. . : . , 'f , . . ; .1 Democrat i . ' ' ; " . , " , . . . t ' . ' VAIiENTEVE ; , NEB. 1 ! . : , ' r. ) r" . ,1 i " ' L 3 ! . RICE , - - - , - Publisher i/ ' l " , ' f . ! ! il l ( 100 PEfiSOKS PERISH 1 . ; / TWO STEAMERS COLLIDE IN THE d ! f - . SEA OF CHINA. ( iiti ti ! t . ' Majority of Those Aboard Caught in Their Berths Without Warning- Sixty-Five Rescued Practically from the Jaws of Sharks. r Singapore : The mail steamer : La Seyne , ' of the Messageries Martimes service , running between Java and Singapore , and on her way to this port , was in collision early Sunday morning with the steamer Onda , of the British- India , line , and sank within two min- utes. Seven European passengers , in- cluding Baron and Baroness Geniszky , , the captain of the La Seyne , five Euro pean officers and 88 others , comprising native passengers and members of the crew , were drowned. The accident occurred about 4 o'clock in the morning in a thick haze. The vessels were steaming at good speed and the Seyne was cut almost in half. There was no time for panic . . i . nor for any attempt on the part of the officers of the foundering steamer to get out the boats. The majority of those on board were caught in their " berths and carried down with the ves- sel. The force of the collision brought . the Onda to almost a dead stop and her engines were at once slowed and . boats lowered. The rescue work proved thrilling for not only were the res- cuing parties impeded by the darkness , . but shoals of sharks were already attacking those clinging to pieces of wreckage in the water. Sixty-one per- sons from the ill-fated steamer were I' finally dragged into the boats and brought by the Onda to this port. Many of them had been bitten by sharks and several are severely injured. . TO STOP WORK TWO WEEKS. Big Strike Planned on Day A. F. of L. , Officers Are Locked Up. Philadelphia Pa. : Plans for a gen- eral strike by wage workers through- out the country for two weeks begin- ning on the day the officers of the American Federation of Labor are im- prisoned for contempt of court were in- augurated here Sunday at a meeting of the central labor union. Resolutions to this effect were unani mously adopted by the union which \ represents about 75,000 workers in many lines of employment in this city. - Copies of the resolutions were sent to the American Federation of Labor , now ' in session in Toronto , Can. , and it .1 . was decided to appoint a committee of five in this city to perfect plans by . which organized and unorganized wage workers would unite to make the - strike effective. Subway Work Begins. New York : Chairman ' Wilcox of the public service commission. Saturday turned the first earth with a silver shovel to inaugurate the beginning of the Fourth avenue subway which will cross the new Manhattan : : bridge to Brooklyn and then proceed through Fourth avenue to South Brooklyn. . No New Cardinal. Rome : The plan to create a new .American cardinal has been aban doned , partly on account of the claims , advanced by Latin-America and Can ada and partly because of the difficul ty in selecting an American prelate ' who would be agreeable to the major it ) ' . I ; Many Indorse Movement. II i 1 . New York Announcement : was : made that distinguished men and wom J ) en are behind a movement to raise * . ! $2,500,000 before February 22 next for ! 0 i " a George Washington memorial build I , , ing Washington , D. C. 'I ' , John G. Carlisle III. , New York : John G. Carlisle , who iVas secretary of the treasury under President Cleveland , was reported i \ Sunday as resting more comfortably at St. Vincent's hospital where he lie ? , seriously ill with acute intestinal trou ; hIes. Telegraph Service in Mexico. Chihuahua , Mex. : Gov. Creel an- . :1 : nounced that the Mexican government , I : , in order to get better communication , ! with northern Mexico , has ordered tele ! graph lines builfinto several remote : , regions. 1/ / Ii . , ' Czolgoz's Brother Dead. i : I Aberdeen , Wash. : Frank . Czolgosz. \ i aged 40 , brother of Leon Czolgosz. as- ! sassin of McKinley , is dead of heart I disease. - . - . Sioux City Live Stock Market. Sioux City : Saturday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market fol low : Grass steers , $5.00@5.75. Top hogs , $7.95. ' Lake Steamers Collide. 1 Sault Ste. Marie , Mich. : The steam 1 er Charles Weston of Tonawanda , N. Y. , was beached on the Canadian shore I of White Fish bay Lake Superior , af I ter a collision with the steamer Ward a Ames , of Duluth. , Mail Robbers Held Guilty. Omaha , Neb. : A verdict of guilty was brought in against the five de- 1 : fendants in. ' the Union Pacific lUAU i v robbery case on . all counts. tia , _ i . . a r . ' - \ ' : r:7" " . , . . ' : " . , , --:7" : . . , ; ' , \ . ' " l . , ' ' . .f" " ' " M POWER RIGHTS CONSERVED. Ballinger Holds Back 8,000 Acres of Public Land in West. Washington , D. C. : Secretary Bal- linger issued an order for the con : servation of the water power rights on public lands. Without waiting for de cisive legislation to learn what will eventually be done with many lands valuable for water power , the secre- tary withdrew from disposition more than 8,000 acres of such land located in western states. This land now being in the public domain will probably be affected bj legislation to be enacted during the next congress. Until congress decides just what is to be done with the land and the terms upon which it is to be utilized the secretary will keep a tight hold upon it. BOMBS FAIL TO EXPLODE. Lord and Lady Minto Have Narrow . Escapes from Death. Ahmedabad , British India : Lord Minto , the viceroy of India , and Lady Minto had a narrow escape from be- ing killed by bombs. They were driv- ing through one of the streets , when without warning two bombs were thrown at their carriage. A dragoon , who was riding alongside , spurred for. ward , and with outstretched sabre in- tercepted the first bomb , hurling it some little distance away into a sand pile. The second bomb struck the vice- roy's jemidar , a native lieutenant hold- ing an umbrella over Lady Minto , and fell harmlessly to the ground. Neither , bomb exploded , as the soft sand acted as a buffer. On examination they were found to contain picric acid. BONES OF PRIMEVAL MAN. Important I Find in Prehistoric Burying Ground in Ohio. Ashtabula , 0. : Prehistoric burying grounds which may rival the famous Great Serpent mound near Cincinnati , were discovered at Point Park hill , near here , when workmen unearthed the complete skeleton of a primeval man. man.The The skeleton , according to Dr. F. D. Snyder , a scientist and member of the International Geographic society , shows .marked deviations from that of the present day human being. The fe- mur is curved like that of the ape , the tibia is flat at the joint and the hu- merus has a perforation no longer found. The skull slopes back and the lower jaw protrudes. K. of L. Elect : Officers. . Washington , D. C. : With the elec tion of officers and the selection of Washington as the place for holding its next annual meeting the conven- tion of the Knights of Labor was brought to a close. The following of- ficers were chosen : General master workman , Simon Burns of Pittsburg , Pa. : general worthy foreman , P. J. McCarthy : , of Boston ; general secre- tary and treasurer : . Frank O'Meara , Washington , D. C. , and national or- ganizer , Thomas H. Canning of Bos- ton. Fight Duel with Pitchforks. Laporte , Ind. : In a pitchfork duel between Clarence Benninghoff and John W. Rank , farmers. Benninghoff received injuriea which probably will prove fatal. His body is a mass of wounds inflicted by the fork Rank wielded. The men have been enemies ' for years. Rank is under arrest. Insane I Arkansas Governor to Return. Little Rock , Ark. : Gov. John S. Lit- tle , who was taken from the governor's office three hours after his inaugura- tion three years ago has returned to Little Rock , accompanied by his son and physician , and will enter the state hospital for the insane. He has been in a sanitarium at St. Joseph since October , 1908. ' Many Coreans Slain by Japs. Victoria , B. C. : According to mail advices from Corea there is great ac tivity in the campaign against Corean insurgents and during the operations in i October in Chollado 334 are said to have been killed and 1,065 captured. The Japanese loss was only three killed. Legal Limit Halts Two Trains. Alton , Ill. : Two crews on Wabash axtra trains after completing the legal limit , of sixteen hours' work aban- doned their trains near here and went to sleep in the cabooses. A special train from here pushed the two stalled trains into Alton , where _ new crews took 'eharge of them. Motor Bus Kills Rich Woman. New York : Mrs. Frank C. Jones , vife of a New York capitalist and daughter of the late George B. Lamar , a New York banker was run down and killed by a Fifth ' avenue motor bus. She was on her way to a bank and had $2- 000 in her purse. Texas Drought Broken. El Paso TeA drought of seveml months' duration has been broken by snow and rain. The heaviest rain in two years fell in western Texas. Castro to Live in Malaga. t Santander , Spain : Sipriano Castro , ( ex-president of Venezuela , will go to [ : Malaga ; there to reside permanently. t Lightning Kills Flying Ducks. Chillicothe , Mo. : During a heavy : ain lightning killed a flock of ducks t flying over the home of Jacob Bruner , L few miles south of this city. Bruner walked into his yard : and picked up 46. Robbed-by Two Highwaymen. Salt Lake City Utah : Two masked highwaymen held up a hotel at Mid- vale , near here , and robbed ' ten smel- ter employes of pay chfecks and cash aggregating $600. . . , , . . , , . l' . . . 4 r . -I " - < * . - - . 4 . 7 SEVEN TO PLEAD GUILTY. Indicted Wyoming Cattlemen Will Ac ceptPrison Terms. Lincoln , Neb. : A Journal special ? from Basin , Wyo. , says : The seven cattlemen indicted for the killing of three sheepmen will enter pleas of guilty and accept prison sen- tences as the result . of an agreement . . . entered into here. ' Herbert Brink , con- victed of murder in the first degree will be granted a second trial , allowed to plead guilty and receive a life sen tence. George Sabin and Milton Alex- ander will each receive twenty-year sentences , and Eaton and Dixon will escape with three years each. Two others accused of complicity in the killings , but who confessed to the grand jury and turned state's evidence are to be given their freedom. CANADIAN CONGRESS OPENS. Second Session of Eleventh Parlia ment Called to Order. Ottawa , Ont. : The second session of the eleventh parliament of Canada was opened by Earl Grey. The general interest which exists in Canada in the new American tariff was indicated by i the fact that R. L. Borden , leader of the opposition , asked if the govern- ment had any correspondence bearing upon' it. Finance Minister Fielding said the government had no corre- spondence on the matter and held that it would be _ improper for it to take any action until the United States govern- ment had decided how the Payne tariff law will be applied against Canada. Norway's Cabinet to Resign. Christiania : As the result of the general election going against the gov- ernment , Premier Knudsen announced that at the session of parliament in January his cabinet will resign. The totalsvof > the election , which have just been revised show that the Rightests and Liberals , who coalesced , won sixty- I three seats , as forty-sevco for the Left , or governmental party. The Socialist got eleven seats. Seek to Remove Oleo Tax. Chicago : A campaign of education looking to the removal of the tax on oleomargarine was planned at a meet- ing of the executive committee of the National Live Stock exchange. It is held that oleo is a product of the cow , the same as butter and should receive the same consideration as butter. "Museum Thief" Rearrested. Columbus , 0 . : Clarendon Henri , the man known as the "museum . thief , " was arrested at the gates of the peni tentiary by an officer from Washing ton , D. C. , who afterwards took him before the United States commission- er. Henri completed four-year : sen- tence for stealing a valuable painting from a Cincinnati art gallery. . Not Piano Maker's Widow. New York : Through a hasty aitf in- correct identification a woman who committed suicide in New York was described as "Mrs. : : Marie L. Estey , widow of a widely known piano manu- facturer. " Investigation shows that the victim in reality was Mrs. Marie L. Estey , a dressmaker of this city. Pope Receives Mrs. Bowen. Rome : Pope Pius received in pri vate audience Mrs. Bowen , sister of Archbishop Ryan , of Philadelphia. The ' pope expressed his pleasure at receiv ing Mrs. Bowen and inquired about the archbishop , in whom he showed great interest. The pope sent Archbishop Ryan his apostolic blessing. To Mrs. Bowen the pontiff presented his photo- graph bearing his signature. Woman Buys Shiloh House. The sale of the late John Alexander Dowie's fine residence at Zion City , known as Shiloh house , and its fine brick barn to Mrs. Emma C. Gring , wife of a railroad official living at Newport ] , Pa. , is practically completed. She pays 2-1,000 : , which is only a frac - tion of what the building cost. Winnipeg Terminus of St. Paul. Winnipeg. Man. : The St. Paul road will extend its northwestern lines in'to Winnipeg next year. The road will be brought north from Fargo , cutting midway between the Casselton branch and the main line of the Great North ern into Grand Forks. From there it will run west to Larimore and from there north Winnipeg. . Big Distillery Burns. Cincinnati , 0. : The immense plant of the Union Distilling company , known as the Edgemont Springs dis ] tillery , at Carthage , a suburb of this city : , was almost completely destroyed by fire. The loss is estimated at be tween $250,030 and $ OOOOO ; fully in- sured. : , Tramp Pays $50 for Supper. Kew n'e. 111. : Fiftj dollars in bill ] was in a letter received by Mrs. Frank 4 H" [ Davis , from a fa t p fo whom she 1 KIVP supper ton jears : ago. The letter ' is : signed siuipH"Thn ) Tramp , " but ] tells : that thf writer now is in comfort. j able circumstances at Cripple Creek , Zbyszko and Gotch Matched. : Buffalo , N. Y. : It is announced that i the wrestling match for the world's t championship } between Frank Gotch J and Zbyszko , the Polish champion , will ( take place in Buffalo on Thanksgiving ( Hitchcock Favors Hayward. Washington , D. C. : It is believed that Postmaster General Hitchcock " will ask for the appointment of Wm. : : Hayward , of Nebraska secretary the republican national committee , ( as first assistant postmaster general Washington. . Wants Jews ' Disfranchised. f Odessa : The municipal council has j petitioned Emperor Nicholas to dis- i franchise the Jewish : voters. j . . , : . , . , " . \ . ' . ' . . . - . _ w , . ' - * , 4r f st . fi . . . T $ : , l , ; S " _ _ _ _ _ , , f , . . , r * $ , . . . , . , # : i - , , . r , , . ' > , 'I' w NEBRASKA STATE NEWS , E- ' 1 , " t - . : r fHl f : - _ _ _ _ News of the Week = : r ; t t " in Concise Form 'IV ii' 'IVI , -I ie'- ' ie'f i . . 4 7. . 7. . 7. . 7 1 71 71 71 71 * ' BLEACHED FLOUR EXPERTS. _ Nebraska University Men to Testify ; In Des Moines. The board of regents of the Univer- sity of Nebraska detailed Chancellor Avery and Prof. Alway , of the depart- ment of agricultural chemistry , to go to Des Moines , la. , to give expert testi- mony in the coming test trial of bleached flour cases. Chancellor Avery , who was for years at the head of the chair of chemistry in the uni rslty , is the pioneer in- vestigator of the bleached flour pro- cess , and will testify that the process of bleaching is non-injurious , thereby taking issue with Secretary Wilson , of the agricultural department at Wash ington. Prof. Ahvay is understood to hold the same views as the chancellor. CORX A GOOD AVERAGE.V Average Yield Per Acre Reduced Beu cause of Adverse Conditions. The corn crop of Nebraska for the year 1909 is not nearly so bad as it might have been. The acreage this year was 6,477,282 , against 6,339,019 in 1908 ; the average yield per acre was 28.17 bushels in 1908 , and 25.7 this year. The yield this year was 169- 179,137 bushels , against 178,599,789 last year. The average yield per acre this year was reduced not because of a general reduction over the state , but merely in the southwest section , confined to a small area. In the North Platte coun- try the yield per acre was the largest in the history of the state , surpassing he 1908 yield. ' LINCOLN MAY BE DRY. Clubs Dispensing Liquor Likely : to Be Forced Out of Business. City Attorney Flansburg has asked that the temporary injuncton granted Lincoln clubs permitting them to dis- pense liquor be dissolved. These in- junctions were secured pending the settlement of a test case involving the right of clubs to dispense liquor with- out a license , which the supreme court dismissed. The city attorney urges that there is no basis for the injunctions. If his plea is granted Lincoln will be "dry- no liquor now being sold or dispensed except in the clubs. FIGHT OVER HENRY REWARD. Deputy Sheriff Flannagan and Mrs. Palniatier Both Claim Money. A fight for the state reward of $200 offered for the capture of Frank Hen- ry , of Douglas county , who shot nis wife some time ago , is on before Gov. Shallenberger. Ira Flannagan , a dep- uty sheriff , and Mrs. Charles Falma- tier , of Florence , are the rival claim- ants. Mrs. Palmatier says Henry came to her house and she immediately went to the police station to inform , the po lice. In the meantime , she says , the deputy sheriff "butted in" and arrest- ed Henry. She thinks , however , she is entitled to all the money. Girl and Money Disappear. George Bennett , a farmer youth from Hayes Center , with the aid of the police , is hunting for Mamie Arm- strong who failed to meet him at the court house in Omaha , to conclude a brief but fervent love affair and inci- dentally he is searching for $1,000 in currency which he entrusted to her keeping as a testimonial of his good I faith. ] 1 Cattle Stealing Charged. .J Complaint was filled in the county court at Lexington against George Watson and Earl York , charging them ( with unlawfully appropriating to their , own use and benefit two head of cattle belonging to ; Lew Hock. Each fur- nished bonds and was released from custody until November 23. J a. Otter and Minks. : S L. F. Hilsinger began trapping : for e muskrats and mink this mnoth around I Herman and has sold 65 muskrat and - . mink skins. He has found some good ; otter signs close to the river and has ( ordered traps , and fully expects to , . . catch an otter before many days. - , f . . Reveler Must Face : a Jury. Roy Parker , charged with shooting ! 1 17-year-old Ralph Bishop at a Hal- lowe'en celebration on the night of I . . * October 30 , with intent to do great : ; bodily injury , was brought into county : court at Broken : Bow for preliminary : i hearing. He was held to the grcl1l ! jury. Thomas Himbarger of Wymore. charged with assaulting his brother- in-law , William Lumbard with intent r to : commit murder , in county court at 'J Beatrice pleaded guilty to tho charge } of assault and was sentenced to thirty" days in jail. in . Beatrice Girl Tries Suicide. Miss May Au'stin. bookkeeper for the Jonz Automobile company at Beatrice . shot . herself through the right side just A below the breast , supposedly with sui- to cidal intent. " Plymouth ; Man Frcnd Dead. - John C. Stroh , of Plymouth. was found dead at the hrme of /his son John C. Stroh , in West EeatricV. where ? he had been visiting last few da . .s. f ; Heart : trouble was the cause of death. tl > ' . - . ON TRAIL OF LIQUOR MEN. Suits Brought Against Two Omaha Hotels. . The decision of the Nebraska su preme court sustaining the 8 o'clock closing law has thrown a bomb Into the camp of the liquor dealers and I . their followers ] , and at the same time 'it has created a feeling of assurance among those who are anxious for the enforcement of law and order. Shortly after the news of the court decision reached Omaha , a meeting of the Personal Rights league was called , and practically at the same time the Liquor Dealers' association went into executive session , both con- tinuing behind closed doors for sev eral hours. The Anti-Saloon league at Omaha filed complaints against the Rome and the Henshaw hotels , two of the larg- est in the city charging them with unla wfull ' selling liquor. More than a hundred witnesses are named , and it is alleged that almost daily illegal sales have been made since July 1. ROBBERS NEARLY LIBERATED. Daring Attempt Maile to Free Men : Held in Omaha Jail. The first sensation of the trial of the five men charged with the robbery of the Union " Pacific's "Overland Limit- ed" train at Mud Cut , May 22 last , came Wednesday ' : in the announcement that a daring and almost successful attempt to liberate the prisoners was discovered Wednesday night at the county jail in Omaha. When found tho rbars and plates of the : cage where the men are kept : had been sawed until a very little more work would have opened the way to freedom. On the top of the cage were found two long heavy iron bars , evi dently intended for use in prying loose the bars' ' in the outer windows of the jail and a long rope by which the men could have reached the ground. Two saws with which the cutting of the cage was done , were found hid- den in the broom. - TWO KILLED IN OMAHA. Negro Murdered at Door of Home bj Robbers - Burglar Slain. Two men were shot and killed early Wednesday in different parts of Oma- ha. . James L. Gaines , president and man- ager of the Masconomo club , a negro organization , was shot and killed at oh his own door as he arrived home at 1 o'clock , and $400 in money and a 1d diamond stud are said to have been taken ! . from his person. Charles Story , a white man , recently discharged from the Nebraska peni- tentiary , was shot and killed by Will- iam i Smith a negro , while trying to break into the latter's room. Smith fired through the door. rrome- Jndc Rcyiyals. Instead of paying $1,000 for the services of some noted evangelist to conduct revival meetings and addition- al expenses of at least $500 , Rev. Alex- ander Bennett , pastor of the Methodist church at York , has begun a series of revival meetings , introducing new and attractive features that is interesting hundreds who attend and will result . ' . in many conversions. Locked-Up Babies Burned. Agnes , 1 year ; of age , Annie , 3 daughters of Joseph and Mary Zida- rick , of Omaha , burned to death while their mother had gone to get fuel to .keep them warm and Rose , 4 years of age , the eldest child was terribly burned , as a result of a fire that broke out in the home where the children were left asleep in their bed. Rose will recover. . I Hastings Couple Elope. Erskine G. Fellers , formerly assist- ant electrician of Hastings eloped Sunday morning with Miss Goldie Al exander : for the second time within a little more than a year. His former -.vife was the only witness of their sud- den departure. Itg ! supposed the couple : has gone to Chicago to be mart . ried. j jt s Boy ; Starts Prairie Fire. t A spectacular prairie fire occurred about seven miles south of Broken , Bow : near the farm of V.'ill : Fre - . It is c said ' , to have originated ' with a small f boy aril l a mulch. The boy was bUrn- c ing a bunch t/f drie'l grn > s and the a lire got beyond : his ' * . < ntrol. w c Five People CJo Crazy. Five people in Buffalo county were arraigned before tho insanity cQmIJ missioners during forty-eight hours. l' Three were taken to the asylum at I Hastings and the other two. man and f , wife , now afait the verdict of the t : insanity commission. The mipreme court Tuesday handed 11 down : a decision reversing the finding n of the lower courts in the case of Mrs. fi Alma Shevalier , of Lincoln sentenced E o the penitentiary ( for five years after b "being fount guilty of perjury , and a go new trial is ordered. u Pioneer Dead. w By the death of Christian Henry wA. LTenck , who died suddenly of heart g failure , there has been l removed from i + the " stage of activity at Grand : Island l . f I : , , ' . n , SJ Game Warden Guilus has returned to Lincoln from a trip over the state , where he has been planting fish. H placed fish as follows : .Blue rivei above the dam at Milford , 1,500 crap- pies , cat and yellow bullheads ; St Michael slough at Milford , 1,500 crap county , 500 black bass and crappie ; Pleasanton lake , near Ravenna , 605 black bass ; Victoria creek near , . . An- selmo , 600 black bass ; Jambog pond , Ashton , 400 sunfish ; Swan lake , Cher- ry county , 800 black bass , crappie , 500 rock bass ; Big creek , 500 trout ; North Loup near Brownlee , 500 rainbou trout ; Twin lakes near Hyannis , 600 bass ; Tsump lake , 500 black bass ; Spring lake near Gering , 500 blach bass ; Irrigation lake near Minatare , 500 black bass , 500 cat. The bass are J 5 months old and measure from 3 tc . . .r - 4' 5 Inches length ; crappie , the same age J and measure from 3 to 4 inches ; the catfish are from 6 to 8 inches irf length and are 1 year old. The game warden put 500 bull frogs 2 years old in Swan lake. , . . . * . * Attorney General Thomson has filed in i the federal court in Lincoln an an swer to the allegations of the North western railroad in its attack upor the legality of the 2-cent fare law and the other railroad legislation enacted by the legislature of 1907. In deny ing i the allegations of the railroad thai the 2-c < , nt fare law had caused a loss of revenue to the corporations the an- swer alleges the fact to be that the railroads have made more money un der that law than they did make un- der a rate of 3 cents a mile when passes were in vogue. The answei sets out that the railroads did not re ceive 3 cents a mile per passenger prior to 1907 , but received during the year ending June , 1907 , not more than 2.216 cents per passenger per mile. In that same year the railroads receiveO $ . j'gross revenue per passengei train mile , where , during the fi.sca' : year ending June , 1909 $1.536 revenue per passenger train mile , an Increase of 8.4 per cent. . * * " Gov. Shallenberger and Secretary o.- " State Junkin have signed a contract . ' for the establishment at the state pen \ I itentiary of a factory for the manu- facture of shirts for laborers. This i contract is with a Chicago firm in which it is said there are some Omahn people interested. It provides for z , payment of 62 % cents a day for the convicts , the state to furnish heat , . light and power. The firm furnishes a superintendent and its own ma- chines. It also agrees to furnish shirts . to the Inmates of state institutions at xactly cost of making and material . . The firm also contracts to sell its out- put outside of the state. * : * * : Adjt. Gen. John C. Hartington ha received special permission from the war department at Washington to per- " , - mit Lieut. Col. W. Edmond Baehr First regiment , Nebraska National / Guard , of Omaha , to attend the Unitec States army garrison at Fort Crook A limited number of national guards men from the different states is al- lowed by the government to attend military post schools and a money al- lowance l is made them in accordance with their rank. Lieut. Col. Baehr wiK . receive an allowance of about $80 a month for a school term limited to sia months. : * * 9 ' Secretary of State Junkin is goins after owners of automobiles who are delinquent with their annual license fee of $1. Some of the delinquents the secretary of state has declared can- _ _ _ celled ] and anyone desiring a low num- ber for a machine may get one by ap plying early to the secretary and pay- ing up the money due. Those who are in arrears on th ' ir ] license fee will be arrested just as soon as caught Cun ning ! machine on a license which has run out. These names are now be- ing : copied and will be certified short- ly to the various county sheriffs. * : * : s City Attorney Flansberg has offi cially informed the members of the Lincoln : city council that they cannot legally enter Into contract with the city : and sell it goods. This opinion came : up as a result of the action of Alderman Hoppe in selling hardware to the city. Councilman Hardy ob- jected to the payment of the bill and the city attorney was asked to decido the question , and he did. . * * : * Fred J. Kinyon , chairman of the county : board of Lancaster county , died following an operation for appendi- citis. : He was stricken ! several days ago. He did not 'rally. ! ! He leaves a widow. He has been a member of the county < board six years. * s * Fred G. Koester er , lieutenant in com- pany D , First Nebraska , has sent his resignation to Adjt. Gen. Hartigan. Lieut. Koester has moved from Nor folk , the' home of the company and that was his reason for resigning. * * . Capt. G. B. Boggs. of Hastings , com- manding ( Company D , Second regi- ment , Nebraska National Guard has , filed his resignation with Adjt. Gen. Hartigan. The resignation has not been accepted. Gen Hartigan will \ o to Hastings to Investigate the sit- uation. " * . Chester Daniel French , the sculptor , who Is to construct the monument to . A-braham Lincoln on the state house grounds , has telegraphed that he wilj. e In Lincoln . during thismonth. . .J' ' j . - r