The Valentine Democrat VALENTINE , NEB. . M. RICE , . . . . Publisher. JTSH IN WAR PAINT IIARAHAX HEAD NARROWLY ESCAPES - CAPES AXOTHESL PUNCH. Bip : Railroad Magnate Starts Forward Menacingly When Friends Stop His Progress Wins Point to Have Rce- ords Show Cause .of Adjoiirmiicnt. A warm verbal encounter took place nt the annual meeting in Chicago Friday - day of the Illinois Central railroad between - tween President Harahan and Stuve- sant Fish. In the end the latter sei cured his object and the meeting adjourned - journed in the manner in which Mr. Fish desired and in accordance with the order of Judge Ball until March 2 , 100S. It was understood that when the meeting was called to order that the only matter to be called before it was the adjournment until March 2. Mr. Fish , however , desired it to appear on the record that the adjournment was taken for the purpose of awaiting the decision of Judge Ball on the right of the Union Pacific and the Rail roads Securities company to vote the stock now standing in their names nnd which were temporarily enjoined prior to the meeting in October. He therefore introduced a resolution worded as follows : "Whereas , By an order entered on Dec. 19 , 1907 , in the case of George F. Edmunds et al. versus the Illinois Central Railroad company et al. in the superior court of Cook county it wa.i ordered and decided that the present adjourned meeting of the stockholders for the year 1907 should be further- adjourned until Monday , March 2. 190S , at 12 o'clock noon to await the decision of the court on the right of certain stockholders to vote at said meeting. "Resolved , That this meetine do now adjourn until Monday , March 2. at 12 o'clock noon. " The argument in the hearing before Judge Ball was continued Friday , Judge Farrar continuing all day with his argument. A decision is not now expected before the latter part of Feb ruary , 19 OS. FINALi CHOI * ESTIMATE. Federal Bureau Puts This Year's Corn Yield at 2.592,320.000 Bushels. The department of agriculture has Issued a report giving final estimates of acreage , production and value of farm crops , showing winter wheat acreage to be 28,132,000 ; production , 409,442,000 bushels ; value , per bushel , SS.2 cents. Spring wheat acreage , 17,079,000 ; production. 224 645,000 bushels ; value , per- bushel , 86 cents. Corn acreage , 99,931,000 ; produc tion , 2,592,320.000 bushels ; value , per bushel , 51.7. Oats acreage , 31.837,000 ; produc tion , 754,443,000 bushels ; value , per bushel , 44.3 cents. The average weight per bushel is shown by reports received by the de partment to be 56.9 pounds for sphing wheat , 58.9 pounds for winter wheat , and 29.4 pounds for oats. GUILTY OF LAND FRAUDS. H. C. Wyatt Convicted of Conspiracy in Kansas City Federal Court. H. Clay Wyatt , of Lawton , Okla. , was found guilty of conspiracy to de fraud the government of land in the Rosebud reservation in South Dakota by a jury in the federal court in Kan- pas City , Mo. , Friday. The extreme penalty is two years in prison or a fine of $10,000 , or both. Sentence was de ferred. Wyatt was charged with in ducing old soldiers to enter home steads on the reservation land and then sell relinquishments for about 550. Wyatt and his confederates then sold the relinquishments for from $100 to SGOO. Several quarter sections of land were disposed of before the govern- men agents made the arrests. Xo Diamond Dividend. I The deferred dividend of the De Beers Consolidated Mines , limited , the diamond mines , was passed Friday owing to the unfavorable outlook in the diamond trade , which was an out come of the restriction of purchases in America since the financial disturb' an cos. Ambassador llcin Returns. Whitelaw Reid , the American ambassador - bassador to Great Britain , arrived in . Xew York Friday on the steamer Mauretania. The Mauretania made the passage from Queenstown in 5 days and 55 minutes. Her average speed | was 23 knots. i c Sioux City Live Stock Market. Friday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market follow : Top 'beeves ' , $4.00. Top hogs , $4.35. More Gold Coming1. Heifelbach , Ickelheimer & Co. , of .New York , have engaged $800,000 in gold for import. This makes the total , of $107,350,000 gold engaged abroad since the present movement began. Pacific Squadron for England. According to the Standard the ad miralty has decided to establish next / May .a Pacific and North American [ squadron , the base of which probably _ ivlll be at Esquimault. { [ [ r MINE A DEATH TRAP. More Than 200 Men Killed in Pennsyl vania Shaft. An explosion of gas in the Darr mine of the Pittsburg Coal company , located at Jacob's Creek , Pa. , Thurs day entombed between 200 and 250 miners , and there is scarcely a ray of hope that a single one of them will be taken from the mine alive. Par tially wrecked buildings in the vicin ity of the mine and the condition c the few bodies found early in the res cue work indicate that it seems im possible that anyone could have sur vived it. All of the thirteen bodies taken out are terribly mutilated , and three of them arc headless. This is the third mine disaster since the first of the month in the veins ot the bituminous coal underlying west ern Pennsylvania and West Virginia , for the Naomi mine.near Fayette City and the two mines at Mononguh , W. Va. , in which the earlier explosions . happened ; , arc in the same belt as the | local j workings. Thursday's catastro phe swells the number of victims oi i deadly ( mine gas for the nineteen dayr | to , between 550 and COO. That Thursday's disaster does not .surpass in loss of life and attendant horrors the one in West Virginia is due to the devotion to church duties of a considerable number of miners. In observance of the church festival many of the 400 or more men regu larly employed at tlie mine did not go to work Thursday morning. Those who escaped through tin's reason arc- members of the Greek Catholic church , and they suspended work to celebrate St. Nicholas day. SLAUGHTER JX MIXES. Appalling- Death Roll in tlic United States. The Coal mines of the United States are killing three times as many men per 1,000 employes as those of most European countries. In the last sev enteen years 22.S-10 men have given up their lives in tlie mines of this countrj' . As many violent deaths have occurred in the mines during the last six years as during the preceding elev en years. The number of fatal acci dents each year is now double that of the year 1S95. In I'lOfi 6.SCI men were killed or injured in the mines , the dead numbering 2OI > 1 and the in jured 4,800. These terrible facts have boon gleaned by government experts acting under orders of Secretary Garfield , of the interior department , to investigate the nature and extent of mine acci dents , particularly those resulting from explosions , and to make sugges tions as to how mining conditions may be improved and accidents prevented. SWINDLED RICH RUSSIANS. St. PetersburgWoman. . Who Was on Trial , Jumped Hail ami Fled. Ciga Stein , a Russian woman , who has successfully conducted a series of swindles in St. Petersburg on a large s cale , has fled. She was being tried on charges of fraud and swindling , and she jumped l er bail when she saw the trial going aginst her. She was charged with having defrauded certain persons of $300,000. and her opera tions extended over a long period. Mrs. Stein moved in high social cir cles , and was reputed to be a million aire. She obtained large loans on the strength of a pretended French inher itance. The heavy losers by her op erations are silent because of the fear of ridicule. TRIES TO STEAL $60,000. Bold Attempt Made to Rob Express Car. Charged with making a daring at- iempt to rob a car on the Buffalo ex press containing $60.000 in gold bullIon - Ion while the train was standing in the Reading. Pa. , terminal. Wm. A. Hewett , of New York , was held in heavy bail for further hearing. A yardman while at work discov ered Hewett under the bullion car at work with a saw on the gas pipe. The yardman give the alarm and Hewett was caught. The police Hewett say probable ex pected to enter the car after he had extinguished the lights and loot it un observed. Farmer Attack GirJ Teacher. Miss Maud McCrumb , of James town I , Pa. , a school teacher. 23 years old < , is in a serious condition from an attack i alleged to have been made by Charles Summers , a wealthy farmer. Summers was captured and taken to Greenville to prevent threatened vie lence. Must Remove Dog's Carcass. The court of appeals Thursday re versed the case of Henry Hertie against Alice Riddle et al. of Louis ville.'Ky. , and the latter will be com pelled , to remove from a lot in Cave - Hill . cemetery the body of a dog buried there several months ago. The Rid dle plot adjoins Hertie's. Funeral of Kin Oscar. The body of the late King Oscar , who died on Dec. 8. was interred at noon Thursday in the Riddarholm church at Stockholm , the burial place of Swedish kings and heroes , with sim ple ceremony , the impressiveness of which was accentuated by the wide spread evidences of popular sorrow. Capt. HcrresliofT Injured. Capt. John B. Herreshoff. of New port , R. I. , the blind designer , was painfully injured by falling down a hatchway on the government ferry boat Wave during- her trials Thurs day. Bank Fails. The' Green River State bank , of Green River. Utah , was taken in charge by the state eaminer. It car- jried about ? 50QOO m deposits. cy IVALKER IS PRISONER. Connecticut Banker is Caught in Mexico. The Pinkerton detective agency in New York confirmed Wednesday night the report that William W. Walker , the absconding treasurer of the N * * .v Britain , Conn. , Savings bank , ha.J been captured in lower CalSfor : a. Positive identification has been in.3 and Walker has consented 15 retarn to Connecticut without resort to extra dition papers. Walker was arrested at a mining camp 150 miles from Ensenada , lower California , which is Mexican territory. He was taken by a representative of the detective agency at Los Angeles , assisted by a party of Mexicans. The prisoner was taken to Ensenada , where his identity was confirmed. Walker when confronted by the of ficers admitted his identity and agreed to return east without raising legal ob stacles. Further than this he had lit tle to say. "What I have to say I will say when am back in New Britain , " was his i' j reply ' to inquiries concerning his theft and flight. Walker is in fairly good health and does not seem to have suf fered so much from his soujcurn as might have been expected. A reward of $5,000 had been offered for Walker if taken alive and $1,000 for his dead body if found. Walker is 61 years old , and had long held an enviable position in the business , social and church circles of New Britain. On Feb. 10 he disap- 1 pcared and soon afterwards it Avas discovered that $665,000 worth of se curities had been stolen from the bank. FS ISA It LESS. YET HEARS. Jersey Youth Receives Sound Waves Through Mouth. Ten-year-old John Hetzei. of Jer sey City , is puzzling the faculty of ths state school for deaf mutes at Tren ton. X. J. The lad's hearing is reason ably acute , although he was born with out ears. Tests made by the teachers seem to show that he hears through his mouth. When his lips are closedhe is unable to understand questions addressed to him. There are no cavities in the side of his head through which sound might enter. Where his ears should be smalt lobes of skin have grown. Yung Iletzel was for a time a pupii in the public schools of his home city , hut other children made fun of his appearance and his parents sent him to Trenton. There is some question as to the right to keep him there , inas much as he is not a genuine deaf mute. CHARGED WITH MURDER. Former Lincoln I Soy Under Arrest in Los Angeles. Daniel Meskil. in jail at Los An geles. Cal. . charged with the murder of Policeman Lyons , came from Ne braska , where he has a residence. A letter just received from County Attor ney Tyrrel , of Lincoln , says in part : "I have prosecuted Meskil at differ ent times and am thoroughly familiar with his youthful criminal record. He learned the printers' trade in the re form school at Kearney , Neb. He was in the county jail at Lincoln many times for assaults of various kinds upon his mother , sisters and brother. For example , a sister did not wait upon him quite so quickly as he thought she should , and he stuck a table fork in her back until it pene trated the body for considerable more than an inch. " Xotet ! Circus Man Dead. Gus Ringling , head of the circus combination , died in New Orleans Wednesday at a sanitarium of a com plication of diseases. Ringling went to New Orleans two weeks ago with the hope that the southern climate would benefit him. Back to Full Time Work. Five thousand Pennsylvania railroad shopmen at Altoona , Pa. , whose work ing time was reduced from ton to eight hours a day three weeks ago on account of the financial stringency have been ordered back to the ten- hour system. Lnngford Gets Decision. Samuel Langford , of Boston , and Jim Barry , of Chicago , fought ten fast rounds before the Pacific Athletic club in Los Angeles. Cal. , Wednesday. Langford was awarded the decision. Roth men were severely punished. Langford outgaming' Barry. Student Hangs Himself. Frank W. Miller , aged 20 years , of Kansas City , Mo. , a student at the University of Pennsylvania , was found hanging in his room late Wednesday afternoon. Life was extinct when the body was cut down. Jews Ordered to Depart. A dispatch from Vladivostok de clares the Jews have been ordered to depart within four days. Jewish property holders have been given eigh teen days in which to liquidate. Wireless Phone Feat. It was announced in Copenhagen that a wireless telephonic message had been transmitted successfully between the Weissen Zee wireless station at Berlin and Lyngby station , near Co penhagen , a distance of 200 miles. Insured Just in Time. The Alhambra hotel at Richmond , Va. . 'was destroyed by fire Tuesday evening just after an insurance pol.- had been signed. Loss , $7nOUO . i & If t i [ \ Q l&ZQ&t'S S f.fQ WALLACE OX TRIAL FOR LIFE. Hal ! County Murder Case Taken Up. \viih Jiig- Array of Attorneys. In the district court at Grand Isl and , Judge J. R. Hanna presiding , the case of the state against Frank Wallace was taken up. and all of one day was taken up in securing a jury , It was at once apparent that a jury could not be secured from the regular panel and a special panel of fifty was summoned. The charge is the murder in the first degree of William J. Hillis , in the basement of the Bock temperance pool hall , Nov. 9 , 1906. Hillis was a gami bier. He and two others were having a game , when , as the testimony at the time of the coroner's inquest seemed to agree , Wallace , a local liveryman , who came some years ago from the vicinity of Chapman , entered the place for the first time in two years , went to the basement and took a sith ting in the game. There had been bad blood between Wallace and Hillis , it is alleged , and a cutting remark asserted to have been made by Waiti lace , is alleged to have caused Hillis to attack Wallace. There was a scrimb mage. A beer bottle was swung. The men grappled and Wallace was thrown down. Drawing his gun he reached around the body of Hillis and shot , Hillis Is said to have expired as he was pulled off Wallace. , It is asserted that Wai Sice had been familiar with Hillis' wife and that he had broken up Hillis' home , or had alienated Mrs. Hillis' affections. The remark referred to is said to have had a bearing upon the matter. Mrs. Hillis being at the time employed in a restaurant or bakery. So far as the public is concerned , there was at the time a division of sentiment. The appearance being that the shot was fired at self-defense gave Wallace some sympathy at first. This appeared to undergo a slight change and doubt was created as to whether such a situ ation had been planned or not. E. S. RUMERY LEGALLY DEAD.ti Such is Verdict in Case of Seven"t Years' Absence. Ernest S. Rumery was declared le- gaily dead recently by a jury in Judgti Day's court at Omaha , a little more j than seven years after he disappeared from his Wisconsin home. The jury returned a verdict for $2.099.17 in faj j vor of Mrs. Cora Rumery and against j the Equitable Life Assurance society | to cover Rumery policy in the society j and interest from the time when the I suit was instituted. The suit was based on the rule of law that when a. man disappears and has not been heard from for seven years tlie law presumes him dead , unless his absence i can be explained. ! Rumery disappeared from his home ' in Chippewa Falls , Wis. , more than seven years ago and has not been j heard from by his wife since. She < s now suing for the face of his policy j ' on the grounds that where a man has i not been heard from for seven years j the law presumes him dead. The in- j surance company objects to paying i the claim on the grounds Mrs. Rumery j expended only 12 cents in postage in j a search for her husband. It asserts j she should have been more diligent in trying to find where he is. BOY SHOOTS HIS SISTER. Bullet Lodges in Neck , and Girl Can- j not Recover. j In an accidental shooting which occurred - : curred at 10 o'clock Monday night Co- j celia Teidge , the IG-year-old daughter ; } of a prominent farmer , eight miles j - from Winside , received what will j probably be a fatal injury , a bullet | from her brother's 32-caIiber rille j a. striking her in the back of the neck. The accident occurred while tlui i brother was cleaning his gun. The boy j and girl seated * - were opposite each j other in a room and were conversing $ while the former was polishing up the j ra metal work of the fire arm. Suddenly i the rifle and the ec exploded girl fell over j as if dead. Medical assistance Avas j summoned at once and the injury proj j j nounced very serious. The bullet j struck the vertebra and 'paralyzed the J p whole body. jI I j ! FIRE AT CHURCH SUPPER. ' Si ! fo Gasoline Explosion Causes Damage at j C Randolph. ; P A fire in the vc old Boughn store build- j ing at Randolph caused considerable I w excitement and some damage. The i Lutheran women wore holding a bazaar - j zaar and supper and were in the midst | of serving oysters and doing a brisk ; nc business , when one of the women attempted - j tempted to fill a gasoline stove without first turning off the flame. An explo- j JC sion resulted , the can of gasoline was j overturned and ignited and a good sized blaze started. The damage to ! the building is in broken glass and j ai ruined fixtures , and the women lost he many articles on exhibition , dishes , taas ; ble silver , wraps , etc. [ W' jlh i to Drainage Work to Go Ahead. , j-j The Nebraska supreme court holds ? that the drainage law is good and the preliminary work was well done aivl the work on the $375,000 ditch to straighten the crooked Nemaha will soon begin. Over two years ago the ion Richardson county drainage district j tu No. 1 was organized for the purpose | ni of reclaiming 33.00 acres of the most j has fertile soil in that county from over st flows. LI Mrs. Sawyer Buried in Gniaha. Mrs. C. L. Currier , of Beatrice , who went to St. Louis Thursday after the body of her sister , Mrs. Pearl Sawyer , seth who committed suicide in Forest park th Thursday morning , and interre'l the yo body in Forest Lawn cemeteiy , Oma se' ha. tic Section Man Hard to Kill. Daniel Straycr. a Union Pacific sec tion hand , was struck by No. C. a fast ly. passenger train , at Sanberg sidetrack. ing and. though hurled a cifaii"e ! of lO [ ' feet , has a c-cd chance of recovering j O HOYS SAVE FAST TIIAIX. Find Broken Hall In Track Near Omaha. Two boy. , v.-alkinp : on the Burling- ton ' track between Oraaha and South Omaha early Thursday rnornJng , dis covered a bad break in a rail and by quick , heroic action saved the big Denver-Chicago limited from what would probably have been one of the worst wrecks in the history of the road. The heroes' names are David Leahy and ID mil Swanson. The rail was broken off for a distance of eighE teen inches. Ft was about 7 o'clock In the morning , and the boys well knew that the limited from the west was just due. They knew also that the train -Is usual'y heavily laden with passengers and that if it struck that broken rail there could be but one re- suit. Running at top speed to two switch lamps some distance away Lea- hy and Swanson grabbed the lamps , one of them starting east and the other - er west , swinging the lamps as they ran. ; Leahy had run scarcely a quar ter of a Jiie ! when he heard the long , hoarpe whistle of the limited. The big train was thundering down the grade at high speed. Even now it was doubtful if h < i was in time. The head light swung round the curve. The en gineer : ; a-7 % ' the red lantern swung frantico'fty across the track and the boy'a heart leaped to his mouth as he her rd the wheels sliding on the track and realized that the airbrakes had been set and the train was gradually coming < to a standstill. The cow catcher was within ten feet of the broken rail when the train stopped. It was an hour and a half before the track could be repaired sufficiently to permit the train to run into Omaha. WAXTED'AT FREMOXT. ! TAVO Boys Arrested at Home of Parents - ' rents in Indiana. John Partonheimer , aged IS , and Edward Harvey , aged 19 , were arrest- , ed at Fort Branch , Ind. , on informa tion received from Fremont , Neb. The lads are wanted at Fremont on the ] charges of burglary and grand larceny. Under close examination Harvey admitted taking $25 from his employer at Fremont and dividing it > with his partner , but both deny the charge of burglary. The boys live at Fort Branch and come from among the ] best families there. They recent ly ] returned from the west. They arc being held until the arrival of the Fre mont officials. ' { HOY KILLS HIS BROTHER. Munkct Ls Accidentally Discharged at Laurel. Walter , the G-year-old son of Daniel Mason , of Laurel , was accidentally killed by his brother , only two j-ears his senior , by the accidental discharge of an old army musket. Two older boys had been huntingand. . expecting tc go out again , left the weapon load ed. Just after dinner Edmund , the 8- year-old. ' dragged the gun from one room to the other , and in passing the cook stove caught the lock against it , firing the charge , which struck the younger ( boy in the side of the head , literally tearing it to pieces. tThe bos lived only about an hour. NEBRASKA 3IURDERER CAUGHT. | Identified by Wife of Victim as the Man Who Shot. Her Husband. Fred Casey , whose arrest has been sought by federal authorities for shooting to death Jesse Murray , Feb. 24. last , near Scott's Bluff , where both were engaged in work on a govern ment irrigation plant , is under arrest at . * St. Joseph. Mo. , and has been iden tified . by Mrs. Murray as the man who killed ' her husband. Casey admitted the shooting. The trouble started over Casey accusing Murray of stealing a $40 ' check from him. Casey shot Mur ray while the latter was seated in a buggy. He said Murray had threatened - ed to kill him. ELLIXGTOX GUILTY OF MURDER. Falls , City Colored Man Due for a j Term in Penitentiary. ! Clyde Ellington , colored , was found guilty of murder in the second degree for the kiHirtsr of Charles Wilson , also colored ( , at Falls City. Ellington's ; plea was self-defense , but he became very much tangled up in his testimony when he was on the stand. Great in terest is being manifested in the case. the court room being- crowded all the time. One peculiar thing has been noticed whereas the prisoner on trial for his life is a colored man there has been only one negro in the court room besides the prs , ner. , I Iuin ! Hc.ys on LongWaik. . Two Indian bCryr. scantily clothed and neither ever It' , stopped at a farm house south' of From out a few days aso and a-ke-'l for a chance to do some i a work ' in pay for food , which was given them. Th * boys said they were going the homes of their parents in Idaho. They Jy.d been aitending school in enn.vanta. . but were homesick. Trains on ? crth River Branch. The North River branch of the Un- Pacific as far as Llewellen was turned over to the operating depart ment Friday , and weekly train service been i7ictalled. This train will start ; from North Piattc and go to 4s Llewellen and return the same day. Brothers in Srarcii of Sisters. Two brothers named Ellis arrived in Beatrice recently from Orleans In p search of their two sisters , who left I that place en the night of Dec. 3. The ' young wonei stopped in Beatrice for . several days last week and purchased | C tickets Friday afternoon for Omaha. I' ' Revival Ends. ' p Evangelist C. H. Window , of Waver- . la. , has just closed a series of meet- < 5 in the Methodist church at Ran- j ° ' -i' * . He r.iot with c n-idrrabrc suet t P " . - .1 Y Considerable interest is being taken- meeting of the State- In the coming Teachers' association , ' to be held in. Lincoln December 25 , 26 and 27. Among the active candidates for pres ident of the association , it Is reported , , is James E. Delzell , superintendent ! of schools at Lexington. His candidacy been reported in Lincoln , dacy , it has Is being boomed by A. O. Thomas vf the Kearney Normal school and E. A. Garrett of the American Book com the place -is- desires pany. Air. Delzell a stepping-stone to the office of state- superintendent. The report has a.lso- reached Lincoln that many of the- school teachers desire the position to be tendered to Chancellor Andrews or the State university. Should this be- done the teachers would only be fol lowing precedent , as both Chancellor- Canfield and Chancellor McLean were- made president of the association while holding the position of chancel lor of the State university. Many off the teachers , it is said , will come to- Lincoln urging the chancellor for the position. * * * A. E. Cobbey , the author of Cobbey'sr- Statutes , has evidently started a cam paign among the members of the late' 1 legislature 1 to get them to influence- Secretary of State Junkin to reconsid er his decision not to buy 400 copies of Cobbey's Statutes for 53.GOO. Let ters from the members of the legisla ture have begun to reach the secre tary , most of them telling him that it was the intention of the legislature to- make an appropriation for Cobbey'ff- Statutes , no matter what the bill reads. One senator , however , evident ly got mixed up , for he wrote that he knew the legislature wanted Cob- bey's Statutes , the single volume- cheaper statutes. The single volume- statute is Wheeler's. Mr. Junkin has1- left the courts to say which statute- to purchase , though so far neither- Cobbey nor Wheeler has shown a dis position to go into the court. * * * George D. Bennett , secretary of the- state board of assessment , has receiv ed . numerous letters from county- clerks for a copy of the form to be us ed in the assessment of railroad prop erty in cities and villages under the- provislons of the law enacted by the- recent legislature. Some of the coun ty clerks have asked for the schedules. 'The law does not provide that the- state shall furnish these forms , but in order to assist the state board in equalizing a form will be prepared and a copy sent to the various county clerks as soon as possible. Mr. Ben nett had a consultation ! with railway commissioner Henry T. Clarke regarding - M ing the makeup of the schedules. * * * * Chairman T. S. Allen of the demc ? cratic state central committee has an nounced that the dollar dinner in honor of William J. Bryan will be held on the evening of January 15. The- event will be held in the Auditorium and will be one of the most largely attended banquets ever held in the- state. Distinguished guests from a- great many states are expected. The- list of speakers has not yet been an nounced. It is expected that Mr. Bryan will deliver an address outlining his- : position on a number of issues. * * # The new machinery at the state- penitentiary by which power will be transmitted to the Home for the- Friendless and the state house , is al most in place and will shortly be- ready for the wires , which are now be ing strung. The common labor for this job was furnished by the state , . the convicts being taken out of th& broom factory for this purpose. The- state received a rebate of $1,100 on the job for the use of the convicts. * * * . The board of managers of the state- board of agriculture met recently in the office of Secretary Miller at the- state house. A number of small bills- "were audited and routine matters at tended to. Secretary Miller reported that 11,000 cubic yards of earth had" been hauled into the low ground north of the swine barns. It is on this "made- ground" that the board expects to see- e. magnificent stock pavillion erected some day. * * * H. C. Lindsay has been spending most of his time during the last week : moving books around in the state li brary in an effort to make more room for the constant additions to the num ber of volumes. He has erected a- number of new shelves and before he- completes the work expects to be able- to get all the books on the shelves and clear the floor of the many costly vol umes which have been stored there so- long owing to the lack of room. * * * Horace E. Flack of the department of legislative reference of Baltimore , , has written to Secretary of State Jur.- kin asking for a copy of the 2-cent fare law , as well as information con cerning its operation in Nebraska. Mr. Flack asked also if the railroads are- contesting the law. The legislature or Maryland is considering passing such * an act * * * Labor Commissioner Ryder says he- has received a number of applications-- for positions and while his office is ? not an employment bureau , he will' seek to accommodate all persons in sofar as his power will permit. If per sons with positions vacant will list them with him , he will refer appli cants who may be fitted. * * * Insurance Deputy Pierce is confined" to his bed with nervous trouble. He not in serious condition but is very- 411 * * * * In answer to the mandamus suit brought by the attorney general to- compel the Union Stock Yards com pany of South Omaha to make a re port to the railroad commission an answer has been filed in the supreme- court by the company denying that the company is in any way a trans ports ? tion organization. It says that it has a few tracks but has never sought ( exercise the right of eminent do- ' mam and has no interest in the- charges preferred by the railroad com panies for hauling cars over these- ' ' \ , I