McCook Tribune F M K1MMELL Publisher MCOOK NEBRASKA A Parjs doctor says that kissing Is healthful but how can anything so pleasant be so A noted sporting writer says the race ot fighters Is disappearing Still the fit survive so to speak Next we shall be hearing that the bargain counter fiends are taking les sons in the noble art of jiu jitsu Helen Mathers the English writer who is over here says that she likes American women immensely So do we The tax list shows that Mrs As tors diamond stomaclier is not one of the permanent institutions of New York But perhaps that St Paul paper that spoke 9i the enormity of a dead mil- lionakes estate meant precisely what it said The biggest sea lobster weighs eighteen pounds The species that travels on land usually weighs about 300 pounds Perfnmed gasoline for automobiles is the latest innovation in Paris The world will wait with bated breath to learn how it works Two Frenchmen fought a duel the other day in which both were severe ly wounded Accidents will happen even in French duels The Connecticut candidate who courteously vqted for his opponent and thereby elected him has experi enced a change of manners Tom Lawson says he once kept Ad dlcks from committing suicide The strange thing about it is that he makes the statement hoastfully A Chicago man says wood alcohol has an agreeable taste It is noticed that when once a man drinks it he never goes back to the other kind A Boston scientist has discovered a new kind of grip germ One unsatis factory thing about the new germ is that it is no improvement on the old kind Woodman Spare That Tree is not enough Somebody ought to write a new song Farmer Plant a Tree and teach all the country school chil dren to sing it Who are most beautiful large blondes or small blondes large bru nettes or small brunettes Well it depends more or less on which you hapnen to be with Dr R Heber Newton not only ex presses his faith that the spirits greet the living but he declares also that men possess halos We all know men who think they do The valued St Paul Globe dis courses pessimistically on Christmas horrors Nothing but neckties match safes pen wipers and smoking sets in its stocking this year That movement to eliminate the ragtime song may be worthy but it is somewhat late The world has passed the Bedelia stage and is now in the deadly embrace of Teasing Tfee economical New York editor wh addressed a New Years cable to the Emperor of Japan Mikado To kio alight have saved four bits more if he had cut Mikado down to Mike Ninety years ago the first great bat tle New Orleans was fought Every body will recall the fact that the sec ond great battle of New Orleans was between Sullivan and Corbett many years later v Prof Perrlne of the Lick observa tory has discovered a sixth satellite of Jupiter but as a telescope of 10 to 12 inches in diameter is needed to observe it comparatively few of us will ever see it Objection to the marriage of King Alfonso of Spain and Princess Victo ria ot England has been raised in soaevhlgh places This being the caseiaiis pretty sure to marry her if She will have him Geerge Meredith comes out now with the discouraging declaration that America has never produced a great writer And still America doesnt es pecially regret that George Meredith wasnt born over here Uncle Sams experiments in the matter of worlds fair postage stamps have convinced him that a busy peo ple does not take kindly to the idea of licking an unnecessary area of mucil age when about to mail a letter It appears that Mrs Chadwick smuggled over 50000 through the gates of the custom house at New York- This fact is likely to cause certain ladies who occupy high social positions to regard her with admira tion rather than contempt Gor Pennypacker says the Pitts lurg Post will now show whether ho is a man or a mouse It must be gratifying to Mr Pennypacker to Icnow that there is after the record he has made afc doubt on -the question as It relates to him REVOLUTION IN RULES FOR SHIPPING STOCK Department of Agriculture Prepares Plans to Stop Spread of Disease WASHINGTON The Department of Agriculture has issued regulations es tablishing on February 1 next a fed eral quarantine against a large part of the south and parts of other states to prevent the spread of splenetic or southern fever among cattle The quarantine lines are largely the same as last year The quarantined terri tory will embrace the eastern part of North Carolina all of South Caro linalina Indian Territory Alabama Mississippi and Louisiana that part of Virginia below the James river and running to the northeast corner of Bedford county all of Georgia but Union Towns and Rabun counties all of Arkansas except the two north ern tiers of counties which are left outside the quarantine lines during February and March but are placed within the quarantine during the rest of the quaratine period part of Ten nessee and Oklahoma most of Texas except the Panhandle and the lower part of California The quarantine is declared to be in force until Novem ber 1 but this date is subject to change The regulations allow cattle in the quarantined area to be shipped north in placarded cars If shipped for slaughter and placed in quarantined yards on arrival at destination If the stock is unloaded en route it must be at yards reserved solely for southern cattle and after unloading cars must be disinfected before being used for native stock Rich Man Shoots Himself NEW YORK Jacob Ridgeway Wrightr who is said to be a wealthy and socially prominent resident of Wilkesbarre Pa was taken from his apartments in the Hotel Imperial here with a serious bullet wound in his left side He died a few hours after being taken to a hospital He declared that the shot which caused his injur ies had been fired by himself by ac cident His physician Dr Howard A Pardee who was with him at the time of the shooting was detained as a witness The Cotton Situation WASHINGTON Reuresentative Byrd of Mississippi introduced a res olution reciting at length the deplor able condition of the cotton raising industry ot the country and conclud ing with an instruction to the ways and means committee to make a fa vorable report to the bouse on a- pend ing bill discontinuing the tariff sto fix rates He said it was a radical change of government principles He said the record of the commission in the courts was twenty two misses one bulls eye apd two Inside the ring RUSSIA That Is What the City of St Pet ersburg Is Facing BLOOD FLOWING IN THE STREET Workmen and Their Supporters Strive to See the Czar and Are Slain by the Soldiery 500 to 5000 Reported Killed - ST PETERSBURG This has been a day of unspeakable horror in St Petersburg The strikers of yester day goaded to desperation by a day of violence fury and bloodshed are in a state of open insurrection agaiustthe government A condition almost bordering on civil war exists in the terror stricken Russian capital The city is under martial law with Prince Vasilchikoff as commander of over 50000 of the emperors crack guards Troops are bivouacking in the streets tonight and at various places on the Nevsky prospect the main thoroughfare of the city On the inland of Vassilli Ostrov and in the industrial sections infuriated men have thrown up bar ricades which they are holding The empress dowager has hastily sought safety at Tsarskoe Selo where Em peror Nicholas II is living Minister of the Interior Sviatopolk Mirsky presented to his majesty last night the invitation of the workmen to appear at the Wnter palace this afternoon and receive their petition but the emperors advisers already had taken a decision to shoW a firm and resolute front and the emperors answer to 100000 workmen trying to make their way to the palace square today was a solid array of troops who met them with rifle bayonet and saber The priest Gopon the leader and idol of the men in his golden vest ments holding aloft the cross and marching at the head of thousands of workmen through the Narva gate miraculously escaped a volley which laid low half a hundred persons The figures of the total number killed or wounded here at the Moscow gate at various bridges and islands and at the Winter palace vary The best estimate is 500 although there are ex aggerated figures placing the number at 5000 Many men were accompa nied by their wives and children and in the confusion which left no time for discrimination the latter shared the fate of the men The troops with the exception of a single regiment yhich is reported to have thrown down its arms remained loyal and obeyed orders But the blood which crimsoned the snow has fired the brains and passions of the strikers and turned women as well as men into wild beasts and the cry of the infuriated populace is for vengeance The sympathy of the middle classes is with the workmen If Father Gopon the master mind of the movement aimed at open revo lution he managed the affair like a genius to break the faith of the peo ple in The Little Father who they were convinced and whom Fatner Gopon had taught them to believe I would right their wrongs Gorky the Russian novelist expresses the opin ion that todays work will break this faith of the people in the emperor He said this evening to the Associated Press Today inaugurated revolution in Russia The emperors prestige will be irrevocably shattered forever by the shedding of innocent blood He has alienated himself forever from his people Gopon taught the work men to believe that an appeal direct to The Little Father would be heed ed They have been deceived Gopon is now convinced that peaceful means have failed and that the only remedy is force Midnight Bulletin Firing continues on the Vassiliostrov It is rumored that the workmen there have seized a dynamite factory and also that 30000 or 40000 armed strikers from Kolpino sixteen miles distant are marching on St Petersburg Barri cades erected on the Island of Vas sili Ostrov late tonight were destroy ed by troops almost immediately with the loss of thirty workmen killed SENDS A MESSAGE President Wants Action on Export Trade Scheme WASHINGTON The president sent a message to the senate recommend ing favorable action upon a sugges tion made by Assistant Secretary Loomis for co operation by the De partments of State and Commerce and Labor in collecting information concerning trade conditions in foreign countries The president recommends that provision be made for the ap pointment of six special agents to be called commercial attaches who shall visit the different countries and make a study of industrial conditions with a view of suggesting modifications and changes in the existing plans of our foreign commerce Mr Loomis in explaining the plan said that this plan can be put into execution at a very small cost in fact he places the cost of the test at 50000 per annum Six commercial attaches or special agents will be suf ficient to inaugurate the movement They would be allowed salaries at 5000 per annum and traveling ex penses and would be assigned one to cover Austria the Balkan states Ger many Switzerland Russia and other countries of northern Europe one for France Italy Portugal Spain and other countries bordering on the Medi terranean a third for Great Britain and dependencies the fourth for Mexico Central America the West Indies and South America the fifth for Asia more particularly Asiatic Russia China and Japan and the sixth to be held in reserve for special service in any part of the world It is not proposed that these attaches should have a fixed residence at any particular capital but that they may be transferred from point to point Homesteads in South Dakota WASHINGTON The house com mittee on public lands heard Sena tors Kittedge and Gamble and Repre sentatives Martin and Burke S D in favor of a bill increasing from 160 acres to 640 acres the amount of and that may be taken up under the homestead act in that state The argu ment was made that without this in crease the settlement of the state would be materially retarded -The committee took no action Two Mining Men Murdered RAPID CITY S D News has just arrived by courier of the murder of the Cain brothers two bachelors who lived at the Tamarack mine fifteen miles west of this city The murder is the greatest mystery It Is known that the brothers had trouble with some neighbors and they are suspect ed of the crime The courier states that the bodies have the appearance of having been clubbed to death One theory is that they were murdered for a wagon load of merchandise recently purchased JAPS ENTER CITY Victorious Army In Possession of Port Arthur Headquarters Third Japanese Army at Port Arthur The victorious army Sunday formally entered Port Arthur General NogI with his staff entered first through the old town and took his stand in the public square of the new town The army was represented by one regiment from each brigade The procession which was five miles long was three hours passing the saluting base after which the troops passed out of the city through the new town The correspondents then visited the captured city for the first time The old town buildings were badly smashed by shells but in the new town the damage was slight All the shipping in the harbor was badly damaged by shell fire the warships being practically useless owing to the injuries they had sustained by shells Proposals for the surrender of Port Arthur were first made December 29 at a council of war General Stoessol was in favor of surrender but some of his general officers were bitterly op posed to it The regimental officers and the troops were not consulted The first news they had of the sur render was January 1 after General Stoessel had communicated with the Japanese The scenes following the surrender were disgraceful Drunken soldiers filled the streets and refused to obey l their officers Many of them destroyed the guns upon the positions they had defended and came into the city with out permission The infantry loudly protested that the fortress had been given away They threw their rifles and ammunition into the harbor and proceeded to break into warehouses and loot and drink vodka until in a helpless condition It was evident that the surrender was not necessary as there were 31000 effective men in the fortress The suply of ammunition was short but it was not exhausted Food was scarce but private stores were not requisitioned by the military There is no difficulty in getting good meals in the city even without stores in private warehouses It was the opinion of the non-combatants at Port Arthur that the sur render was unnecessary as the troops were able and willing to fight to the bitter end General Stoessel was much blamed for what was characterized as a disgraceful conclusion of a splendid defense which ended with the death of Major General Kondratenko who was loved by the soldiers and was the life of the defense Memorial services were held in honor of the spirits of the Japanese dead upon the plain north of the vil lage of Shuishi a snort distance from Port Arthur Regiments representing the entire Japanese army were pres ent A shrine was erected on the crest of a small hill and the troops formed a circle around it General Nogi and his staff were present Lunch wau served afterwards in the open to all the officers present It was a splendid spectacle Cowboys Going to Washington DEADWOOD S D A party of Black Hills cowboys thirty to sixty strong is being organized to go to Washington for the inauguration of President Roosevelt March 4 The men will take their own horses and be dressed in cowboy costume Cap tain Seth Bullock who has just re turned from Washington is organiz ing the party Merchant Found Murdered LARAMIE Wyo George Gerber a merchant was found dead in his store with his skull crushed and throat cut An iron bolt with which he had been struck lay beside the body and the knife with wbich he had been stabbed was still sticking in the wounu Burkett Tenders Resignation LINCOLN Neb Congressman E J Burkett of the First Nebraska district tendered his resignation as member of the lower house to which he was re elected last November He will serve out his present term Hoppe Defeats Schaefer DENVER Willie Hoppe won the 800 point 18 inch balk line billiard contest with Jake Schaefer by mak ing 585 during the second nights play LABORED AMONG THE INDIANS Abbot Felix de Grasse Dies in Okla homa GUTHRIE Okla Abbot Felix de Grasse a grand nephew of the distin guished French admiral Count de Grasse whose fleet co operated with Washingtons army in the revolution ary war has died at the Benedictine monastery of the Sacred Heart in Pottawattamie county aged 63 years according to advices just received Fatherj de Grasse was born at Ba court France For thirty years he lived among the Pottawattamie and Osage Indians at fhst sleeping in their wigwams and eating at theh camp fires He established numerous churches and schools in Oklahoma ano Indian territory To Dispose Indian Affairs WASHINGTON Senator Stewarl on Monday introduced a bill to pro vide for the final disposition of the affairs of five civilized tribes in In dian Territory Provision is made foi establishing public highways in the Choctaw Chickasaw and SeminoW nation for the discontinuance oi townsite committees for the paymenl of all just indebtedness of the flv civilized tribes for abolishing trlba courts in the Choctaw Chickasaw and Seminole nations and for the dlsposi tion of lands remaining IF mmBBKBBsBSfsS W TliroinilWMM MiPHNgPwwHIIH I Hi IjWPPPiftHlSlI I SIHIHIdH Sal WmasaW wHHBMb MHBIIBMBm Alexander Hilton Alexander Hilton formerly general passenger agent of the Frisco system and prior to that assistant general passenger agent of the Kansas City Fort Scott and Memphis railway now absorbed by the Frisco has been ad vanced to the position of passenger traffic manager for both the Frisco and the Eastern Illinois systems with headquarters in St Louis Mr Hil ton besides being a broad intellectual HOMESTEAD BILL HEARING Fate of Martin Measure Depends on Working of Kinkaid Bill WASHINGTON The successful working out of the so called Kinkaid bill giving homesteaders 640 acres of land in the west section of Nebraska will be a factor with the house com mittee on public lands in determin ing whether the Martin bill now be fore it giving 640 acres in a large section of South Dakota should be come a law The committee has been having hearings on this mea sure as well as similar ones intro duced for Montana and Colorado Senators Gamble and Klttredge and Congressman Burke of the South Da kota delegation were before the com mittee Senator Gamble made the principal speech for the delegation urging the pasage of the Martin bill He stated that the lands included in the great Sioux reservation had been opened for settlement for fifteen years while the Black Hills cession had been subject of entry for twenty four years These lands in all amount to about 17000000 acres lit tle of which had ever been entered upon He contended that under the bill the land could be taken advan tageously and this great region set tled and occupeid He showed that 640 acres was not disportionate as in early days settlers had the right to enter upon 480 acres under the home stead timber culture and clause the latter having since been repealed RUMORS OF YELLOW FEVER Isthmian Canal Commission Wants Official Report WASHINGTON The isthmian ca nal commission has cabled to Gover nor Davis of the canal zone calling attention to reports of the preva lence of yellow fever on the isthmus and asking for a report on the con ditions No answer has yet been re ceived owing to interruption of the cable service The commission ac credits the cases that already have occurrerd to carelessness of the pa tients in going jnto the Chinese quar ter or into other unsanitary sections and is anxious to secure an official report showing the exact conditions at this time The commission is ship ping a large amount of medicinal sup plies to the canal zone to aid in the sanitation of that region HOLDING TWO POSITIONS Dismissal of Postmaster Pogue of Texas Explained WASHINGTON Postmaster Gen eral Wynne has advised Representa tive Beall of Texas who recently asked for the departments reasons for removing Oscar Pogue as post master at Blum Tex that Pogue has accepted the position of president of the association of national fourth class postmasters at a salary of 1000 a year and that he came to Wash ington last November and remained several weeks during a session of congress presumably in the interests of the association The department felt it clear that he had not been at tending to his duties as postmaster Mr Pogue remains at the head of the fourth class postmasters organiza tion although not himself a post master Dinner in Honor of Lodge BOSTON United States Senator Henry Cabot Lodge was the chief speaker at a dinner given in his honor by the Middlesex club In a forty mintue speech Senator Lodge declared against the supervision of railroad rates by the interstate com merce commission and in favor of a special court this court to have power only to revise rates not to fix them He gave warning that unless government supervision of rates was obtained the country would see a rad ical movement for public ownership and well endowed gentleman Is also widely known as a successful and mas ter railroader respected in business for sagacity and fairness As a pas senger traffic man he has been widely known and justly popular During the late worlds fair he made a most en viable record and is now president of the St Louis association of general passenger agents Mr Hilton succeeds Bryan Snyder GENERAL STOESSEL TALKS Correspondent Has an Interview With Him LONDON The correspondent at Nagasaki of the Express has hatf an interesting interview with General Stoessel in the course of which the general says The capitulation occurring o New Years day was merely an incident The loss of 203 Meter hill and ne subsequent capture of forts combinedl with the deadly marksmanship with1 the terrible eleven inch shells the de pressing effect of the death of Gener al Kondratenko and the fearful in crease of scurvy really fixed the time of capitulation It is quite untrue that I dissented from the unanimous deci sion of the final council of war Our final urgent request for relief was never answered As regards parole I aistinctly dis couraged any concerted action Every officer decided for himself Generally commanding officers stuck with their men and chose imprisonment Most of the naval officers also chose captivity many probably being influenced by the fear of impending court martial The correspondent adds that con versation with other Russian officers reveals great bitterness against Ad miral Alexieff for his failure to gvop erly fortify Port Arthur and his cowardly flight by the last traia from the fortress They say the torpedo boat destroy ers that escaped before the surrender carried all the regimental and naval colors to Chee Foo The junior officers denounce the incapacity and folly of the government in entering upon the war and declare that all the mea who return to Russia from Port Arthnr are revolutionists in spirit These opin ions were openly expressed is the presence of General Stoessel who re marked Let them talk they have earned the right to think as they please by braving untold deaths for our coun try CHICAGO GETTING SCARED Because Grain is Going Abroad by Southern Route CHICAGO The Chronicle today says Diversion of grain shipments front Omaha and Kansas City to European ports via western lines through New Orleans Galveston and other gulf ports is being inquired into by the interstate commerce commission The commission will try to learn whether secret rebates are responsible for the diversion of western grain shipments from Atlantic ports via Chicago to the gulf ports It is claimed that the use of the special rate which is less than the normal tariff has been directly re sponsible for shipments of com amounting to over 4000000 bashels from Omaha and Kansas City by local and Omaha grain shippers by way of New Orleans instead of Chicag and the Atlantic ports Talks on Statehood WASHINGTON Consideration t the statehood bill was continued in the senate Thursday and Mr Stone spoke for two hours in opposition to it The bill for the remuneration or American fur sealers who suffered losses because of their suppression also was debated at some length buc no action was taken Deny Violation of Neutrality ST PETERSBURG The govern ment has not renewed the state of siege in Manchurian cities at the opening of the new yearr civil law in such places replacing military rule The Russian papers protest against the imputation that General Mlstchen kos cavalry violated Chinese neutral ity even if of which there Is at pre sent no evidence they crossed the Liao river above New Chwang claim ing that a small strip on the west bank is distinctly reserved as incltnT ed In the sphere of hostilities f SOk r i