THE VALERTIHE DEMOCRAT VALENTINE , XEB. I M. KICK , - - - - Publisher. LINCOLN'S OLD HOME SPLEXDID TRIBUTE TO BE PAID HIS MEMORY THERE. ? Iaiis for Dedicating Hie Marble Me morial Hall by President Roosevelt Have Been Fully Arranged Foil .Addro.-.ses Are Scheduled. Simple and yet splendid with the presence of the first citizen of the United States will be the homage paid the old homesti ad of Abraham Lin coln in Larne county , Ky. . on the oc casion of his centenary , Februry 12. The plans for dedicating the marble memorial hull by President Roosevelt have been fully arranged. It has been determined that the five trains that will he run to Hodgenville from Louis ville on February 12 shall bear the va rious delegations , and that the repre sentatives of the republican and demo cratic committees of Kentucky will b given a place of prominence in the ceremonies. Mrs. Roosevelt and Mis.- 'Ethel ' Roosevelt will be members of the president's party. This announcement has proved of great interest to the Kentucky women. The first train will leave Louisville at 7:30 a. m. February 12 and will carry all who desire to reach the farm and roam over the acres where th < child Lincoln played. The second train at 7:45 a m. will carry a band of sixty volunteer militiamen , eighteen cavalrymen and fifty newspaper men. The third , nt 8:15 : a. m. . will bear the federal and confederate veterans who a.re to act as escorts to the president. the veterans of the Spanish-American war and flov August 10. Wilson and his military staff ; the fourth , at 8:35 : o'clock , will carry Louisville business men in charge of the celebration , and the fifth train , at < : : ; o'clock , will hear the president. Mrs. Roosevelt , Miss Roosevelt. Secretary Loeb and 'Secretary of Wnr Luke E. Wright. r' ht states have made February 12 { a \ oliday , hut the observance this year will not be limited to these states. BRYAX NOT 1X.JURED. Commoner Arrives at Jacksonville in the Best ol' Health. William Jennings Bryan reached Jacksonville , Fla. , Sunday from De land and emphatically denied the re port that he was injured in an automo bile accident near Tarpon Springs. Mr Bryan was met here by his cousin , Wm. S. Jennings , and taken to his liome. Upon reading the report of the accident he said he was in Lakeland until noon Saturday , when he left for Deland , speaking there Saturday night and leaving there for Jacksonville. Mr. Bryan K in perfect health and expressed himsc If as pleased at his re ception. He delivered his lecture. "The Prince of Peace , " Sunday after .noon. "WIRELESS OPERATOR DROVv'XS. .A Seaman in a Bravo Attempt at Res cue Also Sinks. "While standing on a pond near "Wood's Hole , Mass. , Sunday , Charles 'Cottliebson , win-less operator of the revvanue cutter Acushnct. broke through the ice , and both he and Sea man Oscar Rongved , also of the Acushnet , who made a brave attempt to j ; cscue him , were drowned. Sjeveral of their shipmates endeav- orcQ to reach the drowning men from th < | shore by tying their handkerchiefs together to make a life line , but the 5/ce kept breaking under them. A tree i was then secured , but before it could be put on the ice both men had gone 1 under. Quarrel Over a Scat. Confusion bordering on a panic en dued in a crowded 5-cent theater in Ualsted street. Chicago , when a pa- iron , quarreling over a seat , drew a revolver and shot a man. Two more shots stopped the show and caused the audience to rush to the street. The wounded man. Daniel Zincarelli , prob ably will die from his wounds. His .assailant escaped. School for Chinese Pulpils. A school for Chinese students , or ganized and maintained at the expense of. the imperial Chinese government , was dedicated with befitting ceremo nies in San Francisco Monday. This is the first institution of the kind in that city , although similar schools have "been provided at Sacramento , Los An- Keles , Vancouver , Chicago and Xew York. Sioux City Live Stock Market. Saturday's quotations on the Sioux "City live stock market follow : Top Cattle , $4.80. Top hogs , $0.40. Gen. Fredericks Guilty. Gen. Fredericks , former governor of JNizhni-Xovgorod , Russia , whose trial on charges of complicity in the grain -scandals that attended the distribu- nion of famine relief in 1006. has been = going on for the past five days , was -convicted of negligence and corruption. Violent Earth Shocks. At Tiflis , Transcaucasia , two violent shocks of earthquake were experi- lenced Sunday night , but no damage In ireported. CYCLONES HIT SOUTH. Sections in Dixie Land Devastated by Storms. Mayor Geo. 31. Brier , of Cullman , Ala. , wires that seven people are known to have been killed in that county Friday afternoon by the tor nado which passed over that section of the state , but that wire communi cation is impossible with the stricken locality. At Kayesa , a mining camp west of Birmingham , on the Southern railway , five houses were blown down , but only one man was injured , a Mr. Logan. The property loss in the territory north of Birmingham appears to have been very large. Telephone commu nication to the north is impossible. Death for nearly a score of people , loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars lars worth of property , and the crip pling of many telegraph wires resulted between noon and dusk Friday from a series of small cyclones and tornadoes which swept Dixie from the Tennessee line to the Texas Panhandle. The storms were accompanied in most cases by hail , darkness and ter rific lightning flashes and sheets of rain. Most of the towns where the losses of life occurred are isolated so that news from them has been coming in but slowly. Arkansas and upper Louisiana rice fields were injured to the extent of many dollars , while the larger cities had rains and darkness illuminated by lightning bolts that made the atmos phere quiver. XEGRO RUXS AMUCK. Terrorizes a Section of Xortli Memphis Before lie is Killed. Henry Morton , a negro , was killed by police and citizens of Memphis , Tenn. , Friday , after e had held up an other negro , fired repeatedly into street cars and houses and terrorized a sec tion of Xorth Memphis. After forcing a negro to give him a bundle of hides Morton tried to make a trade with a produce dealer , while threatening him with a pistol. Fail ing , he sent a confederate to dispose of the booty and both escaped before the arrival of the police. Morton later was located on a street cars , but as a police man approached lie jumped from the car , firing blind ly several times. A riot call brought a squad of po lice , who were joined by many citizens , and Morton was finally brought to bay on a porch. Morton continued firing , but his bullets went wild , and then he fell dead before a volley fired by the crowd. XO VERDICT IX TIIE GOW CASE. The Jury is Unable to Reach an Agree ment. A Brooklyn jury , before which Will iam Gow , formerly president of the International Trust company and di rector of the Borough bank of Brook lyn , was ti ied on a charge of larceny of $14.,000 , disagreed early Friday , the vote standing eight for acquittal nnd four for conviction. Gow already uas held under $117,000 bail and this vys continued. The charge against Gow was based on the withdrawal of $145,000 in the Borough bank , it was charged , to finance the organization of the Inter national Trust company. Another charge of larceny of $250,000 is also pending against flow , as also are three charges of misdemeanor , based on the all < { red overdrawal of his account with the Borough bank. BODY FOrXD IX CISTERX. Ar-aihi-r D\ton. O. . Murder Mystery Added to Tjist of Crimes. Another murder mystery has been Hded to the long list which have al- "ridy occuired in Dayton , O. Late , iT.iy aftei noon the body of a young vnman was dragged out of a cistern in 'ha rear of a vacant house. Her broth er has identified her as Lizzie Fulhart , * > years old , of Vandalia , O. , and her v.-eetheart. Albert Wilkie , employed ? .t a local machine shop , is being held ji suspicion. He declares , however , : .e had not seen the girl since Decem ber 29. Miss Fulhart came to Dayton on December - comber 20. raid was staying with her mint , Mrs. Samuel Deeters. Bridge Burns Xcar Xorfolk. Xcb. . . The burning of a three-span bridge on the Omaha road blocked all traffic between Sioux City and Xorfolk , Neb. , Friday. The bridge was over Pigeon creek , between Winside and Hoskins. The cause of the fire is unknown. No accident resulted. The passengers and mail were transferred. Police Rout Strikers. As a result of violence being offered Friday by the striking miners at the Trerrfont coal mine , Belle Vernon , Pa. , near Pittsburg , to the nonunion miners who went to work , a troop of state constabulary charged the strikers. Sev eral persons on both sides were slight ly injured. Fire Loss is $220.000. The most disastrous zre at Cha- Jottesville , Va. , in twenty-four years Friday destroyed property valued at $220,000. The blaze originated in the building- the Charlottesville Hard ware company. Mnn Blown to Atoms. James Cody , while operating a ma- ; hlne drill in the Bluebeard mine , at Victor , Colo. , drilled into a missed shot and was blown to atoms. OBJECT OF SOME COMMENT. Frisco Agog Over Movement of War J Munitions. The close of the present week will see an unusual amount of war mate rial and supplies shipped from San Francisco to the Philippines and the Hawaiian islands. This fact taken in connection with the arrival of the t , transport Buffalo from Honolulu ! painted leaden gray , the color that is associated in the popular mind with ' the fighting garb of the American na vy , and the unexpected return of the torpedo flotilla from the south is caus ing some local comment. Saturday the bark Mohicon left foi Honolulu , riding deep in the water un der the weight of the two great disap pearing guns destined to form a part of the defense at Pearl harbor , the site of the new naval station in the Hawaiian islands. Sfurday the Pa cific mail liner Asia saileu for Manila and Japan , carrying 3,500 tons of car go , 2,000 tons of which consisted ol army and navy stores for the Philip pines. Included in this shipment arc 2000 submarine mines which are to be placed beneath the waters of Subig bay at the entrance of Manila harbor , and 2,500 cases of small arms ammu nition. The army transport Sheridan lefl for Honolulu laden with : > 00 tons ol general supplies for the troops in tlu islands. While admitting that there is un usual activity just at present in Pa cific coast naval circles , officers of the navy profess themselves unable to ex plain it. SHOOTS WOMAX AXD C1IILDREX Long Island Man Then Hangs Him self in an Attic. Tn the little village of Farmingdale Long Island , a few miles from Oystei Hay , Frederick Buck holt , 40 years old Thursday night shot and killed Mrs Elizabeth Rust , wounded her twc children as they stood clinging to hei skirts , and then hanged himself in tht attic of his home. The tragedy occur red in the presence of IJuckholt' : wife. Mrs. Rust , a divorced woman , board ed her children in Cuckholt's home When she called to sec them Ruckhol- demanded an increase in the board she was paying. A dispute followed which enraged Huekholt , and th tragedy occurred. The children ar < I not dangerously wounded. PASSED LOWER BODY. .Johnson Bill Goes Through the Cali fornki House. Gov. Gillett sent a message to tht assembly Friday asking that body tc reconsider the vote by which it passcc the bill compelling Japanese childrer to attend separate schools. This ac tion is the result of a message receiver from President Roosevelt. appealing to him to devise some means of block ing the measure in the legislature. The governor's message to the as sembly was a strong appeal to the- members to stand by the aministration and deal with the question of treatio with Japan and other nations. Kills His Brothcr-in-Law. Leslie Brophy , after fatally shooting his brother-in-law , George Mayer , ai St. Louis , Mo. , Thursday , walked tc the police station and surrendered Mayer had been quarreling with his wife and his mother-in-law and the shot was fired after Mayer , it is said had threatened violence. Mayer died at the city hospital. Easy for Abe AltcH. Abe Attell , of California , found lit tle difficulty in retaining the feather weight championship when he met Eddie Kelly , of Xew York , in a sched uled ten-round bout before the South ern Athletic club at New Orleans , La. Kelly's second threw up the sponge in the seventh round. Head Hcatcn to a Pulp. Joseph Vigne , residing at Cocolalla , a few miles west of Sand Point , Idaho , killed his wife in a jealous frenzy , beating the woman's head into a pulp with the butt of a gun. Vigne then dragged the woman's body into the cellar , where it was found by the of ficers. Cock Fight is Raided. Sheriff Jerge early Friday at Buf falo , X. r.t raided a cock fight on the outskirts of the city. Over 100 men were arrested and 75 dead and live birds were captured. The prisoners include men from Ohio , Pennsylvania , Canada and down-state points. Boy Given Life Penalty. Harvey Hazel , 17 years old , of Tole do , found guilty of murdering his mother , has been sentenced to life im prisonment. Hazel was convicted of slaying his mother January 1 , 190S , by beating her to death with a ham mer. May Be Johnson's Brother. In the morgue at New York City there is an unclaimed body of a negro believed to be that of Rosecoe John son , a brother of "Jack" Johnson , champion heavyweight fighter. He died in the New York hospital from pneumonia. Prince's Auto Hits Pole. Crown Prince George of Servia suf fered another automobile accident as a result of indulging in fast driving Friday. He is nursing cuts on his face and bruises on his head received in a collision with an c'ectric light pole. Anti-Bucketshop Bill Passes. The anti-bucketshop bill passed final reading In the senate Friday at Nash ville , Tenn. The bill prohibits the dealIng - Ing In futures. WOULD SETTLE QUESTION. Whether Whitp Men and Colored Women Can Legally Marry. Some time since James Hand , a white man , and a negro woman , were arrested in Xebraska City , they hav ing been living together. The couple claimed to have been married in Coun cil Bluffs and on their own testimony they were released by the county judge. The county attorney , D. W. Livingston , is not satisfied with the finding of the court , and wanting the question settled .as to whether a white man and a negro women can live to gether in this state , even if married in another state , has appealed the case to the supreme court. In the meantime - time Hand and his dusky wife , who borrowed the money with which to fight the case and secure their release from jail from a poor widow , have packed their belongings and it is said have gone to Oregon , where the laws permit the mingling of people of dif ferent colors in legal marriage. LOXELY DEATHS THEIR LOT. Auburn Man Pens Explanation Before End Comes. "Salmon made me ill , " wrote Elmer 2 ook a few minutes before he died a lonely death in a house on his farm a few miles from Auburn. Finishing this brief statement he dropped back on a canvas cot and peacefully suc cumbed. When found his face was as calm and uncontorted as that of a sleeping baby. He had borrowed a horse and buggy from his brother-in-law , D. H. Mcln- i'ch , and expected to return in the e 1rly afternoon. Night came and he did not return and his wife became uneasy. About 10 o'clock her brother jrot a team and drove to his farm. On the table was the remains of the lunch which he had bought at a store starting to the farm. On an envelope were written his last words. HEARXEY BOXE 31 ILL BURXED. Wont I'p in Flame About Five Tues day Afternoon. The Knrdy bone mill , located just e st of Kearney , was burned Tuesday aftrenoon about 5 o'clock. The mill was not running and the cause of the lire is unknown , unless tramps set the fire. The machinery was badly dam aged , and the fertilizer and feed stored in the mill was all destroyed. The loss will be over $5,000 with only $2,000 insurance. The mill was owned by C. A. Rob- i'lson and Robert Hardy. It will prob- ob'v he rebuilt. Heavily Fined. I'll ) district court at McCook Bell Hall , Minnie Brown and Ruth Barry , three keepers of disorderly resorts in that city , pleaded guilty to selling liq uors illegally in their houses of disre pute , and were finded $250 each and costs , amounting in each case to over $300. These three houses were raid ed about a year ago by officers of the Anti-Saloon league and a large quan tity of liquors found in them. May Be a Fraud. The farmers about Inland contrib uted gener.visly to an oily tongued agent and between them bought a car load of oil. The carload of oil is on the sidetrack at Inland and has been there for some time , but the agent has not showed up. Perhaps it would be a good thing for th m to get together and investigate to see whether the bar rels contain oil or water. Boy Injured. While Ray Gantt , the 5-year-old son of Amos Gantt , of Falls City , was rid ing with the man who was delivering coal at his home Sunday afternoon he fell from the wagon , which contained two tons of coal , and the wagon ran over his body. At firts it was thought that he was most seriously injured but upon examination itas found that no bones were broken , but some very se vere bruises sustained. Xarrow Escape. Frank Williams , a blacksmith at WyomJng , had a narrow escape from being instantly killed. He was using a gasoline engine to run some machine over which he as working and un dertook to stop the machine by throw ing the belt off. He had a long gash cut in his face , his right eye was near ly cut out , and his head and arm are badly lacerated. Stella Had Sunday Fire. At an early hour Sunday morning fire was discovered in the Ramsey drug store at Stella , but had gained such headways that nothing could be done only move the goods out of the adjoin ing frame building * on the south. The Sherman Byrley barber shop , G. D. Knapp's drug store and the Moran general merchandise store on the cor ner were destroyrd. Dies Xcar Railroad Track. An inquest v7as held by the coroner on the body o * a man found near the railroad track west of Powell , eight miles west of Fairbury. From papers found on his person it appears that he was E. B Ellis , of Denver , Colo. , and that he v/as an electrician and a mem ber of > labor union of Denver. Fire * at Xebraska City. ET.rly Saturday morning the resi dence , in the western part of Nebraska C'ty , occupied by Leonard Taylor and family was consumed by fire with its contents. The Omaha University. Preliminary to the active work of canvassing for funds for the universi-i ; ty of Omaha. 100 gusts were assembled - ; bled at a dinner at G:30 Monday and1 listened to partial outlines of the uni versity promoters , followed by com ment of some of those present. The plan involves the raising of $200,000 by Omaha citizens and contingent up on the success of that , it was an nounced that $300,000 would be added to it from the educational fund main tained by John D. Rockefeller. 'CAIRO ' BUSINESS HOUSES BtTRX. . Early Morning Blaze Does Damage I Amounting to $30.000. I A fire , doing damage to the extent of about $30,000 , visited Cairo early ' Sunday morning , completely destroy ing the hardware store of McAllister Bros. , the general merchandise store of F. W. Goodrich , J. F. Carland's confectionery and residence rooms oc- j cupied by J. S. Pickett , Charles Omer and Mrs. W. Miller. The fire was discovered at about 3 a. m. and upon investigation it was found that the entire stock of F. W. Good rich was ablaze. An alarm was imme diately sent in and every available per- Hon joined in the effort to extinguish the fire. Bucket brigades pi-evented the spread of the flames to adjacent buildings , though several of the larg est business houses suffered some loss from the effects of the fire. The loss is estimated at about $30- 000 , being only partially covered by insurance. J. F. Garland was serious ly injured while attempting to remove some property from the burning build- ings. HEATHER BOUXD OVER. Irregularity in Obtaining ? tloney Cannes Him Trouble. The preliminary hearing of Audrey J. Heather on a charge of obtaining money under false pretenses , was held at Oxford , Heather , last March , in duced A. W. Vetter to sign a sight draft with him on a Colorado townsite company , and drew $75 expense money from the bank on the strength of the endorsement. The draft was protested and Mr. Vetter was held for the amount. The latter averred that he had not been repaid by Heather , who represented himself as beinff In the employ of the townsite company when he obtained the money. After hearir.g the arguments put up by the prosecution and defense , Justice Briothaupt bound Heather over to dis trict court , which convenes in Febru ary at Beaver City. The defendant was brought to Beaver City from Pue blo , Colo. , a few weeks ago , since which time he has been an inmate of the county jail. HUXGRY 31 AX STOLE BULLtOX. Exportation Offered by One Caught Stealing Metal. An unsuccessful effort to stcar a large disk of bullion , mostly copper , with probably a little gold in it , re- j-ultfd in the capture of one ot the thieves , John Pete , and his being sent to jail in Omaha for fifteen days on the charge of petit larceny. The other man made his escape and it in not known \\hether or not he took any of the mr-tul. Neither of the men knew just what he was stealing , and Pete told the judge in police court Saturday morning that he stole because he was hungry. ' That the bullion was of great value is discounted by the fact that in the larceny complaint filed against Pete by the smelter offici.'ils. gave the value of the metal as $14.50 , although no one knows its exact value , and it is said there was a percentage of gold in the "pig. " KILLED BY A FALL. Colored Man at Holdrege Discovered Dead. Gery Gates , a colored porter in the Palace barber shop in Holdrege , was found at the foot of the stairs leading to the room occupied by him over the shop at o o'clock Monday morning by the night watchman , dead. Phy sicians were at once summoned and reached him before his body was cold and gave it as their opinion that the cause of his death was concussion of the brain , resulting from falling down the stairs. He was found lying flat on his face , with both arms extended and there were bruises over both eyes , indicating that he had struck his head on the way down. Xo inquest is deem ed necessary and none will be held. Farmer Scalded. Henry Stull , a well known farmer residing a few miles northwest of Plattsmouth. while attempting to scald a hog in a large vat of boiling water , accidentally slipped and went into the steaming fluid himself. His hired man tithed him out. The flesh on his left arm to the elbow was badly cooked and his feet and lower limbs were scalded. Fortunately Stull's head was kept above the boiling water or he would certainly have lost the sight of both eyes. Fnrm Hand Inline. W. Rhodes , a farm hand , formerlj from Wall Lake. fa. , who has been working near Trumbull , returned from Hastings and going to the farm of James Campbell , tried to get a gun with the avowed intent of killing him self. He finally wandered into a draw in a cornfield and wont to sleep , where was found. He will be taken before the insanity board , as he has pro- nouncc'l symptoms of insanity. Student Threaten to Strike. The board of trustees of the Grand Island college held a long session over the threatened departure of some of ( I the students , variously estimated from ten upward. The students in question [ have been making much complaint j against the management of President Sutherland. It was the unanimous feeling that President Sutherland was entitled to the continued confidence of the board. \Vttnt Sunday Ball. A petition is being circulated at Wy- inore favoring the Sunday baseball bill , and it is being liberally signed. It is said that a first class ball team will be organized at that place this rprinpr. and in that event the baseball enthusiasts of Wymore are anxious * o have the bill favoring baseball become a law. Hot Brick Starts Fire. In trying to warm their bed Mr. and Mrs. Kovarik. an aged couple living in iSchuyler. put a heated brick in their bed. The brick was very hot and soon had the 1 > 0 > 1 afire. The fire was put out ly neighbors. Deaf .Mute Killed. Word comes to Tecumseh that Judson - son Brown , the deaf mute who was run down and knocked off the track by a Burlington passenger train a mile west of Tecumseh on January 20 , died at St. Elizabeth's hospital , Lincoln. STffllli What Is It That Is "Incompatible " Which with Public Interest" Prevents Action by Congress ? SULZER BILL LONG HELD TIP. Lawmakers May Move at Last to Bring Wreck and Bodies to the Surface. Washington correspondence : What is it that is "incompatible with the public interests" and that prevents the raising of the Maine ? No one can or will answer this be found who can question explicitly. The Maine lies in its bed of mud at the bottom of Ha vana Harbor. Sentiment demands that the vessel be raised and. that the dead be recovered from her hold , but some thing Stronger than sentiment seems to be in the way. Recently the report of Charles E. Magoon , provisional Governor of Cuba , was made public. Mr. Magoon , af tor . referring to navigation , wrote : ' 'Even more important is the fact that this wreck , although it contains the bodies of sixty-three American seamen , or what is left of them , apparently is abandoned and forgotten 1)3' the govern ment and the people of the United States. * * * It has become a na tional reproach and an international scandal. " Representative William Sulzer's bill asking for an appropriation to bring the wreck to the surface and to remove the bodies therein to Arlington Ceme tery , is in the keeping of the House Committee on Xaval Affaire , where it has been for nearly ten months. Sev eral of the committee members are in favor of reporting the bill favorably , bur the majority seems to be held back by som ? shadowy thing of which no one lias or seems to have any substan tial knowledge- . On the tenth anniversary of the de-- stniclion of the Maine. Feb. 15 , lfOS ) , Representative Sulzer introduced a re- elution asking that the Secretary of the Xavy be requested to send to the House as early as possible "all letters and data as to the cost and legal status under which Congress may take imme diate or future action for the removal of the wreck of the United States bat tle ship Maine and provide burial for the dead lying with the hulk in the harbor of Havana. " An amendment to the resolution was suggested. It provided for the inser tion of the clause "if not incompatible with the public interests" after the re quest for information. Perhaps there is nothing incompatible with the public interest in the voting of an appropria tion for the work of bringing the wreck to the surface , but that there is such a reason and that it is holding back the authorities is the theory which it is difficult to drive from the mind of Washington. Appropriation Was Xot Used. The Secretary of the Xavy sent to Congress , in response to the resolution , certain facts concerning the raising of the battle . ship. Congress once appro priated $200,000 , but the work was stopped after a comparatively small amount had been expended , and the balance was returned to the surplus fund. In Cuba the Spanish contingent at tributes the failure to remove the wreck to fear , as Governor Magoon points out. that the work "will disclose the incorrectness of the popular belief that the Maine was destroyed by a tor pedo or mine , instead of an interior explosion. " Certain Americans believe with the Spanish sympathizers in Cuba that the government is afraid to act because an examination of the broken hulk might show "that the Maine de stroyed herself" and that the Spaniards had nothing to do with it. A board of competent men settled to the satisfaction of most people that an "exterior explosion" sent the vessel to the bottom. No one in the service or out of it probably believes that the re port of the ofUcers was not accurate and least of all that a wrong report was turned in intentionally * to lift blame from the shoulders of the officers - cers of the ship. Apparently one must leave the question of the cause of the disaster when seeking the reason , if there be one , why it is not compatible with public interests to bring the ship and its dead to the surface. The records of the Xavy Department show that 231 men were killed when tLe Maine was destroyed ; that twenty- four bodies were recovered immediate ly and buried at Key West , Fla that 144 bodies were recovered afterward and buried in Havana , but later brought home for interment in the na tional cemetery at Arlington. The bed ies of sixty-three sailors of the Maine never were recovered or accounted for , and it is supposed that they are enV tombed with the wreck in the mud of \ Havana harbor. " A The Xebraska State Railway Commis sion has issued an order which will have the effect of compelling railroad compa nies of the State to install telephones in all stations whenever patrons make the request , to be maintained bv the rail roads. There are between 900 and 1,000 stations in Nebraska.