! The Valentine Democral VALENTINE , NEB. L M. IUCE , Pablfahei STANDARD OIL WIN ! : KANSAS REFINERY KILLED B\ SUPREME COURT. Measure Passed by Kansas turo AppropriatingllOOOO foi u State Refinery Is Held to bo Un constitutional Other News. A Topeka , Kan. , special announces thai the law passed by the legislature "las winter appiopriating110,000 to build ai independent oil refinery at Peru was Fri day declared unconstitutional by the state supreme court. The oil refinery lavwas considered one of the most direct blows struck at tin Standard Oil Company by the last legis lature. The court holds that the construction ol the refinery and the branch penitentiary in connection with it is in violation of the Btate constitution , and declares : "The state shall never be a party in carrying on any works of internal improvement. ' ' The construction and operation of such refinery , it is said , would be a work of in ternal improvement. The court by inference criticises Gov. Hoch for using a scarecrow to frighten the oil trust , so-called , and then for in forming the trust that the tiling he has Bet up is a scarecrow. 'The indictment of the Standard Oil Company , " says the court , "is no doubt true and the provocation was very great , but we must not make a scarecrow of the law. " The oil refinery law provided for the erection at Peru also a branch peniten tiary to house sufficient prisoners , who , it was intended , were to work the " ' plant. State Treasurer T. K. Kelly , . . . . AVarden E. B. Jewett. whose duty it was to issue the bonds , declined to sign them in order to first secure a decision on the constitutionality of the act. Attorney General C. C. Colcman filed mandamus proceedings in the state supreme court on behalf of the state to compel these of ficers to sign the bonds. The opinion Friday , declaring the act to be illegal and unconstitutional , was concurred in by all members of the supreme court. i TRIES TO CHEAT GALLOWS. Kentucky Dual Murderer Attempts i Suicide , but Fails. During Thursdaj * night , Robert Math- ley , who was hanged in jail at sunrise ( Friday at Owensboro , Ky.t made an un successful attempt to cheat the gallows. 'He tore open the veins in his arms and ncarly bled to death before the death ( watch discovered his attempt at suicide. ( Mathley , who was a contractor , killed William ATatkins and James Gregson , in a jealous rage , June , 1904. On the scaf fold he said a woman swore his life away. ALIVE UNDER SEA. Submarine Boat Crew Has Not Y t Perished. ' A Paris dispatch says : The ministry of marine Friday received a dispatch from Zizerta , Tunis , saying the subma rine boat Farfadet , which sank Thurs day , is still lying at the bottom of the harbor and that her imprisoned crew , numbering thirteen men , continued to re spond Friday morning to the signals of the divers. The rescue party has been unable to move the boat , as her bow is deeply im bedded in the mud. Terrible Dynamite Shell. That a 12-inch shell , loaded with only a small charge of dynamite , the world's most effective explo > ive , will crumple in the side of the heaviest armor-clad ves sel , though the shell fall short of its mark by twenty feet , was demonstrated Friday by tests at the government prov ing grounds at Sandy Hook. Drowned His Own Boy. John AYicher , aged 22 , was Friday ar rested at Chicago charged with drovftv ing his G-monh-old boy in the Chicago River. Anna AVichcr , the child's moth er , said AA'icher left home after a quarrel , saying , "I'll take care of this kid. " She said AAricher objected to supporting the child. Carnegie Gives Another Library. Gen. O. O. Howard , who for the last fifteen years has been engaged in promot ing the finances of the Lincoln Memorial University at Cumberland Gap , Tenn. , received information Friday that Andrew Carnegie has given $20,000 to build a library for the institution. Trust AI sorbs Bijr Tannery. At Titusville , Pa. , the Queen City tan nery , the largest sole leather manufac turers in the world , was sold by Lucius Bcebe & Sons , of Boston , to the United States Leather Company. The transfer involves about $1,500,000. Sioux City Stock Market. Friday's quotations on the Sioux City stock market follow : Butcher steers , $4.55@3.25. Top rogs , $5.27 . .Ex-Senator Sandeis Dead. Ex-United States Senator AAr. F. S : dcrs died at Helena , Mont. , Friday. Receiver lor Devlin instate. At Topeka , Kan. , Friday , Cyrus Le- land and J. K. Hurley , general manager of the Santa Fe Railway , were appointed temporary receivers of the properties of C. J. Devlin. A bond of $230,000 was required. Object to Bibles in Public Schools The reading of the bible in the public schools was denounced in the coinmittee on sectarianism of the central conference of American rabbis' , .which closed at Cleveland , 0. , Friday. > JUMPED THE TRACK. Disastrous Wreck on tho Greai Northern iu North Dakota. About thirty people were injured , om seriously , in the wreck of the Greai Northern westbound flyer at Sprint Brook , twenty-one miles east of AVillis ton , N. D. Seven cars were burned by a fin which broke out immediately after tht wreck , presumably caused by the explo sion of a gas tank under the smoking car. The mail car and the special cai Joliet , containing Dr Frank Billings , oi Chicago , and a party of physicians ei : route to Portland , did not leave the rails , and was unharmed by the flames. The officials of the road at St. Paul say that it was a miracle that numbers were not killed , as the train was running at a high rate of speed when it left the rails. According to their report then was no spreading of the rails , and they are unable to account for the accident. As the cars left the track they partially up-ended , but did not break in two. Most of those injured suffered from burns , the flames spreading so rapidly that many were scorched before they could be removed from the wreckage. Dr. Billings and the physicians in his party at once took charge of the injured and dressed their wounds pending the ar rival of a relief train from Williston. All of the injured were able to resume their journey except C. II. Stryker , who is reported to be in a serious condition. Stryker was in the baggage car en route from. St. Paul to Boise , Idaho , and was badly cut and bruised. All mail and bag gage was saved. Among the seriously injured are Mrs. Mary C. Lewis , Danville , la. , and C. H. Stryker , Boise City , Idaho ; critical. FIGHT FOR EIGHT-HOUR DAY San Francisco Printers Locked Out by Employers. Two hundred printers and 100 press men , it is said were locked out Thurs day by employers in the conflict between the typothetae and the union over the question as to whether the men shall work eight or nine hours a day , at San San Francisco. At the union headquar ters the announcement was made that not a single desertion had been made from the ranks of the men who are in sisting upon the eight hour proposition. Non-union men in a number of places re fused to return to work under the nine- hour dar. The Bulletin declares that four-fifths of the printing houses will live up to the old schedule and are now working un der the eight-hour rule. KOCH IS ON TRIAL. Arraigned for Third Time for Gob- hard t Murder. The third trial of Dr. George R. Koch , a New Ulm dentist , for the murder of Dr. Louis A. Gebhardt , of New Ulm , a rival practitioner , on Nov. 1.1904 , began Thursday at Mankato , Minn. , Judge Loreu Gray presiding. The defendant was in court , surrounded by relatives , looking well and feeling confident of ac quittal. Juror No. 1 was secured in the per son of William Schaefer , a farmer , of Limetown. The regular panel of thirty jurors was exhausted and a special venire of seventy- five was ordered. LYNCHING IN ARKANSAS. Citizens Prevent Marriage of Negro to White Girl. A special from Dumas , Ark. , says : A negro named Joe AVoodman , of Rives , Ark. , was lynched here early Thursday after having eloped with the daughter of J. S. Small , a white man. The elope- men occurred Wednesday and Sheriff James Gould , of Pine Bluff , caught the couple at Tamo on board a train. The girl was returned to her parents , and the negro was placed in jail here. All was quiet during the nighth , but Thursday the jail was found broken open and the negro's body dangled from a tree a mile distant. ROOT IS PREMIER. Former Secretary of AVar Re-enters Cabinet. A New York dispatch says it can be aeiinitely stated President Roosevelt has affcicd the position of secretary of state [ o Elihu Root , and that Root has ac- icplcd. AA7hile no official confirmation is obtain- ible at Oyster Bay of the announcement : hat Elihu Root has accepted Roose- relt's proffer of the secretaryship of state , it can be said that the president vill authorize a statement to be made regarding the matter. China Well Pleased. The final indemnity agreement 'was jgned at Pekin , China , Mondaythe iusso-Chinese bank difficulty being rc- noved. China will therefore liquidate > n the basis orignially proposed. . The af- air regarded as satisfactorily settled t least for the present , and is considered xcellent for China. Japs Make Big Loau- The negotiations for a Japanese loan of 150,000,000 , with the tobacco monopoly s security , were practically completed Thursday morning at London , and the erms were signed immediately. Lost in a Submarine Boat. A French submarine boat , with a w of thirteen on board , foundered at erryville , Tunis , Thursday. The Leanders AA'on Race. The Leanders , who AVednesday defeat- 3 the A'espers , of Philadelphia , Thurs- ay at Henley won the final heat in the > ntest for the grand challenge cup , de lating the Belgian crew by two and a alf lengths. Time , G:5G. O Millionaire Knds Life. o. The body of AAlnthrop Turney , million- re mine owner , was found dead Thurs- y In a pasture in the town of Coletl ook , Conn. It is supposed despond- icy led him to commit suicide. TOHNADO'IN TEXAS. Reports of Forty Lives Lost in a Furious Twister. According to a Fort AA'orth , Tex. , dis patch , a tornado which struck Texas Si : the upper edge of Montague County , coming from the northeast and swing ing far to the southeast , AVednesdaj afternoon , caused the loss , it is believed of forty lives , injured a large number ol people and did untold damage to grow ing crops and cattle. Fortunately the tornado missed the small towns in the section through which it swept , but it zigzagged in such a way as to take in the homes of many farmers and stock raisers in the section. At Jacksboro the force of the wind was terrific. The Baptist church and twenty other buildings were blown off their foundations and a number of buildings were totally destroyed. Mrs. Travis Calhoun wes seriously in jured. Travis Calhoun , Mrs. Thomas Hoi-ton and Henry AA'esser and family were also injured. At Montague no lives were lost in the town , but in the coun try there was great loss of life report ed. The wires are down in all directions and it is difficult to get particulars. Ten persons are known to be dead in the neighborhood and unconfirmed reports are to the effect that the list will go as high as forty. Most of those killed lived on Salt Creek , along which the tornado swept with special force. At Nocona the tornado passed a few milqs to the south and latest lists give the dead at fourteen and the injured at forty- one. one.A A reliable man at Nocona , who ha ? been over the scene , .says that reports were being received of the dead when he left and he places the loss of life at sixty. Owing to the widely separated homes and the fact that in many in stances whole families were wiped out , details and names are hard to get. CONFESSES AWFUL CRIME. Pennsylvania Man Killed One Son and Tried to Murder Another. After being subjected to a severe ex amination by detectives , Gustave A. Glos- son , of Morrisville , Pa. , has confessed that he poisoned one of his sons and at tempted to kill the other in the same manner. AA'alter Glosson died on May 19. There were suspicious circum- circumstances surrounding the death of the boy and the coroner of the county started an investigation which resulted in Glosson's making a confession. Glosson was a flagman at a railroad crossing at Tullytown and is about GO years of age. He poisoned the boys be cause they were notvery bright and there was no chance that they would ever be of any use to him. There is an insur ance of ? 3GO on the life of the boy ho tried to kill. Glosson is in jail at Doylestown , Pa. BODY IS IN GRAVE. Hay's Remains are Placed-in Final Resting Place. At almost exactly noon AA'ednesday the body of John Hay was laid to rest in the Lake A'iew cemetery , Cleveland , O. Around the open grave at the last mo ment stood with bowed heads the presi dent and vice president of the United States , members and ex-members of the. present cabinet and men who had in former years served with the dead sec retary in the official family of President McKinley. There were many others who willingly would have paid tribute , hon or and respect to Mr. Hay , but it was the wish of his family that the funeral should be conducted quietly and unos tentatiously. . MORE BANKS FAIL. Fwo Devlin Institutions in Illinois Closed. The comptroller of the currency at Washington , D. C. , has appointed na- ional bank examiners receivers for the Spring A'alley National Bank , of Spring Galley , 111. , and the First National Bank , > f Toluca , 111. , upon information that oth institutions had closed. The suspension of the banks was due o the failure af C. J. Devlin , president if both of them. The capital of the Spring A'alley Na- ' > nal Bank was $50,000 and of the 'irst National of Toluca , ? 100,000. A Maryland Bank Fails. President Muson , of the Commercial Sank , at Hagerstown , Md. , Thursday ; sued a statement that the bank would ot again open for business. Muson aid an examination of the bank's affairs ad disclosed a deficiency of assets and a onfused condition of books. Cashier ohn Bowman committed suicide July o. 'he deposits are $100,000. Indian Woman Honored. Sacajawea , Indian Bird , the woman ho , bearing on her back her in- mt child , guided the explorers Lewis nd Clark through "Old Oregon , " re- 'ived public recognition for her services t Portland , Ore. , Thursday at the ex- jsition , when a handsome bronze statue ' the Indian woman and papoose was nveiled. Explosion in Coal Mine. An explosion occurred in the Tidewa- r coal mines at Bivian , AA . A'a. , AA'ed- jsday , causing the death of nine men id injuring four score others. Fifteen ere resuced in a dying condition. To Declare Devlin Bankrupt. A petition to declare C. J. Devlin inkrupt was filed in the federal court Topeka , Kan. , AA'ednesO.iy on behalf the Kansas City creditors. Fourth of July Victims. According to dispatches received by e Chicago Record-Herald from 350 of e principal cities of the United States persons were killed and 3.G77 injured explosives of firecrackers , firearms , npowder and toy pistols on the Fourth July. Hurricane in Samoa. Sews has reached Sydney , N. S. W. , it great damage has been caused in moa by a hurricane. Particulars have t yet been received. . - - ! STATE OP NEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON- DENSED FORM. Fight Over KightofWay Said Sur vey of Great Northern is Such thai it Will Rentier Operation of ln- tcrurban Rpaci Impracticable. The Winnebago Indian reservation ii Nebraska soenis to be destined to be th scene of a battle royal , uot only betwcei those opposed to the sale of liquor , bu the construction of several railroads a : well. The question of right of way priv ileges across the AVinnobago reservatioi in eastern Nebraska has brought the con troversy before the department of tin interior at "Washington , D. C. The casi is an interesting one , and has been sev oral months" developing to its presem crisis. A year or two ago the Sioux City , Ho iner and Southern Railroad secured righi of way across the reservation with th ( announced purpose of constructing at interurban road from Sioux City so lit 1 : to Omaha. There had been reports pre vious to this that the Circat Northeri designed an extension over a ve/y simi lar route of its line from Sioux City tr Omaha. The Sioux City , Homer and Southern proceeded ( o construct a fe\\ miles of its line , but not on the reserva tion , and then fell into financial difficul- ties and construction was suspended , Meanwhile the ( treat Northern matured its plans , made surveys and prepared to build its line from Sioux City to a connection with the Burlington and Mis souri. Application was made a few weeks agu to the Indian office for right of way across \Vinnebago reservation. Un- der the law the department may not grant second right of way across a res ervation , parallel to one already granted , and within ten miles of it , unless there be1 a showing of especial public necessity for the construction of the second road. In this case the Sioux City , Homer and Southern protested , insisted on its good faith and desire to carry out its plans , showing the Great Northern survey cross ed the right of way of their company at a number of places and produced con ditions that would make it practically im possible to operate either road success fully on the proposed routes. Application has been received from Joseph Crowe , attorney for the Sioux City , Homer and Southern company ask ing that a date be fixed for oral argu ment of the matter before Judge Camp bell. Accordingly July 25 was set for the hearing , at which time Thomas II. Ben- ton , of St. Paul will appear on behalf nf the Great Northern. Meantime the whole plans of the Groat Northern are in abeyance. BURNED IN GASOLINE. Omaha. Woman Mistakes the Liquid lor Water. As a result of a gasoline explosion at Omaha Wednesday Mrs. Anna Johnson , of 1(513 ( Ohio Street , met with a frightful death , and her home wa partially de- st royed. Mrs. Johnson had gone to the kitchen to light a gasoline stove which had been leaking. Mistaking the gasoline be neath the stove for water Mrs. Johnson struck n match. A terrific explosion followed , enveloping Mrs. Johnson in the burning fluid. In her efforts to extin guish the flames the woman rushed into a bed room , setting the house on tire. Af ter the house had been partially destroy ed the fire department succeeded in ex tinguishing the flames , when Mrs. John son's body was found burned to a crisp. CHILD AND TEAM DROWN. Nebraska Man Drives Into Ponca Creek , Near Lynch. A Norfolk special says : Returning to their home in the country after spending the Fourth of July at Lynch , where they had given their baby its first ride on the merry-go-round , Mr. and Mrs. Perry Scott lost their way and drove into Pon ca Creek. The child was carried from its mother's arms and the body has not yet been recovered. Both horses were drowned in the stream and the mother iind father were only saved after a long , [ laid struggle on his part. MAN KILLED. Traveler Run Over by a Train and Body Cut in Two. O. E. Terry , a wealthy business man ) f Stoughton , WNwas . killed at Lin coln AVednesday night by being run over ) y a Burlington railroad train. He was > n his way home from Ravenna , Neb. , ind while the coach in which he was iding was being switched in the Lincoln ards he attempted to jump to the plat- orm , but fell and was drown under the vheels , which severed his body. Shot in Self-Defense. Dan Dimich. the man who shot and tilled Yosa Bosovig in a car near the Union Pacific depot in Fullerton last Saturday night , was discharged by Conn- y Judge Robinson , before whom the ireliuiinary hearing was held. The evi- ieuce clearly showed that the defendant vas acting in self-defense. Girls Travel in Male Attire. A gentleman by the name of French , rom Allen , is at Albion looking for two f his daughters , who left Plaiuview nore than two weeks ago. Shortly after tailing they secured male attire and tuve ever since been traveling in that isguise. No Relief for Mrs Algoe. J. O. Yeiser's efforts at Lincoln to se- nre the release of Mrs. Lillian Algoe. a onfessed blackmailer , from the Douglas 'ounty jail under habeas corpus proceed- ; gs , have failed. The supreme court s denied the writ. i t Ashland Man Loses Foot. ) Charles Dalton , of Ashland , while pass- > g between a moving freight train , slip- jd and fell and had his right foot cut such bad shape that it will be neces- iry to have it amputated. He was sent the St. Joseph hospital at Lincoln for eatmeut. ills Fellow Workmen in Quarrel At Fullerton Daniel Mimineh. an Aus- ian laborer , was shot and killed Satur- iv night by Voso Bosovich , a fellow orkman , in a box car as the result of a larrel. Bosovich escaped. DECLARED GUILTY. Banker Chamberlain Convicted ol Embezzlftmenr. After being out since1:30 the previous evening the jury "in the district court at Tqcumseh at G o'clock Friday nigh ! brought in a verdict of guilty against Charles M. Chamberlain. Chamberlain , who was the cashier of the failed Cham berlain banking house of Tecumseh. was accused of misapplying $3,500 of the bank's money in the purchase of a ranch in Custer County. Following the delay in securing a jury a hard fight was put up on both sides of the case , the same coining up before Judge Paul .lessen , of Nebraska City. Monday morning last. At about G o'clock on Friday night the jury announced that it found Cham berlain guilty of the charge of embezzle ment. The judge asked the amount , whereupon the jury again retired and re turned shortly and announced for the I full amount chargod. Chamberlain wapnsent'n the court room and was greatly affected at the find ing. ing.No No doubt the case will be taken to the supreme court. It is a notable fact that within the past twenty-five years thero have been three bank failures in Tccum- sell , and this i.s the first conviction. FLOODS ARE SERIOUS. Burlington's Train Service Demor alised by Washouts. Transportation has been practically fit a standstill around McCook for the last twenty-four hours as the result of ex traordinary rainsover the Burlington main line and branches north and south. Heavy Avashouts are reported between Arapahoc and Ilolbroolc on the main line to-Chicago ; between Carter and Oi'jcans on the St. Louis main line ; between IIol- liuger and Beaver City on the Orleans and St. Francis branch : between Farnani and Maywood on the Iloldrege and Cheyenne branch. Two bridges are out , one on each side of Hollinger. The aggregate of grade washed away will make a number of miles. Days will be required to make good all the damage caused by the Hoods which have been unprecedented. NORTH PLATTE HAS A FLOOD Heavy Haiti Accompanied by .Hail ana Wind Destroys Property. A North Platte specialays : A severe storm came up fiom tiie west Friday evening about 7 o'clock. It wa ! preceded by a strong wind with clouds going through peculiar antics. Clouds were noticed with a large funnel Avhirling with the point upward. Soon heavy hail be gan to fall and fell until the ground was covered about three inches in depth. The hailstones were large , many of them , by actual measurements , being one and a half inches In diameter. The wind with the. hail caused it to do great damage and hundreds of window lights were broken out in this city. Trees were trimmed of half of small twigs and leaves and some large branches were broken off. Hail broke down some elec tric wire connections. STUDENT IS WOUNDED. Robert Livingston , of Bm-rcll , Shot While Hunting. While out hunting , Robert Livington , son of Ida Livingston , of the Simmons Hotel , at Burrell , was accidentally shot at one of the lakes about twenty miles northwest from Burrell. His recovery is doubtful. It seems that he and his four com panions were out near the lake and a shower came up and they all ran for the buggy. Livingston put his gun in. loaded and cocked , and in scufflling for the best seat Avith his companions the gun was discharged and the full load took effect in his body. He is a student of the Omaha Medical College and a brighht young man. and the tragedy casts a gloom over the whole village. PLOEHN GIV N LiFE SENTENCE Murderer ol Alma Goos Pleads Guilty at Plattsmouth. Max Ploehn surprised the people of Plattsmouth AVednesday by pleading guilty to charge of murder in the first degree. Judge .lessen , before whom the plea was made , immediately sentenced the murderer to the penitentiary for life and he was taken to Lincoln iii the af ternoon. Ploehn shot and killed his cousin. Al ma Goos , and wounded her sister , atie Goos farm , south of Plattsmouth , last month. lie eluded arrest for several lays , but finally surrendered. At the preliminary examination he pleaded nof ruilty. BURNED BY GUNPOWDER. Lincoln Boy Drops Fuse into Can of Explosive. Lincoln escaped this year without a ntal accident being reported , but about ifty persons were burned by explosions md bruised in various undertakings on uly 4. Roy H. Schmitz was the most wrious- vinjured. . He dropped a lighted fuse uto a baking powder can full of powder , lis face was badly burned and he may jse the sight of both eyes. Barn Struck by Lightning. The barn on the farm of Fred Roebke , ix miles from Seward. was struck by Shining on Sunday night about 0:30 'clock and was burned to the ground. . team of horses and a lot of farm ina- tiinery was consumed. This makes the n'rd time that the barn on this place has een destroyed by fire. r b More Graders in the Field. Another large gang of graders , with luipment , passed through Dakota City nturday morning from Sioux City en Sifi mte to join the gang now at work 'near fin 'omer. The grade is being built from n omer toward the junction with the if esent Great Northern tracks. 01 Republican out of Banks. Owing to recent rains the Republican PI iver is out of its hniikx , overflowing the PIP ittom lauds near Bloomington. It is ! tl gher than at any time since 1895 , with tc dications of more rain and a still greatas rise. AA'heat cutting is stopped and 's rn plowing is impossible. ai Sheriff Confiscates Liquor. ; s Sheriff Brott arrested Isaac Ong , of in cCool , who was charged with selling bi iuor. The sheriff also captured ten bim ses of beer and three gallons of whis- m The state bureau of labor has com- pleted its schedule showing the number of men needed in each county and town in Nebraska , and is now ready to begiu operations to v-ippb * the fields * of Nebras ka with all t.-.e men needed. Until Sat- urday ni ht the bureau has been Kansas , where over 22,000 men w needed , and has shipped to t'.i.it stnte a great number. Saturday * harvest commenced generally over NeMiaska and the bureau will now call 0:1 tu > director of employment of Kansas to return the favor and to ship men to the farmers of this state. Because of the great number of men who go into Kansas every year , Nebraska , it i.s claimed , sots the better of this labor agreement , since the harvest is soon over down there and til' * men are- aided to get cheap transportation to Ne braska , where new jobs await them. In- fact the bureau of labor claims Nebras ka gets about four times as many men- back as it sends. The schedule is as fol lows : Adams. 00 ; Antelope , 75 : Boone , l. 0 : Buffalo. GO : Butler , 75 ; Clay , 125 ; Coif as , 00 ; Cuming , 70 ; Custer. 140 ; Dawson , 100 ; Dodge , SO ; Franklin , 7 ( > ; Frontier , 50 : Furnas , 115 ; Gage , 30 ; Gosper , 23 ; Hall , 80 ; Hamilton , 5G ; Ilarian. SO : Hayes. 100 ; Hitchcock. 300 ; Jefferson , 100 ; Kearney , 00 ; Madison , 175 ; Nance , GO : Nuckolls. ( JO ; Phelp 1GO ; Platte , 125 : Polk. 25 ; Red Willow : , 225 ; Saline. GO : Seward. 50 ; Stanton , 00 ; Thayer. 150 ; A'alley. GO : Webster , G5 ; York , 115. Total , 3.570. * * * The first copies of the session laws arc expected by the secretary of state by July 1. The contract mr.de by the- printing hoard carries with it a penalty of 1 per cent of the total amount of tho contiact , So.GO a page , for every day af ter Jul1 that the books aro not deliv ered. The printers have notified the sec retary of state'that the books will be de livered by July 1. Under the constitution the state is required to get the books out within sixty days after the legislature udjourned. This law imposing this duty on the secretary of state has been unper- seded by the law creating the printing : board , which provides that this board shall let all contracts. According to this section the board has twenty days before- advertising for bids for printing , and it4 is required to give at least ten days' no tice before letting the contract. This would consumes thirty days of the sixty ; consequently it is almost an impossibili ty to get the books out within the sixty days required by the constitution. Inci dentally , no one knows when the senate and house journals will be out. The con tract specifies that they sliall be com- ] pleted within sixty days after the receipt ! by the printer of the last of the copy. ] The last of the copy is supposed to have been delivered to the printer at a very recent date. * * * Saturday , July 1 , all the laws enacted , by the Lite legislature which did not carryj the emergency clause went into effectv Among the many enacted not in force are these : One new law protects imported pheas ants and partridges. Another prohibits changes in school sites without previous notice. County treasurers are given more pow er in the collection of personal taxes. Automobile owners must register at the state house and each machine must pay ] l an annual tax of $1. Members of the Lincoln school board" are to be elected every two years. A new law is on the books regarding ; Ihe giving and taking of bribes. Rights of way are granted over state lands to irrigation ditches. , The drainage ditches cannot be built to tvater courses. Cigarettes cannot be made , sold or giv- ' ? n a'tray. Business combinations cannot be made , n restraint of trade , and the giving o ebatcs is made illegal. Tliia state law s framed on the lines of the national mti-trust law. York County stands at the head of the ist so far in the counties which > havc nade their returns to the state board of iqualization. The county returned an as- essment of § 72-1,000 in excess of the as- essment last year after the state board- tad added 5 per cent to tiie total. In all he assessment is § G.l 51.854.40. The in.- rease is spread on all kinds of property , ! laking it general. About $400,000 is for mprovements on real estate. Cherry' ounty shows a decrease of $27,000 on ? ersonal property and an increase of $17- 00 on improvements on real estate. * * * Rev. L. P. Ludden , who , on the retire- lent of Chairman Tawney , of the state oard of education , became chairman of ie board , has announced the appoint- ? lent of the new committeesofthe boardJ .uditing , Mortensen , Childs , Delzell ; fti- ! nitive. Majors. Gregg , Ludden ; furni-1 ire , Childs , MeBrien , Mortensen ; teach- , s and employes. MeBrien , Delzell. ilaJ > rs ; text books , library books , course ofc t'.dy and rules , DeIzM , Gregg , Childs. * * * Secretary of State Galusha has issued ! J7 licenses under the new automobile- w and is getting in more applications .ch day. He has received the seals to- s delivered to the ov.-ners. They ar tin and round , about two inches in dV neter. In the center is the number of e license and around this is the state- ent that the number has been i ued ' the secretary of state. t * * * f Application was made to Gov Mk-ke look into the cage of John McCorniick , nt to the penitentiary for twenty ve-irs > m Nebraska City for sliooting a" wo- "i. McCormick's relatives believe that the governor looks into the case thor- glily he will grant a pard-i to the man , / * * * Che American Birth lus-irance Com- ny , of Massachusetts , vrh.'eh seeks foj t a premium on the'sr > r.v's visits ig ; latest company to m..iapplication ; ; do business in NVbni.- ; . . . . Inasmuch ; the statistics at this ri-r.e show there little need of ssich a boa-is the insur- , ' : e department has taoa ! up action in' s matter. The intent of the compauyi to discourage "race suicides" by pay- ' : to parcnfs from 50 U $500 "at the th of each child , to serure which thoj rents must pay a certain as nthly.