THE FRONTIER. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY By Tn* l'HONTIKR PmSTINQ CO. O’NEILL, NEBRASKA. If this scheme to tow canal boats by electricity does away with canal boat drivers, whence will come our future Presidents? The king of Corea has called upon an American to run his kingdom for him. Can it be possible also that Queen Victoria has cast the eye of hope upon Richard Croker? In celebrating the German victory over France Buddy Hohenzollern pro poses to Ignore entirely the services of Bismarck. In other words, the tin soldier proposes to boycott the old war horse. Bismarck Is an old man, and it Is a cynical commentary upon his life that he gives In saying that through all the years that he has lived he has not experienced more than twenty-four hours' happiness. The United States navy has too man; officers and too few enlisted men. Near ly every class of cadets that Is graduat ed from the naval academy at Annapo lis provides u supply of youug officers In excess of the available vacancies, and In spite of the most skillful maneu vering some of the cadets In each class fail to secure commissions and are dis charged, although well qualifled for the service. The surplus of officers Is ono of the legacies of the civil war, during the course of which several classes of unusual size were rushed through the naval academy in order to meet the necessities of the times. The new administration of Great Britain ha3 very much the aspect of a nice little family party. In It nre a father and a son, Mr. Chamberlain and Austen Chamberlain; a father-in-law and a son-in-law. Lord Salisbury and Lord Selborne; two brothers, Arthur and Gerald Balfour; an uncle and two nephews, Lord Salisbury and the Messrs. Balfour; and two brothers-in law, Lord George Hamilton and Lord Lansdowne; and, when the cabinet meets the clerk of the house of com mons, they will find him to be the hus band of Lord Salisbury's niece.—Bos ton Herald. i VjtT 7L A Michigan dispatch says: “A new species of grip has appeared In Shia wassee county, locally known as “Trilby." Its symptoms and varied ac companiments are severe pain In one or both sides, Bore throat, headache, high temperature, and difficulty in breathing. It is no respecter of persons, but seizes old and young, prostrating them usually within a few moments from the first In- ! dications of illness. There are 500 cases I Of “Trilby” In Owosso, and Blmllar re- j podts come from Bancroft, Morris, Perry, and other parts of the country. ! As yet, however, no deaths have been reported." This all comes from Du Maurler’s hypnotized maiden having posed in her bare feet and left oft her stockings in some of the recent Trilby dances. That retribution for unscrupulous dealings is sometimes visited upon the wrongdoer speedily and from an un s expected quarter is illustrated in an in cident given in the "Missionary Re view,” and 'taken from a native paper. MA milkman at a fair made 50 rupees by selling milk which was largely wa ter. Grateful for his prosperity, he made an offering to the shrine and set t : about washing away his sins by bath ing In the river, though it does not ap pear that he reckoned the adulteration of milk among them. He laid aside his garments, in which were the 50 rupees, and proceeded to his bath, when a mon key seized the garment and climbed to the topmost branch of a tree overhang ing the water. To the horror of the bather he saw the beast take out the silver pieces and drop them, one by one, Into the swift-flowing stream. There was nothing to be done but to bear his loss; but mindful of how the money was obtained the man piously exclaimed to the river, ‘Mother Gunga has claimed her own.* ” Edward Eggleston originated th6 Christian Endeavor Society in his pop ular story, "The Hoosler Schoolmas ter," which he wrote in 1S72 in a small house in Schermerhorn street, Brook lyn. It is in this Action also that may be found “The Church of the Good Ucks.” In 1877, when Mr. Eggleston , became 'the pastor of the Lee Avenue Congregational Church (now the Lee Avenue Theater), he organized for the young people a Society of Christian En deavor, in imitation of the one in his hook. The weekly meetings in the , church drew together such a company of bright young men and women as that town never witnessed in similar gath erings before or since. All the pro fessions were represented; and the ob ject was chleAy social culture. It was from the success of this small company 1b making one evening in the week •greeable and proAtable that the great gathering in Boston has come to pass A Kansas man and his wife spent t fortune in suing each other for divorce After they had gotten rid of all theii Money they concluded to live happily together in poverty. This is a new demonstration of the theory that th< vray to get any satisfaction out 01 wealth is to spend it. In the present Salisbury ministry jt. Mood tells, or title does, for nearly al of them belong to the titled classes but so does education count, for nini . of the members are graduates of Os< Jord and three from Cambridge. OVER THE STATE, Chnse county's fair is fixed for Octo ber 11, 12 and 13. Yoiik has a brass band, composed en tirely of new women. Cass county will make a showing of big apples at the state fair. Mbs. W. It. Davis, a highly esteemed lady of Beatrice, died last week. < Lincoln is taking steps to keep out the circus during the week of the coun ty fair. Tuk Broken Bow Bank of Commerce, closed since May 31, has reopened for business. C, O. Sabin, a prominert young law yer of Schuyler, died last week of typhoid fever. Mr. McLaughlin, living near La Platte, is building a corn crib ninety feet long and eight wide. A Furnas county farmer, 7G years old, has planted and cultivated sixty acres of corn this yeur. Thieves burglarized the store of J. Rittcrbush of Nelson and carried away several articles of value. Two mui.es and three horses were killed by lightning on the farm of Joshua darn in Gage county. of grain at the state fair that is ex pected to be worth going miles to see. The Beatrice street railway property has changed hands and a thorough overhauling and improvement will fol low. A stone twenty-two feet long, three and one-half feet wide and two feet thick was quarried near Wyraore last week. The Farmers State bank and the Bank of Plainvlew have consolidated and the former will hereafter do all the business. The dwelling house of Supervisor A. Snyder, who lives about a quarter of a mile west of Kim Creek, was struck by lightning and burned. I.oss about St*, 000. The new maps of Nebraska ordered by the State Board of Transportation will show all the irrigation ditches completed as well us those under con struction. Wii.i. If. Ryan of Jackson has been appointed receiver of the Citizens State bank at South Sioux City, which bank was closed by Bank Examiner Cowdery on the 5th inst. On the farm of Mart Ballou, half a mile north of Ashland, fifty acres of wheat that was almost abandoned was threshed and yielded 1,000 bushels of the best quality. Buy home-made goods and build up home industries, is a good policy: Far rell's Fire Extinguisher, made by Far rell & Co., Omaha; Morse-Coe bootsand shoes for men, women and children. The dead body of Frank Kreng, a Bohemian, was found alongside the Union Pacific track, about two miles from Lincoln. He is supposed to have committed suicide with a 38-caliber re volver found in his hand. The good people of Jamestown were so deeply shocked over the action of a contractor in pushing work on the new school house on Sunday that the direc tors were compelled to interfere. Chius Buiikk was found dead on Cut Off island, near Elkhorn, the coroner’s jury finding his demise due to neglect and starvation. He leaves a wife and thirteen children in the old country. J. II. Larkin, a wholesale liquor dealer at Chadron, assaulted City Mar shal Charles Morriscy in front of his place of business, using the but end of a heavy revolver and indicting a severe wound. Maggie and Ellen Gaffey of Nebraska City were buried in the same grave the other day. One died from typhoid fever and the other was lulled by fall ing into a well while getting her dying sister a pitcher of water. The Bank of Commerce of Broken Bow, which suspended about three months ago and went into the hands of a receiver, has completed arrangements to reopen. The stockholders received an order from the state banking board to that effect. Suit for $10,000 damages lias been brought by County Attorney Freese of Antelopo county, Nebraska, against C. J. O’Conor, proprietor of the Homer State bank, and Sheriff Kelley of Da kota City. Four years ago, when Freese was cashier of the Homer bank, it was robbed of $1,600 and he was suspected. He resigned, and moving to Antelope county was nominated by the populists for county attorney. The missing money was found in a well at his form er residence during his canvass. He was arrested and during his hearing a telegram arrived announcing his elec tion. The case against him was drop ped. but he still claims to have been greatly injured and demands damages. Notice is hereby given that the hear ings in the matter of the adjudication of the rights of the water claimed, prior to April 4, 1S95, within the water shed of the Republican river in Ne braska, will be held, for the several counties included therein, by an officet of the state board of irrigation at ( o'clock in the forenoon at the place? and upon the dates indicated as fol lows: For Chase county, September 2 at office of county clerk, Imperial. Foi Hayes and Hitchcock counties, Septem ber 4, at office of county clerk, C-ulbert son. For Dundy county, September 7 at office of county clerk, Uenkelman F'or Frontier, Red Willow and Furnai counties, September 6, at office of W H. F'aling, Cambridge. For Franklit county, September 10, at office of coun ty clerk, Uloomington. Thomas Davis, an employe on th< Barrett ranch, near Wisner, was kicket by a horse, sustaining injuries fron which he died. George Anderson of Furnas county thinks he has raised the biggest turni] on earth. It is thirty inches in cir cumference and weighs eleven pounds The contract for erecting the neti school house at Newcastle was awardee to Anderson & Suecker, local men, fo: the sum of $2,58a As the result of being thrown from i wagon, a boy uamed Latenslanter, o Elkhorn, had his leg broken in twi places, necessitating amputation of th< limb It has been discovered that the mat killed in Murdock by McDonald is thi robber who took his supper the sami evening at Mr. Granger's in Ashland 1 and then in the night robbed Grange; of $65. Granger went to Murdock &n< identified the dead thief, and also som< of the money. The Watera of Kebraafca. The State Board of irrigation hat formulated the following rules for the guidance of citizens or companies inter ested in water rights in this state: First—The adjudication of the rights I claimed to the use of the public waters of the state for irrigation and other useful purposes as provided by the ir rigation law approved April 4, 1895, shall be' conducted by watersheds of the state as defined by the state en gineer and secretary of this board. Second—The first adjudications of the rights of claimants shall be con ducted for the purpose of determining the validity of claims, the land and ter ritory covered in the case of irrigation canals, the date when works must lie completed in the case of uncompleted canals and the time within which the water claimed must be applied to the beneficial use for which it is appropri Third—Such adjudication within any watershed of the state shall be preced ed by hearings to be held in each county comprising such watershed wherein notices of appropriation were recorded previously to April 4, 1895, provided that the hearings for two or more counties may be held at the same time and place if the secretary of this board deems expedient. Fourth—Said hearings shall be held for the purpose of receiving testimony offered by parties in interest in support of rights claimed, and shall be presided over by the secretary, assistant secre tary or one of the under secretaries of this board, who shall keep a complete record of the proceedings thereof. Fifth—All evidence, whether oral or in the form of depositions, shall be sub mitted in typewritten form. If oral, it shall be taken down and transcribed at the expense of the claimant offering the same. Sixth—The number of witnesses upon any one point may bo limited by the officer conducting the hearing, provided that in the case of controversy an equal number shall be heard upon both sides. Seventh—Claimants may appear in person or by attorney, but appearance must be made on the day or days speci fied for the hearing for the county within which the claim is located. Eighth—Claimants having filed with the secretary of this board, ten days previous to date of first hearing an nounced, claim affidavits in the form prescribed, and entitled “Claim for the Waters of the State of Nebraska,” need not appear at said hearings unless they wish to offer additional testimony in support of their claims. Ninth—Points of law made by claim ants or their attorneys, together with the authorities cited in support of the same, must be submitted in typewrit ten form. Tenth—The record in the case of each claim shall consist of: 1. The original notice filed with county clerk. 2. A claim affidavit, signed and veri fied. 3. Additional testimony offered at hearing in support of claim. 4. Points of law and authorities cited in support of same, submitted in writ ing. 5. Decision of secretary, which de cision will be reviewed by the board' only upon exceptions taken at the time of hearing and determination. Eleventh—The secretary of this board shall mail to the postoffice ad dress of each claimant of record, at least ten days before the date of the first hearing announced, a copy of this resolution, together with a notice of the dates and places of hearings to be held within the water shed to be ad judicated. The Koyal Arcanum. The Executive Hoard of the Royal Arcanum of Omaha, South Omaha and Council Bluffs have jointly arranged for the establishment of Royal Arca num headquarters at the Nebraska State fait, to be held in Omaha in Sep tember. It is their wish and desire that every member of the Royal Arca num who visits the fair, together with their family and friends, will call at the headquarters and make himself known. It is proposed to extend a “Royal” welcome to all. Special com mittees have been appointed, whose duty and pleasure it will be to furnish information to visiting brethren, and in every possible way contribute to their comfort and enjoyment It is proposed also to do some secret work, providing a sufficient number of visit ing brethren are present Foxwell Family in Lack. Many of the residents of Plattsmoutl are more than interested in the an nouncement that William Foxwell, whose family resides there, had won his title to the famous Ilarris-Hartlej estate in Cornwall, England. The man in question was one of the claimants tc the vast estates. Mr. Foxwell went tc England last November to look aftei the Foxwell interests. He has just for warded the following cablegram to his family: “We have won.” The estate is valued at over £2,000, 000 and Mr. Foxwell's income from rents will amount to fully £30,000 pel year. When Mr. Foxwell went to Eng land he got the depositions of severs' old residents in the vicinity of Racine Wis. as to bis identity and the deposi tionswerea great aid in winning hi: tase. Doable Work for Justice Brown. Washington, Aug. 23. — Justici , Brown has been assigned to the Sixtl i circuit to fill the vacancy occasionec by the death of the late Justice Jack - son. Until the vacancy on the sn > preme bench is filled, Justice Rrowi will also look after his present circuit the Second. U« Got the Burglar. | Murdock dispatch: At 3 o'clock thii morning Harry V. McDonald, a drug gist, was awakened by a burglar trying - to get in his house. Investigate - proved the fact that a man was trying 1 to gain an entrance through a nortl i window to their bed room. Mr. Me Donald asked who was there, but re > ceived no answer and fired through th< i window. No further disturbance wa i heard and the family remained upunti daylight and then retired for a fev - hours’ sleep: At 7 they awoke am I looked out and discovered the body o i a man lying in the yard, supposed t< , have received the bullet of McDonald CUBA IS BEING RUINED. THE GREAT SUGAR INDUSTRY IN DANGER OF DESTRUCTION. LATEST NEWS FROM THERE Planters Unable to Gather the Crops of This Year or Prepare for Next Sea son’s—Business Almost Dead and the Outlook Most Serious— Views of a Plantation Superintendent. New York, Aug. Aug. 27.—The Ward line steamer Santiago, which has just arrived here, brought Dr. II. Von Herff of this city and John La Bourdette, administrator of the Santa Marca plantation at Guantanamo, which was recently raided. Dr. Von Ilerff said: “I found business of all kinds in Santiago de Cuba at a stand still. Most of the merchants were waiting for better times. Some of them had closed their doors. Recently the government issued an order forbid ding the merchants to sell any goods or materials to women and children from the country. This was done to cut off the insurrectionists from ob taining any supplies from the towns. The revolutionists are simply carry ing on a guerrilla wafare. Every few days I heard of some raid, which usually consisted of destroying a plantation. There is little fighting going on. No one ventures to predict when the war will come to an end. If the insurrection goes on for another year, the sugar industry will be pros trated. The administrator of one of the largest plantations in the Santiago sugar district told mo that it will take the planters four or five years to re cover from the damages already done. Many plantations not laid waste by the insurrectionists have been practically abandoned. In fact, the sugar plant ers really bear the brunt of the war. They will have to pay enormous taxes, even if the insurrection be put down. At present almost every planter is threatened with ruin if he does not contribute money to the insurgent cause. The sugar planters are be tween the devil and the deep sea. If they do not contribute large snms of. money for protection their fields are laid waste. If they ask for protection they are marked as enemies of the re public and their property would be set on fire or ruined at the first opportu nity,” _ TREATIES ABOVE STATES. Bannock and Shofthone Indian Hunters Will Be Protected In Wyoming. Washington, Aug. 27.—No attention will be paid by the Indian bureau to the game law's of Wyoming where they come into conflict with the treat ies of the United States with the Bannock and Shoshone Indians, the attorney general, after considering the matter, having informed the sec retary of the interior and the com missioner of Indian affairs that the right of Indians to hunt on unoccupied lands, in his opinion, are unquestion able, and that he considers that the state of Wyoming lias no power to limit or abridge this right. No definite steps to enforce this de termination have been decided upon than that the instructions to the United States district attorneys to se cure the release of the Indians now in custody on writs of habeas corpus probably will be supplemented by an order to do the same thing in ease any Arrest shall be made in tne future.. The bureau will discourage hunting by the Indians as far as possible, and at present no passes will be issued per mitting the braves to leave the reserv ation. _ A Nebraska Sian’s Suicide. Pittsburg, Pa., Aug. 27.—W. W. Kittell, an attache of the war depart ment in Washington, shot and killed himself in his room at the Hotel Willey in this city about It o’clock this morn ing. A note to the proprietor said that nobody would claim his remains. A dispatch from Washington says that Kittell was appointed clerk in the record and pension division of the war department from Nebraska in 1891. McKinley Holds a Sunday Levee. Chautauqua, N. Y., Aug. £7.— Gov ernor McKinley of Ohio and ex-Senator Miller listened to a sermon yester day morning by Dr. W. W. Ramsey, pastor of the Tremont street church of Boston. The people were so anxious to see the governor that he was obliged to hold an informal reception after the services and shake hands with several hundred. Later the governor left for Williamsport, Pa. The Flait Law Opposed. Bloomington, 111., Aug’. 27.—A con vention of school directors of McLean county assembled here to-day to con sider the new state flag law to the provisions of which strenuous objec tions have been made. The conven tion was decidedly animated, a large majority of those present being op posed to the new law. Resolutions were offered declaring the flag law '-‘nnamerican and despotic.” Murdered In Parisian Fashion. Pittsburg, Pa., Aug. 27.—In “Yel low row,” a notorious building on Sec ond avenue, an unknown man, who had been enticed into a room, was killed and his body thrown into the street from the second story window. His neck was broken and his skull fractured by the fall. William Boyer and wife, who were detected wiping a bloodv knife, were arrested. I j A Young Millionaire's Unt roely End. ( San Francisco, Aug. 27 —Harrison j P. Bridge, a young millionaire of Bos i ton, son of the late H. E. Bridge, the I St. Louis stove manufacturer, died at r I the Palace hotel, after an illness of [ j three weeks. He had been enjoying [: good health until he contracted a cold ,1 at San Rafael recently. He was <12 i years old. . • , . ... • * HOLMES LATEST STORY. Telia In a Signed Statement How Nannie Williams Died. JJew York, Aug. 27.—A signed state ment written by H. H. Holmes in Moy amens.ng prison at Philadelphia and certified to by liis lawyer, going into all the details of his acquaintance with Minnie R. Williams, is printed by a local paper. Holmes writes that he first met Minnie at an intelligence office, kept by one Campbell, on Dear born street, Chicago, in January, 1893, and employed her as a stenographer. She was installed in his office in the building which has become known as “Holmes’ Castle, ’ and from March to May of that year occupied rooms in the building adjoining the office. Oc casionally meals were served in the building, and if any bones have been found in the stove there, he writes, it will be found by microscopic examin ations that they are the remains of such meals. Williams, knowing him to be in need of money, gave a draft for 82,500, the proceeds of the sale of real estate she had held in Texas, and asked him to use it until she should need it. About this time, Holmes narrates, Miss Williams was taken ill, suffered from acute mania and was removed to the Presbyterian hospital, being en rolled as Mrs. Williams, as her ail ment was such that it was prudent for her to pass as a married woman. Minnie Williams’ condition was brought about, so Holmes says she told him, by a prominent Boston busi ness man, head of a firm dealing in surgical instruments, with whose wife she visited at their home in Somer ville. This man had acquired an influ ence over her which she was unable to resist; betrayed her, and she met him frequently at a hotel near his place of business, breaking her engagement to marry an honest clerk. When she grew better and returned to his house, her sister, Nannie Williams, came from Texas to visit her. Returning one evening early in July from a day in the city, he was greeted with a cry from Minnie Williams in the parlor: "Is that you? My God, I thought you would never cpme. Nannie is dead. ” She was seated upon the floor, hold ing her sister’s head in her arms, rocking back and forth and moaning, much as a mother would over a child. He found that; Nannie had been dead for hours, and laid her body upon the bed in his own room, finding no mark of violence, but a slight discoloration on one of her temples. According to the story written by Holmes Minnie Williams had been away the preced ing night, and Holmes had also been unexpectedly detained by business all night. When Minnie Williams re turned home she noticed that his bed had not been occupied during the night. This is what Holmes writes: "And with only one thought in her disordered mind, she had rushed into the adjoin ing room where her sister sat, and in a voice which only the very few who have been intimately acquainted with M iss Williams can appreciate, had said: ‘You devil, you have stolen my hus band from me.’ At the same time she struck her sister with a small foot stool, causing her to fall to the floor where with hardly a struggle, she ceased to breathe.” At first Minnie thought her sister had only fainted and tried to revive her. then she found her efforts useless, and remained in the position in which he found her. Then came the ques tion of what to do. Holmes’ story of what was done follows: “We clothed Nannie in a light dress she had liked to wear, and taking a large trunk she had brought with her from Texas, I placed her in it. I went to a stable and obtained a covered con veyance, and upon my return I en gaged a man to accompany me to the house and help me place the trunk in the carriage. I then drove to the lake side and waited until night, thus ap pearing to parties noticing me, if any, that I was awaiting the return of some belated boating party. "Then I procured a boat at some distance and took it near my waiting place, and later, with considerable trouble, I placed the trunk in the craft and proceeded about one mile from the shore. There in the dark ness passed beyond the sight of this world into the ever-grasping depths of Lake Michigan all that was mortal of this beautiful Christian girl. “The housekeeping was broken up, and very shortly thereafter Mr. Hatch took Minnie Williams to Milwaukee, where she remained in a private insti tution until later in the summer. The cause that produced her unsound men tal condition had been removed. We kept Nannie's things several weeks, until I could obtain time to dispose of them, when I assorted some of them and gave them to Pietzel, telling him that they were some that Miss Will iams had sent to his children. All the others were burned in the large stove in the third story office. The last I ever saw of Miss Williams was in De troit last fall, and my belief is that vhe is still alive and well.” COLORADO BULL FIGHT. Simply an Exhibition of Cruelty —Wit nessed by 6,000 People. CRirn.E Crf.f.k, Col., Ang. 27.—An other bull was killed in the arena at Gillett yesterday, in the presence of 6,000 people, and the work was done in the regal splendor of Spain and Mexico. The first hull turned into the arena was an exceedingly tame animal. Even after the darts were in him, he refused to tight, and the multitude cried for a new animal. Arizona Charley appeared to be equally dis gusted and-headed the band of cowboys that drove the bull into the arena. The next animal made a fight for his life, but its fight was quickly over. Chireta, the king of the arena, in not only Mexico, but Spain, made two stabs at the animal, and then practically left him dead, but the Mex icans with the red cloaks tossed the creature and made him dart at them. One came within an ace of losing his life and there was great excitement in consequence, especially among the lit tle company to which the individual belonged. Not a few women fainted. It was simply an exhibition of qru elty and was not enjoyed at all by the crowd. Over a hundred.deputy sheriff* were , in attendance and the management ( was again placed un -r arrest, but no attempt was made to stop the proceed °EESAND| V'eK* °f *• Chicago, Aug0*""', anl, vice preside,,^" Railway union dor,-,..,' last yt.ar) who Lnued States tempt of court in *v„." preventing the urd^ w.th trains during X leased yesterdav fj H and came hcre^at future o, tiietr,I American Railway ' “V“- n’’C, it, 1 am sure, win ' tvery railroad oficia' 1 nottce from SOfc' other railroad organic Will allow the American! to raise its head with w week a railroad man at, charged because it km ne naa belonged to the w way union. In regard Master Workman So»e j] Knights of Labor, which, boring men to refuse J payment of obligations!* the sheerest nonsense tbed of bombast, and ninety WJ working people of the V look upon it in that light need money in any stapes, that the order will he Debs was visited bv his «i ter. He declares that ht| work to do answering letter ing after the order, iu we intend to do istobi American Eailway union the strongest organ aatioal country. There are SS0,'Mi men in the country, ami H. seven-eighths of them an Hut they do not speak theirs tend meetings or join the fear of the blacklist. tl»l Managers’ association ta that no man who to*» strike or who joins our uaioss in this country and i the blacklist around, there are a few lam spiracy, which, it seemtaitsi only for labor unions, not n, unions. We are going to ftl the blacklist simply by harisg union. There will be no pet, ings. No one will know vkjj and the man who denounce) company's agents may bead By January 1 we will luvci all the principal cities o! L Bu'-ns will work in Chicaga win is going to Winona, a there he will work to the Si ler will establish headqa Minneapolis, which is kb Rogers is going to Pueblo, Col to Ogden, Utah, and Elliott 1 in the East. It is a gigantic with the help cf our friends succeed. Each district sue* have a lot of assistants who the homes of the men whi join and there enlist the union. It is the only wi; come the system of espioi which we constantly work, as I get out I will gotolc and I expect it will take n or more to straighten up all business office of tbe uas January 1 I will start on al country, speaking and unions, with the ultimate unifying and harnionmn" unions.” __ A Successful Homo J Mr. Olmsted, of Bentley k las just returned fro:r. (hicasoj le went to meet a buyer of Jj western concern, and inspite itrong'est competition dr. arouplit back the order, sawwb jver $8,000, of shoes and ruoterff -The Des Moines Leader. ire in Tallequah, I. T-Jj Central hotel, WilliamJand leral store. Browns dra= L. hank building. Lcs>es,t* LIVE stock and fkodcc* Quotations from S« *°* *,] Louis. Omaha and OMAHA 1(, Butter-Creamery ' S M butter-lair 10 good couaw ,,, 1 i oncy—Call*f oni ja. per S • Hens—Live, per lb--—■ — •« Spring Chickens, per ID Lemons—Choice Messinas.-. j Apples—per bbl...3* Oranges—Florida*, P« 3 Potatoes—New --;';n7'n .!>' Watermelons-per'do• d tja2® Leans—Navy, hand-pic»0“' (ins Hay-Upland per toe..oo Unions—l erbu reaD3 £ J Cheese-Neb. A la-. *udcr., a i;ineapples-per dot ^ • lte < 1 Tomatoes per 4-pasKL . Hogs—Mixed pack nr---.4fo hoas—Heavy we^u‘ri'feeder* ; ‘1 Leeves—Mockers and lee. Beef steers...1* ..::::.^i1 Maps..- (l „| L . •• 1 ai — -- . . | S' *1 liters. .?... *1 Vesterns...... it ee p— La rn ns.. • • • • • * * * “ , t-tep—Choice nat.'^ ,i ill s * Cheat—No. 2. spring orn-Per bu. ,ath—■ er bu.•;; ' ocds-Pack'ers and mixed...;;, , auie-Native steers.... ;; :H ut-ep—Lambs,... - beep—I* yuBlw l'heat.No,=,redwinmr...;;;; «. €rn I* 0