THE VALENTINE DEMOCRAT VALENTINE , NEB. JJ. M. IlICE , - - - - Publisher. MAIL CAR IS LOOTED 1AJNE IJANDIT BINDS CLERKS ON GREAT NORTHERN TRAIN. IJn Addition to Ills Own Business as llobber He Attends to. Duties of Clerics , Discharging Pouches at Sta tions During Run of Five I Ion re. A lone bandit boarded the mail car tin the westbound Oriental Limited , the fast transcontinental train of the Great Northern railroad , at Bonner's Ferry , Idaho , before daylight Sunday morn- Ing' , bound the two mail clerks and robbed the mail and express cars. The Tobbery was not discovered until the train reached Spokane at 0:30 o'clock it. m. , more than five hours after the "bandit boarded the train. The train carried the through trans continental mail and much of it was registered. The amount stolen will 31 ot be known until the registered mail 3ias been checked up by the postal au thorities. When the train arrived at Spokane at 0:20 o'clock Sunday anorning the mail car was closed. Em ployes at the station opened the ear iind found one of the mail clerks ly ing bound on the mail sacks. The oth- r clerk was locked in a closet. .As soon as the men were released they said that a bandit boarded the ear at Bonner's Ferry , a division joint , about 100 miles east of Spokane , where the train arrived at 4:04 o'clock a. m. The clerks said the bandit held them up , bound them and went through the registered mail. He then Haiti he would work the regular mail , and proceeded to do so. At all regular stops he threw off the mail and took the outgoing sacks , though at some of the smaller places where the train does not stop he did not throw off the mail. He stayed on the train for nearly five hours , jump ing off at the Oregon Railroad and Navigation junction , two miles east of Spokane. FIREMEN JN COLLISION. Chief of St. Louis Depart ment Probably Fatally Hurt. Assistant Fire Chief Thomas \V. Jtucker , of St. Louis , Mo. , is reported to be dying and his driver , Harry Doerr , is dead as the result of a colli sion Saturday night between Rucker's buggy and a street ear at the inter section of Broaduay and Cass Avenue. Chief Ruckcr was making a run tea a lire that proved of minor importance. Practically at the same time as the collision with the street car and Avhile hurrying to the same fire , the wagon of engine company No. 13 collided with a telephone pole at Ninth and Carr streets , seriously injuring two 'firemen and killing a horse. The jarring made on the pavement by the passage of the rear guard of the fire fighting apparatus while the two accidents were happening to the van , wrecked a two-story house on Eleventh street. Excavations had been made on each side of the house. The family of six has been accounted for. VICTIM OF BLACK HAND. Italian Shot to Death in New York Street Fight. A well dressed , prosperous looking Italian was shot to death in a street light with two men at One Hundred and Fourteenth street and First ave- mie , New York , Saturday. The two an en made their escape and have not" * been captured. From stories told by 'several persons who witnessed the af fray it is believed that the dead man was a black hand agent and that his death was a result of an attempt to .collect tribute from the men who af terwards killed him , or that he sought revenge upon one of the men he at tacked. The two men who escaped a. were wheeling carts filled with ba- lianas when attacked. MAIL SPREADS SMALLPOX. to ,3)i.sease Starting in Postal Car Becomes Epidemic in Town. Eight more cases of smallpox in Dauphin county , Pa. , were reported teState State Health Commissioner Dixon Sat urday , believed to be the result of the 'infection ' spread through the mails til couple of months ago when a rail way postal clerk who had smallpox handled the mail that was distributed to various parts of the state. Following the discovery of the mail clerk's case of smallpox a clerk in the postofiice at Millersburg developed smallpox and now in a factory in that loAvn eight more cases are reported. Sioux City Live Stock Market. . Saturday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market follow : Top ibeeves , $5.35. Top hogs , 54.50. of Union Employes Discharged. i About 200 brewery bottlers and [ helpers were discharged from the va- trious breweries in St. Louis Saturday because they refused to load wagons for men hired to supplant the 400 driv nis ers who walked out Friday. War'on Night Riders. for Rewards were offered for the arrest of night riders and any and all per- usons connected with .them at a meeting of the Law and Order league at Vcr- " Ky. , Saturday. [ on TO PUNISH GRAFTERS. Four Men .in .Pennsylvania .Capitol CaseConvicted. . The jury in the first of the capitol jonspiracy cases to be tried gave a ver- ' Sict of guilty as to every one of the Jour men who have been on trial at { Jarrisburg , Pa. , for the past seven K-eeks Friday night after six hours' deliberation. There were two ballots taken , but the jury did not come into : ourt until two hours after reaching a jonclusion. The men found guilty are John H. Sanderson , contractor : William P. Snyt 3er , former auditor general ; W. L. Matheus , former state treasurer , and T. H. Shumaker , former superintend ent of public buildings and grounds. Motions for new trials were made In each case. Only Sanderson and Snyder were In court when the verdict was given , tnd neither would talk. None of the jounsel for the defendants would say anything about the case. The maximum penalty for each de fendant in this case is two years' im prisonment and $1,000 fine. The four men were convicted of de frauding the state in furnishing the new capitol , which cost the state about $13,000,000 instead of $4,000,000 the figure at which the contract was esti mated. The present cases constituted one of the longest jury trials in the his tory of the Pennsylvania courts , and it attracted much attention throughout the country. The prosecution of the alleged frauds was the outcome of the politi cal upheaval in Pennsylvania in l)0f ! ) , which resulted in the election of Will iam H. Berry , a Democrat , as stare treasurer , in the fall of that year. BUCKET SHOP INQUIRY. Secretary of Department of Commerce , Makes Statement. To correct any misapprehension that may exist through the circulation of erroneous reports concerning the in vestigation which Commissioner of Corporations Smith is making in the laAvs affecting bucketshop operations , Secretary Straus , of the department I of commerce and labor , Friday issued the folloAving statement : "Secretary Straus states in regard to the matter of bucketshops that the president has simply referred the sub ject to this department , with a re quest to have Commissioner of Corpo rations Smith examine certain bills aimed at bucket-shops and to report . his A'ieAVS on the general subject. The president has not ordered any general investigation of the stock exchanges. Smith has been instructed to use his i own judgment in reporting upon the subject and getting the facts that the | president desires. " , WALSH TO GO TO PRISON. Federal Judge Denies His Plea for ' . New Trial. Federal Judge Anderson Friday de nied the motion for a new trial in the case of John R. Walsh , former presi dent of the Chicago National bale , con victed of misapplication of the bank's funds. Walsh was sentenced to five years' imprisonment the minimum penalty in the federal penitentiary at Fort Leavenworth , Kan. As soon as the court announced its decision refusing to grant a new trial the attorneys for the defense entered a motion in arrest of judgment , which they argued for some time. It was generally thought about the court room they would consume two or more hours in giving their reasons for the granting of this motion , but At torney Hart , who presented it , ceased speaking in about thirty minutes. Judge Anderson then promptly over ruled the motion and sentenced the banker. TAKES WIFE FOR BURGLAR. Washington Man Shoots and Kills Her Instantly. ' Hugh Hoi 1 is , of Washington , a treas ury department clerk , who served for . time as private secretary to the commissioner of internal revenue , shot and killed his wife at his home Fri day. Early Friday morning his wife arose attend to a child and as she re turned to the bedside Hollis awakened , pulled a revolver from beneath his pillow and fired , instantly killing the woman. Immediately he went to sleep again and knew nothing of the shooting until he was afterward awakaned. He had always borne an excellent reputa tion , and declares he was dreaming- burglars. Divorce Paper Served on Thaw. Papers in the suit of Evelyn Nesbit Thaw for the annulment of her mar a riage with Harry K. Thaw were served upon Thaw at the insane asylum .Thursday night. At the same time a topy of the summons and complaint ' a was delivered to Superintendent Lame , the asylum , who is the legal guard ian of the defendant. Southern Cotton Mills Close. Fifteen hundred operatives were affected - < fected by the closing down at New Or leans , La. , Friday of the Lane-Magin- cotton mills. A poor demand for cotton goods was given as the reason the shut down. Indict American Ofiiccr. The grand jury at Winnipeg. Minn. , Wednesday returned a true bill agahiot "United States Customs Officer Foulke $ the charge of kidnaping farmers. READY TO ATTACK TARGETS. Wccfrs of Hani Work Ahead of Evans Tackles. When the American battleship fleet under command of Read Admiral Robley D. Evans steamed Thursday into Magdalena bay , passing through the rocky gateway marked by Pail Rock on the north and Redondo Point on the south , and dropped anchors be , hind the high peninsula's promontoiv i which stretcher ! fl protecting arm from ! the m.iiMi.ind : u : < ) makes Mnn-o"-Wir I cove ' , the most sheltered harbor of | the low&r Pacific coast , the history- j i making naval cruise of more than 13.- 000 milea begun at Hampton Roads less than three months ago practically came to an end. Magdalena is the principal naval base of the Pacific for American target work and battle practice drills , and by right of temporary ownership through government lease , the vessels , if not the men of the fieet , may feel that they are again in home waters. There remains to be made the trip from Magdalena bay to San Francisco , the destination originally announced , a matter of some 1,100 miles , but It will not begun until after target prac tice is concluded and flee drills are done. There is serious/ work to be done at Magdalena. however , before the sail ors' thoughts can turn to the happy days of home coming. Target ranges are ] to be established off the coast of lower . California at once , according to the wireless dispatches from Admiral Evans , and the divisions of the fleet will be sent out with big guns boom ing i as soon as they are ready. Long before the fleet passed through the strait of Magellan the ordnance of ficers of the sixteen ships , the turret captains and heads of the various gun crews were busy with the details of the coming practice , and in the run from Callao to Magdalena they com pleted the final arrangements. Two target practices are held each year in the navy. The spring practice which has been completed by all vessels - sels of the Pacific fleet , and which is about to be undertaken by the fleet from the Atlantic , is known as the "record practice , " as the result of which four trophies annually are awarded. RESCUES FALLEN FIANCE. Minister Finds Her in Wicked Chicago Resort. Rev. F. Lloyd Swearer and his wife left Chicago Thursday on their honey moon to Pittsburg , Pa. , where the bridegroom is an a Mutant rector of ono of the churches in the Episcopal diocese. The bride was Miss Grace Henry. Underlying the happiness of the newly wedded couple there is a storv of romance , of sv. cethearts'ciuarrls airi separation , culminating- a rescue of the girl from one of the wickedest resorts in the red light section of Chi ( cago. The ceremony was performed in a resort at 2024 Armour avenue. Rev. C. A. Kelly , pastor of the Wabash - bash Avenue Methodist church , was the officiatingclergyman. . He was approached preached at the conclusion of his morning services by a young man who said his name was Swearer and that he was from Pittsburg. The applicant displayed a license giving his age as 2C years and that of his prospective bride as 21. When told where the cer emony was to be performed Rev. Mr. Kelly gasped. Pressed for explanations the applicant gave the story of his life- romance. \ FINDS NO PERSONS TO BLAME ' Existing Conditions * ' Responsible for the Collinwood Disaster. Coroner Burke rendered his decision ' in the Collimvood school fire Thursday. Conditions existing are blamed , but no fault is charged to anyone. Fred Hir- ter > , the janitor , is exonerated. The coroner found that the fire started in a closet under the front stairAA-ay and Avas caused by OA-erheated pipes. The death of the children , he said , Avas due to faulty construction. The coroner recommended that the 1li legislature pass a UIAV to make all school buildings fireproof and that au tomatic devices be put in the buildings to further safeguard the lives of the children. China is Still Talking There was a further conference in I Pekin Friday between Baron Hayashi , the Japanese minister to China , and Na Tung and Yuan Shih Kai. repre senting the Pekin government , over the Tatsu Maru incident. No final understanding was reached , and the discussion of the matter will be con tinued. Socialist Arc Defeated. The liberals and socialists came to clash in the JSnglish house of com mons Friday , undoubtedly influenced to a certain extent by Lord Roseber- ry's speech in the house Thursday' ' against socialism. The liberals threw overboard the unemployed Avorkmen's bill of the labor party by a majority of 149. Held for Murder of Policeman. Jesse Cox , who Wednesday night shot and killed Patrolman L. F. Har vey , of Muskogee , Okla. , was Thurs day held for murder in the first degree. He asserts that the act was justifiable ' . | a Accused City Treasurer Acquitted. C. Elijah Meyer , city treasurer of Michigan City. Ind. , Avho AA-as reported by examining auditors to be more than $10,000 short in his accounts , Avas ac ; quitted Thursday. i Nebraska EARLY RAILRO\D MN DEAD. Ccsfrove. EMHJ oyxl b.A Overland ' Since I8J57 , Pa M's Away. James Cosgrove , a pioneer railroad man of Nebraska and for many years an employe of the Union Pacilic , died at 1 o'clock Wednesday morning at his home in Omaha. He began his railroading career in the days Avhen the Union Pacific \vas "building its line across the state and Avas the hero of many thrilling experiences. While Avorking on a construction gang he Avas captured by a savage tribe of Indians and condemned to death. He managed to escape in the darkness and came to Omaha , Avhere he has liA'od since. He Avas born in County Cork. Ire land , in 1S40. He was a carpenter by trade and \vorked in Philadelphia be fore coming to Nebraska in 1SG7. He went to Avork for the Union Pacific in the construction department , but after his Indian experience was transferred to the locomotiA-e and car department , where he worked for tAveb-e years. Suffering an injury , he was given charge of the Avalchmen in the shops. Ho held this position until 1904 , Avhen his health gaA'e out and he Avas retired on a pension. Two sons and a daughter of Mr. Cosgrove Avere killed and another daughter badly injured in the big rail road wreck at Logan. la. , and this bereavement - reavement Avas the direct cause of the breakdoAvn of his health. He leaA'es a Avifo and one daughter , Katie. Mr. CosgroA-e Avas well-to-do financially , and hi.s property is estimated to be Avorth $40,000 , due to his industry. HAS A NEW INDUSTRY. 3fcn in Ncmaha County Gathering- - talpa Scud. A Shenandoah nursery has repre sentatives covering Nemaha county gathering catalpa seeds. The men are paid by the pound and are able to make from $6 to $ S per day and have al ready shipped nearly a ton of seeds. The nursery will grow seedlings and sell to parties who desire to grow po.sas , railroad ties and telephone poles. Last fall this one concern alone handled thirteen carloads of seedlings and did not have enough for the de mands. The trees went to nearly every state in the union , but mostly to Ne braska and the Dakotas. There are several species of the tree , but only seed from the catalpa speciosa is gath ered , as this grows a large , tall tr e from brandies. The trees at the age of ten years will yield from two to four posts that are equal to osage for durability and migh lighter , besides the wood. A grove of these trees will provide a liberal income in a feu- years. A CLOSE CALL. Stations Closed. Confusion Results Wreck Narrowly Averted. Two Missouri Pacific freight trains nearly had a collision at the edge of | Nebraska City Wednesday. A heavy train from the south had been given the right of A\-ay and Avas climbing the heaA'y grade , north of the city. Avhen the engineer noticed another train f bearing doAvn on him. and he reversed J the engine and backed down the grade ' just in time to preA'ont a head-on col- \l \ lision. The telegraph offices north of ' Nebraska City closed , the incoming , train I understood they had the right of way. Since the telegraph operators in j small stations north and south of ! this 1 city have been discontinued , sev eral trains have had close calls of go ing i together. The railroad men are - becoming 1 afraid to run very fast between 1t ' tween t stations where there are no op erators , fearing they will meet other trains. AYRONG PARTY DEFENDANT. " . ' Railway' ' Company Leased from "Railroad" Company Mixed. " . The suit of A. W. Bradley , of Juni- ata , for $4,500 damages Avas dismissed in federal court at Hastings because the defendant Avas named as the Chi cago. Burlington and Quincy Railroad company instead of Chicago , Burlington - ton and Quincy Railway company. Bradley claimed damages for the destruction - struction of a barn and contents by fire which Avas alleged to haA'e been started - ed by fire brands from a Burlington ' engine. At the time of the fire the "railway" company was lessee of the property owned by the "railroad" company. Two days were consumed ci in the trial of the case before the point was raised in defense ? . Decision was given by Judge Thomas M linger. ' Parkers Arc Ilu y. I The Morton-Gregson Packing com ' pany at Nebraska City are workin ? " full force and find it hard to get all of the men they want , because of the : ' . fact that labor is scarce in that vi cinity. District Court at Beaver City. District court was convened at Bea ver City Tuesday by Judge Orr. Th" docket is an unusually long one. and contains many important cases , inclu/i. ing the Arapahoe murder and numer ' ous whisky cases. n Fnliner Goes to Wcslcyan. C. A. Fulmer , for five years superin tendent of the public schools of Beat rice , has tendered his resignation and it has been accepted by the board r.f education. Mr. Fulmer has accepted " the position of dean of the college of liberal arts at the 'YsTesleyan university at Lincoln. Foot Crushed in Corn Shellcr. Ernest Whittmorc. a young- farmer living northwest of Beatrice , had his Y ( foot so badly mangled in a corn sheller - tn er that it had tojje amputated the re FAKE BOMB IN OMAHA BANK. Stranger Approaches Official and Demands mands yr , ( ) ( )0. ) A man giving the name of Charles E. Fee , of Kansas City , was arrested in Maurer's restaurant in Omaha , at 11 o'clock Tuesday , following a threat he made to blow up the Merchants Na tional bank , unless $ f,000 in cash was handed over to him by Vice President Luther Drake. . | Foe.vcIl d reared and with apparent , inar ! : of a gentleman , called at the' ' ' Tkt : n-"rt . "c'-ie ' * : .11 d : > ! - od for Vice President Drake. The latter in- vitecl the map to step into his private office , thinking he was a country banker. Fee at once began to tell a rambling story of having his business destroyed and losing a small fortune by the failue of the Kansas City Bank of Commerce , in which he said he had $5,000. He closed his harangue with the nourish of a small bottle , which he told Drake contained nitroglycerin , and said unless the president produced $ . ' . .000 in two minutes he would send him : o eternity in the same breath , stating he did not care for his own life. Drake at first was unnerved by the unusual happening , but summoning courage , attempted to quiet the man. This at first failed , but after Drake said. "You want to see your wife be fore you do this" the man quieted down. Drake then suggested that Fee go around the corner , get breakfast and feel better. This invitation v/as accepted and the police were called in the meantime. The man was placed under arrest and sent to the station , where it was found the contents of the bottle -ee not nitroglycerin. The man N m' .v being held pending an in vestigation. TRAGEDY IN OMAHA. Youngftma Mi Mill * Wife and Then Commits Suicide. A dispatch from Omaha says : Glen Rathburn. who came here Monday from Dos Moincs. la. , shot and killed his wife Tuesday morning and then sent a bullet through his own temple , dying instantly. The tragedy was en acted at the home of S . R. Hall , Eng lish consul and a wealthy attorney , living on West Farnam street. The shooting was evidently the re sult of jealousy and the separation of itathburn from his wife. The man called at the Hall home Monday night to see his \\ife and a quarrel followed , Mr. Hall ordering Rathburn to leave the place. Tuesday morning while the family was outing breakfast they heard a shot in the kitchen. Hall rushed in and found Rathburn with a smoking revolver and his wife lying in a pool ff blood. He slammed the door on Rathburn and hastened to send the family upstairs. A moment later a second shot Avas heard and Rathburn \vas found uith a bullet hole in his 'lead. A letter found in Rathburn's pocket from his wife indicated she recently loft him. Letters were also found addressed to his parents , chief of police and coroner , giving instructions > r the disposition of the bodies. They i.i % e b-en turned n\er to Coroner Da- . 'is. and the parents were notified. Rathburn's parents live in Sigour- ney. la. Heas a printer by profes sion. GAME BIRDS PLENTIFUL. Heavy ! Kan * Arc Being Made on Plattc River. The hunting season for ducks and creese along the Platte river is in full swing. The wild water fowl have been increasing rapidly in number along the river the last month , and immediately after the snow storm of last week hunters found them easy gathering. The storm drove the birds together in large flocks to the sheltered places along the lee banks. The river was o\\ . but full of floating ice and snow and the birds were so tame that hunt ers were able to approach within gun- -hot range with very little trouble , and sometimes with the aid of blinds.V 'arge number of heavy bags were re ported , one man equipped with AvaJ- nm boots returning after an early trip last Friday morning Avith a load of JS ducks. One flock of sixteen geese was counted from the Plate bridge , .ve mile from Bignell , on a sheltered andbar and within range of a shot gun , and they remained in that A'icin- .ty all of Saturday morning. Yiolators of Game Law. Mike Murphy. Hugh Stewart , Gus Widick. James I'eggs and Sam Schultz , live prosperous farmers living near Friend. Avere caught seining fish from the ] waters of Turkey creek , some thro.- miles south of Friend , by Deputy Game Warden Gilbert. The poachers find fish were brought to Fried and tlie men were tried before Justice Mc- Farlane and fined $10 each and trim- Harry Good Acquitted. A juiy at Fremont found Harry jood. formerly of Sioux City , la. , not guilty. Good , who Avas a traA-oling man ir the Tit Prt Candy company , was harrod with forging checks in pay- 'lent ff : the company's accounts on "sem nt. and it was alleged he got 40' ) in Xcbrrsl-a and Iowa. He .ai.iiecl he usoil the money for ex- Tccumscirs NCAALibrary. . Tec-urn ; eh"y new Carnegie library builuir-o is IIOAV ready for occupancy. The building is finished , the furniture Mas been installed and the library has been moA'ed from its old location in t'le city hall building to the new building. The ne\v structure Avas for- aliy dedicated Wednesday. Odd FelliJAis in Convention. The sixth annual com-ention of the XorthAven Nebraska Odd FelloAvs' as sociation , embracing the counties of "eclar. Dixon. Dakota. Wayne and eastern Knox , Avas held at Wakefield Tuesday. Biljlinpr at York. Contractors , lumber dealers and those errjnfro.l ; : ? the building trades in Yok reprt that more building is con tracted icr and contemplated than at beginning of. any yeai for several rears. The folloAving circular has been sen ) out by State Superintendent McBrieK and Lu'di.r Commissioner Ryder "OAVing to the recent calamity al ( 'o.iinwooc : . ; i : ui tirb "f < * 1.aim. 1 . C ) . Ave deem it our duty to call the altera tion of boards of education , city super : intendents. high school and village principals , teachers and other official ; throughout the state who are responi sible for the lives of the school child * ren entrusted to their care to the la s regulating fire escapes and exlti > from public buildings. "To guard against loss of life in thij- state AVC urge upon all officials Avhosji duty it is to enforce the aforesaid act * to see that the provisions of these lawj- are strictly observed. We regret to say that there are at least 300 public school buildings in villages , toAvns and cities in Nebraska Avhcre existing ar * rangements fail to meet the require ments of the laAV. In many places thfi situation is criminal. "It is the small details that are tog often overlooked or entirely neglected. Avhich in the event of great emergen cies would be the line between s-afotv and danger. All doors should swing outAvard. WindoAVS should never be allowed to become bound or neglected to that extent that they AVI ! ! not uork with a touch of the finger. Escapes of non-compustible material should be erected Avhere needed. The need 4 " should be regarded a simmediate rather - er than in the distant future. "We offer the suggestion that in ad dition to exits and lire escapes provid ed for by law there should be on everv lioor of a school building IAXO or more stories in height a supply of ropes ii OA'cry room , knotted and securely fastened to the A\alls ready for immediate use. Tht boys should be required to practice de fending on these ropes occasionally and the girls should be required t < watch the boys at practice. "There should be frequent fire drill ? in every school , but it should be re membered that in a fire drill it is as- important to see in h nv orderly n manner the pupils can leave the build ing , as Avell as how quickly it can b < done. " * * * J. F. . Cobby has delivered to the secretary rotary of state 400 copies of his stat utes , for which he Avill receive S'5.000 appropriated by the recent legislature. The books Avill be distributed to the members of the legislature , district judges and state officers. The supreme court decided that the legislature pro- A'ided for the purchase of Cobbey's Annotated Statutes v.'hen it made an j.piiropriJ'tion for the purchase of 10 < " < > pies of annotated statutes for $2.fi)0. ; IT. II. Wheeler sought to compel the secretary of state to buy life compiled statutes. Secretary Junkin. Avhen the dispute between the two authors arose , ; of used to buy ether and f'obboy ask- oil for a mandamus to run against Jurikin and ho got it. l . * I The state board of public lands ami buildings has receiA'ed bids for the construction of a building at the Gr Island soldiers' homo and for the cot tage at the Milford soldiers' home. Bids haA'e not yet been receiA'ed for the construction of the cottage at the latter. The board is divided as tc Avhether this building should be erect , ed , but a majority is in faA'or of spend ing the appropriation of $15.000 as thr law provided. Secretary of State Jun kin believes the cottage is not- need ed , but the other members of the board do not agree Avith him. * * * After being prevented by the rail road commission from increasing the. minimum freight charge from : > . " > to 4X ( cents , the Nebraska railroads have in creased the minimum weight of a shipment to 100 pounds. An Oxford man recently made a shipment according cording- the old rules and paid 50 cents charges only to recoiA'o a bill later for an additional 77 cents. The shipment Avas of an interstate charao- te , hence the Nebraska commission is poAverless to give relief. A letter Ava sent from here to the complainant in- Arming him of the dilemma and ng- his only redress was to buy his goods in Nebraska. * * The attorney general Avas giA-en per mission by the , court to file an appli-r cation for a mandamus to compel the city council of Wayne to revoke tht- liquor license issued to one Thomson. This case A\-as before the governor on the application of the Anti-Saloon league to remove the councilmen xvho refused to vote for a revocation oi . the license. The governor referred 7- the matter to the attorney general for a ruling of the legal department and the legal department upon the recom mendation of the goA'ernor passed it on to the court. * * The commission appointed to pro mote the national corn shoAV to be held at Omaha next December , me ? iid organized by the election of the rollowing officers : William Ernst , fohnson county , president : E. A. Bur- ictt. Lancaster county , vice president ; R. Hoge , second vice president : W. R. Mellor , treasurer : E. G. Montgomery , -.ecretary. The commission Avill create- nterest among the corn raisers in Ne- Draska to get them to make exhibits * * * R. M. ShumAA-ay. convicted of mur- ler in Gage county and sentenced to e hanged on March 33. has appealed lis case to the ' " * supreme court. T'- cts as a stay of execution until the- ourt has passed on the case. * * * The report of State Accountant "airfield to the effect that no im-oice- ad been taken of the store room at he institute for the feeble minded outh at Beatrice when the institution as turned over to its pretjen superin- ndent , is in error. On file in the of- ce of Gov. Sheldon and also on file i the office of the secretary of state , re copies of that invoice taken Avht-n r. Osbornvas appointed superinJ& ndent. It is supposed the instiuvriorr uthoritiesoA'erlookedthe invoice whee 10 state accountant recently checked tp the ins-iituUon.