THE FRONTIER. ! PUBLISHED BVFUY THCRBDAT By _Tn KaOKTlKn PSMTIKO 0O. O'NEILL, ■> NEBRASKA. Nebraska news. Wnyno county has ever 1,000 chil dren of school age. Tliero are three < eases of typhoid fever in one family-near Eustis. Several sad fataliUes{from diphtheria lave lately oocurred at Wisner. The school professor at Wakefield lectures on “Brainsand;Backbone.” Johnson county will donate a car of m to the starving people of India. ; Stock in the building-end loan asso ciation at Gcring sells at a premium. A lady of Lexington furnishes a daily reoord of mortgages filed and released. Dr. Hildebrand of Clearwater was ■uccessfully operated upon for appendi citis. George Bohmer, who -moved from Wayne county to Montana, is moving Bock. Nebraska City contemplates putting Up a new high school‘building to cost •25,000. The Union Pacific ice Jionse at North Matte is filled from the Jake at - Goth •nburg. Andrew Harper of Cedar county lost uonsiderable live stock sick at home, but has been placed under arrest. For the Ex-Confederate Home. Jefferson Crrr, Mo., Jan. 22.—Col onel II. A. Newman, Major lianner man. General Kas Ilonding and other ex-Confederate veterans met in the office of the railway and warehouse commissioners Tuesday afternoon to draft a bill to present to the Legisla ture to provide for financial aid for the support of the Confeder-te Home at lligginsville. No Sunday Game* in Texas. Austin, Texas. Jan. 22.—The house of the legislature to-day practically settled Sunday baseball in Texas by passing • bill prohibiting it. An Intercessor for Dnestrow. St. Louis, Mo.. Jan. 22.—Millionaire Brewer Adolphus Buscli has declared j that he believes Murderer Duestrow to be insane, and to have been so at the time of the crime, and he (Busch) will intercede with Governor Stephens for Duestrow's life. A Farmer Dead In Hie Wagon. Hays City, Kan., Jan. 23.—George ■ King’, a German farmer living ten miles southwest of here, was found dead in his wagon near his home late yesterday evening. He was out in all the snow storm of Tuesday night and had been sick._ Old Civil Engineer Dies. St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 22.—Colonel J. I B. Moulton, one of the most prominent civil engineers in the West, died here yesterday, aged 87 years. In 1830 Colonel Moulton constructed the Lex ington & Frankfort railroad, of which Henry Clay was the president He was afterwards chief engineer of the Iron Mountain railroad, now a part of the Wabash system, besides a number of other roads. Electric Light Works Destroyed. Tobonto, Ontario, Jan. 22.—Shortly before 5 o'clock this morning a spark from a dynamo in the Toronto Electric Light company's building started & fire which resulted in the total des truction of the plant. Business de pendent on electric power will be obliged to shut down until new dyna mos can be installed. The loss is $150, 000 fully covered by insurence. Pension for Mrs. Perkins. Washington, Jan. 22.— Senator Pef fer has made a favorable report from the Senate committee on pensions on a bill for the relief of Mrs. Louise E. Perkins, widow of the .late Senator Bishop W. Perkins of Kansas. The report strongly recommends that the relief be granted and that Mrs. Per kins be paid $20 a month. The Success of Anton Wenzl. Anton Wenzl settled in Pawnee county, Neb., in 1867, he was com pelled to work out by the month to support his family. Today he owns 1,640 acres of the finest farm land, valued at 830 per acre, together with stock and other property valued at 810,000. Every dollar of it was made on the farm. Mr. Wenzl is one of seven brothers whose aggregate land holding amounts to over 5,000 acres In our “Nebraska Book" (40 pages with maps and illustrations), are doz* ens of statements like that of Mr. Thor rell. They are made by farmers who have made a success of farming. They show that Nebraska is as good a state as any in the Union. The book in which they appear is as different from the ordinary agricul tural pamphlet as day is from night. It is interesting, practical and truthful. In a straightforward, simple fashion, it tells you everything you need to know about Nebraska—its climate, people, schools, churches, railroads, markets, soil and crops. It explains why the Nebraska farmer makes mon ey in spite of low prices and hard times. Why land is cheap. And how it is as easy for an intelligent and in dustrious man to BUY a Nebraska farm as it is to rent one in any state east of the Missouri river. Every- farm renter who wants to be come a farm owner; every farm owner who is tired ot trying to make money off high-priced land; every father who wants to give his sons a start on the high road to independence, should write for a copy. Free. , J. FRANCIS, Gen’l Pass’r Agt., Burlington Route. _. Omaha. Neh, PATENT LAW PRACTICE. Des Moines, Jan. 13.-A corres pondent at Laurens, Iowa, asks, “What liability attaches to an applicant for a patent who proceeds to manufacture the article for which the patent is ap plied before the patent is granted in case the application should be re fused?” Answer:—As a rule when an inventor applies for a patent in good faith and finds lie lias been, an ticipated and that his invention is sub ordinate to a prior patent and then quits, that is the end of the matter. But at the same time he would be liable if prosecuted for infringement and the general rules concerning damages will apply. But the fact that the infringer supposed himself to be the first original inventor of the sub ject matter covered by a prior patent can be plead as a mitigating fact that the courts will recognize and be len ient as possible to the infringer. Valuable information about obtaining, valuing and selling patents sent free to any address. Thomas G. and J. Rali-ii Obtvio, Solicitors of Patents. LIVE STOCK AND rBUUIlCE MARKETS 0 0 (ft (ft o Quotations From New York, Chicago, Louis Omaha ami ^-.ewhere. OMAHA. Butter—Creamery separator.. 20 Butter—C hoice fancy country 1* Eggs—Fresh. 13 1 rairie chickens, per doz. 6 00 „ Spring Chickens-dressed. 5 3(ft Turkeys. 8 (ft Geese and Pucks.. 5l4 Lemons—Choice Messinus. 3 00 (ft 4 Honey—!• ancy White. 34 (ft Onions, per bu. (50 (ft Beans—handpicked .\avy. 1 2» 0 1 Potatoes. 35 (ft Sweet i’otatoes per bbl. t 75 (ft 2 Oranges—Per box . 3 d0 (ft 3 Hay—Upland, per ton. 4 00 0 5 Apples -Per bill. 1 50 r 3 SOUTH OMAHA STOCK MARKET. Hogs—Light Mixed... a 30 (ft 3 Hogs—Heavy Weights. 3 2» (ft 3 Beef—Steers. 3 50 0 4 Bulls. 2 40 (ft 3 Milkers and springers.25 Oj 03< Slags. 2 40 (ft 3 Calves.. 3 00 (ft 5 Stags.* 3 10 (ft 3 Cows ... 2 10 (ft 3 Heifers. 2 25 0 3 Stockers and Feeders...3 2' (ft 4 Sheep—Native. 2 2> 0 3 Sheep—Lambs.. 3 7* (ft 4 CHICAGO. Wheat—No. SSpring. 7? 0 Corn—Per bu...... 22 (ft Oats—Per bu. 1, 0 Pork. *5 0 8 Lard. 3 80 (ft 3 Stockers andleeders.3 75 4 Calves. 4 5 06 Hogs—Medium mixed. 3 30 0 3 Sheep—Lambs. 3 5i @5 N r-NV YORK. Wheat—No. 1, hard.. 93 0 Corn No. 2,... *.8 0 Oat s—N o. 2,..V. 22 (ft Pork—. i . 8 50 @ 9 Lard—... 4 25 0 4 ST. LOUIS. Wheat—No. 2 red, cash. 87 0 Corn—Per bu. 10 (ft • Oats—Per bu. 17 0 Hogs—Mixed packing. 3 20 0 3 Cattle—Native Hiip’ng Steers. 3 60 0 4 KAacjAs Li». l\ Wheat—No. 2 bard. .. 74 0 Corn—No. 2..-.. 17 0 Oats—No. 2... 1 0 Caul —Stockers and feeders.. 3 25 0 4 Hogs—Mixed.... 3 22 0 3 Sheep—Lambs .. 4 00 0 5 Sheep—Mettons...........2-15 03 St. 21 15 13' Z 25 6 0 6 oo 15 40 35 00