PHE NORFOLK WEEKLY NEWS-JORURNALJ FRIDAY JULY. 20. 1907. SOUTH CAROLINA SENATOR MAY JAB DOLLIVER. IN WAYNE SPEECH THURSDAY "Pitchfork" Ben Tlllman Will 'Deliver anvAddress at the Wayne Chautau- qua Thursday Afternoon at 3 O'clock on the Race Question. Wayne , Nob. , July 23. Will United States Senator Ben Tlllman of South Carolina , better known as "Pitchfork" Tlllninn , take occasion In his speech here Thursday afternoon to pierce Sen ator Dolllver of Iowa with a number of pointed arguments on the race ques tion ? That Is the question which Is just now Interesting people planning to attend the Wayne Chautauqua on that afternoon to hear the celebrated senator lecture. Senator Tlllman will speak primar ily on the race question. Incidentally he may turn his attention to Dolllver In reply to an address recently deliv t > ered by the Iowa statesman contra dicting statements of the South Carolina lina speaker. At that time It was re ported that Tlllman issued a challangc to Dolllver for a duel. Norfolk people can come to Wayne on the'afternoon train Thursday and return home In the evening , getting back to Norfolk at 7:37. : TUESDAY TOPICS. Miss Glen Evans left this morning \ f' for a week's visit to Broken Bow. Dr. R. C. Simmons Is In Nlobrara. He Will return to Norfolk next Friday. TJ Attorneys Jack Koenlgsteln and M. C. Hazen were IpiMadlson Tuesday af ternoon. Miss Pickering of Clinton , Iowat. , ar rived In Norfolk at noon , the guest of Mrs. S. M. Braden. , ' Charles Helnhardt of Council Bluffs and C. Wolf of Omaha have come to Norfolk to work for C. H. Krahn. W. J. Stadelman , general manager of the new Independent telephone com pany , returned to Norfolk at noon from Lincoln. C. H. Groesbeck , president of the Norfolk driving club , went to Wlsner and Pllger Tuesday noon to advertise the big Norfolk racing meet. Mr. and Mrs. August Gehm of Mar- celllne , Mo. , are In Norfolk on a two weeks' visit with relatives. Mr. Gehm Is an engineer on the Sante Fe. Mr. and Mrs. From and daughter , Miss Dorothy , of Omaha , are guests at the home of Mrs. M. Elliot , before leaving for a visit with friends at Ne- ligh. ligh.H. H. V. Evans and family leave the latter part of the week for Lincoln to bo with Mr. Evans' parents who are to come from their home in Delaware for a visit In Lincoln with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Selcke , who have spent the past few months In Norfolk with their daughter , Mrs. C. C. Wehrer left Norfolk Tuesday for an extended visit to Germany Mr. and Mrs. Slecke started for Germany last spring but were compelled to abandon the trip at New York on account of Mr. Selcke's 111 health. Now they are starting again on their journey to Ger many and southern Europe. Frank Peterson of near Wlnterset , Iowa , father of the Iowa , boy who start ed out to see the new west but whose trip was stopped in Norfolk , arrived Jn Norfolk Tuesday noon to accom pany his son back to the Iowa farm to which the young man now seems quite willing to return. Young Peterson with $70 in his pocket set out to take up a claim in the west. He was stopped In Norfolk by the officers who noted the young fellow's Inexperience with the ways of the world. J. Hershelser Is. In O'Neill. A , Klngsley was in from Stanton yesterday. J. C. Stitt was In Plainvlew during the afternoon. Myron Whitney of Randolph was In Norfolk yesterday. Dr. H. S. Overocker is In Battle Creek on business. Mrs. P. C. Marsh of Fender Is a t Norfolk visitor today Mrs. Mary Marten of Crofton was In Norfolk yesterday. E. Agler of Wayne was In Norfolk yesterday on business. R. C. Thomson of Randolph was In the city lasts evening. James Poole was In Madison yester day afternoon on business. Mrs C. W. Landers and children are home from a visit to Genoa. F. Eaton of Crelghton was in Nor folk between trains yesterday. J. H. Farlln and U. D. Mathews o Madison are In Norfolk today. John Pearson of Ponca was In Nor folk for a few hours yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. I. M. Macy are homo from a visit at Belle Plaine , Iowa. Mrs. Robert Eccles and Mrs. Fred Koerbef are In Hot Springs , S. D. John R. Mundy of Wayne was In Norfolk yesterday enrouto to Denver E. Malcom and George T. Malcom of Callaway stopped In Norfolk yes terday. Mrs. Henry Torpin and Mrs. C. H Torpln of Oakdalo were in Norfoll yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Weutherby re turned last evening from a week's vis Jit In Omaha. 1 Mrs. Hand and brother , Leste Weaver , leave tomorrow on a visit to Armour , S. D. Mrs. L. E. Scofleld of Freeport , 111 has arrived In Norfolk on an extended visit with her son. Arthur Krahn has gone to Chlcag to enter the Croonborg cutting school , where ho will spend the next two months. Miss Arvlllo Morris of Seattle , who B the guest of Mrs. Apfel , Is In Uazlllc Mills on a short visit. E. E. Cartney of Fremont and Mrs. J. Carlney and Miss Evu Cartney of Tllden were In Norfolk yesterday , caving at noon for Denver. Dr. C. C. Johnson of Crelghton was \mong the first physicians to arrive n Norfolk to attend the meeting of ho Elkhorn Valley Medical society. J. C. Blcknell was In Nellsh yestcr- lay assisting one of his salesmen In i big piano sale at that point. Mrs. Blcknell accompanied her husband. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Greene are In S'orfolk arranging to have their house- old goods shipped to Plnlnvlow , vhure they have made their homo for evoral weeks past. Dr. C. S. Parker will leave Thurs- lay for Minneapolis to attend the ses- Ion of the National Association of Dental Examiners and the clinics of he National Dental society. Mrs. E. M. Van Patten of Fort Dodge , lown , Is here visiting her sis- er , Mrs. E. M. Huntlngton. She has been , with her husband , for an outing it Manltou , Col. , and Is now on her vay homo. Gentry Bros. , dog and pony show vas the attraction In Sioux City yes- erday. Miss Emma Wetzel Is on a short acatlon from her work in the A. L. Gillian store. The Sailer Coal & Grain company are 'installing a fine new scale at their office on Norfolk avdnue. S. T. Napper , who Is at present de- iverlnff live stock to the government at Indian agencies , will not finish the ask for another month. C. E. Cole , a student at the Norfolk business college has accepted the position of stenographer with the firm of W. J. Gow and brother. Mike Mullen has sold his residence on Pierce street in South Norfolk to Charles Bennett , who recently moved o Norfolk from Long Pine. Mosquitoes on the prairies of the losebud reservation are working again this summer with wonted vigor on cool cloudy days or in low spots vhere matted grass has become damp. in swarms of countless numbers the ittle insects alight upon travelers and Iterally eat them up. Mosquito bar about the face and gloved hands are essential to comfort at times. Rev. John M. Hines , pastor of the Second Congregational church of Nor folk , and Miss Mable R. Hare of Cort- and , N. Y. , will be married on Wed nesday , August 7 , the ceremony pccurlng at Cortland , which is Mr. fllnes' former home. Mr. Hines eaves Norfolk the first of next week on his summer vacation. He will return to Norfolk with his bride dur- ng the early part of September. A huge mastodon's tooth picked up : wenty miles west of Long Pine was jrought to Norfolk on the morning train by C. O. McDannel. Mr. McDan nel 1ms been out west of that place near the Northwestern gravel pit and in walking along the track found the big tooth. He says that he was of fered $25 for it but preferred to keep It. Four of the same teeth , he said , liave been found In that section. Mr. McDannell brought the tooth to Nor folk to learn just what type of remnant - nant It is. Dallas News : The allotting crew are now in camp on the Cottonwood on the west line of Trlpp county. The allotting in Trlpp county is nearly completed. The difficulties of allot ting are many. The full blooded Indian - dian cares very little for land and will not exert himself In the least to se lect an allotment. The new law with reference to the making of allotments requires that the family record be made complete of every applicant for allotment. This makes it necessary that every Indian como In and be counted and as they are not inclined to come In the work of allotting Is con sequently slow. The Beuser-Faucett company , the company Incorporated to control the mall sack clasp lock Invented by Post master Benser of Hosklns and M. M. Faucett of Norfolk , has made arrange ments to have their lock brought be fore the attention of the government. S. Marks of the Security Business Co. of St. Joseph was In Norfolk over Sunday and arranged to represent the new company In their eastern nego tiations with the government and par ticularly with the postoffice depart ment. If the postmaster general ap proves the "Norfolk lock" the lock will be riveted to millions of government mall sacks over the land and the In ventors will stand to become wealthy. Mr. Marks will leave In about a week on his eastern trio to investigate con ditions and Interest the government in adopting the new lock for which great convenience Is claimed. A few days behind the Northwest ern the Milwaukee track layers com pleted the laying of the last steel rail on the new extension from Chamber lain to Rapid City and that town can now boast of four railroads to the east. There still remains the work of ballasting the track from there to the Cheyenne Tiver , but a largo crew of men are being pushed at this work and the gravel pits are being stripped at the rate of two carloads every six minutes. The steam shovel which was working on the other side of the river has been transferred and Is now en gaged In the work of completing the roadbed. It Is officially given outtha barring unforseen accidents the Milwaukee waukeo will establish Its regular pas senger service to Chamberlain on Aug ust 15 , the same day that the North western Commences regular service to Pierre over Us new extension. GEORGE E. SCHILLER IS CONTEM PLATING IT. MIGHT USE SUGAR FACTORY 'roprletor ' of the Oxnnrd Hotel Here Is Considering the Launching of n Twenty-flve Car Circus for the Sea. | son of 1908. ( From Tuesday's Dnlly. ] A twenty-live car circus may become - come a Norfolk Institution , and In case the tleal Is consummated an at- cmpt may bo made to secure the old igar factory building for housing the nstltutlon. George 13. , Schiller , pro H-letor of the Oxniml hotel In Nor- 'oik ' , Is very seriously considering the natter of launching the circus enter- irlse. Mr. Schiller has for some weeks icon contemplating the purchase of a good sized railroad circus and says hat In case ho carries out his plan he horses and animals and workmen , vlth tents and wagons and other par- apliornalla , will be brought to Norfolk as the winter headquarters. Robert Schiller , his brother , has had much experience in the circus business and inderstands the successful operation of such an Industry. Norfolk during its lifetime has been he , home of one circus. The old Hurl- bert & Leftwlch circus made winter iwidquarters hero for several years , islng the building now occupied by he Seller livery stable. That was a lorse and dog show and It continued o prosper until Prof. Hurlburt was burned to death one night just before an opening performance In this city. A circus In town nil winter brings a number of men to town and neces sitates the purchase of a largo quan- Ity of supplies. If Mr. Schiller starts his circus It will make Its bow to the public In 1908. WEDNESDAY WRINKLES. Leo Pasewalk is In Omaha today. Miss Neigh of West Point Is in the city today. F. McCarthy of Vista was in Nor folk yesterday. H. Barnes of Battle Creek was In Norfolk yesterday. P. C. Anderson of Bristow was In Norfolk over night. James Allaway of Primrose was in Norfolk yesterday. George C. Stevenson of Madison was n Norfolk over night. Miss Cora O'Connell of Ashland was a visitor in the city yesterday. Mrs. E. Frlnk and daughter of Tll den are visiting C. H. Brlggs and fam ily. ily.Dr. Dr. and Mrs. H. O. Munson of Bat tle Creek were Norfolk visitors yester day. day.Misses Misses Olga Johnson and Minnie Stem of Winside visited in Norfolk yesterday. F. H. Brewer of Herrick and Charles Brewer of Wlsner were in Norfolk yesterday. Henry Warneke. a live stock man of near Harrison , was in Norfolk yes terday between trains. National Bank Examiner Cllne of Lincoln was In Norfolk this week for the regular examination of national banks. H. J. Miller and Cashier P. A. Tul- leys of the Farmers and Merchants state bank of Bloomfield were In Nor folk yesterday. D. Mathowson Is in Gregory. C. W. Landers went to Genoa today. P. J. Stafford left at noon for Scrlb- ner. ner.J. J. D. Sturgeon was in Tllden yester day. day.D. D. B. Nethaway Is in Omaha on business. Lorin Doughty went to Lander , Wyo. , yesterday. Miss Marguerite Austin left at noon on a visit to Oakdale. E. B. Kauffraan went to Oakdale yesterday on business. Mrs. F. W. Koerber has returned from Hot Springs , S. D. C. Brown of Fairfax was a South Dakota visitor in Norfolk yesterday. Perry Covert arrived in the city at noon from Lander for a visit with his father , J. M. Covert. E. P. Olmsted left at noon for Wayne , where the Wayne chautauqua assembly Is In session. Rev. and Mrs. D. K. Tlndall left at noon for Wayne to attend the Wayne Chautauqua assembly. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Rouse of Meadow - ow Grove arrived In Norfolk yester day to visit their daughter , Mrs. W. W. Weaver. Mrs. Robert Wilkinson and Miss Ma bel Gunderson of Bellwood visited friends In Norfolk today , returning from a visit at Spencer. Mrs. Anna Gray Moudy , a proml nent school teacher of Sioux City , vis Ited Monday and Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. E. Nethaway. George R. Hodson of Lynch , secre tary-treasurer of the pickle company , returned homo Wednesday noon after a short business visit to Norfolk. H. J. Miller and Mr. Tully of Bloom field , vice president and cashier of the Farmers and Merchants State bank of that place , spent the night in Norfolk Mr. Miller was formerly associated with the Nebraska National bank of Norfolk. Miss Martha Krohn has been ill. Mrs. Retta Inglls Is on a two weeks vacation from the Beeler storj. Miss Lizzie Guild Is bookkeeper for the Norfolk Plumbing & Heating Co The Ladies Aid socley of the First Baptist church will moot on the church lawn Thursday afternoon at 11 o'clock. Sam K. Reynolds has resumed his work at Northwestern headquarters as night chief dispatcher after n two weeks' vacation , 1'nul Zuolow , who IIIIH had a recent attack of 111 health , In on a vacation from hit ) work an assistant cashier of the Nebraska National hank. In a baseball game northeast of the city Marquardt'u nine triumphed over Fuhnuan'a line-up by a score of J2 to 5. It was a shut-out for the last six Innings for the loHlug team. Purple and yellow or yolhnv and purple are the colors of the Norfolk racing meet and are expected to bo liberally displayed on the occasion of the big racing days in Norfolk , July 31 and August 1 and 2. The Commercial club directors yea- terday morning voted to accept an In vitation extended by the Wayne chau tauqua management to visit Wayne on Thursday when Senator /rillman speaks at the chautauqua. The executive committee of the Madison County Sunday School asso ciation will meet in Madison Thurs day evening. President O. R. More- dltl ; and Secretary Julius llulff of the association will attend from Norfolk. The Commercial club directors held a short meeting yesterday. An adver tising folder to bo slipped in business correspondence and drawn up to ad vertise Norfolk was approved by the club directors. The folders will be printed and distributed by the club. County Commissioner John Mnlono of Madison Is at present In General hospital , Omaha , whcro ho Is under going a course of treatment for stom- ich trouble. Mr. Malone's address Is room 03. General hospital. Ilo has been suffering from the nllllctlon for a long time. The state convention of the Chris- Ian church convenes In Bethany , a Jncoln suburb , on July 30 and will bo n session until August , Mrs. J. A. Zoolr'and Mrs. 0. R. Meredith have jeen elected as delegates from the Christian church of Norfolk. Mrs. H. V. Evans and Mrs. Burt .Taylor are also expected to attend the conven tion. John E. Pike , the young groom re cently arrested In Norfolk and taken lack to Fremont In shackles with his ) rlde alongside , was held to district court in Fremont yesterday In the sum of $1,500. The complaint against him was filed by Myrtle Ilendrlckson. Pike's father claims the young man nnocent and will fight the case. Pike says he will furnish bonds. A woman who had sallied forth from the Junction depot yesterday noon In search of bananas came near grief when she attempted to climb between two baggage cars to avoid walking around the Gregory passenger. The train started with the woman wildly clinging to the car couplers. A brakeman - man who saw the woman's perilous position stopped the train before It had moved far but the sack of bananas was scattered along the track. County Commissioner Taft yester- : lay supervised the extension of Cor poration gulch at Its head , Just above Koenigsteln avenue between Thir teenth and Fourteenth streets. The gulch has been enlarged at that point to prevent further overflows of water rushing down from the northwest hills. The ditch there was made six teen feet wider and is now thlrty-tlx feet wide at the bottom. Koenlgsteln avenue In that vicinity was raised two and a half feet , so that it will act as' a dike. It is believed that this will remedy the overflow from the gulch but Mr. Taft says that In case the relief Is not forthcoming , more work will be done. Battle .Creek Enterprise : For sev eral months past , George W. Losey has been constantly urged by hun dreds of friends to allow his name to go before the primaries as a candi date for the democratic nomination for sheriff. Being comfortably situat ed on his farm east of town , where a monetary Incentive to office-seeking would never Intrude , he has until a few days ago turned a deaf ear to all entreaties. However , ho has been In duced to reconsider his determination not to again enter politics , and will accept If the nomination is unani mously tendered. The Enterprise knows Mr. Losey to be tho.unanimous choice of his party and his name will look good on the ticket. We can state authoritatively that If nominated , he Intends to make a vigorous campaign. TOM SMITH AND HARRY LAMB ARE BOTH HIT. A BAD STORM AT MADISON Mr. Smith Was Unconscious for Two Hours But Is All Right Now One of His Hands Was Burned Lamb's Shoe Sole Was Ripped Off. ' Madison , Neb. , July 21. Special to The News : Tom Smith and Harry Lamb were struck by lightning last night. Mr. Smith was unconscious for two hours and one of his hands was burned. Lamb was knocked down and the solo of his shoo ripped off. Ho came hero from Norfolk. Both men were going to a cave when struck. The worst electrical storm ever known In Madison was seen hero. For two hours the lightning played In the clouds , ripping Into trees and keeping up a continual rapid flro of explosions. Try a NOWB wantad. IGNORANCE AND SUPERSTITION ENSHROUD MIND ILLNESS. NO DISGRACE ABOUT INSANITY Dr , H , Douplna Singer Snys Reforms Should be Instituted In the Legal Proceedings for the Mentally III , Physicians Meet. The Ignornnco and superstition which alive shrouded the subject of Insanity from earliest llmeH explains ( \ \ largo part the general attitude of the public toward the Insane and Ilinso who care for them , according to Dr. II. Douglas Singer , first assist- nut physician at the Norfolk hospital , who Hpoko yesterday afternoon at 11 IP session of the Klkhnru Valley Medical society held In Uaslo hall In Norfolk. Continuing Dr. Singer mild : "It IH not HO ninny years since mich sufferers were burned at the stake or chained to posts In filthy dungeons to die of starvation and exposure. They have been considered as outcasts and possessed by devils. Even today It Is considered disgraceful to a family for one of Its members to suffer from In sanity , so much BO that the fact Is often - ton denied even to the physician who asks the specific question. ThlH Idea of sin and shame , Dr. Singer said , was to some extent fostered by the present form of commitment to the hospital with" Its legal forms , enforced by sheriffs and often preceded by In carceration In the common gael among criminals. Hero In the legal proceed ings necessary to safeguard the pa tient and the public , reform should be Instituted. Patients Not Mistreated. The deeply Ingrained fooling that patients In the state Institutions are grossly abused and Ill-trentcd , Dr. Singer said , was another feeling found ed upon tradition. The aim now In all directions , he said , was to do away with the old asylum and to replace It by a hospital In fact as In name , the patients being cared for by trained nurses wherever possible and treated along the same lines which obtain at any general hospital with duo allow ance for the altered conditions. Of the prejudice that Bomctlmes at taches to hospitals for the Insane , Dr. Singer said : "It Is hardly necessary to tell you that living among the In sane docs not make one cither brutal or Insane but , such has been urged against those who devote their lives to this work. A physician at the larg est hospital for the Insane In the Unit ed States Informed mo that the mem bers of that staff wore more or less socially ostracised and despised In a city which claims to be one of the most enlightened on earth. However , those are eastern ' Ideas and I can vouch that they nro not oxlstanl In this liberal minded west. " On the problem of the marrying of the Insane the speaker said : "The otlnology of insanity is still very ob scure and owing to its complexity must necessarily long remain so , but there are certain factors which wo know ns yet vaguely but which arc capable of modification. The question as to who nro to bo permitted to mar ry and perpetuate their kind Is one of the serious problems humanity has yet to face and It Is the physician who will have most to say In this matter. The doctor Is gradually coming to replace the priest as family friend and coun seller , n function In questions of this sort that ho Is eminently fitted to ful fill. No hard or fast lines can be laid down and each case must bo more .or less Judged on its merits. It may bo stated that marriage should bo abso lutely forbidden to those to whom In sanity Is now or has been present , es pecially where there are sl ns of a [ isychlc degeneration. A taint of in sanity or neurosis In a family does not necessarily forbid marriage. " It was an Important point , Dr. Sing er said , that the general physician should familiarize himself with the subject of insanity that ho might roc- ognlzo Its early stages , especially those forms of depression which so commonly precede acute Insanity. Pa tients should be placed under proper treatment at once rather than have action delayed until the case Is so far advanced that the results of the treat ment must bo poor. The after-care of patients following their discharge was a field of action that called for the co-operation of the medical profession and the state and offered a special field of work for a well organized so ciety. Boyd County Witches. Insane Ideas , but not Insanity , are contagious , Dr. Singer explained to the meeting In the discussion follow ing his paper. Dr. Singer recalled the recent case of the brother and sister who were brought to the Norfolk hos pital from Butte , where nil the mem bers of the family were convinced that someone was bewitching the brother. Only the latter proved to bo suffering with an Insane Illusion , the other members of the family adopting the Idea of witchcraft upon the constant reiteration of the boy's complaints , thus causing witchcraft to spring up In northern Nebraska again much as It once did In early Salem. Insanity as a by-product of evolu tion was later given an academic dis cussion by Dr. J. II. Mackay of Nor folk. Discussing the insane typo Dr , Mackay said In part : "Evidently the human mind has been developed through a process of evolution extend ing back through countless ages , foi when the clock of civilization struct Us mmrlso hour innn wait an unclad savage , driinkon , greedy and beastly. To fill his stninnch and find a comfort * able place to nloop completed the apex of Ills grntincndnii and ambitions. It was his normal Rtato. Hut when ho lii'Kiin to enlarge bin cranial sphere , when he commenced lo expand the horizon of his thought realm , ho start ed Iho development of a function which soon evolved rough corners , ex aggerated eccentricities and uncon- trollnbln proclivities. In the slower leisurely progress or the mad stam pede at times of humanity inlown the corridors of the past , In the Jonlln , the strife , the clash , I he crush , tin ! greed , the vices and mistaken of the race , do wo wonder that hero and there should occur oxaKKciatlous , oxcrescenses and abnormal innnlfestatlons of the func tion of mind ? " Need of Rest In Bed. "Host In bed , " Dr.V. . ! ' . Mllroy of Omaha declared was the host proven * tlve of Impending Illness , the. lien I of restoratives to health. Sick people were constantly , the Omaha physician said , keeping away from their bedH when rest would ward off serious Ill ness or servo to lessen Its effects. All functions of the body are related to the nerves and when the body Is beIng - Ing rebuilt one's vitality must not bo exhausted. People threatened with 111 health who talto to their sick bed at once obtain : munclo activity reduced to minimum , a uniform temperature , mental quiet , avoidance of shaking up , and other conditions favorable tea a rapid recovery before the disease lu far advanced. "Headache , " ordinarily a vulgar neglected topic , was handled by Dr. A. I ) . Dunn of Omaha In a thoroughly technical manner. The technical do- tall and the classification evolved lu his discussion were of a nature to star tle the layman. Other technical papers which were well received by the association were : "Malignancy of Hone Tumors , " by Dr. Robert R. Ilolllster of Omaha ; "The Necessity of an Early Diagnosis In Diphtheria , " by Dr. A. U. Tashjean of Norfolk ; "Glaucoma , " by Dr. A. G. Lueschen of Columbus ; "Demonstra tion for Fracture of the Neck of the Femur , " by Dr. J. P. Lord of Omaha , "Floating Kidney and When to Ope rate , " by Dr. A. C. Stokes of Omaha. Al Iho close of the evening session the physicians met In the Elk club rooms for a lunch and a social hour. Order of Hearing of Final Account. In the matter of the estate of Gott fried Klesol , deceased ; In the county court of Madison county , Nebraska. Now on the 22nd day of July , 1007 , came Frcdorlckc Klesol , the adminis tratrix with will annexed of said es tate , anil prays for leave to render air account as such administratrix. H Is therefore ordered that the 19th day of August , 1007 , at 1 o'clock p. m. at my office In Madison , Nebraska , bo fixed ns the time and place for exam- ihlng and allowing such account. Ami the heirs of snld deceased , and all per sons Interested in said estate , are re quired to appear nt the time and place so designated , and show cause , If such exists , why said account should not be allowed. It Is further ordered that said Fred- ericke Klesel , administratrix with will annexed , glvo notice to all persons In terested In said estate by causing a copy of this order to be published In the Norfolk Weekly News-Journal , a newspaper printed and In general cir culation In said county , for three weeks prior to the day sot for said hearing. In testimony whereof I have here unto set my hand and affixed my of ficial seal this 22nd day of July , A. D. 1907. Wm. Bates , PAT CHANDLER IN TROUBLE. Held to District Court In the Sum of $1,000. [ From Tuesday's Dntly.l Pat Chandler , about twonty-ona years old and the son of a prominent Madison county fanner living some ten miles south of the city , Is under $1,000 bonds to appear at the next term of the district court at Madison to answer the charge of being the fa ther of the unborn child of Mlnnlo Preuss. Miss Preuss Is a well appear ing girl of eighteen. Her parents are also well-to-do people living south of Norfolk. She filed her complaint Mon day evening In the Justice court of Judge Lambert. Young Chandler was arrested by Constable Conley. Tuesday morning In the Justice court he was bound over to the district court , a $1,000 bond no- Ing signed by his parents , Mr. and Mrs. F. Chandler. Mapes & Hazen have been retained by the defense. County Attorney Koonlgsteln appeared for the state. The girl came to Nor folk unaccompanied by her parents and was the only witness examined this morning. INCLINED TO GO HOME. Young Peterson Decides He Has About Enough of the West. Chief of Flynn received a message Monday afternoon from Sheriff J. F. Dockstader of Wlnterset , Iowa , the message requesting the chief to hold Gustavo Peterson until the Iowa sher iff could arrive In Norfolk to escort the young man back to the Iowa farm ho deserted Saturday for a taste of the wild life of the west. Young Pe terson is now of a mind to return homo but ho will probably bo accom panied by an officer to prevent the evil minded from attempting to dl- vorco young Peterson from the "roll" ho pulled together before starting out for the west. Peterson Is the unso phisticated young farm hand who was taken in town by the officers Sunday.