T A Brave . By Robert Louis Stevenson. CHAPTER IX. ( Continued. ) And with that he was gone among the thicket. I made a fire , for I had no fear of the Italians , who had even spared all the little possessions left In my encampment ; and , broken as she was by the excitement and the hideous catastrophe of the evening , I managed to bring her back to some composure of mind and strength of body. Day had already come , when a sharp "HIat ? " sounded from the thicket. I started from the ground , but the voice of Northmour was heard adding , jn the most tranquil tones : "Come 'here , Cassllls , and alone ; I want to show you something. " I consulted Clara with my eyes , and. receiving her tacit permission , left her u'.one and clambered out of the den. At some distance off I saw Northmour leaning against an alder , and , a ; soon as he perceived me , he begin walking seaward. I had almost overtaken him as he reached the outskirts of the wood. "Look. " said he , pausing. A couple of stops more brought me out of the foliage. The light of the E Y morning lay cold and clear over that .veil-known scene. The pavilion was but a blackened wreck. Close by the islet a schooner yacht lay to , and a well-manned boat was pulling vigorously for the shore. "The Red Earl ! " I cried. "The Red Earl twelve hours too late ! " "Feel In your pocket , Frank. Are you armed ? " asked Northmour. I obeyed him , and I think I must have become deadly pale. My revolver had been taken from me. "You see I have you In my power , " lie continued. "I disarmed you last night while you were nursing Clara ; but this morning hero take your pistol. No thanks ! " he cried , holding up his hand. "I do not like them ; that Is the only way you can annoy me now. " He began to walk backward across the links to meet the boat , and I fol lowed a step or two behind. lu front of the pavilion I paused to see where Mr. Huddlestone had fallen ; but there wag no sign of him , nor so much as a trace of blood. "Graden Floe , " said Norlhraour. He continued to advance till we bad come to the head of the beach. "No farther , please , " said he. " 'Would you like to take her to Graden House ? " "Thank you , " replied T ; "I shall try to get her to the minister's at Gra den Wester. " far The prow of the boat here grated on V the beach , and a sailor jumped ashore ; with a line in his hand. "Wait a minute , lads ! " cried North mour ; and then lower and to my pri vate ear : "You had better say nothing of this to her , " he added. "On the contrary ! " I broke out , "she shall know everything that I can tell. " "You do not understand , " he re turned , with an air of great dignity. " 'It will be nothing to her ; she ex pects it of me. Good-bye ! " he added , with a nod. I offered him my hand. "Excuse me , " said he. "It's small , 1 know ; but I can't push things quite so far as that. I don't wish any sentimen tal business , to sit by your hearth a white-haired wanderer , and all that. Quito the contrary : I hops to God I shall never again clap eyes on either one of you. " "Well , God bless you , Northmour ! " I said heartily. "Ch , yes , " he returned. \ He walked down the beach , and the man who was ashore gave him an arm on board , and then shoved off and leaped into the bows himself. North mour took the tiller. They were not yet half way to the Red Earl , and I was still waCching their progress when the sun rose out of the sea. One word more and my story is done. Years after Northmour was killed fighting under the colors of Garibaldi for lb.3 liberation of Tyron. THE END. Carrie The Telegraph Girl XXX A ROMANCE OF THE CHEROKEE STRIP. XXX By Captain Jack Crawford "THS POET SCOOT. " I had not met Carrie Rankin. I did r.ot know if she was long or short , blonde or brunette , sweet sixteen or crabbled forty , plump as a mountain < iuall or thin and angular as a Kansas fsmale suffragist ; yet we had become the best of friends , and daily chatted with each other on terms of marked sociability. I confess that , as the days sped by and I listened to her witty expressions and bright conversation , I found'myself falling in love with her , yet I had not the leaat tangible idea of her personal appearance , and knew not whether her voice was eoft and musical , or pitched in a high key that v/as harsh and disagreeable to the ear. I knew she was good-natured and pos sessed of a keen sense of humor , for she would laugh heartily at my re marks , and respond with the most brll- llant repartee when my humorous darts were leveled at herself. This may all seem enigmatical to the reader , but will assume an aspect of entire plausibility in the light of the fact that she and I were telegraph op erators at widely-separated stations on a western railway. She knew as little of the young man with whom she dai ly chatted as 1 did cf herself. We had each drawn an ideal picture of the per sonal appearance of the other , and in our frequent conversations over the wire , each had in mind a face and fig ure to whom the remarks were ad dressed. I had pictured her as a bright-eyed , laughing , jolly little crea ture , with golden curls and silvery voice. I often wondered what sort of a mortal picture she had drawn of my self. self.Red Red Rock , where I was located , was a station on the Santa Fe railway , in the Cherokeen strip of Oklahoma , be fore that now famous stretch of land was purchased by the government from the Indians and thrown open for set tlement. The population of the town ( ? ) consisted cf a burly section fore man , of Milesian extraction ; his wife , a red-faced , red-armed woman , who had no aspirations outside the limits of her not over-clean kitchen ; four section laborers , and myself , the agent and operator for the railway company. The country was , at the time of which I write , a wild one. Inhabited only by Indians , a few cattlemen who leased grazing lauds from the aboriginal own ers , the cowboys who looked after the scattered herds , and roving bands of desperadoes under the leadership of the Dal ton brothers , the most famous of whom , Bill Daltcn , was punctured by a well-directed bullst from the rifle of a deputy United States marshal but a few days ago , and who died with pistol in hand cursing the shot which had laid him lew. Miss Rankin was my predecessor in the position of agent and operator at Red Reck. She learnt the art of tel egraphy In the train dispatcher's office at Arkansas City , where her widowed mother resided , and when competent to assume charge of a small station , had asked for and been given a posi tion at Red Rock. She tired , of a while , of the lonely monotony of that obscure station , and asked to be sent to one less isolated from mankind ; and when one day the operator at Ed- raond , further clown the line , reported that his fingers had been "pinched" while endeavoring to couple two cars together , and that he must hasten to Arkansas City for surgical attention , the Red "Rock agent was telegraphed instructions to lock up her depot , leave the key la the care of the section fore man , and proceed on a train then al most due to Edmond , and assume charge until the injured agent should return. I was at the time an "extra operator" on a Kansas division , and on the afternoon of the day on which Miss Rankin left Red Rock , I found myself sitting in her recently vacated chair for an indefinite stay at the lone ly station. My first train report had scarce an nounced my presence to the operators up and down the line , ere Edmond called me up. She expressed regret that she had been denied the privi lege of extending to me a personal wel come to my new home , said she hoped I would find the station a pleasant one , and asked me if I would not kindly collect a number of feminine trifles which she had overlooked in packing her trunk , and then send them down to her. She would be ever so much obliged , and should an opportunity pre sent itself , would certainly reciprocate my kindness. That was my first "meeting" with a lacly who was soon destined to play a heroic part in a thrilling adventure in which I was a prominent figure. Little by little Miss Rank-in and my self became acquainted over the wire. We were scon holding daily conversa tions , then semi-tlaily , and then cur chats became so frequent that at times jealous operators at other stations would break in on our conversation with hints that some one was "mash ed" on some one else , and that we had belter give the suffering wire a rest and do our spooning by mail. To these uugentlemanly interruptions we paid but little attention , but continued our long-distance intercourse I , as I be fore remarked , falling more hopelessly in love with my new friend as the days sped by , and often wondering if a recl- prccatory feeling was net growing in warmth at the other end of the wire. I was a young man cf but 20 , very susceptible to female charms , and as I was then denied even a look at a pretty face , aside from fleeting glimps es of female passengers on passing trains , I came to regard Miss Rankin as "my test girl , " and her personal telegraphic signal , "Cr , " became the sweetest.sound my instrument clicked into my ears. Modesty , coupled with a fear of be ing "guyed , " had prevented me from questioning the train men regarding the personal appearance of my Inamor ata , but one day when I had orders to hold a north-bound freight until a belated south-bound passenger had ar rived , and the freight conductor , Tom Armstrong , came into my office and sat down for a chat , I determined to sound him and learn a little something of the idol of my dreams. "What sort of a looking girl is that now holding down Edmond station ? " I asked. He looked at me a moment in a half-mischievous muu- half-quizzical , - ner , and replied : "Say , Fred , I've heard some cf the boys en the line say you was dead gone on that piece , and I have an idea she Is on your trail , too , for she made me toll her all about you while my train was lying there this morning waiting for No. 7. Did you never see her ? " "No , I never had tire pleasure ol meeting Miss Ran ! < 5n. " "Miss Rankin ? You mean Mrs. Ran- kin. " "Mean wha-a-a-at ? " "Mrs. Rankiu. 1 thought you knew she was a widow with two kids at her mother's , up in Arkansas City. I guess she's square enough sort cf woman , but when you see her , old man , I've an idea you won't want a second look. She's no spring chicken ! Forty if she's a day , and she doesn't need a better protector than that face of hers. And temper ! Gee-whiz ! My hind- brakeman asked her the other day if that face didn't pain her , and she grabbed up a coupling-pin and let it go at him. He'd have been a dead brakey if he hadn t been a good dodger. He never sticks his head out of the ca boose window now while we are at that statlou , for she's got it in for him. " The passenger whistled , and he hast ened to his train to pull out as soon as the track was clear. How cruelly my idol was shattered. After the trains had gone , I sat as if dazed ; in fact , I was so absorbed in digesting the startling information I had gleaned from Armstrong that I neglected to report their departure , and the "jacking-up" I received from the train-dispatcher for my inattention to duty served to still further increase the ill temper into which the conductor's story had thrown me. The snappy clicks cf the instruments had scarcely ceased to convey to my ears the mer ited reproof , concluding with the ster eotyped chestnut which dispatchers al ways crack in such cases , "Don't let it occur again , " ere I heard a call from Edmond. Heretofore I had fairly sprung to the table to respond to that call , but now I felt no desire to enter a conversation with the ogre who pre sided at the key at that distant station. It was with no gentle tcuch that I an swered her call. "Say , Sd" ( my personal signal ) , "it's too bad , but u shld 'tend to biz. Ha ! ha ! ha ! Was u sleep or reading letr fai ur girl ? " Thus came her consolatory message in the abbreviated conversational style of the telegrapher , and it served to fan the flames of my anger into a fierce heat. Had it been the nice little mai den cf my dreams who had slung such chaff at me over the wires I would have smiled and thought it real cute , but that fright ! Bah ! "I dt no as it interests u wt I was doing. I'm 2 busy to talk nw. " I snapped the words off with spite ful .sharpness and closed my key with a thump that almost sprung the cir cuit breaker. "Well u needn't bite my nose off coz Dr ( the dispatcher ) turned you over. Call mo up when u get in gd humor. I've something to sa to u. " My gentlemanly instincts sharply re proved me for treating her in such an ungentlemanly manner. Had she ever led me to believe she was young and handsome ? Was she to be blamed be cause she was a widow , wore a carica ture in lieu of a face and was the mother of two children , no doubt as ugly as herself ? I felt a tinge of shame for having spoken so crossly to her. and with softer touch of the key replied : "I beg pardon , madam. I've got bad hedake today , and feel cross as bear. Forgot I was talking to lady. Wt u want to sa to me ? " "O , I'm real sorry ur not well , for I've been 'ticipating pleasant visit with u. The agent here is on No. 5. and I'm ordered to Ark. City , and I thought if twould be greeable to u I'd go up on freight trn and stop over t'r for pass enger ts eveng. I want to c the old statn again. " ( To be continued. ) The Kevolutlonsiry Tories. James K. Hosmer in the Atlantic : If George III. and his ministers were em barrassed by opposition at home , says James K. Hosrner In the July Atlantic , the American patriots were no less em barrassed. An energetic minority , it has been said , brought to pass the revolution elution , which proceeding , especially from New England , was carried through in spite of a majority in the colonies a majority in great part quite apathetic , but to some extent actively resisting. The emigration of forces , when the day was at last won , was rel atively as great as that of the Huguenots nets from France after the revocation or the Edict of Nantes. The total num ber is estimated to have been at least one hundred thousand. In this multi tude were comprised only such , with their families , as had been active for- the king. The indifferent , who had lent no helping hand to the patriots , must have been a multitude much larger ; these remained behind , inertly submitting to the new order of things as they had swayed inertly this way or that , following the power and direc tion of the blast of war. Ready with the Text. From the Boston Transcript : The Maid What" are you doing with the Bi ble , Freddy ? Freddy Picking out a text for today's sermon. When I come home from church I always have to tell pa what the text was. The Maid But how can you know the text until you hear it ? Freddy Any text will do. Pa won't know the difference. The Maid But your grandmother Is going with you. Freddy But grandma will be fast asleep long before they get to the text. A Kansas and a Missouri Regiment Will Go to Porto Rico , BROOKE LEAVES CHICKAMAUGA Tim Sixth Army Corps to IJn Organized Immediately Under the Command of Major General Jnme.4 II. Wilson To Consist of OG.OOO Second Call Men. CiiiciCAMAUGA. .luly 25. General Urooke and staff left this afternoon on a special train for Newport News , whence they go to Porto Kico. The train was made up of a private car occupied by General Urooke , Uvo Pull man sleepers and two baggage coaches. It will go over the Queen & Crescent routa by way of Lexington , Ky. , and Richmond , Vi. The departure of General Urooke loaves Major General Wade in command of Camp Thomas. At 'in early hour to-day the reserve hospital corps , reserve ambulance corps , the signal corps , Troop II , Sixth United States cavalry and Company I'1 , Eighth United States infantry , left on special trains for Newport News. The several commands marched five miles to llossville , where they were loaded ou special trains. To-morrow morn ing four light batteries of artillery , A 6f Illinois , IJ of Pennsylvania , A of Missouri , and the Twenty-seventh In diana will leave for Newport News The whole of the Firsst corps , with the exception of two brigades of the First division which arc now on the way , will leave next week for Porto llico. The regiments are as follows : Twen ty-first Kansas , Second Missouri , Fifth Illinois , Third Wisconsin , First Ken tucky , Sixteenth Pennsylvania. Second Wisconsin , Third Kentucky , Thirty- first Michigan , One Hundred and Six tieth Indiana , First Georgia , Sixth Ohio , One Hundred and Fifty-eighth Indiana , First West Virginia , Second Ohio , First Pennsylvania , Fourteenth Minnesota. First South Carolina , Fifth Pennsylvania. Eighth Massachusetts , Twelfth New York. Ninth Pennsylva nia and First New Hampshire. It is announced here that immedi ately after the several corps have left Chickamauga park ths organization of the Sixth corps , to be commanded by Major General James H. Wilson , will be begun and completed. The corps will consist of twenty-seven regiments from the .second call for volunteers , numbering in all 30.1)00. ) WASHINGTON' , July 25. Major Gen eral CoppSnger , commanding the troops at Tampa , has telegraphed Sec retary Algcr that the Eleventh and Nineteenth regiments , regular infan try. Troop JJ of the Second cavalry and Light batteries M and Cof the Seventh artillery arc embarking to-day for Porto Kico. These trcops. General Cop- pingcr states , totally exhaust the ca pacity of the ships now at Tampa. General Grant's brigade received orders to-day to immediately follow General Ilaiue's brigade to Porto Kico. Orders were sent yesterday by the sec retary of war to General Graham , commanding the troops at Camp Alger , to send troops under his command to Newport News for transportation to I'orto Rico. Commissary General Egan is rapidly making his arrangements for sending supplies to the Porto KScan army. The transport ship Massachusetts will sail in a few days from Newport News with a large amount of provisions. The ves sel will go directly to Porto Uico. General Egan. has received a cable gram from Colonel Weston at Santiago in regard to the commissary supplies. This is the dispatch in full : ' 'The Mississippi came in yesterday. The beef is delightful. We issued to our troops and hospitals C" ,000 pounds. About 33,000 pounds is the daily average consumption. We have light ered it ashore. Ships holding our stuff should not draw over fourteen feet of water. Stuff should not be on ships with troops aboard where their rations arc mixed with ours , causing loss to its. Our losses from this source are large. Full rations are issued and fresh brea-'l to two divisions. All will have freoh bread in a few days. Smith writes rnc concerning a lot of bacon and hard bread , parts of 7.10,000 rations bacon and 500,01)0 ) hard bread sent by your orders for Cubans. Wes- toii. Chief Commissary. " ' MORE TROqP3FOR MANILA , Another Transport With Two Uattalions and a Signal Corp ? Detach men ! Sails. SAX FHAXCISCO. July 25. The trans port steamer Kio Janeiro , bearing two battalions of South Dakota volunteers , recruits for the Utan light artillery and a detachment of the signal corps sailed to-day for Manila. The vessel was accorded the same ovation that has been given to the other troops that have sailed for the Philippines. The expedition is under the command of Ilrigadier Gen eral H. G. Otis. A Kansas Soltller Die * nt CSiIckainauga. CIIICICAMAUGA PARK , Ga. , July " . " > . Charles Ellison , Company 15 , Twcnty- first Kansas , son of the sheriff of Ham ilton county , Kan. , die I at Leiter hos pital yesterday of typhoid fever. Xio ! Kni3JS Accounts Mixed. SAN FRAXCISCO , July 2V Lieuten ant Colonel Uarnett of the Pennsylva nia recruits , Captain Perry and Lieu tenant Milesan have been detailed as a board of survey to straighten out the badly tangle ! accounts of Quartermas ter Lieutenant L. C. tmith , Twentieth Kansas , resigned. Champagne for the AVounilod. NKW Yo K , July 21. A firm of wine makers at Rheims , France , has offered the United States government 1,200 bottles of champagne for the sick and wounded soldiers. QUEEN LIL HAS A FEW CLAIMS. To Ask for n Million Acres of Crown I iiiidt and tie liack Kontals. SAX FKAXCISCO , July 25. It is re ported among the intimate friends of Liliuokalani , former qussu of the Ha waiian islands , that when she reaches Honolulu she will issue a statement or manifesto to the people. As soon as she has informed her people of the re sult of her mission , she will publicly protest against the transfer of the islands , aud will present her claim for the crown lands , confiscated by the re public , which consist of nearly one million acres which yic-ld a yearly rental of more than 8100,000. It is said she will also present hcrclaimfor between 5300,000 and $ KU,0)0 collected as rentals by the republic. American lawyers , it is said have b en engaged to handle the case against the United States government. WAR BETWEEN THE STATES , Wh t tl p K\-Confcderites "Would Sub stitute toe "tha ICclielllon. " ATLANTA , Ga. , July L'5. The city wa.'j decorated with endless miles of bunting for Hi3 Confederate parade yesterday. Mrs. Stonewall Jackson. Miss Winnie D.ivis. Mrs. John H. Gor don and Mrs. Crabbclle Currie , presi dent of the Daughters of the Confed eracy occupied carriages , as did also General and Mrs. Longstimoet , General and Mrs. Hooker and General Wade .Hamptou. ! General Gordon , at the auditorium , introduced Miss Winnie Davisthe vet erans giving her an ovation. A reso lution was passed to substitute for "the war of the rebellion. " the expres sion , ' 'th.5 civil war between the states. ' ' Charleston , S. C. , was select ed as the place for the encampment next July. TEXAS POPULISTS DESERTED , The Ittiildle-af-tliu-Koiiil Convention AVill rrolmlil.v I5u Abandoned. CINCINNATI , July 25. The national convention of the Populist party.called to assemble in Cincinnati September 5 , is off and the gathering of middle- of-the-road and alliliatcd - - Pop ulists will nut gel beyond a call. Several states had held conventions and selected delegates. Maine had chosen five leading Populists as dele gates. Other states had responded to the Omaha call Kven Georgia had broken away from Chairmin M. C. llut- ler. Hut Texas would not. and this broke the backbone of the straight Populist movement. LITTLE WILL NOT BE OUSTED , The Hoard lo Examine Into the Officer's Health Said to lie Dropped. CA.MI * MKP.KITT , San Francisco , July 25. Lieutenant Colonel Little of the Kansas regiment , into whose physical | condition a board of medical survey i has been asked to examine by the col- i onel and chief surgeon of his regiment , said yesterday that he had been in formed by Brigadier General King that on account of his obvious good health the matter would bt : dropped and no board appointed. A TUGBOAT BLOCKADE , Although Ironclad * IVill lie Kelioved , Cuba's Guard Will Ba M.ulo Stronger. JACKSONVILLE , Fla. , July 2. > . The government is dispatching a large fleet of tugboats and other small craft , car rying a few rapid-lire guns , to Cuban waters with the evident intention of relieving the big cruisers now that there is no Spanish fleet there. With this Heel of tugs and .scows a strict patrol can bo established around the island , thus entirely shutting off all food supplies for Havana. Missouri Potatoes for Cuha. ST. Loiris , Mo. , July 25. A St. Louis ! commission house yesterday received a j telegraph order from the assistant ! quartermaster general at Chickamauga for fifteen carloads of potatoes to be shipped immediately to Tampa. Fla. , i and thence by transport to Santiago. { The firm hired a number of extra ! drays , canvassed the city for potatoes , and last night had the fifteen cars loaded and ready for shipment. To Weed Out the First Corp * . CIIICKAMAVGA. July 25. All over the First corps are a number of men who I cannot endure the hardships of war. i These men are to be discharged .it I once. An examining board from each ' of the United States division hospitals will at once ba appointed to examine I and inquire into the health of the men. j This work will not d.jlay the departure i of the corps for I'orto Kico. No Sponsor for Rooievelt. NKW YOUK , July 25. No one can be found who will stand sponsor for Col onel Theodore Koosevelt's candidacy for governor. No one will admit that he has authority from Colonel Koose valt to promulgate his candidacy , and there is no organized movement appar ently to advance his candidacy , but a candidate ho is. and a popular one. Galveston's S20O.OOO Hotel Fire. GAI.VKSTOX , Tex. . July 25. The P.tjach hotel located on the Gulf front , : i summer and winter resort house , was burned at 5 o'clock this morning. The cause is said to have been a de fective electric wire. The loss is esti mated at from 200,00 ! ) to S250.000. The building was owned by W. E. Hughes of Dallas. Is'cw I'oll IJooki Tor Soldicr.4. Toi'EKA , Kan. , July 25. It would cost S30.000 to print the tally sheets and ballots for the 4,500 Kansas sol diers who are absent from the state this fall. TO BRING THE TROOPS NORTH , Surgeons Think Slmftor'rt Army Should Bo Glvou a Vacation. SANTIAGO w : CUJA , July 20. Gen eral Shaftcr has opened a cable otlice. hero and is in communication with Washington regarding the disposition of the Fifth army corps , which con sists , of those troops which came with him from Tampa , and the reinforce ments from the four transports which have since been unloaded. Except the Thirty-third and part of the Thirty- fourth Michigan , none of the latter has been in action , but all are camped in the same place. So far as health considerations go. General MeKibben seems to have held the opinion that the Fifth corps could join the Porto Kico expedition under General Miles as soon as Santiago should fall. This was the evident in tention when the army of invasion left the United States , but the condi tion of the men now , according to the physicians and commanding officers , la such that the entire corps should re turn north at once. General Miles has cabled that he does not want and will not need a single man among them , and he believes that after their hard campaign they should ba given a rest of at least two or three weeks. The doctors say the men should be sent into camp in the mountains of North Carolina or Western Maine for a month. Washington agrees to this and will do everything possible , the cable dispatch to-day says , to carry the army away from here. I5ut there- is a lack of transports. In addition to the I'orto Kico troops , which will re quire forty steamers for their convey ance , the authorities here are still counting upon having to convey tha 22,000 Spanish prisoners to Cadiz. It appears from here that our government cannot get sufficient vessels and this fact holds the Fifth corps hero , doing nothing. The men r.re anxious to get away. The cavalry division has been sent into the mountains at its own request to see if it cannot get into shape to join General Miles. If no fever develops , the men may go to Porto Kico. The Twenty-fourth infantry is act ing as guards and nurses at the hos pital at .Juragtm. More nurses ara needed. The colored troops will prob ably remain here to attend the sick and hold Santiago. General Shaftyr has cabled to Wash ington that it is imperatively neces sary that he should have more im- nnmes sent to him quickly , and the ; probability is that a corps will leava within the next ten days. All our men are now camped upon the lighting line , whera they have 'been fur two weeks , except General Wheeler's men , who have been sent into the hills. General Wheeler is still ill , but ho resists the pleas of his friends to re- tvrn to the United States. WASHINGTON ; July 22. Secretary Alger said to-day that the troops which were in the engagement. * .it Santiago would not be sent to Porto Kico. They will remain in Cuba until yellow fever has been entirely stamped out. General Miles did not think it advisable to take any troops to Porto Kico that were liable to have con tracted fever , and in this conclusion the department concurred. End of Sedalla'j Hogs-Shirk Incident. SEDAMA , Mo. , July 22. William n. Hogg , who was horsewhipped by W. S. Shirk , jr. , Tuesday , far paying at tentions to his sister , was married to Miss Maude Shirk at the Cumberland Presbyterian church this morning , the Kev. Mr. Logan officiating. The couple left a half hour later for Kan sas City. Neither Judge Shirk or hia son attended the marriage. A British Stcnmer Takon. KST WEST , Fla. , July 22. The Brit ish steamer Newfoundland , loaded with food supplies , was captured by the Mayflower on Tuesday off Cien- fuegos , into which harbor she was heading. Two blank shots across he- bow brought her to and the Mayflower put a prize crow ou board of her and sent iier to Charleston. S. C. Blanco in a I'rcas As MADRID , July 22. An otlicial dis patch from Captain General lilanco announces that the greatest enthus iasm prevails in Havana , and that tha feeling in favor of resisting the "Yan kee" is universal. It further asserts that the commanders of the voluntec r forces , at a conference under the pres idency of General Arolas , military governor of Havana , resolved to "ex haust their resources and die rather than surrender. " LIVE STOCK AND PRODUCE Omaha , Chicago anil New Vork fllarket Quotutloiis. OMAHA. Huttcr Creamery separator. . . tt a ! . " > Butter -Choi , e fanry country. 10 a 11SH ERRS Fresh , per do/ . ' a SH Spring Chicken -Per pound . 11 a 12 Lemons -Per box . * " " si 6 on Oranges IVrbo\ . 2 . ,0 a 2 7" Honey Choice , per pound . It a l. Onions I'er bushel . 75 a > 5 ISeans Handplrkrd navy . 1 > a 1 ) Potatows IVr bushel , new . 30 a 55 May- Upland per ton . 4 " > 0 a G OJ SOUTH OMAHA STOCK JIAKKCT Uozs-Cholce light . 3H ) a 3 W Hogs Heavy weights . 3 * > a 'i ft. P.eef steers . ' ' ' & a 5 ! . " > Hulls . 2 00 a 3 , ; : J-tass . 3 S ( ) a 4.0 Calves . CO a 5 25 Western feeder * . 3 W a 4 1' ) Cows . 2 25 a 4 11 Heifer ; . 3 75 a 4 ti Stocxers anil feeders . 3 i > a I M Sheep -Muttons . 300 a 4 40 Steep -Native mixed . 33) a 4 00 CHICAGO. WheatXo. . " 5 spring . 75 a 76 Corn Per bushel . 3-1 a 3- { ' { OaU-I'er bn-.hel . 23 a Ztv , Warier-No. 2 . : a U Kye No. 2 . 47 a IS Timothy seed , per bu . 2 . > 0 a 2 55 I'orlc tVn-wt . 'J SJ a 9 - 7 I.urd Per ! lX > jiotiiuU . 5 5i a - " > > 7 faille Prime feeding cuttle. . . 5 GO si1 { . " > I'attle Native beef steers . 4 CO a 4 V5 1 IocsMixed. . . . . , . 3 fit ) a 3 si . 4 75 0 10 ne'-u t llppod LimlH a Siiti' ' ) -prinsl.amb- ; . 550 a 0 40 SEW YOUK MARKET. WheatNo. . 2. rert winter . S2 a s' : * { Corn -No. 2 . : a i 4o ont No. - . - " * - V I . , r'1) . c\ ) a ! ) 75 Lurd- . 5 00 a 5 3) KANSAS CITY. Wheat No. 2 spring . 73 a 74 Corn No. 2 . 'M . \ - \ O'lts N > . 2 . 2i ! a y \ Calf * Mixed . 3 ) a T "M HOJH Mlx-d . : : a 4 < Shaep S.oc .crs and feeders. . . 3 15 a 4 < >