THE NOKKOLK-WEEKLY NJSWSrJOUUNAI .FiUDA.i AP.R1L J. . * i' ' The Norfolk Weekly News-Journal The Mows , EBtnbllahcdlSSl. Tim Journal , Established 1877. THE HU8E PUBLISHING COMPANY. W. N. Huso , N. A. HIIHO , President. Secretary. Every Friday , By nmll per year , $1.50. Entered nt the postolllco nt Norfolk , Nob. , IIH Becond class mutter. ' _ " TelephonesEditorialDepartment : Ko. 22. UuslneBS Olllcu niul Job Rooms No. 11 32. _ _ _ Castro BCOHIB to bo getting "his. " In Honduras , mnbognny is cheaper ihnn ) > lno nnd Is used In building the poorer houses. It IB Btrnngo Santa ClniiB hns not been heard from concerning this tariff on stockings. A judge hns just decided thnt the father IB not the absolute boss of his own homo. Some judges are woefully low. Why not tell us something new ? The Indian IB to be removed from the copper cent. Poor Lo Is fast disap pearing and the places which knew him once shall know him no more forever. William Allen White IB mentioned * > r lieutenant governor of Kansas. There's nothing the matter with Kan- nns when such men as White forgo to the front. But why not make him governor. Smoking apparatus pipes , cigars , nnd cigarettes have led to nearly ten million dollars' worth of damage by fire. Matches , tobacco's mischiev ous assistants , add fifteen million more of lire loss largely to be credited to careless smokers. Ex-Senator Thomas C. Platt seems to find great satisfaction in insisting that he retired voluntarily. The pub lic' is willing ho should continue to hold this view of "the incident If lie derives any comfort from it. The main thing is that he is no longer in public life. A hen iu North Carolina has been spreading herself. She was just a common scrub hen up to a few days ngo when she turned over a new leaf nnd laid five eggs a day. This is be lieved to be a world's record but we wait oggspectantly to hear from the liens nearer home. Dun's Review makes some distlnc- lions which require a powerful micro scope for the ordinary man to dis tinguish. For Instance , hero is a re cent statement. "Improvement in the structure of business is much more pronounced than Improvement lu the activity of business. " The successful master of a business must know it from the bottom to the top. The college graduate who is not afraid to put on overalls and go to work in factory or machine shops , stands a far better chance than if he draws back fearing that this would lie an admission that his education was a failure. When a man can' ' go into a country like that around Ainsworth nnd In one year produce enough potatoes from ar. acre of ground to pay for the land many times over , you may set it down that land In northern Nebraska 01 southern South Dakota , of desirable quality , Is a rich investment at presenl prices. Steps are being taken to erect c monument on the cite of the Collin wood school where about 200 chlldrer perished in the flames. If the me morlnl will act as constant warnhif against carelessness in failing to safe guard In every possible way the build Ings where children gather , it wil serve a worthy purpose. The new United States senator , E D. Smith of South Carolina , pledgee lilmself to secure 15 cents a pound foi cotton by national legislation. Yoi can't phase the nerve of some men not even with the old law of suppl ; and demand , notwithstanding' fac that like the ten commandments , i has never been repealed. That there is n very widespread dc sire in this state to stop the ravagei of tuberculosis is shown by the Intro duction of bills before the legislature relating to its control , treatment am prevention. The campaign of educe tlon which has been carried on in nl the larger cities of the state the pas year against the great white plagu < is bearing fruit. Congressman Tawney has a plan b ; which he thinks the Panama cann will pay for Itself. The Suez conn pays from $12,000,000 to $15,000,00 a year above the cost of maintenance If a similar charge Is made by th United States he figures that the tots receipts will be at least $10,000,00 a year and that half of this amoun can be saved to apply on paying Ir terest and bonds. The final ending of the Balkan 1m brogllo is a triumph for German fore and dfplomacy. Russia has been cc rced Into acknowledging Austria Hungarian sovereignty in Bosnia am Serrla thus left to her own Tceource % u meekly acceded tc- the paclflra t ry termi drawn up by Sir Edwan Gray , Thus pcaco IB assured In the Balkans. An organized effort IB being made to indupo families among the POOR"- clnsses In Now York City to go into the country nnd work on the land during the summer , Where there im- children It is especially desirable to take them out of the city during the hot months , oven If the earning ca pacity of the family only covered lionrd and car faro. Paris fashions decree the revival of the "alms bag" which ladles of the middle ages carried with them to hold the money they gave to beggars. It is really an 'outside pocket suspended from the belt and decorated to suit the fnncy of the wearer. It will bo n relief to know that the ladles have even one hung to them , but It will not be a very secure place in which to carry money or other valuables. Chairman Payne recently called at tcntlon to the fact that the tariff wqt not entirely to blame for the increase ! cost of living and cited as an instance that coffee is admitted into this coun try nt eight and one-half cents pei pound , yet when it reaches the con Burner he Is obliged to pay thirty-five cents a pound for it This is not th ( fault of the tariff but of the middle men. It's rather a shabby trick of UK magazines nnd Sunday papers to tnk ( nil the wind out of Mr. Roosevelt" ! nrticles by publishing scores of illus trnted nrticles by those who have traveled over the same route he has mapped out before ho can oven reacl the scene of action. But mi eh is lift nnd wo will trust our strenuous ex president to find severnl tilings tha neither traveler nor nature fakir hai exploited. George P. Angell , editor of tlio unl quo little paper , "Our Dumb Animals , ' founder and leader of the humane educational movement In the Unltet States , died recently at the age o eighty-six years. Ills work had be come International nnd the Bands o Mercy , composed of children wh < pledged themselves to bu kind to ani inals which ho has organized nov number 73,000. His work will be his most lasting monument. Prom Boston to Washington extend ! the largest elty population strung 01 one line in any country. They ar < still dependent for communication tip on telegraph ai d telephone wires 01 poles. In storms they always breal and great inconvenience and some times loss of life as well ns propert ; result. The wires should be under ground. No Europenn municipal ares like this any longer depends on poles What Is true of this line Is true o every other as fnst ns business wll warrant the change. Ambassador Bryce says that "poll tics Is an experimental science. " Then Is a great volume of truth In thli statomen made by Mr. Bryce who is i life long student of government fron the scientific as well as the practlca side. In thus admitting that politics the science of government , Is an es perlmental science , he makes a com plete answer to that coii6.ervat.lv class'who use as a stock objection ti every proposed reform or change "That is merely experimental. " Senator Flint has Introduced a bll directing the secretary of war to es tabllsh a line of steamers along th < Pacific coast in connection with th line of steamers along the Atlanti coast operated by the Panama railroai and appropriating $10,000,000 for sue ] a lino. There Is no question abou the need of such a line of steamers but considering Senator Flint's clos proximity to the Southern Pacific ger era ! offices , itould be wise to lool Into the requirements of the bill quit carefully before endorsing it. Notwlthstnndlng the passing of th years the federal pension bill grow and grows. Thirty years ago Generc Garfleld , then a member of the hous ( expressed the opinion that the pei sion list would never amount to mor than $30,000,000 a year. He lived- see it three times as much and no' the senate has passed a bill carryin $160,000,000 a year in Straight pension and not Including the private pension that are passed for the benefit c those who cannot get in under th general law. The statement was n cently made by a member of the hous that 70 per cent of the government' ' expenditures went for military costi either past , present or future. Th army , the navy and the pension list are the heaviest loads the governmet has to carry. The chief argument of those oj posed to tariff revision IB that ther Is already a deficit , and they ask , ho1 is the deficit to be made up if th customs , duties are lowered or n moved. This argument has little fore from the fact that there Is little d < mand for a lowering of the tariff o imports which now actually compel In this market and are therefore larg revenue producers. It Is not th prices on goods which are in con petition with Imported goods , thi people complain of , but of the tar ! which prohibits foreign competltlo and sires home manufacturer * monopoly , and thcso schedules' are not revenue produceru. They can bo made revenue producers , however , by lowering the tariff to n point which will admit foreign goods to come in and pay the duty. The revenue conies 'from the MiRtom duty , It Is not the tariff which prevents legisla tion. The new South American repuuilc Is to have two capitals. Parliament will meet at Capetown and the gover nor-general and other executive of ficers will live at Pretoria about 1,900 miles away. There was so keen a rivalry between these two sections thnt as compromise the honors were divided. The British empire has changed its policy since the colonial days of jhe United States. Then It tried coercion. Now It adopts sub mission. All the great dependencies make their own local laws. It holds them in the empire by tics of senti ment and not .by Iron bands of taxes and harsh laws. The Root waterways providing foi the settlement of all present and fu ture differences between Canada and the United States Is likely to be re jectcd by the Canadians because of the provision which gave to the United States 78,000 of the 100,000 cubic feel of water per second flowing over the falls at Sault Ste. Marie. The clalrr o fthls country to the larger volume of water was based upon the posltior of the International boundary at thai place. But It is a short sighted policj to exasperate this near neighbor by re fusing an equal division , of water ai this point and therby .probably lose hoi friendly co-operation in the preserva tion of the seal and other far more 1m portant matters , a journey to arrive at the station aftoi The question Is often seriously 'ask ed , where do the unemployed conn from ? Why is it in this great and productive ductivo country , where there is roon and to spare should able bodied ni'ei The place where the first Baldwli apple tree grew Is marked by a menu ment. This first tree was a clianci seedling that came to maturity on i farm near Lowell , Mnss , about 1740 It was not until 1784 that Colonel Bald win became interested in the apple developed it and gave it his name. Tin original tree lived till after' 1817 am did not live in vain. For the Baldwli apple Is one of the best. It Is an evil day in any nation whei it plots the destruction- Its great est patriot. That Is what Russia 1i doing with her most brilliant dlplo mat , Count Witte. There Is not an other Russian statesman who arouse ! the slightest admiration in tbe hear of an American. But the world is glvei to honoring the man who accompllshei the Impossible , and that Is what Coun Witte did in the treaty of Portsmouth Any other man would have returnei to Russia with nothing saved and hii country's honor "dragging in the dust Witte returned with honor and sub stantia } concessions from the victor ious Japanese. Yet instead of givlni him gratitude and honor , the Russiai government has heaped every possible itllgnlty upon him and sought for ai excuse for his Imprisonhient , but hav < never found a cause for which the ; dared to lay hands on him , He live ; in retirement while the governmen is conducted by his inferiors. The lesson of preparedness is om that every man especially every youni man should take to heart , . It wn Benjamin Franklin who said that tin tax we pay to the government Is ai Insignificant tax , but that the tax wi beg for food ? There Is only one rea son why this condition should exist fo any length of time ; that Is becaus when prosperity comes we abuse II We lay hold on the fat of the lam and feed upon it , throwing all else t the dogs. "By these spendthrift meas ures we are shortly bankrupt. Ther Is no reason Inthe nature of thing why this country should ever have i panic , no reason why it should no have prosperity all the time , insteai of only part of the time. The reaso ; that we have prosperity by spells am jerks Is because of our bad methods If we insist upon being wasteful li the years of plenty , years of famln must Inevitably follow. Very conflicting statements hav been madeas to the results of woma suffrage in the western states whlc ! , have for s"ome time granted wome : the ballot , but the conclusions of man like Judge Lindsay of the Denve Juvenile court are especially valuabl as he is a shrewd student of the sue ject and has known it from the insld the fourteen years It has been i : effect in Colorado. He makes th following1 summary of results in th World's Work : "Respectable wome do go to the polls. Forty-two pe cent of the' state is female and a : average of forty per cent of the totn vote Is cast by women. The votoe o women have not taken politics out c the control of the corporations nor o the bosses. But there has been n chance to vote directly on this quei tion. Fear of the women baa proveni od the nomination of men of ba morals and the women hare defeate such men eren when nominated * oi ticket * . Tho' et result * c woman suffrage has not been very mpresslve , yet in npno of thcso west ern states is it looked upon as an ox- icrlment No one suggests rcatrctlng ho suffrage to males. It IB univor ally accepted and considered right. " THI3 FOURTH OF JULY. Norfolk will celebrate the Fourth ol July this year. And the sentiment ol justness men at the Commercial dub's quarterly meeting Thursdaj light , favored a celebration of Indo xMidcnco day every year. Norfolk ought to celebrate tlu 'ourth ' of July just as regularly as the day rolls around. The city should dc this for the sake of entertaining at r ) lg , free , happy holiday the innnj farmers and their families who live iround this city. ' There Is no rcasoi why Norfolk should not decide one * for all to always observe the nation1 ! birthday in manner befitting the oc caslon. ' This town has ndl'dono Its share n fourth of July celebrating In the past For one reason or another the Fourtl has been neglected. But It Is an oc caslon which should find fitting ol ) scrvance annually In this city. Norfolk depends to great extent upon the farmers In this vicinity , fo Its business. And these same farmer are entitled , at the hands of Norfolk to a joyous event each year in conncc tion with the big national holiday. It was the sense of the meeting tha the celebration should be held wltli out thought of monetary profit. Thing should be free. Our farm friend should be invited into town for tin day and entertained royally , with Noi folk people as .their hosts. Norfolk owes It to herself and ti her clientele to adopt such a plan. The city of Springfield , Mass. , i already agitating a safe and sail Fourth of July in a very definite waj and begins this early so that dealers ii fireworks may not suffer financial los by overstocking with combustibles. I would bo a most excellent plan I ? i similar movement could be mad general. If the day ever conies when th courts of the United States will glv -justice Instead of technicalities I will Inaugurate a new regime In th political and business of the nation. NORFOLK IS BOUND TO GROW. In his address to the Norfolk Con merclal club Thursday night , E. II Gurney -of Fremont brought forth number of ideas that have attrnctc attention among business men of th city. city.That That Nebraska is a great state ain that it will , within the next few .yours develop Into just as great and rich state , acre for acre , as Iowa or Illinois was his forecast. He cited the fac that Illinois has perhaps seventy fiv cities like Peorla , Blooniington , etc. , c 15,000 to 20,000 population. Iowa has her score or more of cltie of 15,000 to 20,000 population citie like Waterloo , Cedar Rapids , Marshal town , Keokuk , etc. The territory In which those citle are built Is no better than Nebrnskr 'ihose cities are none of them locate- better than Norfolk few , Indeed , s advantageously. There are manufacturing Industrie in those cities 120 manufacturing nt tablishments , for instance , In Wutei loo. Manufacturing- move to N ( braska. There Is no reason why thi state should not make stoves , harness buggies , shoes , and hundreds of othe articles , used by the people of thi region. Mr. Gurney scoffed at the man wli says manufacturing cannot be don successfully In Nebraska. It can b done In Nebraska as well as In lower or Illinois. It Is up to Norfolk , Mr. Gurney sale to decide whether It will become center for manufacturing , dlstributlni shipping and business generally. It 1 located right , it is a wonderful oj portunity , remaining only for Norfolk' business men to take advantage of.- Mr. Gurney urged all of Norfolk' ' business men to co-operate for No : folk's growth ; to get together In thi one movement for Norfolk's advanci ment ; .he urged tuat Infant Industrie in the'city be given encouragement- loyal , neighborly encouragement. H frowned on the knockers and the pess mists. Mr. Gurney is not alone In his fait that Norfolk has the chance to becom a center of Importance. All Norfol business men see the same oppo : tunlty. And they agree with him the this territory , which has been growln and developing for twenty years , I just now about to' ' blossom forth int a territory similar to that of low and Illinois. And when Nebraska does become a Iowa , surely there , Is no reason wh Norfolk shall not be a Cedar Rapids. AROUND TOWN. The News want nds. still grow. It's Mayor Friday for the third tim ( It was a bad day' for the new Easte hat. There are 6,317 'too ' many cur dog In Norfolk. ' ? Why shouldn't there bo a Norfol & Yankton rialroaUT' Here * * another , for refftretee la yei to come : The ground in Norfolk wan covered with snow on the morning of April 12 , the day after Easter. Life's worth living again. The base ball season has reopened. * There should be better roads lend ing Into Norfolk from nil directions. But think how it would feel to bo on the wrong side of thnt wheat bulge. You'll see a lot of people nt church Sunday whom you hnven't seen there for n yenr. Norfolk's first colebrntlon In several ycnrs of the Fourth will come on the third. Optimists say this will insure n fruit crop. 'It'a a cinch 'there should bo some compensation. Don't ask anybody what the sermon was about. That's not the question in point on Easter. Thanksgiving dinners will cost more than ever next fall If that Turkey revolution develops. Sheriff Stucker of Stanton county rules that there Is no open season on men up telephone poles. . "JIm"Patten keeps right on cleanIng - Ing up his several hundred thousand dollars every day In wheat. There's this satisfaction about Easter week : You don't have to eat left-over turkey for the whole seven days. It was a little hard on the keeper who wn.s trampled to death , but thnt elephantine Incident at Des Moines will be great dope for the press agent , Insane asylum scandals make the rounds a good deal like the measles , Two years ngo Norfolk hnd one ; last year Illinois had one ; and now It's In Iowa. Let a now bonnet go by and a btincli of women will abruptly discontinue the most sensational gossip for the time being , to get a glimpse of the passer by. Denver gets a little notoriety be cause there's been ten feet of snow ii : that town. It's a safe bet they hnven'l had a patchln' to the "winter in Nor folk , when It comes to winters. Governor Shnllenberger hasn't ad tied any to his popularity in Norfolk by vetoing the bill for the new nurses building at the Norfolk hospital which as is conceded by all who have Inves tigated the situation , is very badly needed. About Norfolk. Orchard News : The Norfolk Nt ws threatens to deal harshly wUh , the chief of the weather bureau should tne latter fall to provide the best kind of weather for Sunday , Apiil 11. Niobrara Tribune : We believe witl The Norfolk News , that Norfolk av nue in that city should be paved. Noth ing they could do down there would give a better imprcs'sion to the thous ands of people who pass through the city. Wayne Democrat : Anyway the Nor folk News treated Wayne on the square. That write-up of President Pile's demise and about the college properties wns good. The New1 ! hns a happy faculty of alighting in the right spot when there Is no politic ; in it. Madison Post : The teachers' asso elation at Norfolk last week resolved that playing marbles for keeps Is gambling , but we will stake all oui marbles for keeps that every lenrned professor played for keeps in his day and generation. Let the marbles gc and eliminate "Say kid , " "You bet , ' "frat , " nnd a few other vulgarisms that find root nnd branch In the vo cabulary of our schools. The New Service. Wayne Herald : The Norfolk News has added a leased Associated Press wire to its news gathering equipment and will be better able than ever tc serve Its patrons. Pierce Leader : The Norfolk Dailj News now has a wire of its own whlcl : connects It directly with Omaha , and which enables It to obtain the latest news from all over the world frorc the Associated Press. The News is i fine little daily and is occasionally making those Improvements which arc for the accommodation of its readers ATCHISON GLOBE SIGHTS. A fat dog Is always disguesting. When a farmer is talky ho talks lot. Horses seem slower than over slnct automobiles came in. A boy likes pie so well he novel knows when It Is poor. YOU often hear men say : "I've tak en all I intend from Him ! " Does your roof leak when there IE a rain ? That's shlftlessness. t That taxes will Increase every yeai seeina to be as certain as death. A girl learns to cook as naturally as a boy learns to chow tobacco. Falling In love is as hard on the system as having a hard spell of sick ness. When an engaged girl gets mad at her. intended , ahe-bogina to fidget witb her engagemoBt. ring , a * If abe were going to tnko it off , nnd trample It un der foot. Only when the baby Is asleep , is earning the living for the family the linrdest job. Bet on almost any candidate , and you'll soon become alarmed for the safety of your money. It IB the good fortune of many n bride and groom at the altar that re sponses do not permit them to Intro duce any bad grammar. The argument , which you think should enlighten your opponent , ho re gards as a ruse to fool him. Look at ton women these days , and the way seven of them wear their hulr , will make--you lauglin More women are making speeches , and they are making better ones , but the same can't bo said of their pie. A man cannot convince you that ho IB cultured the first time ho meets you , but many of them attempt it. The empty back scat of a big auto mobile is one of the things that add to the discontent of the man on foot , There is something about a girl who has had a "steady" that you do not notice about a girl who has never had one. The man equipped to plow gardens is as popular these days as a politician with money , and a good deal more in dependent. If you want to be of assistance to n friend In trouble , do not say , "I'm sorry. " That will not help him any , but it may bore him. An Atchlson man who Is notoriously henpecked , lately explained to afrlend ; "I 'must either stand It , or whip her , And It Is easier to be henpecked than it is to whip a woman. At its next meeting the Lancnutei Literary society will take this for HE subject -of debate : Which Is the greater loss of time , trying to get some one over a telephone , or saying good bye to a caller ? No woman's neck and bust were ever pretty enough to be displayed In public. If fat ; they look greasy , and If thin , the play of ribs and chords and muscles , when she moves and talks , is a terrible sight. A man may not pay much attentlor to what his wife wants , but he wants to look out for that daughter who Is growing up : Before she is ten she is seeing things , and making up hoi mind that her father needs taking ii : hand. It Is better to pity others than your self. Self pity makes for weakness and narrowness , but there is strength in encouraging the strength yov may need for helping others. And ai occasional glimpse of the trouble o : others Is apt to show that yours de not amount to much , after all. When anyone tells you that sleep IE a habit , and that five hours is enough do not believe him. Sleep all you can It was intended that healthy people should sleep eight hours ; If you sleei ten all the better. Sleep Is nature's sweet restorer , as you may have heard before. A preacher was called upon recently to tell a dying man that the end was near. He said nothing about repent ance or hell ; he told the man he was about to go on a little journey and that at Its end he would meet nil the good friends who had gone before He must not be afraid , ho told him ; all would be well. And the man died with a pleasant smile on his face. The Incident is an illustration of the greal cange in sentiment : Two genera tions ago the preacher would have taken brimstone to the man about tc depart. If you start or repeat a bad story or any one , you are doing n damage thai no repentance or shame on your par ! can ever undo. Whisper a slander te your best friend , and , though yovi stand on a hill the next day , and pro claim in a loud voice that it Is nol true , .you cannot call the bad story back. People who do wrong are pun ished enough , even if there Is no gos sip about them. OVER NORTHWESTERN PRAIRIES , Beemer is thinking of celebrating the Fourth. The Wayne high school won Its de bate with Oakland. Bonesteel will hold its first city election a week from next Tuesday. Emll Hertert , a Pierce boy , Is serv ing in the navy on the battleship Cali fornia. Senator Randall secured one of the senate flags for the Madison military company. ' The Burton Independent , which has been independent in politics , is now democratic. A. V. Smith of Madison Is said to have been offered $1,500 for his fast horse , Nabisco. Smallpox has appeared la Fremont , a Fremont college student having con tracted the disease frrFremont. P. H. Kohl of Wayne got the pen with wh'Ich Governor Shallcnberger signed the Wayne normal bill. According to the Madison Post there Is a possibility' of the two Telephone companies in Madison consolidating. , ii.in- aii-i.ii.i f John Dugnu of lloneateol , S. 1) . , has Issued a signed statement denying thnt ho Is an undeslrnblo citizen. The Gregory Times Intimated IIR much. "Johnnie" Dugnn has HOVOII years of re'sldonoo in Gregory county to liln credit. Madison Post : Isn't it about tlmo for the growing maidenhood of Miull- son to cease nddresslng thulr chuiuE , us , "Sny , kid ? " According to the Wnyno Democrat the daylight miloon bill moistened up n good many otherwise arid spots In Wnyno nt the license election. A now Methodist church at Pligor Is assured , It will coat about $3500 | of which $2,500 hns been pledged. Judge Wilton has received a tele gram from Washington stating that no additional reservations for townslteu will be approved , Governor Shnllenberger still finds n smllo for him In one part of Ne braska. Ho has been invited to attend a banquet nt Wnyno Tuesday night. It Is stated that Mrs. M. A. Phillips of Wnyno will bo a candidate for the Republican nomination for county su perintendent of Wayne county this fall. Governor Shallciiborger having sign ed the Chase bill appropriating $35,000 for n state normal school in the Sixth district , the slto for the school will bo chosen by the new state normal board , the town winning the school to deed eighty acres of land to the state. Wnyno Democrat : The laboring man won't have tljno to tnko n drink before going to work nnd the saloons will bo closed right nftor supper. By dad , I mnke a motion thnt every man who doesn't work bo arrested as n vagrant. It Isn't fair thnt the loafer bo entitled to exclusive saloon privi leges. A. Ray Evans , n well known north Nebrnska newspaper man , has pur chased the Bristow Enterprise , suc ceeding Editor J. G. Willis who has filed on a Souia Dakota homestead In Mend county. Mr. Evans Is a son of the late C. S. Evans , a former Nor folk newspaper man , nnd has been in Dallas , S. D. At the annual congregational moot ing of the Ponca Presbyterian church the question of rebuilding the church , which was burned to the ground on February 13 , was taken up and ns a result a committee of six men was appointed ! to get plans and estimates on various material and report at nn adjourned meeting to be hold on April 15. At that time n building committee will be elected to carry out the wishes of the congregation. Superintendent Doremus may leave the Madison schools to accept n col lege position , according to a rumor from Madison. Mr. Doremus Is presi dent of the North Nebrnska Teachers association. The Madison board ha ? elected the following teachers for next year : Misses Florence Donald son , Beatrice Clark , Minnie Jones , Eva llorsham , Sophia McFetters , Amelia Bauch , Lola Taylor , Myrtle Dewey , Pearl Elley , Ellznbeth McFnr- Innd. Humphrey Democrat : Alexander Zuhlke , a young man employed in Casper Theisen's jewelry store , met with n painful nnd quite serious acci dent Tuesday afternoon , and ns a .re sult ho is minus a part of the thumb nnd forefinger on his left hand. He was examining n dynamite cartridge nnd in some way it wns caused to ex plode. The first joint of his thumb and two joints of the forefinger were taken off as clean ns though they had boon cut off with a surgoon'B knife. Word of school trouble of a rather sensational nature hns been brought to Norfolk from Dallas , S. D. , where n man teacher is said to be involved in trouble as a result of a beating ad ministered to n little son of diet Slaughter of Dallas. The boy Is said to have been whipped so unmercifully that his sister Intervened , only to re ceive a few of the blows herself. Mr. Slaughter's friends prevented him from going gunning for the teacher and according to report the matter was slated to come up in the Dallas courts. News comes from California that Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Herd of Central City have sailed for Honolulu , where they intend to make a short sojourn. After his attack of paralysis in the winter Mr. Herd , as soon as he had recovered sufficiently to bo able to travel , departed for California In com pany with his wife , and have since then been making their headquarters at Los Angeles , where their sonlln-Iaw and daughter , Mr. and Mrs. Will Rich ardson , reside. Most encouraging re ports , showing a marked Improvement In Mr. Herd's condition , have been sent back to Nebraska , and It is ex pected that upon his return from the Hawaiian islands he will have recov ered sufficiently to enable him to re turn and take charge of his business interests at Central City , where ho has the distinction of feeding more cattle than any other man in the world. NEBRASKA POLITICS. Dan Nottleton of Clay county ; ix- speakcr of the house of representa tives , lieutenant Governor' Hope-well of Tckamah and Will Hayward , secretary of the national republican committee , are three men who are being men tioned Ju4t now for the .republican nomination for gorernor two years from now. ' *