i m ' j" * T THE VALENTINE DEMOCRAT VALENTINE , NEB. . M. RICE , . . . . Publisher. LAtfjti is BUHIED R ! JVT IjEAST : ! 0 LIVKS CIIVSHED GUI JIV AVALANCHE. n hi Oust as Citizens Begin to Stir foi Morning Church Service Huge Bowlders from Towering Mountain I , Swoop Down on Village. Half of the little French hamlet of Notre Dame de Salette , sixteen miles from Buckingham , Ont. , on the Lievre river , was buried Sunday night under a sliding mountain , and at least thirty of its small population are known to ( have perished. The hamlet has no telephone e r telegraph , and it is not ! on a railroad. Meager bits of news of the disaster crfme in by messenger from the physi. icians and other rescuers who were ( hurried there when the first calls for aid came at early morning. The Uevre river winds at the foot < of the hamlet and a mountain towers behind it. Spring rains for days past ' lliave been melting the snow and ice on I' > the mountain , and streams have been coursing down the river. At f > .o'clock Sunday morning , just as the little hamlet began to stir for early mass , part of the mountain .started to slide toward the river. It tore a path of death and destruction for all in its way , and those who were not killed when their homes were en gulfed were left buried under the mass of rock and earth. Camille LaPointe's house stood first in the path of the avalanche. He and his family of eleven are known to have perished. Eight others whose names have not been obtain are miss- 'ing. and in the panic the rescuers are attempting to find definitely how many more are missing. Mrs. , des Jardin's cottage also was swept away , and she. with her two children , a domestic and a hired man , are known to be buried in the landslide. DYNAMITE FOR BIUDGIC. Structure at Fall River , Masis Badly Damaged. The new Bristol county steel bridge ivhich is to connect Fall River city and the town of Somerset , Mass. . across the Tauhton river , was badly damaged "by a mysterious explosion of dyna mite early Sunday. "The bridge 5 ? be ing built for the county at a cost of $7oO,000 and was to have been com pleted in two months. It is estimated that the loss to the contractors nil ! reach $15,000 by the explosion. The police investigation showed that a charge of at least fifty pounds of dynamite was placed on the granite pier nearest the Fall River shore and was fired by the aid of a long fuse. The entire northern section of the city was shaken by the explosion and window glass in nearly every house was smashed. The contractors , who began work on the bridge a year or more ago. are Jiolbrook , Cabot & Rollins , of Boston. The same firm has suffered three pre vious attempts to wreck bridge con structed by them in Baltimore. Phila delphia and the Bronx borough in Xe\v York. MAIL , POUCHES MISSIXG. .London Hears of Loss in New York of Papers Worth Sr 00 , < ) ( )0. ) The London postal authorities have learned that two bags of mail from that city , containing securities and other valuables worth SfiOO.OOO. were stolen in New York the latter part of last month. According to reports re ceived at London one of the bags was destined for St. Louis and was shipped by the Majestic , which arrived in New York on March 26. The other , des- Itined for Brooklyn , was shipped by the uteamer Philadelphia , which arrived at New York March 29. Both bags disappeared. in transit between the steamers and the postoflice. It is stat- cd that they were handed over to the mail boats and receipted for. "Efforts Jiave been made to keep the theft a secret while the investigation is going on. ' Sets Self on Fire. As a pennance for her imagined sins , Hose Sudder , of Newark , X. J. , a pretty - ty woman woman of 2f , who , the po lice say , was temporarily insane from Jinuch brooding over religious matters , early Saturday evening lighted a can dle in her home and set fire to her clothing. Sioux City Live Stock Market. Saturday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market follow : Top Jjeeves , $6.85. Top hogs , $5.40. Asks for Children Half Time. Ernest T. Hargrove , of Boston , has filed application for supersedeas hi the .supreme court to get the custody of 'his children for six months each year. A few days ago the court granted Mrs. Amy T. Smith's petition that she have the children by her divorced husband. Lightning Kills Father and Son. Hubbard Harrison and his 6-year- jOld son Thomas were killed by light- Ining at their home near Iluntington , l"W. Va.f Sunday. WTXD WRECKS TOWNS. Scores of .Southern Villages Demol ished in Storm. Reports up to midnight Friday in dicates that 2fi5 persons were killed , end about 500 injured in storms of trreat violence which passed over sec tions of Louisana , Mississippi and Al abama TYiday. Several towns were aimost totally swept away and the property damage will run Into large Egures. Most of those killed were ne- fcroes whose cabins were swept away like so much paper. Perhaps a dozen white persons were : aught in falling buildings and either fatally injured or so seriously dis- ubled as to require medical attention. Friday night it was difficult to esti mate the loss of life or the extent of the destruction of property , for there ' s little or no communication with the points where the wind and rain did the greatest damage. In Louisiana it is estimated that a. score of small towns were destroyed or partially wrecked. They include Amite City , Arcadia and Independ ence. Belle Grove , Melton , Lorman , Pine Ridge , Quitman Landing , Fair- child's Creek and Lumberton , Miss , are reported seriously damaged by the- Storm. in Alabama , Dora was the rhief sufferer ; this town is also known is the Bergen. Four or more persons were killed , among them the wife and .laughter of Sectionmaster Moore. Fifty persons , at the lowest estimate were injured. Those most seriously hti'-t were carried to hospitals in Bir mingham , Ala. One woman , Mrs. JucCully , died on the train. At Bergen cars were blown from the railroad tracks and considerable other property destroyed. HELIE HAPPY TO GREET AXXA. Rumors that lioni Will Challenge Uis Cousin Unfounded. Mme. Anna Gould arrived at Xaples Friday from Xew York. She was met in the harbor by Prince. De Sagan , who arrived in England a few days ago and hurried hither to welcome Mme. Gould. The steamer came into the harbor at 6 o'clock Friday morning. The prince was one of the first to go on board. He rushed to Mme. Gould's cabin and met her at the door , lifted his hat and kissed her hand. The prince refused to be interviewed. After the party had had a light breakfast Mme. Gould and the prince , accompanied by the proprietor of Ihe hotel where rooms have been engaged for Mme. Gould , went ashore in a spe cial launch and took an automobile Crom the dock to Bertolini Palace ho tel. It is reported that Count Boni de Castellane has arrived at Xaples and is about to challenge the prince to a duel , but this is declared to be un- "ounded. THE ROBBERS LOSE NERVE. Stop Train. But Make no Attempt to ( Jet IJooty. Lack of nerve at a critical moment yiused the failure of a desperate at tempt Thursday evening to hold up a westbound north coast limited at a point twelve miles east of Butte , fJont. , on the line of the Northern Pacific. Rudolph Kenk , Paul Silen- < us and Al Teasdale were arrested for somplicity. Wenk and Silenius , who are Germans , admit having participat ed in flagging the train , claiming however , they had been forced to act by two armed masked desperadoes , who , when the train had come to a halt , lost their courage and made a quick get-away They declare the bandits had fifty sticks of dynamite with them , and that it was planned by the desperadoes to blow up a portion Df the train to secure the money sup posed to be aboard. Wife Worth Ten Dollars. One of the most novel pictures in court at Columbia , Tenn. . Avas that of W. J Riggins , a white man , who re- Flevined his wife , formerly Ada Tem- pleton , from her parents. Esquire Far- iss required a bond twice the value ) i the property in question , and Rig- placed a value of $10 on his wife. Bandits Raid Phone Exchange. Four masked robbers , after taking possession of the Cumberland tele phone exchange and beating the oper ator into insensibility , compelled As sistant Cashier B. II. Hans , of the Bal- ard County bank , of Bandana , Ky. , tc open the safe for them late Thurs- flay night. The robbers got $3,000. Mistake McdieJue for Candy. Bernard the of , 2-year-old son Bailey N. Xagle , of Erie , Pa. , president of the Pennsylvania boiler works , and prandson of T. M. Xagle , a multimill- onaire , died late Thursday night as the result of taking medicine prescrib ed for his mother , believing itto be candy. Alleged Dynamiter Caught. The first arrests in connection with he dynamiting of former Supervisor Gallagher's home at Oakland , Cal. , were made Friday night Avhen de- ectlves placed in custody J. Kerr , a > lacksmith , and another man whose name has not been given out. Vaccination Not Compulsory. The Illinois supreme court in a de cision rendered Friday holds that a loard of education has no right to bar a child from the public schools for failure to comply with the dictations f the board as regards vaccination. Bootblack is Greek Tutor. Thomas Kalends , a bootblack , ha-j )0on appointed critic of the Greek lass in Shurtleff college at Alton , 111. 'he boy is 18 and a graduate of the Athens high school. HAVOC IX TORNADOES. s Storms Hit Iowa , Nebraska and Dakota. A tornado struck Valley Springs , S. D. . about twenty-fjve miles east of Pioux Falls , Thursday evening and demolished about thiity buildings. Be fore the wires went down the central telephone office at Sioux Falls was Informed that a call had been sent out to neighboring towns for physicians. Persistent efforts to get into com munication with Valley Springs Thurs day night v.ere unavailing. Additional information cannot be secured before P'orning. A dispatch from Fender , Xeb. , says a terrific cyclone passed through that neighboihood about 12:30 : o'clock Thursday It first struck at Dick Walker's , n-jout six mi'es ' southwest of Tender , demolishing all his buildings and injuring Mr. Walker's mother and the hired man. The family had just sat down to dinner when the house was struck , but all except the two mentioned escaped without injury. The : : ext place was that of Emil Magnus- senwhere the family consisted of Mr. aid Mrs. Magnussen and Mr. Magnus- sen's mother and three children , three more chUdren being at school. The bab.v , about 1 year old , was instantly Killed and the elder Mrs. Magnussen is not expected to Inc. Two cyclones which started near Westfield , la. , did considerable darn- nje to property an 1 endangered the lives of-many people. Both were seen by many people , airl both occurred at almost the same time. The first storm began about one mile east of McCook , S. D. , and traveled up the i'.ig Sioux Vallej' . It was first seen about 4:10 o'clock , and . lifted and settled many times during its course. It struck the farm of C. W. Campbell , s.bout a mile south of Westfield. A large barn was completely destroyed. WAR VETERAN IS 105) . fives with Widow f One of His Ten Sons , AH Dead. Henry Dorman , of Liberty , Mo. , one bi the oldest civil war veterans , has , ust celebrated his 109th birtnday. He : -.ys he used the weeel when a baby in : \w " York state : , where h was "born. f * eng ess his increased his pension 'nce he became 109 years old to $50 y month. Mr. Dorman has been a resident of M-ss < uri for more than tnirty years , a great part of that time being spent in Lnmar , Mo. , where he owned a small garden patch at the edge of ' .own He gave up the tobacco habit u 1101 , when he began to show the ejects of his extreme length of years. He is cared for in his declining years I y the widow of the youngest of his ten sons , all of whom he has outlived. Mr. Dorman enlisXed in the union -rmy from Michigan in 1S6 : ; , when he < % \/as 61 years old , an age at which most men are incapacitated for the duties of n soldier in the field. He n ndered ef- ficJent service and took part in the rattleof Gettysburg and other impor tant engagements , in one of which he was wounded. He is well known inC CA. . R. circles throughout the state. ORGANS WERE REVERSED. Autopsy Showed Unusual Conditions in Body of St. Louis Judge. Surgeons in Johns Hopkins hospi tal in Baltimore , at an autopsy on the body of Judge John 13. McKeighton. of St. Louis , found that instead of the usual setting of the organs , thosein the body were scattered about in vari ous ways. His heart was turned in a position the reverse of normal , his kidneys , were united by a ligament in the shape of a horseshoe , and other organs were reversed. Juelge McKeighton was 66 years old. HP. became critically ill in St. Louis in February and his physicians were un able to diagnose his case. He was brought to the Johns Hopkins hospital early in March , where an operation \ \ as performed. TORNADOES IN 1 HE SOUTH. Much Damage Done in Mississippi Several Reported Killed. A tornado swept over Walls , Miss. , early Friday. At the Memphis offices of the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley road it was re- rorteel several people were drownel and several killed at Walls. Six or seven stores and many residences were entirely demolished. At Mason , Tenn. , the Methodist. Presbyterian and Episcopal churches were practically destroyed and several other houses blown down. In Memphis the wind reached a ve- iocity of sixty miles an hour , uprooting .ices , blowing down telegraph and tel ephone wires and forcing in ' plato windows. Big Brokerage Firm to Wall. The suspension of T. A. Mclntyre & Co. , of Xew York , brokers and members of the stock , cotton and pro duce exchanges , was announced on the stock exchange Friday. The firm did a large business and had branches in Chicago , Baltimore , Boston , Hartford , Binghamton , Syracuse , Rochester and Hot Springs , Va. Great Fly Wheel Bursts. Two men were killed and two hurt seriously , and several others slightly bi'rned in the plant of the Xorth Miore , 111. , Electric company at Waukegan - kegan , 111 , by an immense fly wheel , nhich flew from its bearings. Commander Xoel Dead. Commander York Xoel , U. S. X. , elicd Thursday at Xew York. During ihe Spanish war he was commander of the cruiser Marblehead. I * INTEREST N3 HAPPENINGS From Day to Day Condensed FOR OUR " 1 HORSE 'i RAHKF.S SHOW FIGHT. Become I : ! ' . < ' . " ' . : ! ( " ! 5ul Engage i" i'tglit \\.th 'to\\u .Marshal. As a result of an altercation with .T. R. GosIIn. the village marshal of On I't is , in Pawi'p county , one man has paid a line of ? 10 and another has a f.r.e of $50 arse ? ed against him. ' 1 uesday afternoon a horse trading < utfit drove into the \illage and three ' f the parties being intoxicated the marshal endeavored to induce them to leave town quietly. One. becoming enraged , drew a gun and fired at the I'U'.rshal. but missed him. The mar shal grappled with the shooter , who | began pounding the marshal over the head with his gun. the marshal also g tting in his work on the person of his assailant. Alter the row , the strangers undertook tget away'but ' were pursued by a posse. One of the 1 osse being aimed with a long- range Y/Snchester was ordered by the mai'- shal to shoot to get one of the run aways , lie fired , and. notwithstanding the long shot , came so close to his nan that their hands went up and all surrendered. All are strangers in that part of the country and unknown. It is understood that further charges \vill be brought against the parties. Resisting and officer and carrying con cealed weapons , which is a state of fense. IIKM ) TO BE A TIirST. Supreme Courl Unit's Against Nebraska - ka Lumbermen. In a decision filed Thursday the su- rreme court enjoined the Nebraska State Lumber Dealers' association from doing business in the state. The i-upreme court holds that the associa tion conspired to restrain trade. .Senator Xorrte Brown , while attor ney general , started the action , alleg ing that the lumber dealers had violated lated the anti-trust laws of the state , and Attorney General Thompson con tinued the action. Referee Post took the testimony and decided against the state. This the 'decision of the su preme court practically reverses. The association was accused of try ing to regulate prices between dealers and attempting to prevent sales to per sons other than regular dealers. Dealer er- ? not belonging to the association were called "poachers. " Wholesalers who made shipments to poachers were boycotted , it is alleged. In the brief for the state the Wis consin. Minnesota and Illinois state associations are given as colleagues in ihe work of disciplining "poachers. " TIT < : PLATES LAID ox TISACK. T\vo Roys from Ma con Accused of At tempted Train Wrecking. M : > nning and Harry Weber. two brothers living near Mason , were ar rested Tuesday night near Reno and brought to Alliance Wednesday for placing tie plates on the rails near the latter place which would have wrecked Ihe next train had the iron not been discovered in time. The boys claim they placed them enl l- ! e rails to make a more comfortable seat , but as they were beating their v iy. it is presumed they were thrown off some train and did this to get even. They are now awaiting the arrival of the sheriff from Sheridan county , where the act was committed and vhere the trial will be held. MAN AND SOX DIE IX FIRE. .Stunned by Lightning. "Which Starts Fatal Ula/.e. Tuesday afternoon L. .T. York and . - ( in Earl , of Osmond , wore burned to death" in a fire caused by lightning. They had been plowing in a field five miles north of Osmond , and had led their horses close to a strawstack and then took shelter under them. A holt of lightning killed five horses , vhich fell Vn York on nis sonT"e stack was et on fire , and York and his son were burned to death. Before beVoming unconscious they called for help , and neighbors half a mile away responded , but were unable to help them. 'The ' coroner was sent for to take charge"of the corpses. Steps on Rusty Nail. Mr. f'harles IluJjk , a young farmer living four miles north of Blair , while j loading cattle on tlio cars last Monday - I day , stepped upon a jj-usty nail , which penetrated the ball o'f ' his foot about three-fourths of an hnch. He sufferevl severely from the wound , and as there were symptoms of blood poisoning , he was taken to an Omaha hospital Wed nesday evening. Train Dispatchers in Conference. A. G. Smart , chief , train dispatcher foi the Wymore division of the Bur- Pngton , is in Lincoln in conference with the officials ov < Jr contemplated change in time cards. After finishing | h-s work in Lincoln. Mr. Smart will go ' to points east of the river and inspect : he system of dispafuhing trains by telephone. { r Child Drowns in ] Water Tank. The little INyear-hld girl of Mrs. j John Kerr. of St. aul. lost her life Wednesday afternoon by drowning in the water tank on tl'ie farm of William , Crow.-west of St. Paul , where Mrs. . Kerr resides. The little one had cl'mbed into the' tank and was dead vvhen found. Homesteaders Burned to Death. Tuesday afternoon at Kilgore. 22 miles west of Valentine. Max Francke. a man of about 55 years of age. living in a claim shanty , was found burned to death just a few rods from his he use. The dead body was brought to Valentine Wednesday. Dniw Straw * for Oflicc. The tie on alderman in the Second ward of liandolph h'abeen ei cieied by el rawingstraws. . C. E. Ckillagher , tlie ' dry" contestant , won the draw and was declared elected for tvo years. s-cpi'ri : > ox A M.vrcir. Fire at Ponder C-ji-e > Forty 'I honsaiii ! Oi.llar Lc > f * > . A lire in John K. House's general meivhandlfo store caused a $40000 losr at P-nder Tu < sday aftern. . n , practical'/ destroying the entire stock in the store , the largest in Pcnder , and aN' greatly damaging the build ing. Hiuij-e had only $12 < 10' ) insur ance on the stock. The building , which \\as knov.n a the Opera House block , \\a < 5 owned fcy A. B. Warring- ton , and his loss is said to be covered ky 5r.s--ui.niep. While a young woman clerk in the store was wailing upon a customer the heel of her shoe believed to have ignite : ! a parlor nuU'-'h which ha 1 been aecidonal'y dropped upon the floor. The blaxe quickly spread to the in- f'ammalije material on the counters and to u large pile of cotton batting. In a fe-v minute the whole h.torior of the tfture uas a mass of flames The lire deourlment responded pimptly \vhe.s I'.ie alarm uas turned in , but when the he.se was laid it was disio\- eretl that some unknoun person had cut four 'engths ' of hose with a knife. This can-cd a delay of about five min utes , during which the llames made great luaduay. The cutting of the hose is a mysteiy which the authorities are now trying to solve known. 11 ! : ; : : MAX TAICRS POTSO.W. Prominent Dentist Commit Suicide-- > No Roar-on for the Act. J. Ita.isom Waldon. a prominen\ dentist of Holdrege. committed sui cide Monday afternoon. Hi father found him on a couch in his of'ice about 2 o'clock , dead , with his left hand in his pants pocket and the right hand thrown acres his stoir.aeh. and on the floor beside the couch a com mon table glass which had c mtained a solution of Cyanide of potassium. lOnough was left in the glass if dis solved to have killed twenty-live men. j The act v.as premeditated , as he left j two letti-s to his wife telling how to settle up his business and how' he com mitted suicide He w is prosperous and had a good business , and everybody is wondering what was the cause of the suicide. His | domestic relations so far as known J have been of the most pleasant. An j inquest < vas held and the jury brought in a verdict that he came to his death by hi > wn hand by taking the dose of cyanide. LEAKV BOAT CAUSE OF DEATH" . Voui ! - Fremont Fanners is DroTviieu at Diers Lake. Coroner Cvergaai d held an inquest j Monday moming- the body of Geo. j Johnson , the yumg farmer who was ! drowned in Diers lake Saturday after- | Moon. It appeared that Johnson and j another j-aity went out in an old leaky I boat.VIien about fifty feet from the shore ami in ten feet of water the stern went down and Johnson fell into the water , sinking immediately. His com panion hung on to the boat. There were a number of persons present , but they were unable to get him out. John son evident'y ' had cramps , and his teeth were forced through his tongue. He was a son of Christopher Johnson , an old resident of that county , and leaves a wife and four small children. He was a member of the Danish Brotherhood , which organization had charge of his funeral. Snakes in "Douglas County. Mrs. Thomas Arnold , living a few miles south of Waterloo , stepped into a bunch of snakes and was bitten sev eral tim.-s about the ankle. She as first thought the snakes were rattlers , but investigation showed thesr were not venomous. A doctor was called and | attended to the wounds and the wom an is getting along all right. Arrested at Osr-eola. A. G. (5lover ( , of Arlington , is in jail at Osceola for the reason he , it is al leged , received money under false pre tenses. Sixty-five dollars is involved in the deal that caused his arrest. It is claimed that he received much more from the farmers of Hamilton county and western Polk county through his stock and food sales. Drnuii Arrested for Selling Liquor. Frank C. Alley , of Howe , a town six miles south of Auburn , was arrested on the charge of illegal sale of liquor. He was bi ought to Auburn , pleaded guilty ro the charge and was fined $100 and costs , which \\as paid and he was released. Mr. Alley is the pro prietor of the only drug store at that place. I'tica Man Attempts Suicide. Jame- Sage , aged about 22 years who Itiif been employed as a drug clerk in .Mien & Sons drug store in Utica for nearly t\Vo months , attempt ed to com.it suicide Sunday night by cutting iiis throat vith a razor. Th.- doctors do nut give-much hope for his recovery. Horold Discharged in Hearing' . W. W. Coates. of Plattsmouth , caused the arrest of Henry Herold on the charge of having embezzled $17,000 from him while manager of three stores for eleveif months. In the preliminary examination today in Toulon. PL , the court found Heroic" not guilty. Fire at Fremont. Georse MTirrcH's barn , on the reai of his lot at the corner of Eighth an3 Iv streets. Fremont , caught fire recent ly , and on account of adjoining build ings it ; > r : ved a dangerous fire. Loss about $200. Fully injured. Man Attempts Suicide. In s. lit of despondency on ui'cuunt of being out of work. W. A. Suiter , a printer , tttemptod to commit suicide .Monday inrrl ' . ty srtabbir > 3 hinie' ; * t . the ' . it il ft LINCOLN The employes of the state board oC regent are following out the rules laic down by the new board , recently pub lished , in the matter of the purchase or supplies. This information is in the- report of the university by ? tate Ac countant Fairfield , who is still looking ever the books of the institution. The- il Charl-s Anderson , . rules were drawn by George Coupland and Fred Abbott and adopted by the board shortly after * the first two named became members'- of the board. In his special report the- - ftate accountant says : "Xo public institution and probably but few private institutions , if any , m * the state has such an elaborate system ? of bookkeeping and accounting as the- state university. It would be impossi ble to keep out of chaos without ar * . accurate system in an institutibra spending the money for the inmunee able purposes required by the univer sity. It is not clear that ar.y lers elab orate method tha < i that in vogue would pioduce the results. It is not the in- tintion of this report to try to pick : any ( laws in the system , if indeed there- aiv any ( laws. Competent bookkeepers : thods are employed" , , o : up-to-date mt piul a regular examinati ii of the ac counts is made by an expert account ant with a reputation well worth main taining. Vouchers ai > - approved by every official who could possibly be ex pected to know of the dbt which it is * to liquidate. Some of these O. Iv.'s- ire necessarily perfunctory , as will ap pear by the enumeration of the parties * who allix their names to each docu ment. " * * * Adjt. Gen. Feharz has sent the-fol lowing information of the XationaX Guard to Lieut. Col. E. M. Weaver- . < -hief division of militia affairs , . Wash ington. D. C. : "In response to your inquiry oft" March 28. have the honor to make reply x ply as follows : "Average amount of time in hours- of instruction during the last ? fs\vr years , ! S. "Percentage of this time iniiNTbon - instiuction. fiti. "Percentage of this time in fiel'd' in struction , 44. "Average term of service of commis sioned officers. 1 year 7 months. "Average term of service of enlisted ! men. 2 years 7 months. "Percentage of vacancies among- of ficers by resignation or discharge-year ly. 04. "Percentage of discharges aniongr iited ! men. 4S. "Percentage of discharges among " , enlisted men due to expiration ; c f service , 50. "Percentage due to sickne&K ; , slight. "Percentage due to personal" desire- i > | "H the service. IS. pereentage" > 'due to non-resuk'ncei. : > o , - - - - * "Average total number commission d officers during past live years.v.n4 _ "Average total number enlisted met * luring- past five years. 1,140. " - * * * Attorney General Thompsonvas - very much disappointed \\hen lie re ceived news that the I'nited State su preme court refused to b-sue the man damus to compel tlv f.-deral judges : to remand to the state court cases in \olving- the anti-pass 'rr.v ; the 2Aeenf fare law ; the Aldrich bill , and the- lailway commission bill. Mr. Thomp son filed suits in the state court to compel a compliance \\ith tht-s-v ? aws = - and the railroads secui.-d their trans f r to the federal court. Mr. Tln-mp son raised the point that the srare was- he real party at interest , and. there fore , the cases could not be nans feried to the federal court. The ef-urf assumed jurisdiction , however , and the- attorney general then applied to the- federal court for a mandamus n > com pel the federal judges to rcr.iantf the- suits. The I'nitfd States supivme- court refused to pass upon tn > ques tion of whether the state is a party of interest until after the case has been * tried out in the tower court and. ap pealed. The express companies doing1 bus-- ness in Nebraska , have filed v.itJithe - state railway commission a new sched ule of rates , differing- from the pres- fnt rates in that they aregyn rally.r lower. So far as Nebraska is concern-- r-il very little change is made fn rhe- ratc , though the interstate shipments , , y from here to Xe\v York , for instance , , is much reduced. The rates - wcr.filed" for the approval of the commission , and until that approval is secured' theyr e-annot become effective in this sate. For the present at least the approval of the commission will be withheld" , for the reason if the commission permit ? these- rates to go into effect it rm.-un.s- ; they take the place of the rates fixed : in the Sibley law. The commission does not know whether the express * companies sought to catch it asleep- atu have these rates approved as- the * official rates in the state , and thus de- Jeat the object of the Sibley law. AVilliam M. Cubbison. sentenced tc the penitentiary from Platt county for two years , is seeking relief through : habeas corpus proceedings. It was alleged by his attorneys that rhe in formation filed against him was fileoS when court was in vacation , which om previous occasions the court has held sufficient grounds kto nullify a cun- \iction. * * * Oscar H. Allen , of Wabash , Cast county , has filed a complaint with the j.tate raflway commission against the Western Union Telegraph company and the Missouri Pacific railroad , charging they have closed the tele * graph office at that place and it is impossible to get telegraphic commu nication with the outside world. Mr. Allen said he is now compelled to arive his catUe to another town for- shipment by reason of the absence of ihe telegraph office at "abash.