SBSPSSS?!? . xrv &V K- -&" -: ' ,-V- -;-gft?? fS3Jh4rv"iiii-A3'S;?-VJ,erW.- Ti!"?9iSVl!iA SSXT. tttSfG P? $MS- .- -C- -. -- - . ' i :-fgr-'- f- -.or- .: i;5 --r--' "&- :-&?-' -- -"". ' r JS-JT ' vr; "VS," i 3 .-. '51 v I Uf r r " ft v t a-1 SirftjESsiSP A Columbus Journal STROTHER STOCKWELL, Pubs. COLUMBUS, - NEBRASKA IN CONGRESS. The senate substituted the Aldrich currency bill for the Vreeland bill passed by the house, and passed it The house passed the military acad emy appropriation and omnibus pub lic building bills. .The Vreeland currency bill, agreed upon by the Republican caucus, was put through the house under a special rule by a vote of 184 to 145. Fifteen so-called insurgents of the majority party voted -with the Democrats, who went on record solidly against the measure.. r ., r - "" The great sundry civil appropriation bilC carrying"'! total of about $120,-000,000-, was" passed by the senate." The further, consideration of -the .Brownsville affair was postponed by. the senate untif December 16 next. ' The senate" passed 'the house bill re storing the motto "In God We Trust" on coins of the United States. The house agreed to the .conference report on the naval appropriation bill and it went to the president for signa ture. The senate passed the post office appropriation bill. Republican members in conference adopted an emergency currency bill.. The house, by agreeing to senate amendments, took the final congres sional step to stop betting at the Ben .ning race track. The senate passed the agricultural appropriation bill. PERSONAL. Mrs. Christina Metsker of South Bend, Ind., was found not -guilty of the murder of Carleton Morgan of South Bend, whom she shot April 10 in front of the home of Mrs. Mae Green in Cassopolis, Mich. The ver dict occasioned a remarkable demon stration in the courtroom. Walter S. Farmer, a prominent mer chant of Colchester, Ind., was indicted on a charge that he is responsible for four fires which burned one-quarter of the business section of Colchester. Thomas W. Harvey, former teller of the defunct Enterprise National bank, was sentenced at Pittsburg, Pa., to seven years in the penitentiary. Taft was indorsed by Republican conventions of California, Oregon, Washington, Montana, North Dakota and Alaska. Socialists in convention at -Chicago nominated Debs for president. Gov. Allen Gard of Lanao Province, Philippine Islands, who was injured by Mora bolomen recently, is not dead,-as has been reported. It was reported in Washington and Chicago that Federal Judge Grosscup would resign to practice law Dr. Arthur L. Kilbourne of Roch ester, Minn., was elected president of the National Medico-Psychological association at Cincinnati. 'Gov. Hughes formally declared, that he would not accept a nomination for 'the vice-presidency. Republicans of Michigan and Idaho Instructed their delegations for Taft H. Heath Bawden, professor of philosophy at the University of Cin cinnati, was asked by President C. W. Dabnejr, to tender his resignation be cause of his private views on mar riage. A son was born in Florence to the Countess Montignoso, ex-Crown Prin cess Louise of Saxony, now the wife of Signor Toselli. GENERAL NEWS. Command of the great Atlantic fleet of battleships passed to Rear Ad miral Charles Stillman' Sperry, who succeeded Rear Admiral Thomas. The conference of governors at Washington on conservation of the nation's natural resources ended after the adoption of a declaration of co operation and suggestion that the president call the conferees together again in the future. Five suits in action of debt aggre gating $1,750,000, and for damages of $150,000, were begun by Attorney Gen eral Stead and Gov. Deneen of Illinois against the -sureties of former state treasurers and one former state aud itor, for fees retained during their ad ministrations. The handsome Catholic church and parish house at New Coeln, 'Wis., were destroyed by fire. President Roosevelt laid the corner stone of. the new home of the Interna tional Union of American Republics in the presence of a throng of emi nent persons. The chares v and school of the Im maculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary 1b Cleveland, 6., were complete ly "destroyed by fire. Seven mine workers were instantly killed and more than a dozen injured 1b an explosion in the Mount Lookout colliery at Wyoming. Pa. Charles H. Krogh, an Omaha archi tect, tried vainly to kill his wife at Beatrice, Neb., and then committed suicide. Miss Carrie Ade, who said she was going to Washington to kill Presides! Roosevelt, was arrested as insane at Louisville. Nearly every building in the village of Barrytowa Landing, N. Y., was de stroyed by fire. Practically the -whole population of the village, of Belleghem, Belgium, set upen and killed a man who was caught in the act of robbing the lamos chanel of the Virgin. pin ' - FORM ' BUSY MAN '! X X1 Most Important Happen- X ings of the World jj 8 Told in Brief. 0 p,Three.more;names, were?, added to tike list of supposed victims of Mrs. Bella Gunness on her farm? near La porte, Ind.r Evidence' was obtained by Laprte eScIals that Mrs. GTuness had an ac complice who aided in luring victims to. her farm. A. K. Helgelein, last of the victims' of Mrs. Gunness, was buried at La porte. The 'Iragments, of jawbone found in,the ruins of, the farmhouse were identified by a dentist as' from Mrs. Gunness' skulL Two trainmen- were killed and 15 passengers injured in a collision on. tbe Missouri. Kansas & Texas road near Muskogee, Okla. The old plant of the Omaha Packing qompany in South Omaha was de stroyed by fire together with 3,000,000 pounds of meat, involving a loss es timated at $500,000. The right of President Roosevelt summarily to dismiss a negro soldier of the Twenty-fifth infantry for al leged participation in the riot , at Brownsville, Tex., was sustained by Judge Hough in the United States dis trict court at New York. A bonded warehouse at Oskaloosa containing 2,600 barrels of whisky was burned. After it had been mislaid for 25 years, workmen found in the sub basement of the war department building at Washington a wooden box containing the personal relics of Lieut. Delong, who commanded the ill-fated Jeannette Arctic expedition and who perished in 1881. Gen. Snarski, commander of the Russian punitive expedition into Persian territory, has been ordered to resume his advance, into Persia and to punish the bandits with fire, and sword. He will destroy villages, but spare the women and children.' The Democrats, of Minnesota in dorsed Gov. Johnson as a presidential candidate and at the same time, by a vote of 772 to 166, refused to declare in favor of Bryan as second choice. Wyoming Democrats indorsed Bryan., Bandits bound and gagged the sta tion agent and a guard in the depot at French, N. M., and escaped with $35,000. " - The armored cruiser Maryland was the trophy winner in the recent target practice at Magdalena bay. The Wright brothers' aeroplane was wrecked at Kill Devil hill, North Caro lina, after a flight of eight miles. Two men were shot and almost in stantly killed and a woman wounded at Coney Island, victims ofthe jeal ousy of a young Italian. "" O. J. Sturgis of Uniontown, Pa., a well-known editor, committed suicide. An incendiary fire' in a tenement at Passaic, N. J., caused the death of three children. James J. Hill and others addressed the conference of governors in the White House on the dangers of forest and soil depletion. A court in Paris granted the Hart McKee divorce, blaming both parties and giving Mrs. McKee custody of the child except for one month yearly. It was announced in London that Miss Jean Reid, daughter of the Amer ican ambassador, and John Hubert Ward would be married in St. James palace June 23. Eight hundred brewery workers of Kansas City went ,on ..strike. ' The Reserve Trust company?and the American Savings bank of Cleveland, O., closed their doors. A tornado wrecked the hamlet of Gilliam, La., and damaged neighboring towns, several persons being killed and many injured. Much damage and some deaths were caused by tornadoes in Nebraska, Iowa and Kansas. Eariey B. Palmore and Miss Lois M. Palmore of Virginia were wedded in the rotunda of the capitol at Wash ington. Numerous addresses were made and great enthusiasm exhibited at the na tional conference on conservation of natural resources in the White House. It was proposed to form a permanent organization. ' Three former aldermen of Rockford, 111., pleaded guilty of accepting bribes and were fined $2,000. each. The Wright brothers made two more successful flights with their aeroplane at Manteo, N. C. Mail, advices say the recent tidal bore in" the Yangtse-Kiang resulted in nearly 10,000 deaths at Hankow. -Miss Maud Fleming of Waterloo, la., shot and killed her father while defending her mother. An attempt made by prisoners to break out of the government jail at Yekaterinoslav, Russia, after making a breach in the wall of the guard room with a bomb, 'resulted in the deaths of 29 of the fugitives. Four miners were killed and three injured by a fall of rock in a colliery at Midvale, Pa. The national conference on the Con servation of Natural Resources opened at Washington with the governors of nearly all the states of the union and prominent men representing every line of thought and industry of the nation in attendance. Tornadoes in Mercer and Henry counties, Illinois, in the vicinity of Madison,' Wis., and in Oklahoma and Texas killed several persons and de stroyed a great amount of property. SL Louis and vicinity were swept by a violent gale. Roy Waller, aged 18, was arrested at Lincoln, I1L, charged with threaten ing Hiram L. Kenya," a y wealthy resi dent of Elkhart with death unless he placed $300 in a designated 'place. The celebrated market and general bazar in Madrid called locally "Las Americas,' and well known to anti quarians, was practically destroyed by fire. In a pitched battle at 'the Canadian Pacific railway sheds near Owen Sound, Ont, between striking long shoremen and a detachment of special constables from Toronto, three men were shot and two detectives clubbed. OBITUARY. Mrs. Emily E. Woodley, famous'civil war nurse whom Lincoln commis sioned a captain, died In Philadelphia. Smith W. Ketchnxn, a prominent business man of Detroit, died .sudden ly in Buffalo. Former Congressman J. H. Howell of Bloomington, 111., is dead. Mrs. Helen E. Moses, national presi dent of the Christian Woman's Board of Missions, died in Indianapolis. "Kt. Rev- Ignatius F. .Horetman, bishop of the Catholic jliocese of Clayelaxxi. died at CantonT'O. " OPIORi III MET 3ras-- PRICES OF SECURITIES CONTINUE TO ADVANCE. KIBH MARK IS ON THURSDAY Persistence of Upward Trend Grad , uafly Convincing, Sceptics that' Country is all Right. "r ., - " " " " New York Prices of securities ad vanced last week, with growing im petus and increasing volume of trans actions, the total sales on Thursday rising to the largest of any day, since last summer, before the financial crisis developed. The persistence of the advance and its freedom from in fluence or check by events seeming unfavorable to values, gave it Impres siveness and had the effect of convert ing a growing number of scepticts in the professional operating class, who had congested the advance by short sales at various stages and had been forced repeatedly to cover at a loss. The abandonment of the opposition by this class and their turn id the long' side had set a little to do with the in creased animation and buoyancy of the market. The success, with with all obstacles were .overcome and prices aggressively advanced from the in ception of the present movement has been convincing proof of the wide re sources commanded by the leaders of the movement, who are commonly be lieved to include great banking houses and individual capitalists whose influ ence commands the resources of the most powerful group of capitalists in the country. The suspicion of a manipulative origin for the rise in prices with the purpose of meeting a semblance of im provement where the realty did not exist served to hold aloof from the market most of the general public, which generally joins in an important market movement. The confidence and consistency with which the move- ment is pursued had a growing influ ence on sentiment last week and had the increasing effect of causing a be lief in the satisfaction thus expressed on the part of great capitalists with the degree of improvement in affairs. In the department of the money market this movement was clearly enough perceptible. For the easy money market to further the success of the financial plans of corporations, however, there was necessary the ad dition of a demnstration of confidence in the security )f values. The rise in the stock' market has operated as such a demonstration. The scepticism with which it was accepted at first was due to the conflicting evidence of news af fairs in general. Waiting on Sick Senators. . Washington The illness of Sena tors Elkins and Foraker, combined with not a little politics, has held up in the senate for several days the pas sage cf the Elkins resolution to sus 'pend the operation of the commodi ties clause of the Hepburn railroad rate law. It is expected the resolu tion will be passed, however, as soon as these senators are able to return to their duties. There is considerable feeling against the resolution even among senators who have promised to vote for it, and it may not pass. Johnson on-Floor of House. Washington Governor Johnson of Minnesota was a visitor to the capital Saturday and spent some time on the floor of the house, where he was the recipient of much attention. Demo crats and republicans alike extended cordial greetings.- He received gener ous applause when, escorted by Mr. Tawney, he ascended the rostrum and was introduced to Speaker Cannon. Governor Johnson bowed his acknowl edgments and for several minutes en gaged in conversation with the speaker. Strike Authorized. Chicago, 1111 A "strike of 5,000 truck drivers was authorized because of the refusal of the team owners to grant an increase of $1.50 a week. A com mittee was instructed to make another effort to 'get an increase. Albania to Try a Primary. Montgomery, AIx. The democrats of Alabama for the first time in many years will vote for all state and coun ty officers in a general primary. FLEET TO CO TO PHILIPPINES. Naval Circles Interested in Report Reporting Cruisers. Mare Inland, Cal. Naval circles here are greatly interested in a re port that the armored cruisers West Virginia, Maryland, Colorado, Penn sylvania, California a'nd South Da kota may be ordered to the Philip pines in the fall. There they will again meet the Atlantic fleet and en gage in target practice in May la bay. in October. Orders have been re ceived here to expedite all repairs" on the Atlantic torpedo flotilla now here. Find 57 Sticks of Dynamite. Pensacola, Fla. Fifty-seven, sticks of dynamite, each from one-halt to two pounds in weight, were found at a point about 500 yards from what is known as Big Bayou trestle, west of the city. Death List is Fifty. " Shreveport, La. The count of the l persons who met death in Wednes day's tornado in Caddo and Bossier parishes will probably total fifty. The number at present known to have been killed is forty-four. DEFICIENCY BILL IN HOUSE. Last of Government Supply Measures Reported. Washington The general deficiency appropriation, the last of the regnlai government supply bills, was reported To the hoase Saturday- by the commit tee on appropriations. The bill car ries $17,342,572. Of this amount $10, 000,000 is for pensions, made neces sary by the widows'- pensions act passed at this session and also by the old age pension act of February 6 1908. N0WAHELP1HGHAM0 GREATEST NEED OF TORNADO "" VICTIMS AT PRESENT. OMAHA AND UNCQLN MONEY Some Details of the Great Storm in the Matter of Loss of Life, De struction of Property, Etc Omaha. Aftermath of the tornado which devastated portions of Cass and Sarpy counties, and which was par ticularly severe at4xuisville, Bellevue and Fort Crook has developed Into aid being solicited for the sufferers. Omaha and' Lincoln have appointed committees for the purpose and other towns and communities will do like wise. The people of Louisville through committee issued the following: "To the People ot Nebraska We, the committee appointed by the Louis ville Commercial club, appeal to you for aid in behalf of the people of Louis ville, who suffered from the cyclone which swept through, our town on Tuesday afternoon, leaving a number of our people destitute and homeless. Ten thousand 'dollars will be needed at once to provide these people with provisions, clothing and furniture to enable them to again care for "them selves. All remittances should be made to George Frater, -treasurer of the 'Commercial' club of Louisville, Neb." ', vThe Bellevue relief committee is sued the" following: "The Bellevue relief committee has after a personal examination, made a careful and conservative .estimate of the needs of the recent tornado suf ferers of this community. In this esti mate Bellevue college and the two churches are omitted, as well as all insured property holders, those who are fully able to take care of them selves, or whose friends are assisting them sufficiently. To meet the immed iate demands $15,000 is imperatively needed. We believe, with your kind assistance, the people of our two neighboring cities would gladly co operate in securing this relief. Can you aid us in this matter? Oscar Keyser is treasurer of the committee, to whom all funds may .be sent, or to some member of the undersigned." Up to this time the number 'of deaths from the storm are six, though perhaps one or two may succumb from their'severe injuries. In Louisville eighteen dwellings were destroyed, the storm leaving nothing of them but kindling wood. As many more' were damaged, some considerably and others escaping with minor loss. The Burlington depot, pump house, semaphore tower, a small mill, a small elevator, the bank of Commerce and Odd Fellows hall build ing, a livery barn and two store build ings were badly wrecked. Business men differ in estimates of the damage done, some being certain that the loss is no more than forty thousand dollars, while others declare it will reach sixty-five thousand dol lars. The best estimates seems to be fifty-five thousand dollars. In some of the estimates buildings are counted as total loss that can be repaired and much salvage claimed. That more people were not killed is due to the warning given by its ap proach and the noise made by it. The storm formed on the top of the bluffs, the fury of the twister apparently be ing exerted after the residence section had been reached. The ground move ment of the storm was slow, its velo city being estimated at eight miles an hour. In fact there is good evidence to show that it required ten minutes to cover one and one-fourth miles of its path in length. The town of Bellevue was literally swept by the wind and Vain and only a very few buildings in that picturesque old village escaped injury. Buildings home and stores were unroofed, or caved in and filled with water. The college buildings were badly damaged, Clarke hall, the main structure, being unroofed, as was also the president's residence. The fact that more lives were not lost is regarded as all but miraculous. College campus and town streets and lots are strewn with fragments of de struction. At Fort Crook the storm was, severe, working much destruction to property, but at this point no lives were lost. It will take $150,000 to repair the dam age, for which congress has already made an appropriation. In the country districts in the path of the storm buildings were unroofed and some of them blown down. Many people saw what was approaching and got into cellars and caves for safety. While the ground movement' was slow the rotary movement of the storm was rapid, and the air was filled' with fly ing timbers, roofs of houses, barns and trees. One citizen said the great fun nel shaped .cloud looked like a giant cushion in which all sorts of property had been inserted. STORM NOTES. Acting Gov. Saunders offered the use of national guard tents to tho&o rendered homeless. Residents of Springfield, Sarpy county, who watched the storm, say that the storm divided jusc as it crossed the river and that one storm moved toward the east while the other traveled toward Springfield passing west of that town and finally dissolv ing in the air, after a number of barns and outhouses near Springfield had been demolished. - Editor Mayfield of the Louisville Courier, had two barns near "each other. One was covered by tornado insurance and one was not. The storm took the barn that was insured. A few days before the storm a widow woman who owned a cottage in the east half of town took out tornado In surance on her home. It was v-recked. It was said these were the only two tornado Insurance policies in force en damaged property. Omaha has started in to rai.-c $10, 000 for sufferers at Louisville ana elsa where. JSP AND' NOTESi NEBRASKA NEWS Item f Greater er L Imper- tance Over the State. Lincoln saloons bow all close at 7 Btoomneld will be a "dry" towa this year. Tecumseh's electric lighting plant cost in all $24,000. Valentine's commercial club has made arrangement for a carnival this fall. The corner stone of Fairbnry's new $25,000Catnollc church was laid last Sunday. The new Congregational church at I Cambridge, costing $20,000, has been dedicated. The Kansas and Nebraska interstate reurlon will be held at Red Cloud in September. Edgar Howard is'a candidate for the democrat-and populist nomination for congress in the Third district - Jim Taylor, who confessed to loot ing an Omaha jewelry store, stealing tfiftp watcnes, was arrested in Lincoln. . The Modern Woodmen of America lodges at Lexington held a grand rally, in. which 300 members were initiated. There is a hot saloon fight in pros pect for the new town of Leshara. southeast of Fremont in Saunders county. Kennison. who killed Editor Cox at . Minatareis again on trial, the su . preme court having granted him an other chance. Secretary Stevens of the Driving association has sent out 3.000 entry blanks.forthe meet to be held, in Wy more in June Moses Y. Starbuck; a mail clerk "who was injured at York while his car was on a'sidetrack, was given $5,000 in set tlement of his $50,000 suit.. Hugh Scilley, manager of the. plant of the 'Standard Sugar company at Leavltt. will go to Brush, Colo., to be come manager of a similar institution. A man by the name of Cordes, liv ing three miles north of Nelson, com mitted suicide by taking strychnine. No cause seems to have ben given for the act. Lightning struck the barn belonging to L. W. Troutman. who lives two miles northeast of Benedict. The barn vand hay, harness and two horses were burned. Loss, near $2,000. fully in sured. C. J. Greene of Omaha, on behalf of the Adams, American and Well Fargo Express companies, has asked, for more time in filing the statements of the express companies, demanded by the railway commission. Anton Bily, who resided on a farm, three miles from Du Bois, shot and killed his wife and afterwards shot and killed himself. Their married life had been notoriously discordant, and the tragedy is no surprise. Sheriff Trade of Gage county re ceived a summons from Ellis that a man resembling Taylor, the Minden murderer, was at that point. He went over and saw the man, but he proved not to be the one wanted. Rock Island employes at Fairbury held a mass meeting and endorsed the plan of organization of the Railway Empolyes Protective association of Nebraska, which was adopted at the Omaha mass meeting April 27. Disowned by -her children, forsaken, by her friends, thoroughly disheart ened and partly demented, Mrs. Annie Lydell was taken into custcdy by Sheriff Her and is being cared for at the county jail in Central City. State vHealth Inspector Wilson has asked the county attorney of Buffalo to prosecute people at Miller who violate quarantine regulations. The village board will also urge to take some steps to enforce its regulations. Sheriff Russey of Cassopolis, Mich., arrived in Broken Bow and left on the first eastbound train, taking with him Raymond Bonine, who has been held there by Sheriff Kennedy, on the charge of seduction. Bonine's crime was commited in Michigan and he has Waded the officers for over two months. : THE MIDWEST LIFE of Lincoln, .Nebraska, an old line Nebraska Com .pany, wants local agents to represent JLi in every town in the state. The Midwest Life issues all kinds of life ipolicies and they are liberal and 'along the best lines in life insurance. Write to the home office at Lincoln i for additional information. Lousi Badger, a farmer near Lush ton, came near losing eight head of cattle from bloat. They had been graz ing on alfalfa. When found, he im mediately tried a new remedy that of throwing hot water, and drenching with hot water. Although when found the catle were nearly dead from bloat, he succeeded in saving five head out of the eight. Eugene Smith, son of Frank Smith, living near. Milford, was found dead hanging in the barn on his father's place. He was 24 years of age and had appeared before the grand jury of Seward county here, where he was closely questioned concerning the death of his mother last February. At the time of the assault upon Mrs. Smith, the son's ways were the subject of much comment. He left a note, de nying he was responsible for his moth er's death. Brooding over the fact that as soon as his prison term was finished he would be arrested again on other ! charges of law breaking, and that he was. already- a disgraced, man, Charles W. Smith, whose real name was Henry Taylor, hanged himself in his cell at the penitentiary. W. H. Seybert of Cass County re ports be bought 80,000 bushels of last year's corn crop at Cullom,' and 125,000 bushels the year previous. David City is putting forth strong efforts to raise the balance needed for the proposed- $20,000 library. Over $11,000 has thus far been secured. ' The management of the Tecumseh Chautauqua has about completed its program for the 1908 assembly. The catalogue will soon be issued. The dates are July 10 to 19 inclusive,- and the assembly will, be held on the fair grounds. The Trans-Missouri elevator at Kearney was burned to the ground. The fire started from defective elec tric wiring in the cupalo of the build ing and spread rapidly to the other wooden buildings nearby. The loss on the elevator amounts to over $40,000. Over 1,500 bushels of grain cf all kinds i were burned, THE STATE CAPITAL 4 MATTERS OF INTEREST TO ALL CITIZENS. EHUIES l FIR IBM Want the State Railway Commission to Be More Reasonable in Matter of Rebates. Employe Ask a Hearing. Railroad employes are pressing for a hearing before the State Railway commission for the purpose of protest ing against an increase In rates, and they make no secret of their claim that they represent a considerable number of voters, F. M. Ryan, a Burlington engineer living in Lincoln, represent ing the Nebraska. Railway Employes' association, not only asks for a hear ing for his association, but a hearing for the employes of each system of railroad in th'e state. The commission has set no date for a hearing, but long ago informed the employes that they would be given a 'hearing before any action is taken on rates. Mr. Ryans letter to the railway commis sions is as follows: "Enclosed you will find a request for a hearing from a committee of the Nebraska Railway Employes's Protect ive association. This committee is acting in connection with the executive committee of employes of several sys tes. who have requested your honor able body for a hearing and if con venient would like to have you arrange the bearing, of the system committees, consecutively and that of the employes association last; also we would appre ciate as early a hearing as possible, for the reason that there are quite a body of voters represented in all these -requests and from some points the inquiries grow suggestive of impati ence, and a growing idea that they could he heard sooner. We want to be fair to the commission and we do not believe that any -member of the commission can recall a circumstance where the employes of any railroad were not fair with every one. We want this spirit to continue, and in the in terest of it venture to suggest that these hearings of railroad men be brought on as soon as convenient." Federal Indictments. The federal grand jury returned an indictment against George R. Smith for infringement of the United States oleomargarine laws; Thomas O'Brien, passing counterfeit money1; Joseph Jones, two indictments, for breaking open a mail pouch and robbing a mail pouch. SUPERIOR MEN COMPLAIN. Insist Beatrice Has a Better Rate Than They on Grain. Elevator and grain men of Superior held a conference with the railway commission and presented an informal complaint against the Burlington road on account of a charge of from 1 to 2 cents per hundred for the privilege of pebilling grain after it had been milled. They allege that other towns get a milling in tra'nsit privilege for nothing. The town of Beatrice is said to have this privilege, and Superior men say Beatrice draws indirectly from their territory. The railroad company hauls grain from the vicinity ot Superior to Beatrice, and the grain is later shipped to northwestern Ne oraska. The complainants desire to be put on an equality with Beatrice. The road is obliged to haul grain three times as far when it takes it to Io atrice. The complainants are C. E. Shaw, D. C. Bishop, F. L. Myers and E. Bossemeyer. Trains Discontinued. Senator C. A. Randall of Madison county, whose home is at Newman 3rove, has. filed a formal complaint with the railway commission alleging that the 'Northwestern road has with out cause taken off two trains much to the inconvenience of the people. Mr. Randall is a farmer and a banker. Newman Grove has a population of $1,000. For four years It has had ;laily train service but on April 25 the Northwestern took off the train that ran Saturdays from Oakdale to Fre mont and the train that ran Sundays from Fremont to Oakdale, through Newman Grove. The Saturday train is a mixed train and carried mail, pas sengers and freight. The Sunday train carried freight and mail from Oakdale to Fremont and passengers froaa Oak dale to Humphrey and stopped at Newman Grove. Senator Randall alleges that these trains were taken off without just cause or reason and in disregard of the interests of the people and with out the consent of the railway commis sion. He says the Northwestern rail-, way company can furnish facilities for carrying passengers on these trains without unnecessary expense. The railway commission will set a date for a hearing. The Paramount Question. The exact amount of revenue re pelved by the various railroads In the territory west of the Kinkaid line !n Nebraska is just bow -occupying the attention of Chairman WInnett of the state railway commission. He wants to find out just how much the rail roads would lose' if rates are reduced to what seems reasonable in the east ern part of the state. The railroads insist that a reduction of rates in Ne braska would be most unfair, as their revenues in the western part "of the state amount to little or nothing. Building for Fair Grounds. The board of managers of the state fair awarded the contract for an audi torium on the fair grounds to W. J. Assenmacher & Co.. of Lincoln, whose bid was $10,000. The other bids re ported were Soucey & Pesha, $12,700; E. A. Stephenson, $10,892; George A. Wilson, $10,452. The contract pro vides that the structure shall be com pleted by August 15 for readiness for use during the next fair. It will have a steel frame, made in Lincoln, and will seat 4,500 people. W. P. Mc- t Creary was reappointed race starter. la Shakespeare' ttea the telM pre vailed' ! May quarters that the coaa ate toad had withia its head a atoaa which 'poaseased extraordinary vir taea. Carried aboat the person, either loose la the pocket or set la a ring or locket; it iasared the wearer agaiast many dangers. Evea so. adversity, though like the toad, "agly aad ve nomous," carries withia itself that whicn awy ia the ead benefit the one to whoa it comes. It may be a bless ing in disgalse. jast as the toad's head hides the "precioaa jeweL" Caught Milk Thief eti Fishing Lln. After Busaerotts bottles of milk had been stolen from his window oa the first floor of No. 18 East One Hun-, dredth street, Henry Cantrowitz rigged up 40 feet of line oa a spool, hooked one end to a newly deposited bottle and with the spool ia front of him watched for a "bite." When the spool moved . rapidly across the floor to the window sill he followed. And as it danced down the street pointed it out to a policeman. Harry Wolg, on the other end, was' fined two dollars in the Harlem court. ROMANCE OF BURIED PICTURES. Long-Hidden Works of Great Artists Strangely Brought to Light. The romantic story of the picture purchased at a London auction, which on expert examination proved to be painted over a Rembrandt worth $40. 000, is curiously reminiscent of the dis covery of a Corfeggio under similar circumstances. A good many years ago two picture restorers, Lovera and Hunterspergb, bought at aa art sale in Rome a number of old pictures in order tos provide themselves with can vases for repainting. In the division of the spoils Hunterspergb. received an indifferent picture of flowers, oa which . he painted a study of a head. This picture he offered to Lovera, who, on close examination, found that the new ground scaled off and that underneath were traces of a figure painted in a style that denoted the hand of a mas ter. Replacing the scales,- and conceal ing his discovery, he purchased the picture for little more than the value of the canvas. Removing the two grounds he disclosed an exceedingly clever, painting' by Correggio, which he sold to the. earl of Bristol for $7,500. Dread of Marble Portraits. "One peculiarity of human nature that I am reminded of daily." said a sculptor, "is the disinclination of the average man to look upon himself re produced in marble. The sight strikes him with positive dread. It makes him feel as if he were looking on his own lifeless body. For that reason it is difficult to persuade many persons -worth modelling to sit for a sculptor. Frequently I am asked why most of my work is modeled after dead and gone subjects. The answer is that liv ing people refuse to give me a com mission. The art of the sculptor dif fers there from that of the painter. Everybody 'likes to be painted. Tho sight of one's face, one's figure, one's clothes in a picture evokes nothing but pleasurable emotions, if well done, but to see one's self carved out of marble produces such an overpower ing sense of death that many sensitive persons put off immortalization at the hands of a sculptor until they are re ally dead." Omaha Directory IVORY POLISH For Furniture and Tiano' COO-D FOTt Afy WOOp LEANS aad polishes, removes stains and restore the Batsh. Can not injure the wood in any war. Guaranteed to aive perfect latidacfioB. Absolutely the best iunuture polish oa the aurker. K your dealer doesa't carry it sead us his name aad we will see (hat you are supplied. Price 25 aad50ceats. UASUTACTUOZO BY Orchard 8k Wilhelm OMAHA. NEBRASKA PRIVATE WIRE J. E. ni Don Gomissim Co. Member Chlrairo Board of Trade and Omaha Gralu Exchange. Grain, Provisions and Stocks Bought and Sold for immediate or future delivery. CJUUN MHrCHT AHO SOLO in Car Lafe. Track bids made on aay railroad. Consignments Solicited. 7aZ0l:7Z?53,&S, B,d- Omaha Ifrnnrdealerdoc'tqpr ry them, mail us 71c r ..T. 1 V ... a one-cound box or 0? rorahair-poandbinandwewtlldallTertheialaTouriloor. . J. O'BKIM CO.. Bakm, 1SSS wr4 St.. Oanka, I.kr. BHIr Tkaa tk a one-pound box 'or 0? TIE IIIINTEST SMT N TIE HAP A GOOD PLACE to Invest your Koney where you car get from 6 ti 10 Oi taprmi Proprtits Write Us How Much You Hare to Invest f 74 Fa Pis. BaJaay ft Jfaeb. Tfce DENTISTS Jd Boor. Paxtoa Block, eor. ICth and raraaai at nvim, vn BffiV,fen'L.pSI Beat cqtilmrd - -.....,. .- .nni.uir mctv OMAHA TEIT & AWNIM GO. Tents, .Awalngs, etc. Larjrest west of Chicago. Write for prices and estimates before basing. Oer. Ilth and Harney . Do You Drink Coffee Why pat tks cntap, rank, bitter-flaw! ruffse Ik 25222212? vmn "AH-AMimCAl? COFFKE coata no moral laststOBhavtaajlt. Yoar groearMUattorcaaawtR. CREAM WANTED We are in a position to pay fancy prices for Cd separator cream at our station Inyo! rtwri or ThlS direct toss at Omaha. mriiiamtxumVta! AUTOMOBILES Co., 1115-17 Faraam Street, Oraaha, 3Cei. a VEUE ToS"1 VEHICLES ASK YOUR DKALKfl OR JOHN DEERE PLOW CO. arte Chris fiinlilii OMAHA "ai '1 K'J At r''t II M -n i i 'j . . . ' V '' t Ml&& ,.s I . -i -Siv-iV : ! '-;j w.'f . -AhS. .V'r & ?-: i-tt&mA .... .. -.. -c-r. Z . 3: .. -ft "Wj'vn'i -tcjra-j & -V sT jss. .- ,A.'-vvag-ftij":i.-js--ftfraa 4 . 3-V-. U&jfr jT-vr-n r- .'V; C'' ,. -s ..y. - .1. '.'..rji '.-' , .-i y-.