Sioux County Journal L f . UMMOM. rwprtttw. NEBRASKA. ' Tn American Association fur the Alt vane -men t ot science i od the trail of the wate ineion rulerobe. It is a pretty got! man that can boast of a much trustworthiness as to to be found id the wag of a dog's ail- The umbrella trust has gone up, but as non : of the factories will si s pend they prooably have soujthiiitf left tor a rainy day. Tub Georgia rattlesnake is out in 11 his glory, and tin- ri;i W e liars are lew ng on the inn u.n and rattling away at a great taie Tao V'l'N' men arc endeavor ng to trael round the world without a tent of money The om petition for the championship of tie d beats waxing hot ' When a boy or young man leaves school or college be should try 10 con nect himself with a Arm which adver tises. The business or such a tlrui is likely to in rease and piosjter. Only 2,000 Smiths attended the reunion oi the Smith family in New Jersey the oilier d.iy, and there is tome apprehension that the Smith family tree may have begun to wither at th roots. , , A rivtmiv roi tester must sub mit to taking a wheelbar-ow ride through a populous street in payment of an ele. t on Let. Many preacners speak against the sin or gambling, but few are willing thus Ao become examples A i"' Guthrie, Oklahoma, srulenls who desired to express disapproba tion of one of their numl.r tossed him lioru a third-story window. The ob.ectionabie person died. Thus does the Wild West prog es . The inci dent is almost advanced enough lor Cornell. , An now it is said thai Mr. St. Gaudeus lat atte ,.pt to diape the nude igure on the World's Fair medals does not suit the President, who is reported as saying that the rioiion the sculptor ban twined aboiu it ere tes the appearance of a man who has had a broken leg bady set. St. L t is was the first city to show how rapid transit electric Hoes could be utilised in improving postal facilities, an it is again the flr.-t lty to show how they ' may I util ized in. improving the ' ambulance service The electric car ambu.ame is another St Louis inventiou which promises good results. The New York jolice bave been Diking a very interesting chemical experiment They soaked a solid piece of brass in a water bii'-ket for some hours, the only result leing the efferveaence of their own excited feelings. The brass was found iy.ng about l ussell Sage's door, and was therefore mistaken for a bomb Italy is about to deport several hundred anarchists to a barren island where tbey will bav- a spletid d chance to wo k out their iheoiy of doing without any governmeat at all The thanks of the other nat ons of the world are due the government of King Humbert for not trying to foist the crowd off on some unsuspecting foreign lanci Delaware's ancient law requiring a bridegroom to give the State an In demnity bond never causes anv serious trcuble. and If the penalty was ever enforced it must have ien a long while ago. The man going out be I bridegroom's bond engages that the I children that may come of the tro- ; pective union shall not. become a ' charge upon the State. Thk President of Honduras is in a ' hurry to have the ex-l'resident shot, j This ha te Is not unnatural. The : frealdent knows that the whirligig j of time may see him wearing the fa- tal 'ex" himself, and the gentleman now endangered by it placed in a no-1 sltioa Ux.otbe shooting However, (be oa come Is unimportant. The, evidence is ample that any man who ' woold be President of Honduras I xtgbl o he snot As iaventor has just dtovered tint tbere It enough latent energy in , NM ' foot of air to kilt a regiment, ' Ml tkat till power can 1m- iilrated ; ty fAnstlna" This is the Keeiv , lector principle A air i cmipo-ed , tt C3Tt-i Ifltuenta gase , on I text In i ftt7 sjteomiCoi jmipurtions. it Is i t" -J Mecaaa rj to prod uoe a v i . ra . f i cf MSeloat tHienlty lo ttiak a j dialea) ohi i.ation ani t here TCJ iff tbe. l a st V'" f ot oitAoritiuo. This 1 showo by the fact that First Lieut uaut James A. ieyden. rouilb Infantrv. with two Don comm an oned 'officers, two piivate. and a packer, with six pack mules are directed to i make a general explorat on of certain sections of country lying between trie I Mullen and I olo trails in Central Idaho. The War Department expects that the trip w.ll not lake more than six weeks. i j The insuran e ag'Ut at i'h lips, Wis., who issued policic. when forest j tire w re raging ciose round the i town is put down for an id ol or ! worse bv trie exa-t,-rated companies j who have to pay the lo-ses but if the tire had skipped the place as x:rnaiis 1 the agent expected he would have i trained g eat cred t for consummate t I inil.'iner.t and nerve and wood lime i liei-n held up as a shining exa'np'.e of j the st lift successful underwriters are made of The way a thin' turns out ! iuak; all the di.'erence to the world. I ' Chicago had anything like our new I nion Mation. when would we I hear the end of it? aks ihe t Lnui Star-Sayings. And the Chicago Trib une resiMjnds: That is exactly the IKjint If i hie go had tbit railway station it would speak of it o casino all v. It is st Louis' exce-sivc mod esty in not boasting now and then of itf Eads bridge, its Veiled Prophets, its big shoe trade, and the fact that St Louis is the greatest mule market in the world that keen that town in the background. Hold your head up, St 1 ouis Cany your chin a litt.e above the level. H ' Im.kkmii.l !ays he has the right to kill himself if he w nts to ike most of lils theories, this is Hot new However, his friends need not feci worried. Thoss who philosophise on the sub ect ra civ rake the plunge. The otoncl w.ll, undoubtedly goon en oyiug the cakes and aie of this vale of teais. varying his law practice wiih efforts to oviue the world that Moses was n it as great a man ! as he has leen reported. We vent ure j to say that even in very hot weather. when the orator wishes he had a --.uired the habit of I e-b-redit ing icethods. he feels in his inmost heart that it. is not so bad a wor! aHrr all. LV.e trie rest of us it is the tst tint the Colonel k nows. T r cranks may 1 relied unon to make clean a path 'or their twn d -; struct ion with their friends, the doc- j tors cannot obstruct. In the fa eof the irruption of homicidal "parano J lacs" that grows instea oi abating, the uries of th ountry are (juite apt Jo forget that these troublesome creatures are poorly developed as to the lower Jaw. and that their cranial proportions indicate sad degeneration from earlier types. A murderous cratik confronted the May r of Louis ville in his office and attempted o slay hitn. In ew ork a wild-eyed fellow who had been tracking Dr. l'arkhtirst was arrested. after he had done his best to 111 a policeman, r roru other points of the country come stories of armed 'paranoiacs" seeking to avenge their grievances by the prevailing method of taking uu man life. It may seera inhuman to say it, but the destruction of the crank is demanded But for the good of society he must be abolished. He has forced the issue. Titf great tierman author, Ooethe, make one of his characters say that the sum of education is to teach the boys to tie servants and the gins to fie mothers. These ideas are repug nant to a large share of the young J people of to-day. To educate b ys to ! he servants, in other words to servo faithfully and obediently, does not mean that tbey shall not i masters where tbey may. but the Idea is based on the truth that the best masters are those who have learned how to serve. The great men of the time have almost without except on been . goKl servants. T. eir sons usua ly tbink to become g eat by starling at the top of the ladder. As for the girls, there is nothing tbey can do that will so develop the best that Is in them as to be fitted conscient ous y and broadly for the duties of mother hood. Even if a girl is never to en-! joy the privilege of becoming a I mother the building of the mind and character with that end in view tits her betUr than anything else she could da The depth and b eadth of love and wisdow that a mother may proper y use In the larlog and ear ing of children Is practically Without limit. Hleep Walkers. A cure for sleep walking, says a correspondent, can be effected by lay ing upon the carpet, by the side o the slr.ep walker's bed, a strip of sheet metal Iron, zinc, or copper so w de and long that when he put his reel out of hod they will rest up on the metaL The coldness felt will iiwakeo him thoroughly, and h will go to bad again. A frwnd. the writer adds, cheeked the habit, or sleep walking In bis son by placing a sir pof wet carpet by the side of his bed. f 1 t IXcath Bava hot one dent A Hrrv.m of t'utu Little Hock, Ark, Oct. 5. Never in the history of Little Hook was there such a scene of wrecked and ruined buildings as was prest-n'rd in this city yesterday uiorn i g. The streets were almost impassable and great chasms in brick piles told of the fury ot night be lore. 1 lie damage will aggregate al most a muiion dollars. The onlr in surance held by the sutferers amounts to about iiSU'. Almost every build ing between Main and Markharn mid Third aud Main sti eels was unroofed and in numerous instance entire fronis were leveled to the ground. On east Mark! am street the destruc tion of properly was greater than else where. Several iar 'e buddings were leveled and not Oi.j escaped injury, mdows ai d doors were blown out, tin roofs carried away, telephone and elec'ric light w ires blown to the ground and poles twisted off tt the curbing. It was at the insane nsylutc where the most complete wreck whs to be The buildings built by the state, at a cost of t3t.H',u;0, are located on a promi nence three utiles wt-st of the busine'S po. tiou of ti.e city and offere t a splen did target for the ury of the storm. Thousands of people in buggies, and on horselMrk thronged the road to the ruins. 1 be wreck w;is not complete, but the. damage is estuu tied a'. H'j KKJ totlOVUO- To frtven. Fir I Sr. Tai l, Minn., Oct. 5. The con-j work only twe.ve feet from a large vetitiou tor the tireeiilion of forest twos ory brick building, bad a miracti fires held at and under the auspices of lms esi-a) from insiani death. When the commercial club was very earnest, . th cyclone struck that ouiluing it but not very largely attended. l'aiers j blew it over on the Western I'ninn were read by J. O 1! irret, secretary of building and the bricks and timbers the state forestry association, and On. ! came crashing through the latter. One C. C. Andrews, and a discussion of the best vnethods to adopt was had by lutx.bermeit and others. A memorial to the legislature was adopted saying that the state owns !,'2i'.t,txl acres, the I'mtBt! Cstates 5.0m.,XJ acres, besides twenty-live millions ot natural forest ! lands need protection. A memorial to the president asking him to call the at'entiou of cmsress to the matter wag a.so adopted. The chairman was authon.ed to appoint a committee to prepare protective bills fvr congress and tlie legislature to pass. Tttis com mittee will be named later and the con vention will meet again in December. lit-mem Knglaud iol Franco. London, Oct. 5. Ttie Central News adheres to its assertion that the sum tunning of the cabinet counpil is due to trie tact that l-'raiice has made repre sentations to the British government concerning England's alleged responsi bility for the attitude of the gov ernment in continuing is strenuous opposition to the treaty rights of France in Madagascar, It is hIso claimed that France has protested of war from England to Madagascar and the enrollment of British subject ill the military service of the Hovas. Jt is known that an ex-cavalry olficer m j tne rniisri army nas goue out to .na'i agaacur to act as commander-in-chii f ot the Hova forces, lie having taken part In the Hova campaign against the French iu Madagascar in ISHo. Another! British oflicer has engaged to serve as adjutant-general in the Hova array and hundreds of settlers in south Africa of all nationalities are prepared to join the Hovas in the event of war, they having been offered five- shillings a day and a plot of land if the Hovas are successful. The Hova army now consists of '.wo divisions of infantry well armed and well drilled, and the Hova authorities claim that they will be able before January 1 to lake the field with 100.000 men. Foreign diplomat regard the situa tion as hopeful and believe the dilllcul tiea will be settled amicably between England and France. Mvrrjr Mara Hnrawl. Minneapolis, Kan., Oct. A livery banr owned by Israel Markley and oc cupied by Stewart Bros., with a small livery stock, burned yesterday morning about 2 o'clock, with all iu contents, consisting of nine horses aud three buggies. This is the tilth barn that has burned in this city during the past nine months and every livery sUble In this city, with the exception of one, has gone up in dames, together with thirty -live or forty heaa of horses. 1 he Ores were all undoubtedly of incendiary origin and there is a feeling of anxiety pre vailing In the city. The tire depart ment tuts done excellent service in every case and con fined the fires to the building where they originated.' The fire department of this city holds more tale first pri7.es than any other volun teer depart ment in the stale and is proving that it is as efficient for actual work as for prize winners at tourna ments. The lues by lire is about $2,&0 with out a dollar of insurance. Slot Cimi h!4. Ottawa. Kan., Oct. il.-llockln-smith and Pitman, wbo killed Donaliu itself defeuse, were not convicted at waa reported. '1 he operator omitted sii important word in the dispatch, viz, "Not." Am Attempt t WrasklBf. Nohton vibt.K, Kan., Oct., 5. -Til Ban l a Pe passenger train which is due tare at 4 o'clock came near being wreckek Ave ml led weat of here Wed nesday night. The traia waa crow dec with persons wbo bad been to Topt-ka to bear tiovernor MeKlnley speak. mcm miscreant had placed ilea acrM the track. Fortunately tlie engineer aav the ttap In time to prevent a ikI ona wreck. . So one waa hurt, ad bnt matt da age done to toe engine. fcwrpt hf a C-rlaaa. LrTTi.E liiK'K, Ark,, O t 4. A ter rihle cyclone swept over tlie buslneM portion of this city carrying' neath and oes'ruction in its pv.h.' SLartly after daik heavy clouds cam from the west, accompanied by vivid tlames of light nine and heay crashes of thunder. 1 he sk tes suddenly cleared and the storm was thought to be over, when suddenly a heavy pale from the south 1 west appeared and for three minutes the city was shaken. The wind was , territic. Treei, telegraph, telephone and electric lilit poles were uprooted land carried a distance of 2K) yards, j The roofs of about thirty f the largest i buildings in the city wen torn from the houses and hur ed against build- ings on the opposite side of the 8'reet, leaving the occupants tnd property within to the mercy of the drenching rain which begaii to fall In torrents shortly afterward. When the cycione had ceased It was discovered that the residence portion of the city had en tirely escaied, but Mam street to Third Markhaiu street iroiii Centre to Cuin lT.auU Second street wcte almost total wrecks, Tins territory covers the principle portion ot the town. MANY NAlUtO'.V tX AI'KS. The Wes;erti Unou telegraph ollice located in the centre of tuts district. 1 he building was wrecked beyond re cognition, the 0ierators who were at work having-narrow escapes. Opera- t.nr Colbert, ill nart ic.ular. w ho was at of the bats struck htm oo the. nip. In dicting a painfui wound. None of the oilier operators were Injured. At 11 o'clock that night a meisage s re ceirtd from the insane isyjtnn, sitn- ated two miles from the city and the state peiiltentiary, just, west of the union depot, calling for a corps of phy- siciaus and other assistance, Jumped the Tim k. Oakland, Cal., Oct. 4. As the local j train on the tifrow gauge road w;i j approaching the Webster si reet draw ! bridge the last Car, winch was th smoker, jumoed the tracK. Ihe en fcineer slopped the train, but bef re he was able to do so '.he forward p ri of the train wis on the draw and the smoking car was being drag -J on the ties. The cooping breaking just as the car re.it lied the groiin.i, il rolled down the bank and into the water. Fifteen passengers were in the enr when it left the track an t f -il tiro the wa'er beside the track. 1". J. Keley, employed by the Denver A; lm (ir.tnne agency here as ticket seller, was killed. Allot iter body in the cjir has not yet been recovered. Captain .1. C. A i'soii of han Francisco is btu tmrt, ev. era! other passenger were injured, al- luougu nol eriously. I'lea.le.l .Nut S.iilllt. Rax FitAN.Msco, Oct. 1. The glrlkMg accused of wrecking a Irani near Sacramento Julv II last, wncn the engineer and four United Mates soldiers lost their lives, were arraigned at Woodland aud pleaded not gnuty, Worden's trial was e; tor the 17'h iiisi. while the others will be tried later. A dispatch from .Sacramento I uesdav eveniug says tliat William McCullom, a railroad employe, lias made a con fession, iu which he implicates two men now employed in tlie shops there In the fatal train wreck and exonerates Worden and the others under arresi at Woodland. An loton tluMl Ojinii.iii. Washington, Oct. ; An inter national question involving the Tinted States and tJermany lias been raised by that feature for the new tariff which inspire the most trouble of any of the suiar schedules. 1 lie tier man govern ment, through its ambassador, Baron Von Sauerua Jellsch, lias made a strong protest to the secretary of state against that clause of the act which imposes an additional duty of one tenth of a cent per pound on sugar im ported from those govern menu which pay an expor. bounty on the article to their producers. It is held by the (iernian government that this feature of the new tariff act is more oppressive in Ha action against the sugar pro ducers of that country than any other, and violates the spirit of the treaty ar rangements between the two govern ments, particularly in view of the con cession by which the embargo against A met lean pork for a time enforced by Germany was raised. . Tlie tier man embassador said the protest had been enteied in a friendly spirit. I'lutil ajr CaralMMHMa. Masmlo. O., Oct. 4 Passenger traius No. 3- ana No. on the t leve land, Lorraine & Wheeling railway col lided at Pauls, live mile north of here. Train 3t waa loaded with Knights Tem plar bound for Cleveland, Careless ness by Engineer Haell of train M In mistaking a freight train on a siding for train 35, which be had orders to meet, caused the accident. Vut Him late to rip. Hi'OKANK,Oct. 4. A special from Moscow, Idaho, aays: At the couny jail here John Witte waa cut to pieces before the jailors could reach him by Joe Itoberts. an Insane United Mates prisoner, who was conliiied in the same cell with htm, Roberta in some way secured a huge knife and attacaeu bis companion. It took him but a few seconds in hia rating madness to ssver Wltte's head and then eat him Into tripe M'Btrbcd IB right. London, Oct. 3. A British naval officer attached to the Chinese naval squadron, which was engaged In the light off the mo an of the Yalu river, has written a letter to the Craphic, w hich is published in that paper. In his letter the writer gives additional details of tlie fighting and says: "Oo board the warship Chen Yuen the lighting was awful. The dock and space around the guns were strewn with human fragments and three of five men working a four ton guu were blown tip by a siiell fiom the Japan ese warsh Naniwa. A fourth gun ner was slot while trying to escape from the turret aud tlie tifih stuck to hi) post. Tins man tired three rounds at the Naniwa, one 'hell entering the engine room of the .i -panege ginp and another smashing le-r forebndge. Tlie Nat twa then hauled off. I he Chinese admiral rewarded th surviving gunner with a present of I.OOd taels. A shell glanced from the steel deck of the Chen Yuen and went through iter lower, shattering everything thetidi!. A l.euteni. .1 who waa in the act of speaking ttiroiigh the tuoe leading to the engine room was blown into atoms an 1 ins head lell hanging to the pipe. Huge fragments ot armor and the backing thereof were carried in-board by tlie shot, crushing a large number of sailors uuo a shapeless mass. A European engineer who was in the act of groping about in an endeavor to re p'ttr a steam pijie was Oieiiched from head to font willi blooi of an assist ant who was dittembureuU by a shot from the enemy's ship. The Chen Yuen arrived at Wet-Hat-Wie the day alter the light in the same condition in which she had lett the battle. No attempt had been made to wash the blood or remove the corpses which S'rewed the deck." The ri'er expresses the opinion that if the European ruleis could have seen the decks ot Chen Yuen they would have i'oresworu war heiicel'orth and forever. : I Kl rtlrll tiy a Tornl. t Wichita., Kan., Oct. 'A. A tornado struck the northern part of this city and tore up property in all directions. Several people were injured, but so far as heard from no fatalities occurred. The wind came from the southwest ac companied by a fierce rain, and dipping down at Wichita and leuili street, it took the roof and one side off a street car bam and turned over a few out buildings. From there it jumped to Main aud Twellth streets, where it tnok the entire roof off the Missouri Pacific depot and tote up tlie inside, turned the crossing watch man's liou.se upside down, without however, hurt ing Hie occupants beyond a few bruiS'-s Mid twisted some of tlie neighboring houses oul of shape. The next place Struck was another street car barn on Fifteen! ii street and Fifth avenue, and this was entirely demolished by the wind. The debris caught fire and some cars were consumed by the llames. In tills vicinity a number of residences were lifted off their foundaiic ns and some of tht-in were overturned and a score of bams and outhouses were demolished. In front of one residence a line of old cotton wood trees, fully two test in diameter were mowed down but the bouse a few feet off was not touched. One six-room house was lifted up and dumped some distance away, yet no one waa hurt. Telegraph and telephone wires are down In all directions. No news has is yet been received from the surrounding country. Murtind lijr a KaploMtuii. Pkkky, Oal., Oct. 3.-Thoiiias Stewart was a'tled and his wife, tour children and Mr. and Mrs. Sliule aud their daughter were terribly burned Tuesday by the explosion of a package or guiiK)wder, The par v. which waa on a Hunting expedition, ,as crossing a creek near this place when the pow der in the wagon ignited and blew btewarl aud Mrs. blade and Miss Made out of the vehicle, at the same time setting fire to the clothing of the others. Stewart fell between the horses and was badly mangled. By jumping Into the creek the remainder of ihe party were saved from immediate death, but were burned so severely that the major ity of them eotiuot live. Prilirl bjr Plain Kk.nomia, Wis., Oct 3. Four per sons were roasted alive and two others were badly burned at the lartn resi dence of II. It. Pierce, iu the town of Wilmont, near the slate hue, Saturday evening. The family consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Pierce, three sons, aged tweutv-live, twenty-nine and thirty four, and a daughter aged eighteen years. All slept up stairs. One of lbs young men tirsl noticed the lire aud leaped down stairs, lie then returned to rouse the others of the family, but perished with Is brothers and sister. The lather and mother escaped with severe burns but the children all iertsliel. Sank la Ihe Bay I'ltn.AiiKl'illA, Oct S. The British auk steamer Allenney wis su ik to Delaware oay In a collision with th Belgian tank steamer Caucasn. Her crew of thirty were rescued. Hair la Many Mllllnai .. Cim aoo, Oct. 3. -"Ben" Pric, clerk of tlie Cook comity jail for mure than fourteen years, It Is said, Itetweeit a.UUO.OllO, and 90,000,(100 richer than he was a week ago. This is the amount of property left to him by bis father, whose, death occurred re cently. It ii scstted over America, Englacd and Australia, and until a aopcitor can get a complete inventory of the nro party the value will not be known,' STATE NEWS ITEMS. IUgan people have rev.ved the obso lete game of croquet. Several Platte country farmers have lately hunted for srtesiau water and found it. Judge Neville of North Platte baa giveu industry a little boost by build iug a large hotel. Hon. A. L. Towle, who has recently been located at Portland, Ore., has changed his location to Los Angeles Burglars entered the tore of II. J. Sebrink a' Firth snd gir away with ??o word of goods and 32 in pennies. A mass nie"tmg will b held at Chap pell to ascertain how 111 y people in Deuel county need a-sisiance an i iiow best to si cure it. Mrs. Cordelia FairehiH died at her home near Dorring'-im after a very brief illness, leaving a husband and live small children. Tiie IJultalo County .('iiru.il fays 1 lint. .1. II, llrayton, lornierlv editor of the Amherst Times, died au accidental deatti at Scranton, pa. Key. H. E. Bobbins of Kearney has been secured to till the pulpit In the Episcopal church at Broken Bow, lately vacated by Kev, Knox. Zeuo E. Briggs of West Point has passeil the liual examination at Anna polis, .Vd. and will shortly enter the United btales naval academy. Miss Mary slebuer, a res, dent of Col fax county, dtspondetit over poor health, ended her life by jumping into Shell crtek and drowning herself, . J. A, Medley, a brakeinan on the Elkliorti running west, from Fremont lost his pocketbook, containing a snug sum of money, somewhere between Fremont and Norfolk. A brakeman on the Union Pacific, run west from Lexington, fell between the ears ai d was Instantly k).l"d. lie leaves a wife, to whom be had been niarr.ed but three months. Hon. A. (!. scott ot Kearney lies in a helpless condition with his left, side wasting Irom paralysis. His sp-eeh is slightly improved, but o'her conditions tire about as they have been for two months past. A Wyoming woinnti with three little children was Htratnb-d at Crand Is land for tlte want of funds to take her to friends in Missouri, and the gener ous people of that, city chipped iu and sent her on her way rej i cng. A big buck on the ranch of J. P. Latla near lekaiiiiih badiy gored a lad named Duuiap who had entered the park. The b y was standing with his back to the animal and the sharp horns penetrated so deep that be nearly died from tiie loss of blood. Fred Uinne runs a restaurant at Broken Bow aiiu the other night some miscreant who didn't like his sand witches threw three large rocks through the window, smashing a showcase and damaging things about 330 worth. He escaped without being identified. Charles Clare, a boisterous Fullertoti boy, drew a knife on ii policeman in the discharge of his duty, and v-heti taken before the cadi lor examination plead for a little time to secure wit nesses. The time was granted and he took advantage of it to skip the couttry. Laat season eighty acres of land io Madison county was sown to flax, the seed coming from Dakota, ami the re sult is thai this piece of land is literally covered with Bussian thistles. All the farmers in i hai victru'y will turn out and endeavor to arrest the further spread of the est. Following are the signal service data complied from record of observations at N orth Platie for the mouths of October during the past twenty years; Mean or normal temperature, f0 de grees; warmest October was that of MV, with an average of U degrees; the coolest was that of 1H8N, with an average of 44 degrees: the highest tem perature was 89 degrees, on Octuber 8, IH'.ilt; tlie lowest temperature waa il degrees, ou October 24, Ihs7; averaging date on which the first, "killing'' frost occurred in autumn. September the average preclnilation for the month. 1.1 inches; the a v sage number of days with .01 of mi inch or more, ti; the greatest monthly precipitation waa 3 47 inches in ins !; the least monthly precipitation was ,05 incites, in lltaj; the greatest amount of precipitation rectrdedm any 124 consecutive hours was 1.45 inches, on .October Ijl, l(ij; average ' number of clear days, 13; partly cloudy days, 13; cloudy days,' 6; the prevailing winds h ve been from the northwest; the hig'ieart velocity of the wind was miles, from H.e south on Octoler 15, 1873. The Standard Cat Me company have commenced harvesting their sugar beets at. Ames, of whicl. eral hundred acres, t they have sev- .' ,.: e shinning se.on all1 iheir lieets ' the acre, tier ion. Sey- to tin- oilolk fncior from present ind ca , will average twelve t.. for which they recen eral analyses have iii.i'l- huh tiiev show m sugar peicentage of i ion, i'ii per cent, to 20 per cent. A new opera house Is among the Im provements at llartinglon for this year. The house la K0x80 feet in size, with a seating capacity of ft Ml. Every seat waa full at the formal owning ihe other night. , While Thomas Harrison was driviug home from Stanton he was stopped by two men who jumped on bis wagon and asaaulted him with a club, break ing bia arm. The men then want through hit pockets and robbed him of every cent lie haA ,