to Discuss the Charge of Bribf ry A Chicago special pays : Aftes a day nwi a large part of the uighl spent in conferences with , hoik sides in the Mont gomery "Ward & CN ) . strike Mayor Dunne late Friday night announced that h < v Iiad made no progress toward a settle ment of the trouble and he did not seem hopeful that an adjustment will com in the near future. Further conferences will be held , but it is not thought by r.ither the employers or the strikers that any arrangement will be reached. The great obstacle to the settlement is that the. tfamsters insist that the strike of the garment workers , now four months old , bo arbitrated before the teamsters return to work , and the employers insist 7 hat the teamsters return to work before anthifig is done concerning the garment workers. Mayor Dunne endeavored Friday night to bring about a joint conference , but neither side would consent to meet the other. The firm of Montgomery Ward & Co. succeeded in sending more goods to th < freight depots Friday than at any time since the commencement of the strike. A.11 of the wagons were under police pro- trction. hut there w.is less violence than on any of the preceding days. Mayor Dunne declined to discuss t he- charge brought to his attention that a bribe had been offered for the .settlement of the strike. "My informant is well intentioned. " he said , "but I do not know whether his in formation is well founded. I cannot give the details of the charges until 1 have investigated the matter and have fount. it based upon fact. A man's character cannot be assailed upon mere informa tion. I'ntil J have traced the matter I can say nothing. ' ' KILLED THE GIRL. , Ir. Crofibrtl Convicted of Murder of Maud Stone. : Dr. Crofl'ord. of the Lamoni. la. , san- , was Friday found guilty of the nnurder of Maud Stone , who died in Vrofford's hospital after a criminal oper- ( aton four years ago. This was his sec ond trial. At his first trial in 100. ; Dr. Crofford was found guilty and sentenced to prison for twenty years , but secured a new trial from the supreme court. Crofford has been out on bail and en gaged in practice , though the state board of medical examiners had refused to re store his certificate , revoked on his con viction. The case has attracted much attention because the defendant , is wealthy and put up a hard fight , and his sanitarium had become well known all over the southern part of the state. RUDOLPH MUST HANG. So Hope for tfie Murderer of Je tective Schumacher. At Jefferson City. Mo. , at a conference between Gov. Folk ami the attorneys of Bill Kudolph , .sentenced to be hanged April 37 at Tnion. Mo. , for the murder of Detective Schumacher , the governor announced that he will not commute Ru dolph's sentence to life imprisonment as requested in a petition signed by liOO persons in St. Louis , which was present ed to the governor Thursday by Jtu- dolph's mother. " The news that Gov. Folk had declined to interfere with the sentence of the court ordering him to be hanged was brought to Bill Rudolph by his sister , Nellie. The girl broke down and wept , but Rudolph took the news stoically. Good Ronclfl in New York. The proposed constitutional amend- , ment authorizing a state bond issue of $ nO.OOOCOO for , building good roads un der the slate aid law passed the assem bly at Albany , N. Y. . Friday. Having passed the legislature last year the prop osition will be Mibmitted to popular vote. Paul Jones' Body Found. The remarkable search which Ambas sador Torlcr has conducted for the body of Paul Jones at Paris has been crowned with success by the discovery of the body and its identification Friday by the highest French medical experts as un $ questionably that of the famous admiral. Gorky IVill Not be Tried. On account of the condition of his 'health ' , and the fact that the evidence against him is not strong , it is under stood the government at St. Petersburg has abandoned its intention of bringing Maxirn Gorky to trial. Sioux City Stock Market. Friday's quotations on the Sioux City at stock market follow : Butcher steers , fo 90. Top hogs , < j-50. ; ' Many Narrow Kscapes. Five persons were badly hurt , fifty oth ers narrowly escaped death or injury , up 'and hundreds driven in were from adjoin ing tenements in a fire at New York Friday which enlirely destroyed a seven- story sweatshop building in Hester Street and damaged .several other near by buildings. Gold Standard in Mexico. land A Mexico City dispatch says : The gold Standard will go into effect without post- lnoQeincDt _ on May : 1. ( NAN PATTERSON CASE. The State Secures a Farther Post ponement. Nan Patterson was brought into the court of general sessions at New York | i j Thursday bv her own consent to plead to a charge of conspiracy to get m " from Caesar Young , the bookmaker is accused of having conspired Morgan Smith and his wife. " < tcrson's sister , to extort dead bookmaker. She was not allowr charge , however , Assistant District Attorney Rand . - 4 J , , , ! Foster that she I L "Ot ari'xtpMrtl , holding that it was Miss J atterson's counsel requested per- to examine the minutes of the jury which indicted her. This was 'opposed by Mr. Rand , who asked for u delay of one day in order that Miss Pat terson night be arraigned in company with J. Morgan Smith and Mrs. Smith , Although Miss Patterson's counsel vigor ously objecfed to the delay the court or dered that her plea to the charge be put over until Friday. She will be placed on trial again next Monday on the charge of having murdered Young. Counsel for J. Morgan Smith and his wife asked the court to order the dis trict attorney to return the letters con fiscated from the Smiths in Cincinnati. The lawyer declared that Mr. Kami had no right to them. Before deciding the question the court decided that formal notice be given fo the district attorney. After the court proceedings Mr. Rand asked the Smiths' counsel to allow them to come to the district at- lorney's office and be questioned. The lawyer reserved his answer. It is said Mr. Rand is endeavoring to learn who , if anyone , assisted the Smith's in their flight from New York after the death of "Caesar" Young lal .June. ST. PAUL MAN SHOOTS TWO One of His Victims is Dead and the Other Will Die. Early ThursdayVilliam Williams , a St. Paul. Minn. , steamtitter , entered ihe flat of Frederick S. Keller and shot John Keller , aged 1(5 ( years , as he lay in bed , and then turned the revolver on the boy's mother. Both victims were fatally hurt. The reason for the crime is unknown. Young Keller died from his wounds later in the day. .Mrs. Keller's recovery is doubtful. Williams told the police he had a lik ing for the boy and went to the flat for the purpose of getting the lad to go away with him. Mrs. Keller ordered him out of the house. He claims he does not re member shooting anyone. STRIKE STILL ON. Peace Conference in Chicago is Without Results. A Chicago conference bit ween repre- ( seutatives of the Chicago Employers' As sociation and the labor leaders Thursday morning , looking to a settlement of the -Montgomery Wan ! & Co. strike was barren of results. The union men declared they were ready to end the trouble if Ward & Co. would reinstate nineteen garment work ers who struck. The firm took tiie stand that the places of the striking garment Avorkers had been filled and the strikers cannot be reinstated. While the conference was in session the scenes of disorder which have pre vailed on the streets during the week were being re-enacted. Slain in a Saloon lira\vl. Roy Joyce , a bartender , killed two men and received severe injuries early Thursday in a saloon brawl at f > 1 West Thirty-first Street. New York. A party of eight men and one woman became disorderly and were ordered to leave' . One man drew a knife and began cut ting right and left , and Joyce received injuries which proved fatal. Groxvth of the K. of P. Charles E. Shive'ley. of Richmond. I nil. , supreme chancellor of the Knights of Pythias , has received from It. L. C. White , of Nashville. Tenii. . supreme keeper of records and seals , the official count of the members of the order. The report shows that the total membership is G22-f.Tl. a net gain during the last year of T.oS. ; . Ends r/ife in a Bath Tub. ' ' The body of Mr- ? , ( .trace Loomis. who claimed to be the wife of Charles Loom- is , tiie millionaire , was found in a half filled bath tub in a fashionable boarding house in Michigan Avenue. Chicago. Thursday. Frequent threats made by Mrs. Loomis that she intended to kill herself leave no doubt that it is a case ' of suicide. to A New Combination. The Central Leather Company , with an authorized capital of $80.000.000. was incorporated at Trenton , N. J. . Thursday. The company is to manufacture and deal in leather. The stock is divided into $40,000,000 preferred , paying 7 per cent in cumulative dividends , and $40.000,000 . the common stock. th Bank Oflicer Ends I jiff * . ing At Rochester , N. Y. . Arthur Lufch- ford , secretary and treasurer of the Me chanics Savings Bank , committed sui cide Wednesday by shooting. Slain by a Mob. in A mob of masked men entered the jail Sfifiatobin , Miss. , earl } ' Wednesday rp release a prisoner , and in an encounter 'vith Sheriff Hoage shot that officer dead. $ Holdup Men Captured. E. Howard and Frank Williams , hold- men , were captured and placed in jail South Omaha , Neb. , Wednesday by night after a running fight with two po licemen , during wuich a number of shots were exchanged. AVommi Shoots Woman. At Cripple Creek. Colo. . Mrs. S. W. VidJcr , wife of a newspaper man , sin/ killed Mrs. H. C. Douglas , of Colo- rado Springs , in the National Hotel Thursday. _ Jealousj ; Js thecauso. _ j . Many I raons Reported to Have xCen Killed and injured. * . < my persons arc reported to have ' _ ' ' killed and injured in a wreck on the and Mississippi Valley Railroad fourteen miles noith of Yicksburg , Mis- . , Wednesday night. The northbound fast passenger train and the .southbound pas senger train .are reported to have collid ed. AH physicians of the city have been called to the scene of the Avreck. A Vicksburg. Mis. ; . , special says : Ya- xoo and Mississippi Valley passenger train No. ] . " > , southbound. Avas ditched near Hardee station , sixteen miles north of hero , at 3 : 'JO o'clock Thursday morn ing. Reports state that sixty-seven pas sengers wore injured. A special train carrying physicians has gone to the scene of the Avreck. It is reported the. entire passenger train Avent down an embankment. Train No.K5 . , belAvecn Cleveland and St. Louis , one of the fastest trains on the Cleveland. Cincinnati , Chicago and St. Louis road , Avas AVrecked at Belle- font aine. O. . Wednesday night , and sev en persons Avere more or less seriously hurt. --vs the train Avas pulling into Bellet fontaine the brakes failed to work and the heavy train plowed into the netted switches al the crossing of the Sandus- ky division of the Cleveland , Cincinnati , Chicago and St. Louis'and the Ohio Cen-j tral tracks , tearing the tracks up so that' fraflic cannot be resumed on the three lines for some hour ? . .T. A. Burnett , the colored porter in jured in the Santa Fe wreck at Kings- t ley. Kan. . Monday night , is dead at the Santa Fe hospital at Topeka , Kan. Fireman Frank .T. Breeve and Ray Zimmerman , the others injured in the wreck , are in the hospital there serious ly injured , but will probably recover. FATAL GRAND RAPIDS FIRE. One Loses Life and Several Other ? I Are Seriously Hurt. May IJerrick , aged 8. is dead : Mrs. ( 'has. N. Ilerrick fatally injured : Chas. N. Herrick. a 12-year-old child of Mrs. Herrick : Thos. Norn's. Ada Norris. Cha < . Anderson. .lack Ward are more or less seriously hurt as the result of a fire at j ( Irand Rapids , Mich. , early Wednesday in a saloon and boarding house at tln corner of Broadway and Elixabeth St reet. Thomas Norris jumped from a second story window and broke an arm. but not withstanding the injury re-entered the burning house several times and carried out inmates overcome by smoke , lie. however , was unable to rescue May Iler rick. owing to the rapid-spreading of the flames. Strikers Adopt Novel Plan to Block the Streets. A novel expedient was resorted to by strike sympathizers at Chicago to delay traffic Wednesdav. At Clinton and Washington Streets several teamsters tied the Avheels of their Avagons ( rgether . with chains. Avhich it took nearly twenty j I minutes to break , resulting in a block ade obstructing Montgomery Ward Co.'s freight. Henry Levingberg. a brush manufac- Hirer , was hauled from the seat of a wagon and beaten by the mob. after hav ing delivered a load of goods to Ward A : Co. The Avagonwas overturned and wrecked. Levinberg was rescued by the police. MURDERED BY A BARBER. Italian Police Have Evidence in the McCready Tragedy. At Caserta. italy , the police have se- : cured what is apparently conclusive evi dence that Miss Catherine McCready. of New York , who was found dead from strangulation in her villa near Caserta on Feb. - . " > , Avas murdered by a barber. Androainnico , husband of Catherine Es- posito. Miss McCrcady's servant , who was arrested soon after the finding of the. body. Others are incriminated , and more arrests are expected to follow. " Get Rich Quick" Victims. A warrant has been issued for the ar . rest of Henry Brueninger. president of the American Mercantile Company , a 'get rich quick"concern , Avhich col lapsed at St. Joseph. Mo. L. II. Mills , secretary , and M. N. Nordean , field man ager , have disappeared and 2.000 people lose $ : JO,000 by the failure. Banker Hunt Pleads Giiiltj' . W. IJ. Hunt , former president of the defunct Pan-American Bank at Chicago , j1 Wednesday changed his plea of not guilty. , guilty. Hunt is under indictment for cmbexzlement. The change of plea places the case in the hands of thu court. ai aihf hf Archbishop is Jlt'Itcvod. lie According to news received at Ha AY vana Mgr. Chapelle , archbishop of New dc Orleans , has been definitely relieved from * < office of apostolic delegate in Cuba , th thus putting an end fo the troubles aris 111 from accusations of a personal char acter against the archbishop. Mail Pouch Hided. The northbound midnight mail pouch from Bedford , Ind. , was found Thursday the north part of the city cut to pieces and a part of the contents gone. on The sack is said to have contained a large number of drafts , oue calling for $40,000. Race War is Threatened. A race war is threatened at Coffey- ville , Ivun. , as the result of an assaultg < a negro upon Mrs. John ( Griffith : ' Avhite. Negroes of the Avorst class haA-e , \J been ordered to leave toAvn at once. In ha. anticipation of trouble the mayor has ordered all citizens to disarm and has sworn in many special officers. to Fire Sweeps Michigan Town. who A fire early Wednesday destroyed ing much of the business portion of Sunfield , Mich. The lojssjs ยง 4Q.OOO. to STATE OP NEBRASKA NEBRASKAr NEWS.OF THE WEEK IN A CON- DENSED FORM. Militiamen Are Facing Trouble Members of Norfolk Company Have Been Careless with Property Indictments 31 ay Follow. A Norfolk special says : Indictments by a federal grand jury on the charge of appropriating government property is the serious situation Avith which a large number of men in Norfolk are just now threatened and. according to Adjt. < Ien. Culver , a situation which they cannot scape. The trouble has arisen from Hie deplorable condition in Avhich the property of Company L , Second regi ment. Nebraska National ( Juard. was ; found ' by ( .Jen. Haggett. representing the federal government on an inspection tour. So Avidely scattered are the guns , tents and other belongings of the com pany that Adjt. ( Jen.Culver . Avas at once called to account and an order immedi ately , followed from his ollice ordering the t company mustered out. Detectives have been sent lo Norfolk k > search out the missing property and , every person in Avhose possession a sin gle article is found must , according to the general , be indicted , as no one has a right to hold any federal property of this ; class. It is feared that more serious trouble may follow for officers directly accountable for the property. The West Point company has boon al so ordered mustered out. Gen. Daggett and Adjt. ( Jen. Culver were in Norfolk again Saturday night fo list , what , prop erty has already been accounted for. GASOLINE MOTOR CAR. Successful Trial of New Device 3Iado at Omaha. The final tots have been given to a gasoline motor car designed at tiie Oma- ha \ } shops of the I'nion Pacific Kailroad for use in suburban and branch service. The car has made a number of trial runs , the final test being given Thurs day , followed by an exhibition of the cur at the union station at Omaha. The car. which has been in course of construction . for several months , is the invention of Superintendent of Motive Power W. It. McKoen. of the Tnion Pa-i j cilic. Mr. Melvccn explains that ) difficulty met with in all former attempts j was to build a motor car that could be j I operated Avithoiit A'ibration. This obsta- do has been overcome in the McKeen motor by the lise of a low gear. Should , the new car prove a success considerable new equipment of the same nature will be placed in service on the I'nion Pacific branches. The car is designed for both freight and passenger service. PETITION FOR REMOVAL. O'Neill Woman Claims Bank Exam- j iner Was Negligent. j An O'Neill dispatch says : A petition j has been filed by .Mrs. P. C. Carrigan. a j depositor in the failed Elkhorn Valley ] j National ; . Bank , for the removal of Bank.1 j ) Examiner Frederick Whitteniorc. .Mrs. ; Carrigan alleges that Whittemore was negligent in the duties of examining th bank's affairs and declares that this al- leged negligence resulted in loss to the j depositors of the bank. | | . The FJkhorn Valley Hank failed sev- eral months ago and its president and cashier were later captured and returned to this city , where they await trial. Boys Arrested for Burglary. Sheriff C. E. Shrader returned from "Pacific Junction , la. , in charge of ( Jny Applegate and William Roberts , who are wanted at Nebraska City for robbing the store of L. Kropp at Wyoming Station. Applegate's parents reside in I'nion. and Koberts claims his home is in Mon tana. The * boys are about ID years of age and Applegate says he escaped from the reform school at Kearney about two weeks ago. Sidney Has Klectric Lights , Amid imposing' ceremonies Saturday evening the current was turned on for the new electric lighting system in Sidac ney. Mrs. Callahan. one of the direc tors , made a pretty speech and then broke a bottle of wine on the power house. Subsequently she turned the big w wheel and pushed the button connecting w the dynamo. All liirhts were turned on in simultaneously. The plant cost about P. ? S00 ( ) . of in Caught on a Shaft. Robert Pressey. head buttermaker for the Queen City Creamery Company at ifcatrice. had a miraculous escape from death. In working about , the machin ery in the butter room his cil blouse caught on a burr and the garment was Avouml around tin- fast revolving shaft. Pressey was thrown against ; the timbers above aid saved is himself by holding to a steam pipe over head until the machinery was stopped. Nebraska Commission to Pair. . The Nebraska commission to the Lewis Ava and Clark exposition , recently appointed , in held its rst meeting Monday in the of fice of CJov. Mickey. Ex-State Senator for William P. Warner was elected presi dent of the commission : IT. ( .1. Shedd. secretary , and ( Jeorge L. Loomis. the third member , vice president and treas urer. The commission has $ li.OUO ( with which to make a showing of Nebraska's resources. Lodged in Jail. Sheriff I fall succeeded in landing Will sum iam Hall in the Holt County jail at O'Neill. Ball i < accused by Maninlieus Libe. who resides near Whiting's bridge , the Niobrara River , of entering his a house and taking * SO from a trunk. Hall No. declines to say whether lie Js guilty or not. Requisition for Lee. ( i jov. Mickey issued a requisition on the governor of Iowa , for the return to Ne braska . of Harry l.ce. who is charged with walking away with a diamond ring belonging to Martin J. Cannon , of Oma . folk Saloons 31 list Obejthe Law. The Plattsniouth city council decided 1 cancel the license of any saloonkeeper Long in the future is found guilty of sell rici liquor to a minor or to any person the after having received a writen request wh refrain from so doiinr. while POLICE JUDGE REMOVED. Replies to Embez/Jement with Demand for Salary. ruder instructions from the city coun cil at Nebraska City. Attorney D. V\ . Livingston filed articles of impeachment in the district court airainst Police Judge C. P. Logan. It is alleged that he has failetl to turn into the city treasury $ L- Ofi'J.SO of tiie fines and costs collected by him during February and March. Friday morning the council held a spe cial session and made a formal demand on the police judge to turn over to the city all lines and costs he is Avithhohling. xie refused to make any reply to the demands and filed a claim for salary against the city amounting to $ J . ( ! > ! . although he lias been allowed and has accepted the salary fixed by ordinance. The council held an executive session later in the day and decided to remove the police judge from ollice and took j the preliminary steps toward tiling charges of embezzlement against him. WORK OF A FIREBUG. Four Fires in Seven Hours Report ed at ivorfolk. Four fires in seven hour. ; is the record for Norfolk during Sunday afternoon and evening. None of them was serious , and it is the opinion of Fire Chief Kern and others that the blazes Avere the work of a firebug. One fire burned behind the Trocadero saloon , lint Avas extinguished. Another destroyed the barn of M. Sinm- baum. The barn of Frank Dederman. in a distant part of the town. Avas burn ed , and during this tire the new home of C. F. Shaw started to burn. Firemen were kept dizzy getting about. An extra detail of fire fighteis was sta tioned at the First ward hose house for other emergencies. Councilman Parish and others have suggested buying an ex tra fire team and equipping the city building Avith rooms , that firemen may be ready. TICKLED TO DEATH. Omaha 3Ian Dies While Laughing at May Yokes. While attending a vaudeville perform ance ' at the Orpheum theater , at Oma ha | | , accompanied bly his wife , Ulysses S. Sykf-s , manager of the loan depart ment of a prominent real ( state firm , col lapsed and died a few moments later of heart ' trouble. Sykes was laughing heartily at a spe cialty being given by May Vokes Avhen . suddenly lie gave a gasp and fell back in his chair. lie was removed to an an- te-room. but died before medical assist- ance reached him. The affair caused considerable commotion for a few min utes , but the performance continued without interruption. Mrs. Sykes was taken to her home nearly overcome by the shock. FATHER SCHELL ASSAULTED Catholic Priest Receives a Terrible Beating : at Dakota City. Father .Joseph Schell is at St. Joseph's hospital ' in Sioux City Avith his jaw brok- en I in two places , both eyes blackened and swollen , and numerous other bruis- es on his body , as a result of a murdcr- ous and dastardly assault Thursday af- . ternoon by Logan Lambert , of Homer , in 1 a livery barn at Dakota City. The attack is the result of the bitter war which Father Schell has AA'aged against the selling of liquor to the In dians . at the Winnebago agency , Lambert being one of tiie saloonkeepers affected by the action of Father Schell. Newspaper Change. J. A. Lister , of Onawa. la. , and at one time the owner and publisher of the On awa Sentinel , has purchased the Harting- ton Herald plant of ( Jeorge L. Nelson. He takes possession ai once. Mr. Nelson has had charge of the Herald for the last eight years , during which time the Her ald has been recognized as one of the represent at ive nexvspapers of northeast Nebraska. Question father's Sanity. ( The children of II. . C. Stutheit. who re V side a few miles northeast of Table Hock in in the corner of Nemaha County , have begun action in the county court of that county to have a guardian appointed for him. alleging that he is of un.vonnd mind and therefore incompetent to trans act his own business. Bound Over to District Court. Fred Patterson , a resident of Bancroft. jo- was : brought before County Judge DC- wald ; Saturday under tin- tincharge of per mitting : gambling upon his premises in to Bancroft ; and various other violations the law. The prisoner waived exam ination and was bound over to the dis trict court. To Extend Kural Service. Postotlice Itural IJoute Inspector L. A. Thompson is at West Point from Coun mi BlufTs for the purpose of making a fin thorough examination of Cuming County Ur with a view to the installation of a com Mi plete rural delivery service. If the report Hi favorable the complete service will bo \ \ installed at boi Thrown from Wagon. l"y' Frederick Erbs. aired about t > 0 years. a ci * almost instantly killed at Columbus as n rather unusual manner. Fie Avas returning from town with a load of malt lujg feed. The wagon wheel dropped * ilKI into a rut and Erbs fell off and oiH ; inn Avheel passed over his head , crushing it nil badly. He lived only a few minutes. oral Bryan Enlarges Farm. the W. J. Bryan has purchased a tract of will twenty acres which he has added to his arj Fairview farm. The land is favorably from located , and for ii Mr. Bryan paid the ofme of 5.000 in cash. me : hty. Fire Horse Dropn Dead. While the fire department AVIS making J run at Omaha , a horse on hose wagon been . 1 dropped dead in the harness at and Sixteenth and Douglas Streets. He was 'tor dragged about fifty feet by his mate. Not Up to Contract- 7 Poor finish in tiie ceilings caused the ten Nebraska state board of public lands and state buildings to decline to accept the Norfolk rants hospital for the in > une from the con for tractor , though tiie board met at Nor the for that purpose sands been Eoy Shoots Himself. Mu Earl Long , the l.-year-old son of Jas. od , living eight miles south of Beat state , was probably fatally injured by fee accidental discharge of a shotgun , reg which he was dragging from behind sufl , enroute to a pond to shoot ducks. ttite t& & flov. Mickey has issued the following : > Arbor day proclamation : Nebraska ! iio profited much by the institution andl observance of Arbor day. The prodigal planting of trees by the pioneers and by those who came after them has not only changed the aspect of the plains as * inherited from nature , but has wrought ! iia important change in climatic condi tions as well. .Many parts of the statd now present the appearance of a well wooded country , while other portions ara responding to the inspiration of example and are making rapid strides in the sama good cause. Through a wise enactment of the legislature a day has been perma nently set apart for the purpose of con serving ( the interests of forestry and per * neliuitinc the " precept ajid example of thj early tree "planters. In harmony wittt the statute referred to I , John H. Mick- ev , governor of the state of Nebraska * do hereby designate Saturday. April 122 , H)0r ) . as Arbor day , and do euriipstlg enjoin its proper observance upon all citizens of the commonwealth. Let the day be given over to the setting of treefi pla'nts and shrubs , to the end that pri vate and public grounds may have intel ligent ornamentation and that present as well as future generations may r < * ceive the benefit of our toil. The Rock Island Railroad was thg Grst this year to file a report of the valujf of its property in Nebraska with thai ' ! tate auditor for the nse of the stat board of assessment in placing a valuq upon this road. The report goes into da ; ] tail about the number of ties in everjj mile of its road and the kind of ballast and weight of steel used , but it remain silent upon those essential points upon which the board should have informaj tion. The tax commissioner under oatlj says the value of the stock , either trud value or market value , is unknown. He also refrains from mentioning the earuf ings of the road in Nebraska during the laj-t year , though the report gives the gross earnings of the entire system , toj gether with the cost of operating and the net earnings. It leaves tne board to guess what business is being done in Nebraska. The report alb. > separates the main line from the St. Joseph an < 3 Nelson branch , and locomotives of lessi value are used on those branches than tire used on the main line. * * * CJov. Mickey Friday morning grabbed hold of the plum tree and .shook it hard enough to dislodge a number of goodj juicy plums , and incidentally the shaka hiei had the effect of ending to a consid" erable extent that melancholy feeling which has overspread tlie state housij since j the first of the year. The appoint ] jE announced officially include these ] Dr. Charles MvKim , of Norfolk , to b state veterinarian ; Edward A. Church ) chief oil inspector ; D. W. Hoyt. o < clC , W. ii. Templeton , of Omaha. C. Burns , of Scrilmer , S. J. Johnson , o Mindon. and IT. J. Hull of Kearney. t be deputy oil inspectors ; George Carter , game warden ; "W. J. O'Brien , fish com ? missioner ; E. Hunger and D. E. Sinitnj deputies ; John Davis , secretary to thj sfste board of charities and correction Mayor-elect Brown , who was sworn in nt chief executive of Lincoln Monday night , has notified Chief Clements of tt j tire department that he was to remain1 in his present position , select his owd assistants and be responsible for the d J partment. Mr. Brown stated that he in | tended to stop the drug stores from sell ? ind. liquor and that the blocks would bd cleaned . of immoral characters. In goiua after this class of people , hov/ever. Mn Brown : stated that he would go after tha owners of the blocks instead of arresting lV ! inmates , as has bo'n the customi Very few , if any , changes will be mad inmi the personnel of the police depart' ' ment. For a while at lease Chief Rom > zaha will remain at the head. * * if Upon invitation of Attorney General Brown , a number of county attorney } met at the state house at Lincoln Fri day afternoon and discussed the railroad tax injunction suit now pending in th4 federal ' court. The testimony was gon over and the attorneys were instructed have witnesses ready upon the call oi he attorney general. The reply of tha railroad attorneys is expected to be filed within a few days , after which Judg Munger will set a time for the taking oi testimony. * * The board of public lands and build ings is advertising for five cylindrical escapes to be installed , two at th Grand Island soldiers' home , one at th4 Milford soldiers' homo and two at th < ( Hastings asylum. The board is alsq wanting bids for one engine and two boilers to be installed at the Uastingi fisylnin. The board closed a deal where * tiie state becomes the owner of eightj acres of land for the use of The Hastings asylum : , for which it paid So.SOO. The supreme court at its last sitting inaugurated a new rule , which will save much time to attorneys. The rule is thai attorneys Avho expect to make aa argument before the court must fila their intentions with the clerk and the ? ! be notified of the time fet for tha argument. ; This will save the attorneys' coining to Lincoln on the first da ? the sitting , when probably the argu ment would not be heard until the last . * : * * All of the state institutions ha v no * supplied with their superintendents assistants except the Industrie } lome at Milford. At present Mrs. Shoa < in i temporary charge. * * * The offons of State Treasurer M"orH tensen to stop the praetic. * of heads of institutions registering stnte wa rantshich he desires as an iuvestnv the permanent school fund , thereby saving to the state many of dollars annually , which thwarted by the action of Mickey in vetoing II. R. : ; ! > ! . has l { up a block of ice between thestj officials. The bill provided tl' should be paid into thetreasur registering warrants and this fee sufllciently large to make the buyi ; warrants a poor investment. , 1k. . i- .