The Valentine Democrat VALINTINE , NEB. L M. RIGE , Pnbllabei 11 I , MILITIA. CALLED GUI ALABAMA NEGROES IN DANGEF OF BEING LYNCHED. Six Are Charged with Assault arid Murder Bi Mob Marches on tin Jail Determined Stand of Stati Troops Prevents Rloodshecl. At 10 o'clock Sunday night Gov. Je : licks received the following telegram froi Ciadsden , Ala. : "My jail and prisoners confined then in are threatened by u mob. Prisoner with and murder o in jail charged rape white woman. Need military assistance Answer. " The governor immediately wired Capl L. Braney , commanding the Gadsdo company of state troops , to place his con : mand at the disposal of the sheriff am to keep the executive oflicc advised o further developments. At midnight nothing further had bee hoard from the scene of the threatens lynching. The negroes in the Gadsdeu jail ar Vance Gardner , William Johnson , E. L Johnson. Bud Kichardson , Jefferson Al ford and Fannie Mayo. Their allegei victim was Mrs. S. J. Smith , a whit widow. The crime was committed Saturda ; night. Early Sunday Vance Gardner re ported discovering the woman's deai body. The police found her nr.de bod ; lying partially concealed in some bushe by the roadside three-quarters of a mil from Gadsden. Mrs. Smith had beei attacked on the roadside , and after hav Ing been repeatedly assaulted was drag ged by her hair down an embankmen over rocks and stumps into the clump u .bushes . , where she was left , after effort Jiad been made to conceal her body. Th details of her condition were shocking 'Her ' neck was broken. A pair of scissor and a caseknife found close to her bod ; evidently aided her in the struggle. A mob of 300 people gathered on Broat Street in Gadsden at dark and late Sun day night marched on the jail , demand ing that the doors be opened. One youn ; man had the rope ready to swing Vane Gardner , one of the negroes implicate ! in the killing. Sheriff Chandler and Judge J. II Disque were prepared to meet them Company C , with Lieut. A. K. Brindle : hi charge , was called out and had picket : out. Representative Burnett and .Tudgi Disque made talks and the mob dis persed , there being less than 100 mei now present. The mob lacked a leader .This alone prevented bloodshed , as Lieut Brindley. with his men. Sheriff Chandle and Judge Disque are determined to pro tect the negroes. The coroner's jury has been in sessio : all day md has just adjourned. HEAD-END COLLISION. Two Men Killed and Four Injured in Virginia. Two men were killed and four mor < injured in a head-end collision betweei two freight trains Sunday one mile nortl of Midvale , Va. , on the Shenandoah divi sioii of the Norfolk and Western Kail road. The dead are E. S. Kite , of Vesuvia , : brakeman , and John Dent , of Koanoke li reman. Midvale is sixty-four miles north ol Koanoke. The northbound freight trail had orders to wait at Midvale for t southbound extra freight , but the orders it is alleged , were disregarded by tin northbound crew. YOUNG GIRL SHOT DEAD. Outcome of a Neighborhood Quarrel at St. .Louis. In the presence of her mother , Bessie .Barnes , aged 1.1 years , was shot dead on the street in front of her home at 270L i Lucas Avenue , St. Louis , Mo. , Sunday. Mrs. Mary Carderer , aged 30 years , is un der arrest charged with the shooting , which is said to have been the culmina tion of ill feeling between the two fami lies. I. Sunday night Mrs. Carderer lay strap ped to a cot at the police station , raving over the shooting. By her side were her three small children. Town Under Scourge. Typhoid fever is epidemic at Collins- burg , southwest of Pittsbiirg , I'a. There are about thirty houses in the village and in every house there is from one to five cases of the disease. Five children of a I family named Litt have died and a num ber of other families have lost from one to two memlicrs. Physicians seem un able to check the scourge. Gen. B. M. Thomas Dead. Gen. B. M. Thomas died at his home in Dalton , Ga. , Sunday afternoon. Periton itis was the immediate cause of his death , lie was a graduate of West Point and a distinguished brigadier general in the confederate army. Sioux City Stock Market. Satuiday's quotations on the Sioux City stock market follow : Cows and heifers. ; > . * .50f'/3.2. > . Top hogs. < . r . (10- Accidentally Shot. By the discharge of a shotgun which he had loaded for the purpose of shoot ing stray cats , Thomas T. Ilagar , a cousin of Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood , was instantly killed at WeMon , Mas * . , Sat urday night. Two Drowned While Bathing- . George and William Gibbons , brothers , were drowned Sunday while bathing in a lake near Olathe , Kan. George Gibbons was seized with cramps and his brother went to his rescue. FIERCE RACE RIOT. Battle Between Whites and Blacl in New York. "San Juan Hill , " the district bound by Amsterdam and Western Avcnv and Sixty-second and Sixty-thi Streets , New York , so-called because its notoriety as a battle ground , was t -ceiie Friday night of a fierce race r which required 250 policemen to quell ; ter many shots had been fired and sevei persons had been seriously injured. The trouble began shortly after ' arrested I o'clock when a policeman ward Connelly for attacking Henry W iams , a negro , and was pursued to t station house with his prisoner by mob of Connelly's friends , hurling sho ers of stones and other missiles. When the station house reserves tin ed out the whole neighborhood was in uproar and whites and blacks eugaj ; in desperate struggles in the streets. Torrents of missiles were hurled fr < roofs and windows. Within ten minutes not less than 1.0 men , boys and women , black and win were engaged in a furious combat. The small party of police were pow < less , and reinforcements were summon * On their arrival a cordon was dnu around the whole district and strong i trols made repeated charges down t streets in a vain effort to restore ord They succeeded in making a few prise ers and were forced to retreat , h'ghti every inch of the way and pursued the station house by a howling mob. Commissioner McAdoo arrived at o'clock and made a tour of the batt field , the fighting by that time havi ceased. He said the riot could not ha taken place had not the rougher elemc been permitted to carry arms. Th appeared to have a regular arsenal weapons , as the police found when th searched the prisoners. In all sev whites and two negroes had their : juries attended to by the ambulance si geons , but scores of others , less serious hurt , were taken to their homes friends. Five whites and six negroi almost all of whom bore traces of c . flict with the police , were arrested. A picked body of thirty policemen w letailed to occupy the disturbed regi .luring the night and assist the police the precinct. HAVOC OF STORM. Tornado Did Much Damage on Kos bun Reserve. Additional details of the damage do ny the tornado which swept over t Kosebud reservation are being receiv at Bonesteel , S. I ) . The latent reports show that one li ; vas lost , and a dozen injured , six whom were seriously hurt. The injured at Burke are : "Uncle" Billy Howe , badly bruise ueo. D. Ouster , two ribs fractured , t hroken ; Mrs. CoughlSn , bruised : Ci Willis , bruised : E. K. Lougley , bruise Frank Castor , bruised ; Jackman Herri * , oruised. Twenty-seven buildings were more less demolished at Herrick. and a h : dozen persons hurt. The financial lo will amount to $7,000. FOR TORTURING A CHILD. Authorities Seek "Woman Placed i a Sanitarium. State's Attorney Graham , of Merc County , III. , has served upon Dr. Sa uer Brown , of Chicago , a demand for i formation concerning the mental com ( ion of wealthy Mrs. Mary McKinney , Aledo. 111. , who , it is alleged , was p vately removed from her home tv weeks ago to Brown's sanitarium , Kenilworth. a suburb of this city. Mrs. McKinney , with her husband , under indictment on the charge of tc tuning Stella Grandy , a child turned ov Lo her by the Illinois Children's Hoi ; ind Aid Society. KILLED IN WRECK. rhree Persons Lose Lives in Coll sion in Illinois. A Chicago and Eastern Illinois It a way passenger train , leaving St. Lou it 11U : : ) Thursday night , collided F ; lay with a suburban train at Steigi 111. Three persons were killed and seven i iured. Some of the injured may die. The cause of the collision is said uive been an open switch , which let tl .hrough train onto ji siding on which tl suburban train was standing. Three Killed and Two Hurt. Three men were killed and two prob jly fatally injured Friday in a freigl ivreck on the Iowa Central Railroad ne ; Richland , Keokuk County , la. A ci if oil took fire , the tank exploded ai jurued the bodies of the killed men to risp. The fire destroyed a bridge ai ; ix cars. Wholesale Car Robberies. Ollicers have arrested eleven men : south Bend , Ind. . charged with being ii > licated in wholesale robberies of ci if the Grand Trunk Railroad near Sti .veil . , Laporte County. Merchandise he value of $30.000 has been taken. Tl ) ther heavy losses of the road were ne ; Valparaiso. Attempt to "Wreck Train. An attempt was made to wreck a Ch : ago. Hock Island and Pacitic throng rain at Greene , la. . Thursday. The a empt was made at a switch , prcsuinabl o give the impression that the switt VHS the cause , if the attempt should 1 uccessful. Chicago Men are Cleared. A verdict of not guilty was announce it Chicago Friday by Judge diet lain i he case of President Albert G.Yhcele if the Illinois Tunnel Company , an ; everal former municipal ofhVcrs on tri : or allege-d alteration of public recoul Killed Their O Ulcers. A regiment of Russian sappers statioi d at a small village in the mountair tear Tiflis , Caucasia , has murdered all ii tfflcers and , it is rumored , joined the re1 ilutionists. WRECKED BY STORM. South Dabota Towns in Path of Pierce Tornado. A tornado swept over Gregory Cozint ; South Dakota , Wednesday nigLt. Win are down and details as to damage ai meager. The storm came at midnigl and lasted two hours. At Bonesteel tl damage was trivial , but on the Ilosebu icservation it was very great. One person was killed and eleven oil ers injured. Xear St. Elmo , a small town , was tor up. Roy McFadden was caught betwec heavy timbers of a building and instant ! crushed to death. Three buildings wei destroyed in St. Elmo. Ilerrick's loss is heavy. Houses wei torn to splinters and the damage is est mated at $7,000. Four men , one w < man and a boy are in a critical conditioi Twenty-five business bv.ildings an many houses were destroyed , includin the Rosebud bank , the school house an Ulrica's large livery barn. Twent ; eight head of horses were in the barn , bi many were saved by citizens. Office stores and saloons were damaged. George Cornwall , who lives one an one-half miles from Herrick , had h house demolished. A. J. Jones , wli lives on a claim west of Herrick , suffers the loss of his property. At Burke many buildings were di stroyed. The Jenson home , in the soutl ern part of town , was completely swa lowed up and Jenson and his wife an baby were blown in various direction : A relief corps heard the cries of the bal ; and rescued it from drowning in a sma draw where it had been blown. Mr : Jenson and her babe may die. Mr. McBride was injures ! in the bac and his home was completely swallowe up. Alvin Nye was injured in the limb : The damage to property will amount t $5,000. Dallas , Gregroy and Carlock repoi slight damage and only a few injured. Many claims have not been heard fron A relief party rs out now. Three large buildings were unroofe and seven smaller ones elestroyed : i Gregory , but no person was injured. The storm was severe over the entir reservation , and several inches of wate fell at the points which suffered th worst. Much damage was done to crop and wiies. and most of the details of th havoc wrought have been brought in b messengers from the different towns. POSTMASTER IS ENJOINED. Mail to People's Bank Must Not b Stamped Fraudulent. A St. Louis special says : A temponi ry restraining order has been issued b Judge Smith McP-herstm , of Iowa , sil ting in the United States district courl against Henry J. Gilson , in charge o the Winner branch postotlicc ? , Postmaste Frank Wyman and Assistant Postmaste Henry P. Wyman , requiring them to dis continue stamping the mail of the Pec pie's United States Bank and E. G. Lew is with the word "fraudulent , * ' and re turning to the sender. The defendants were cited to appea next Tuesday and show cause why a ; injunction should not be issued agains them. In the meantime , it is said , mail wil not be delivered to the bank or to Lewis but will be held at the St. Louis post office Avithout being stamped "fraudu lent , " pending final action. BUTCHERS FIGHT PACKERS. Great Dressed Meat. Plant Erectec in New York. War in earnest was declared in Xev York Thursday against the beef trus when the new plant of the New Yorl Butchers' Dressed Meat Company a Thirty-ninth Street and Eleventh Avemii was opened. Hundreds of butchers are in the nev e'ombination , which was organized as : protest against the beef trust. Thei building , which lepresenls an outlay o almost . LOOO.OOO , is nearly completes and is elaborately fitted. Its nine sto ries , stands out in bod relief to person : passim : along the water front. To thi : building will soon be added another o similar dimensions , which will make tin plant the largest in the world. AVas Robbed and Murdered. O. J. Halde , president of the inn molders' union , of St. Joseph , Mo. , arriv ed at Salina , Kan. , Thursday and iden tiOed the body of the man found dent there as that of N. Sexton , of St. Jo seph. It is thought by the ollicers tha Sexton was robbed ami murdered bj the same gang that held up six men at ; Winlield hotel , two members of whicl fought the officers at Cedarville. Battleship Vermont Ready. A Washington dispatch says : The For < River Shipbuilding Company has noti lied the secretary of the navy that tin battleship Vermont Avill be launched ai the shipyard of that company at Quincy Mass. , Aug. 31. and that the governoi of Vermont has designated his daughter Miss Jennie Bell , to act as the snonsoi of the vessel. Prisoners Released. Seven prisoners , who were serving sen tences in the Denver ( Colo. ) county jail imposed for committing or conniving al election frauds in that city last fall , have been released by order of the supreme court. Baltimore Building Falls. The Glenn building , a small offict structure at. Baltimore , Mel. . collaps J Wednesday , killing two persons and in juring one. Loses Life in Fire. After saving his wife and 2-month-ol < ] baby from flames which were destroying their home1. Samuel E. Howard , a youni : farmer living near Shambaugh , Page founty , la. , went back after some house- liold goods and was burned to death riiursday morning. An Ohio Bank Fails. The Citizens P.auk , of Yellow Springs , Ohio , failed to open its doors Thursday morning. It owes depositors about $25- 300. STATE OP NEBRASKA 'NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A cor DENSED FORM. Two Meet Death in Washout Bu iingtoit Train on Oberlin Brane Goes Into Ditch Near Hanona engineer's Daughter Killed. On the Oberlin branch of the Burlir ton out from Republican City two we killed and several injured in a wreck ne the small town of Kanonn , Kan. , at o'clock Saturday afternoon. The kill were Miss Millie Koll , Republican Cil and Harry White , address unknown. The injured are D. A. A. Allen , Toi ka , Kan. ; Ed Bender , Hastings , Ne and Mrs. W. L. Egbert , Republic- City. The families of the engineer , firem and brakeman of the ill-fated train we on their way to the other end of the ro to spend Sunday because the train en had been kept away from home for week on account of a washout near t Republican River. Miss Millie Koll is the daughted of t engineer. Her mother and younger sist escaped serious injury. Mrs. Egbert the wife of the fireman. Her small chi was with her. Since the water , which came last fcu day , no regular trains have been run the Oberlin branch. Passengers , expre and the mail have been carried by t work trains on each side of the washo and transferred at the gap. The whole train , consisting of engii box car and caboose , went into the dite Conductor Arthur Lymau reports th the track was intact. THRESHING ACCIDENT. Three Men Seriously Hurt by tl Boiler Exploding. By the blowing up of a boiler on thresher machine engine on the farm Fred Keikner , near Johnson , Wediu day , three men were seriously injure Charles Finch , of Johnson , was serious injured internally , Sam Warwick , also Johnson , was struck in the shoulder 1 u flying missile and also received a bro en arm. George Thomas , of Johnso was injureu. on the leg. The engine was completely demolishe and the men not injured had a hard tin to save the thresher , the strawstacks li coming ignited from the fire. The i jured men were removed to their horn and give'ii surgical aid. Sleep Walker Takes a Fall. M" . A. pun fee , foreman of a Burlingt * telephone gang , had a close call fro death at an early hour Sunday mornii at Plattsmouth. He was occupying room on the third floor of the Platt mouth Hotel when he arose in his sle < and climbed out of the window. A m ment later he fell to the street below , distance of thirty feet. A physician wl was called to attend his injuries foni that lie had sustained a severe fractu of the large ankle bone of the right foe Avhile he also suffere'd a puncture of tl flesh in his right side near the armp : He was also bruised about the herad , b not seriously. Live Stock Show at AVisnfr it has been decided to holdothe third a nual stock show at Wisner on Wednc day and Thursday. Sept. 13 and 14. Tl success e > f the shows of the past tv years and the increasing interest has e couraged the management to hold tl show for two days this fall and large enlarge the scope of the enterprise , include besides an exhibit of all classi of livestock and farm products a dome tic department. Runaway Boys Sent Home. Two Peru boys , about 8 and 11 yea of age , sons of George Bennett , ran aw : : from their home last Thursday mornir and walked to Nebraska City. The di tauce is about twenty-two miles. Whe they were missed from their home a larj number of Peru citizens commenced 1 search for the boys , who were thougl to have been drowned in the Missou River. When the boys were located th * were returned to their home much again , against their wills. Body Recovered. The body of Albert Easter , the be who was drowned in the Platte at Fr mont Tuesday afternoon , was found lai Wedneselay evening on a sandbar almo : half a mile from the spot where he w : last seen. A peculiar feature of the affa is that no less than five persons wl : have been drowned in the Platte withi the last few years drifted down to ll same place. York Man Killed. Frank Chapin. of York , was run ove ; md killed by a Burlington train at Cret Tuesday night. Chapin was SO yeai > Iel and had been to Lincoln to visit rels lives. When he reached Crete a freigl train was standing on the sidetrack , an is he drove around this the engine e the Burlington passenger train struc ! iim , killed the horse , elemolished the bu ; ; y and mangled the man. Boarel oi Health Deadlock. The state board of health at Lincol took twenty-seven more ballots Monda morning in trying to elect a successor t Ur. Somers , of Omaha , a member of tli > oarel of secretaries The vote stood jut : he same as it elid at the other meetinj ivhen 100 ballots were taken. The cai lidates voted upon were RobertvicCoi mghey of York. J. A. Andrews of Ho 3re ge , and J. C. Sward of Oakland. Run Down hy Q irs. Coroner Broeck , of Plattsmouth , wi . ailed to South Bend to hold an inque * jver the remains of Henry Ilofmeiste ivho was killed early Sunday morning b i Rock Island train. So far as know 10 one witnessed the accident , which ex urrcd two miles south of South Beiu [ lofmeister was a gardener by occujfatio iml was GO years of age. More Time in Car Shops. The Burlington shops at Plattsmout lave the ten-hour working schedule. Th lumber of men employed is larger tha t has been for many years and more me ire being added to the payroll almos laily. Guard Rifles Competition. The state rifle competition will be pulle ) ff at Kearney by members of the Na ional Guard , beginning July 31 and last ng until Aug. 3. The successful one a this meet will-go to New Jersey t ake uart in the national shoot. , , i : HIGH WATER AT OMAHA. Missouri Breaks Into Cutoff with Swift Current. : For the Qrs An Omaha special says time iu a number of years the Missoui River Saturday morning broke into Cut off Lake with a strong current twenty five feet wide and with a suddenness tha endangered several families living iu th vicinity. Foreman Smith , of the Hammond ic house , and his family were rescued wit ! great difficulty. Heavy damage hus-bcei done to crops and live stock , and stil heavier damages are expected. In Omaha the eastern portion of th Vnion Pacific shop yards was flooded b ; back water from a large open sewer ii the neighborhood. Many persons residing iu the bottom ; sat up all night prepaied to tlee on a mo merit's notice. SHORT CUT TO THE PEN. Hold Up Man Arrested Saturda ] and Sentenced Monday. Quick justice was meted out to Ilarrj Sanford , a white boy , and Charles Wil son , a negro , both tramps , who held U ] Ernest Sabiel at his farm , seven milei north of Sidney , Saturday afternoon The men were captured near Colton oi the Union Pacific railway on Saturday night by a posse and both were incarcer ated in the county jail. The men had : i preliminary examiua tion before the county judge Monday af ternoon and offered to plead guilty. Dis trict Judge Grimes was iu the city , opeu ed court and sentenced the fellows t ( the penitentiary at hard labor for sevei years and they were taken to Lincob Monday night. THIEVES PLEAD GUILTY. Trio Captured at Ainsworth for a Lorijf Pine Crime. At Ainsworth Sheriff Tampert Thurs day arrested Oscar Thurlow , Ed Berrj and John Hall for larceny committed 'a ; Long Pine > . 'Ji'ie parties were arraignee before Judge Ramsey and pleaded guilty to petit larceny and were sentenced te thirty days in the county jail. From descriptions received by the of ficers here it is believed these are tin parties wanted for a criminal offense com mitted in southeastern Kansas recently Chile ! Bitten hy Rattlesnake. Ila Abrahams , a 17-mouth-old child ol J. W. Abrahams , a farmer living abom ten miles southeast of Fremont , was bit ten on the wrist by a rattlesnake a fe\\ days ago. but as medical aid was t ham very soon after , is ree-overing. The babj was playing near the pump when tin another heard herscream. Seeing what hat happened the woman was so ovenvm with terror that she fainted. The child' : wrist and arm had swollen to a large size before help was obtained. Rattlesnake ) are more numerous than usual on tht prairies this season. Storm Near Dakota City. A hail storm , accompanied with r strong wind , slightly resembling a torna do. passed about four miles south am southwest of Dakota City , totally demol ishint ; all crops within an area about twe miles wide and three miles long , extend ing in length from the Missouri Rivei west. Waist high corn was completely stripped of its leaves , but may possiblv come out again and make somewhat of a e-rop. Small grain was beheaded and completely driven into the ground. Robbery at Pierce. A bold robbery took place at Pierce Tuesday night Mrs. George W. sohrtly after 9 o'clock. Mrs. George W. Goff. wife of tiie village marshal , was coming up town and was between the elevator and the curfew bell tower when a stranger grabbed her hands and took an envelope from her containing a $20 bill. The highwayman then disappeared up the alley and escaped. Infant Srraiijrlps to Death. T ne infant child of AVilliam Ploutz , a rancher living four miles southwest of Bloomington. Avas strangled to death Wednesday afternoon in a peculiar man ner. To prevent its rolling off the bed , : is it had done several times after a nap. Mrs. Houtz pinned its dress to the bed elothing. The e-liild was found suspend ed over the siele of the beel and choked to death by the neckband of its dress. Wail Damages Crops. During a thunder storm hail fell north east of Pierce and diel considerable dam age to the crops. IT. F. Magdanz says that one-third of his wheat crop was lost : ind August Korth reports his corn bndly [ lamaireel , but thinks that with the right kind of weather it will come out all right. The hail streak w.s about one mile in width. Died from Lockjaw. J. W. Uobbin of Plattsmouth. who was wounded on the Fourth of July , while repairing a toy pistol , died Thurs- jay evening from lockjaw. Mr. Robin son was wounded in the hand , but the injury had almost healed when symptoms [ > f lockjaw set in. lie leaves a widow iind five smail children. Charged with HOST Klmer Jackson , a resident of Beatrice , was arrested Thursday and lodged in jail by Sheriff Tmde on information from Sheriff Case , of Fairbury , Jackson is charged with being implicated in a hoy stealing deal with several other * * which jceurred in Jefferson County three or Tomyears aso. ! lnl ) < si > n Talks at Beatrice. Richmond I * . Hob on , of Merrimac fame. Thursday afternoon addressed an mdience of about . " . ( tOO at the Beatrice L'hautamiua. Hob on"s subject was 'The American Xavyhich he present- : -d in a logical and entertaining manner. Fitiht with Tramps. At Wood River a freight conductor and trakeman ad a fight with some tramps : he other veiling , whom they tried to put iff the train. During the mixup one cf : le tramps was badly beaten. w Trial tor Chambrrlain. .Tr.dge Paul Jensen , in district conrt at recumseh Saturday morning , set aside he verdict in the case of Charles M. . 'hamberlain. found guilty of embezzle- neiit. and oidere-d a new trial. Chamber- ain has asked for a change of venue. LMie court reduced the bond from $ liO.SOO o $10,000. _ First of Wheat Crop. The first of this year's crop of wheat vas marketed at Beatrice Monday. It vas of excellent quality , testing louuds ; yield , 30 bushels to lite acr The past vrcek has been cold and wet The mean daily temperature averaged ii degrees beloAV normal in eastern coun ties and G degrees below in western.The rainfall was above normal in nearly all parts of the state. It exceeded one Inch. / in most counties , while in considerable areas it exceeded tAvo inches , and in some places was more than four inches. Win in- rapidly - ter * wheat harvest progressed soutfilfetern counties , and is nearly fin eastern counties ; ir ished in the extreme and western- is just beginning in central counties. The crop now promises to bfl and quality. Oata good , both as to yield have improved in condition during , the week. Some rust has appeared in spring wheat and the crop is decidely less prom ising. Potatoes continue to grow well. Considerable alfalfa hay was damageel by rain and some clover and timothy was also injured. The hay crop Avill b large , except iu a few southeastern conn- ties. Corn has grown fairly well during the week , but needs warmer weather. It is small for tlie season of the year. Cul tivation has been retarded by rain in most counties and the crop is getting weedy. Some fields in southeastern counties have been laid by fairly free ol weeds. * * * The shipments of live stock during the year 1904 shoAV a considerable increase over the shipments of the yar 1903 , ac cording to the statistics of t'ae bureau ot labor and statistics , given out by Chiel Clerk Don C. Despain. The prosperous condition of the fanner and stockman ij shown by the fact that there Avere 829- 9S5 more head of live stock shipped in 1904 than in 1903. The total shipment : of all live stock Avas 4.082,333 head. Ir 1904 there Avere 955,791 bend of cattlt shipped , as compared AA-ith 955,203 hea < ? In 1903. The similarity of these figures is indicative of the steadiness of cattlt shipments for the tAvo years being 2,742- 909 head shipped in 1904 and 2,101,511 ! in 1903. The horses and mules ship ments in 1904 Avere 57,9.12 head and 54. S23 in 1903. A large gain is noticeaLlt j in the sheep shipments , the 1904 snip j incuts totaling 925.081 heau , as compared to GSO,751 in 1903. * * * State Superintendent McBrien has had his attention called to the assumption of authority by a number of comity clerks , Avhich the statute fails to give them. In several instances where the school otfr cews certify to the clerk the amount ol money the desire to raise the clerk luu deducted the amount of money held in the treasury to the credit of the school district. This , the state superintendent , backed by the legal advice of the attor ney general , says is illegal and wrong- * and can'tbe done unless th levy is more- than $2.50 on the $100. This because inr many instances the school officers in making their leA'y have taken into con sideration the amount of money they have in the treasury. * * * No state fair iu the western circuit i offers so large an amount in preiniuj for farm prodncts as the Nebraska fair. TAVO thousand dollars for county collective exhibits and move than $500 foV individual exhibits makes a total of more than $2,500 in premiums for farm products , as the various exhibit * included in a county collective exhibit can also bo- entered in the name of the grower for premiums ih the various lots. In addi tion , the state fair management guaran tee a premium of $100 for all county col lective exhibits Avhich cover a prescribod space and that score not less than 800 points out of a possible l.UOO. * * * The school at the state penitentiary which was instituted upon the recom mendation of John Davis , secretary of : he state board jnf charities and correc- Jons , is progressing nicely. Twice a tveek the conA'icts attending are assem bled in the dining room and put through : he lessons they have studied during the ) ther days. So far the school has about 'orty pupils. Avhicli number will be argely increased when the instructors ; ake up the higher branches of education. t this time only the first branches are .aught , some of the convicts , under the lirection of the cliaplaiu. doing the- : eachfng. * * * RepresentatiA-es erf farmers * grain ship ping associations had the floor Saturday n the taking of depositions at Havelock n the damage suit of the Worrall Grain ? Company against certain numbers of thej State Association of grain dealers , . There ( vere no quc : > tions asked that were not inswered through any fear of criminal1 j irersecutions , and some of the testimony j > rought out will create a sensation I imong farmers who have not alreadyf i nnde similar calculations to those indulgj j d in by the Avitnesses who Avere sworn. * * * Engineer Sawyer , who looks after the tate hcuse engines at Lincoln , has finally > een successful in haA-ing the state boaret f public lands and buildings remove 'ohn McCane , his fireman , from office- The latter was notified of his dismissal . iy a letter from Land Commissioner Ea-J on , who by authority of the board has ] harge of the employes appointed by the I ioard. The letter merely read that the J aau's services Avould be dispensed with. * ! 'uly 15 and gave no reason for the re- aoval. * * * The board of managers of the state fair' aet at the Lindell Hotel , Lincoln , July. , for the purpose of going over state fair ! latters. Secretary Bennett reports a ood outlook for a successful fair , based n th-e number of applications for space 1 or exhibits. \u * * * I T. J. Jordon , of Champion , Chase ] ] lounty , wants enough AA-ater out ofjji frenchman Creek to irrigate 1GO acresl f land , and to get it he hus made appli1 atiou to the state board of irrigationm ? he ditch has already been dug. m Insurance Deputy Pierce is gcVo H orried about the collection of the ocal tax due from a number of nee companies. The case to test the ! onstitutiouality of the law has been inl was ! tarted , has recently Gin ! an amended nswer in the supreme court , it is prob-ji ble that the case will finally go to thf ! Fnited States supreme cout before it wiijf e elided. At this time there is consider ! bly over $25,000 due the state under thf jciprocal tax law.