Itonfaester waiter have organized. Grand Kaplds baa a reporters' union. Drover shoemakers now receive $3.50 day. Albany telepboue linemen receive $2.75 a day. New York City bas -50,000 organized rage workers. Tbe Master Horsesboers' Union bas 15,008 members. Spain bas ordered the eight-hour day for government work. Morgaavllle, V. Va.. will bave a $1, KX),000 plate glass plant. Cleveland's new $4"j,000 labor temple project Is assuming a definite shape, Tbe Kuglisb Britannia metal trade dispute was settled after five months. Greater New York's G.000 carpenters won tbe strike for the eight hour day ind $4.50 a day. In Austria, 70,000 tulners have won a nine hour workday. The meu were on itrike nine months. Tbe Bank of England employs about 1.000 people, pays a quarter of a mil lion a year In wages, and 35,000 a year In pensions. Mexican labor Is so scarce as to ne- j hereby deflate a a day NAMES DAY OF THANKSQIVINOL President laauea Froclaaaatiaa Dmir dating Nov. 27. President llooseveft bas issued Us proclsm uliou daaignating Thursday, Nov. !7, is a day of thanksgiving. Tbe proc amstion is as follows: i "According to the yearly custom of our ruiir, ii i at iib upon me i-resiaeui ai mis easou to appoiut a day of foktival and iLanksgivluf to Uod. "Over a century and a quarter bas passed sloes this country took Its place imoug tbe nstious of tbs eartb, and dur nf that time we have bad, on the whole, liore to be thankful for than bas fallen lo the lot of any other people. Genera tion after generation bas grown to uau kood and passed away. Each bas bad o bear Its peculiar burdens, each to face is special crises, sod each bas known reo-rt of gnat tela!,- wbeii - tfc country was menaced by malice, domestic or for lign levy, wben tbe band of tbe I-urd kbs heavy upon it, lo drought or flood or pestilence, wben in bodily distress und tnguisb of soul it paid tbe peuslty of !ully and a forward heart. "Nevertheless, decade by decade, we Uti struggled onward and upward; we low abundantly enjoy material we'll be ing, and, under the favor of the Must iligh, we are striviug earuestly to achieve morul aDd spiritual uplifting. The year that has just closed has been one of (eace and of overflowing plenty, llurely has 0f people enjoyed greater prosperity than we are now enjoying. For this wo render heartfelt and solemn thanks to the Giver of Good; and we seek to praise bim, not by words only, but by deeds, by the wsy in which we do our duly to juraelves and to our fellow meu. "Now, therefore, I, Theodore Roose velt, President of the United States, do of general He. York. cessltste sending for negroes from Ja- I thanksgiving, 'Jhursday, tue aui oi me - i roniing rsovemucr, ana ao reCTiu.uu ithat throughout the land the people cease jfroiu their ordinary occupations, and n their several homes and places of wor ship tender thanks unto Almighty God ! tor the manifold blessings of the past maica. Tbe latter are guaranteed em pluynieut for a year. Tbe American Steel and Wire Com pany It planning to build a hospital for tbe treatment of emergency cases on the grounds of each of Its twenty-two plants. Tbe Journeymen Bakers and Con fectioners' Union of North America bas 12,000 members, distributed In 223 lo cal unions throughout tbe United States and Canada. Tbe National Association of Post Office Clerks, which held a convention In Kansas City, again declared its sym pathy with tbe objects ef the Ameri can Federation of Labor, but declines to affiliate. Tbe laws of Kansas provide that the tabor unions of the State shall organize a Ktate ordor, and select the labor com year. "In witness whereof I bsve hereunto et my hand snd caused the seal of tbe United States to he affixed. "Done at the city of Waahington this 29th day of October, In the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred snd two, and of the Independence of tbe United States the one hundred and twenty-sev nth. "THEODORE R008BVELT. "By the President: "JOHN HAY, Secretary of State." CHURCH-GOERS ARE FEWER. "No better evidence o industrial and conimereii activity la needed thai present inadequate trausporiauuu ik ties. Every form of railway equipment from tr,.k to rollius stock, baa been in . A mnA nrfM-ted during- the last few years to an extent that appeared al most aceeslve, yet the natiou'e businesi bss more than kept psoe. Unseasouabl) mild wcatl-ar has retsrded retail trad) at many points, yet the movement oi goods Is fully sustslned by undiminished preparation for future salea. Distribu tioa delayed by high terapersture Is not lost, while tbe agricultural communitj will proflt very materially by tbe tarii neaa of frost, increasing their ability tt consume tbe produts of factories and mills." The foregoing is from the Week' ly Trade Review of R. G. Dun it Co. II continues : Labor is more fully employed than at any recent date, only a few small con troversies interrupting. Money market pressure baa been removed, and, although securities do not respond, legitimate trad Is not retsrded by quiet apeculation. Earn lugs of the railways during October thui far exceed laat year's by 4.0 per ceui, and tfeosa of 1000 by 12 per cent. Coka ia atill the vital factor In tht Iron and steel situation. Not only hss nc Improvement occurred, but the supply ol fuel is falling further behind ana me oui look is alarmina. Pi Iron is in great de mind, imnorta Dromlainc to continue large, and aa the higher duty on steel v.ili not be elected, there is reason to anuti cata a liberal movement from Germany The demand for rails is so great thai large purchases sbroad are being nego tiated, while practically all railway tup plies find an eager market. Failures for the week numbered 232 in tbe United States, agut 240 last year, and 22 in Canada, compared with 29. One to Strife In Business sad Social Life, Hectare. Dr. Stone. Chicago people are going to church lesa nd leaa each vear. This Is the statement mlssiouer. thus giving the unions the 'mode by the Rev. James 8. Stone, pastor Drlvtleife of savinr who shall represent of St James Churcn, iass ana uu. them In so Important a position. Amerlcsn Flint Glass Workers Un ion, at Pittsburg, Pa., has gained a de rided vlctorv In securing from the Mac beth Evans Glass Company a compro-j itant struggle in the business and social wise advance for skilled men of tbe , world- "A woman who for a whole week factories of 7 per cent In wages. Itreets. Mr. Stone gives five reasons which in his opinion cause this decrease In church attendance. Chief among these five the pastor of the North Side church says ia tbe con- Tbe arbitration board of the Chicago has been atteuding theaters, balls, teas and numerous other social functions," laid tbe Rev. Mr. Stone, "looks forward City Railway agreed upon a 10 per cent ' t0 Sunday as a day of rest, and she sore lucrease in wages, a uniform working ly needs it. For the same resson a man day of nine bours, and pay and one-1 who bas spent six days in any business . , . ,, u ., , , ' which cslls for his whole sttenuon many UU.II IW OJ1 n ", . A . l.l, . .nA n bours. and two holidays a month. The movement for a strict law against child labor has been taken up In earnest in Indiana, and an effort will be made to push a stringent bill through the next Legislature. An edu cational qualification, similar to that In Massachusetts, Is proposed. Cattle butchers In all the big packing centers of the West have secured a part of bis Sunday In church. The Let of reasons given by the Rev. Mr. Stone for the lack of church attidance fol lows: "Wear and tear of the modern business and socinl life; reaction from successive emotionalism; decline in the faith in im mortality; numerous warring denomina tions, and lack of something new in the church. "Chicago is no exception to the lsck o It is the same from rise IU w age auu irujoj .... . ,u . " c, working day, which marks one of the most decisive victories that the work men bave ever secured from the pack lug firms. The rise In wages Is gen eral, and affects every man engaged In cattle killing and dressing, except the workmen of St. Puul,,Mlun and Sioux City. Iowa, where the men are pnld by the week Instead of by the hour, as in , Mr. Stone. "It applies to ail eitias anil towns und is almost as marked in the tonutry as In the city. I have been ass"d If it was not due to the criticism heaped upon the church and the Bible. I do not think that this is the case. This criticUin has been Koina on for centuries and it would not only now begin to affect tho attendance. Others ask if it is not be .,.ua it, a tx.ntil tiflve an idea that tile ;hurch is only for the rich. I do not think . . , . . . m . 1 I !.. Chicago. Brooklyn Plasterers Union has a rule thnt this is the cose, for in churches that wl.lrh permits the union to line any urc bunt ana conaucieu u. ; . bo., plasterer who may be discovered the same state of affairs prevs.la. 1 ho uok yiHn.r. v d prevails everywhere, paying members of the union less than . "JJJ Mr one ,ttnmpted t0 .. the union scale of wages. In a very I t a rem(.,jy for Uie condition. "There heavy penalty. This rule, It Is told, ' s Duy one y,y t remedy this apparent bag been of much benefit to the trade, abandonment of tbe church," said he. and bas been strictly enforced for "It is not in providing music and enter about two years, during which time. It tnlnment for the people, but in impress- I, also told, that the treasury oi tue, " '",;' ;"'" : ,1 Vtl ,, . viuinui is i '.hat the people can be brought back into tbe church." Highly encouraging arc tbe reports from tbe ludjs trial field. Manufacturing comoanlaa have a aood volume of busi ness and in many Unas are not selling mure only because tbey cannot niaka more. Jobbing trade ia satisfsctory on the whole. A touch of cold weatbel would be welcomed in tbe Northwest to draw the farmers from their active work at borne and turn their attention to fall requirements. This would liven up re tail trade, which is reported a little quiet lu some looalltiaa. The railroads are doing a business heavy beyond precedent. We no longei bear tbe loud complaints, so common at this time lsst year, wben the situation was not much worse, of the sesreity ol cars. With all the new equipment added since then and with more coming into use daily, tbe roads are still overtaxed The grain movement la affected seriously. But shippers realise tbe situstion better now and are slower to lodge complaints. In the Northwest it is believed that th movement of coarse grains, the heaviest ever known, bas passed its msxlmum point and that from tbla time on more wheat will coma Instead. Country ele vator stocks are larger than at this tim last rear, while wheat stocks in Minne apolis and Duluth are about 10,000,000 buahela less than last year. ThM-e baa been some slight growth ot reactionary feeling during tbe week due to the recent shsrp advance in wheat (.ncl the fact that a number of bearish Items are seen in tbe world's ststlstics. The heavy Russian wheat and rye crops are dwelt upon as Influences making for ul timate price depression, as is the law increase in Msnltoba interior stocks and the fact thst in four weeks the world's visible suDolv of wheat increased 35.KO0, 000 bushels, compared with an increase of 9.000.000 bushels in the correspond lug four weeks last year. Yet the lacta remain that there is scarcely sny wheat in store in Minneapolis and the movement is not besvy, while the flour mills have been erlndins: St a rata to make new rec ords in flour production, and outside mill ers have also been heavy buyers in this market. The fact that prices are not too hitrh to do business In competition abroad wou d seem clear lrora tue continued ex Dort Inaulry reported from day to day and the exports ol ,lHJO,di( nusneii thia week, the lsrzest of any week lor more than a year. REBELLIOUS MULE WON. laieawaSleat Aailasal Would Mat Be Bouad ky Ceavcntloae, Once, on a mining expedition, we bad imoug the mule a strong, rebellious roung animal tbat was determined to o where and aa she pleased. Some times ber fancy took her along tbe tiigb places above tbe road, sometimes ihe went down beiow it, then she ieemed to have loit something and act id as tbougb she expected to find It in the woods, but she had decided objec tion to walking on tbe road and so save the peon a great deal of trou ble. Finally there came to me a brilliant thought I bad a steady old borae and tbey caught the ambitious mule and tied bar securely to my b.nrae's tail; it wasn't considerate to the borse, but It did tlx tbe mule. She couldn't stop ;onveuieutly and she couldn't get past Ihe horse, neither could be wander up to tbe hilltops or climb down among the gullies, without tskiug tbe horse oloug, too, but that was inconvenient. For a time all weut well, but after awhile we came to a place where the road went down between pretty steep banks till It reached a stream of con- liderable volume. My horse weut down the trail In a resigned sort of way, but the mule started along the bank and wouldn't come into tbe trail; the result was that presently sbe could go no farther, and tben came a tug ot war, to see whether the borse In the gully could pull tbe mule doyn from the high bank or whether the mule could pull the horse's tail out. I scrambled from the saddle sji fast as possible, says a writer In Foreatand Stream, and then tbe animals seemed to come to an understanding; the borse hacked up as far as he could, tbe mule braced her forefeet and hung her head over tbe bank as far as possible; and Bo they stood. Presently tbe peons tame and untied tbem, and I declined to have tbem done up again; aqd so for (he rent of tbe way that mule followed Its own sweet will, "and a 'mule's' will Is the wind's will," and the thoughts of a mule are long, long noughts, lucomprenensiDiy long. HURRY CAUSES ILLS. In union has been enriched by nearly $2, 000 paid for Cues by erring boss plas terers, and by delinquent members of tbe union. Tbe Iron Molders' Union of North America Is making preparations for the Inauguration of a general nine hour work day. At the recent convention held In Toronto tbe plan was outlined, and nil unions Instructed to make the shorter work day the paramount Issue In future agreements. The different districts will be called Into conference ,.v. shortly so that some definite action tutn may be taken by Jan. 1 next. IMMENSE POTATO CROP, Farmers Will Healize More tbaa Fifty Dollars an Acre. The harvest of the potato crop in the Knw valley, Kansas, is Hearing comple tion, and while the size of the crop will not be known until the railroads have re ceived reports as to the number of curs used in transporting It, It is said to be one of the largest ever raised In the v.il- It has been customary for the po- irrowerii of the vulley to keep for In the eed all potatoes dug nfter Oct. 1, bemuse I il.ou flfaa 11 Sal Hi Ik- not lame enough lor district which comprises me " - , . , , unions in Chicago, Clevelnml, Clncln- j f (iU yeip )ril0lk.ny n natl. Pt IXJtilB. Imlianapoiis, ucinm., f , ,,.,,,, harvested are market- - .... . ... ,.,111 r.w.t (,1 I . . snd SlilwaiiKce ueii-Kn- - i " ' bII-. couferciK-e within the next few weens, 'Chin end launch Hie nine hour movement. iir bus bei n nn exceptional ne f,,r proilm lioii in the Kaw vnlley. I lie (HUility of til" potatoes has been better Ulul the ylehl turner man llie nvrr.i;i vi. nr. On iioine of the farms the yield inis been u large ns o.V) bin-licls to the acre. 'i'liis Is extraordinary, but Hie liverng )Md him l'cn good and the price I Potato-Hug Picker, An Ingenious Miehlgnn farmer bin Invented a machine that will pick ioi:t-( to Iiuks all diiy I'mg wit limit rest or .,irll.tiient. Verllv t ho progress of i,i cents a buhel. This makes an this new century Is priding forward by j.ome from sin-h a held as mentioned as leaps find bounds. A machine that high ns $M to the acre. w ill truint) bl "'"'I '"'l' 'I'-roNf The potato growing area of the Kaw botato i.nlch from morning 1111 nlglit river valley ex.cn.is irom Argentu.e on n ti e ho sun without suffering nn- U.e east to I ka on the west. he in tim not sun y,m ..powers n this section have nn organlza- stroke or weak back Is a glorious irM iihil iri((Mi() , 1( t,.nl ,., tnnph. This mnchlne gather old amlj pure Northern seed is to be pbmted 1-1 .. ..i (u .r I, a I' .,!, f.'ien )cnr. i r-'-v.i i " ij'nij ',)hn variety mid conies from the valley f the Red river in Minnesota. young polntn bugs nllke; It plucks off the old striped back veteran ns well a roiing and ambition potato bugs in a lush and Vigor of childhood; n alwrt, bis new HiiUo biig picker I Co, .Dt ipeetor of JMitnto bug. Uy working ....r..-,iiiiiilv for a few minutes It ran I . . ...... ...t. imtnln buns for vast audience was Ai the national convention of the flhrlstlsn Church, nt the Coliseum, Oma iia Neb., 14.tSK) persons communed, The aerfeu wiui im paw Oblcsgo Cattle, common to prime $4.00 to $7.20; hogs, shipping grades, $4.25 to $0.80; sheep, fair to choive, $2.0U to $3.60; wheat, No. 2 red, 71c to corn. No. 2, 55c to 50c; oata, No. 2, 28c to 80c; rye, No. 2, 48c to 40c; hay, tim othy, $8.50 to $18.00; prairie, $0.00 to $12.50; butter, choice creamery, 2lc 24c; egg,, fresh, 18c to 21c; potatoes, 85c to 45c per bushel. Indianapolis Cattle, shipping, $3.00 to $7.25; bogs, choice light, $4.00 to $0.00 sheep, common to prime, $2.50 to $3.75 wheat, No. 2, 70c to 71c; corn, No. white. 69c to 00c: oata, No. 2 white 81c to 32c. St Louis Cattle, $4.50 to $7.25; hogs, $3.50 to $0.75; sheep, $2.50 to $i.H)' wheat, No. 2, 08c to 00c; corn. No, boc to 50c i onts, No. 2, 2Sc to 20c; rye No. 2, 48c to 4!c. Cincinnati Cattle, $4.50 to $0.00 hogs, $4.00 to $0.K5; sheep, $2.50 $3.25; wheat, No. 2, 74c to 75c; corn, No, 2 mixed, S0c to (11c; oats, No. 2 mil' 20c to 30c: rye. No. 2, 52c to 53c. I let mil Cuttle, $3.00 to $0.25 $3.(10 to $0.75; sheep, $2.50 to wheat, No. 2, 7-tc to 70c; corn, rcllow. (10c to (17c: oats, No. 2 81c to 32c; rye, 52c to 5.'!c. Milwaukee Wheat, No, 2 northern. 73c to 74c; corn, No. 2, 58c to 5:tc; onls, No. 2 white, 82c to 33c; rye, No. 1, 5H.J lo 52c; barley, No. 2, 67c to 5S-; pork, mess, $10.50. Toledo Wheat, No. 2 mixed, 71c to 70c; corn. No, 2 mixed, 42c to 4-'tc; mils, No. 2 mixed, 27c to 2-Sc; clover cod, prime, $05. HulTalo Cattle, choice shipping steers. $.(H to $0.05; lings, fair to prime. $1.isi to $0.05; sheep, fair to choice, $3.25 to $3.75; lambs, common to choice, $1.(10 to $5.10. New York Cattle, $1.00 to ?('.!; hoirs. 13.00 to $0.25: sheep. $.1.00 to $3.75; wheat, No. 2 red. 77c to 7Hc; tmik .tm .. ... . v. n l.'t.. JNO, i, 'K)C 10 xic; OSIS, io. nun.-. H5c to 80c; butter, creamery, 23c to 24c ; nous $4.1 Nn, whit GREAT ISLES OF NORTH. Cauada's Title to Those ia Arctic I Questioned. Canada's title to tbe Immense Island ureas In the arctic waters norm aim east of tbe Dominion proper bas late ly been called In question. These areas contain tbe precious and otber metals and some of tbem may yet prove as valuable as the Yukon Itself. There are hundreds of islands, some as large as England and Ireland, says the San Francisco Bulletin. One of hem, Baffin Land, la some 1,100 miles length and 500 miles across at its widest part Baffin Land Ilea at the head of the Hudson bay and Is divided from that enormous and almost unex- I lored aectlon of Canada known as Labrador by Hudson strait There are large Islands In tbe strait tself between Baffin Land and Labra dor and some in the northern part of Hudson bay between tbe main land and Labrador. Tbe rest of tbe Islands nre contiguous to northern Canada in the Arctic ocean. These waters are frequented by American whalers, the owners or Which bave established permanent fish- ry stations far apart In various dlrcc lons. The question of sending Cana dian officials into these unorganized tarts to form them Into provincial dis tricts of Canada and exercise regular jurisdiction over tbem has been fre- luently mooted of late years and may hortly be carried into effect. Attention was called to the subject at the last Ontario land surveyor's con vention, says the New York Times. A recommendation was adopted to memorialize the Dominion government to take formal possession of the unor ganized country on behalf of Great Britain. It was declared tbat tbe pe ninsulas and archipelagoes north of Canada In the Arctic ocean were known to possess considerable unde veloped mineral wealth and might be claimed by some other power. Near Diseases taal Arm Dae to the IIpms m Cttr Life. Ta point to the hurry and stress ot modern town life as tbe cause of half the Ills to which flesh to-day is helt has become alfioat a commonplace Id aetiologies! diagnosis. Tbe old-fash loued complaints, says tbe London Lau cet, might almost excite a medica: man's pity, so much do they seem to be crowded out by those active, wide spread young fellows, neutrltls, neuras t bents'. and a whole young family of nervous illness, tbe offspring of tbe strained existeuce of to-day. A chain is as strong as its weakest link, and to-day It appears that the ner vous system is the weak lluk of tb organism. Tbe weakness is not nat ural. It is acquired because the strait upon this link Is so often almost con stant and out of proportion to tbe wear Ing power of tbe material. Whether at generations advance individual uervoiu systems will more easily bear the la bora asked from tbem or not, at anj rate, it may fairly be assumed tbat Ir the early days of any new style of lift the generations born under an old re glme bave the worst of it. We may Imagine future generations perfectly calm among a hundred tele phones and sleeping swestly though airships whizz among countless else trie wires over their heads and a per lietuat night traffic of motor cars bur ties past their bedroom windows. A? yet, It must be sorrowfully confessed our nervous systems are not so cal lous. Some of us still start at the tele phone ring and find the Irregularities of the Instrument a source of irritatior and worry. Fortunately, the very causes of nerve exhaustion so far as Improved raplditj of locomotion may be counted one ol them, provide one Important counter acting feature of town life at the pres ent day. We are alluding to the facllltj with which those whose week days art spent In city toll may spend the sev enth in breathing the fresh air anc" beholding the Innocent Joys of the rus tic. Without trains, electric tramways and motor cars, a wholesome change of scenery and surroundings would be scarcely possible In the limited time available. We do not wish to underrate for a moment the value of parks and open spaces the "city's lungs." For many theBe afford the only possibility of a Sunday in at any rate comparatively fresh air. Those large numbers, though, who habitually find tbe Sab bath's rest In a day's wholesome ex ercise at some little distance from their work a day center may spare a moment from the usual condemnatory attitude toward tbe bustle, rush and clatter of up-to-date locomotion to bless the means which enable tbem s profitably to enjoy the day. VIkebraska ij T . Aa.a.aiiAaiaH i Only an Electric Shock. Everybody has experienced the queei little shiver that comes upon one now ind then without apparent cause. It ii jcncrally put down as "some one walk ing over my grave." Actually we are told it is the effect of electricity. This ;reat power Is constantly being gener ated everywhere, and when the posl- Ive and negative parts of the powei meet, they produce a shock on any liv- ng thing. There Is a good deal ol pleetrleity In the air, and when the human body is made a meeting polnl the sensation Is liable to be felt about the region of the spine. Some people are liable to shocks now and then Id special parts of them, In the ankle fot Instance, or very commonly around the base of the brain. There is no harm in It, but It shows a rather highly itrung organization. Ileils of All Nations. Considering that a third of our whole Uvea Is spent In bed, It Is not surprls- ng that much care, trouble and money iliould be spent on our sleeping places. In Englaud the unhealthy feather bed baa been almost entirely succeeded by the more hygienic mattress, which lso Is the rule In America. French beds are so short tbat the average for eigner often complains thnt It demands i special education to fold one's self up to the right size for them. Many Norwegian beds are made to pull out from recesses. In South and Central America the hammock reigns, and the Indians of Guiana plait the most beau :lful hammocks of grass, which they dye charming colors. In Japan the bed consists of the matting-covered floor with a curious wood en neckrest; a form of bolster tbnt to a I-'iiropean would be ,i simple Instrtt iiieiit of torture. The Chinese use low leilsteads. often elaborately curved, flith mattresses nnil coverings of lliat- llng. In winter they sleep In heavy armcnts wadded with cotlon. No one s more easily soiled with sleeping ac commodations than the ii"t-ro; ho, like j cat, can cuii u und lake his rest iny where, Modes miuI Fabrics. Wonderful lleai-il. A wonderful ln'i- l is worn 1 -y Jean flonon of Moiitliic ii. I'l'iinri', It Is 10 feet lO'a Inches Ii' lriitli. nml ncnily Dve feet of It. wl 11 lie stiinils erect rests on the llooi. The ends of his mustache bun;: below his wnlst. A case of smallpox Is repored at Lelgb. Tbe case is of a mild form. Burglars entered Beeler Bros, store at Norfolk and stole $500 worth of goods Tbehoiseand buggy stolen from Harry Fisher at Falls CUy.was found later at Sterling. Word has been reeceived that Cliff Montgomery, an old resident of Ed gar, has been murdered In the Philippines. ' At Winside. Miss Mamie Elliott was run down by a train and killed and Miss Alice Elliott was badly in jured, but will live. Near Seward E. Donelson's two-year-old daughter was run ovei by a lumber wagon and her life was crushed ojt. Gerhard Eorchres, a well known German farmer, bas disappeared from Columbus, leaving a number of moth erless children behind. Lieutenant George A. Day, a son of Mi. and Mrs. H. G. Day of Be atrice, bas been assigned to duty on the cruiser, Newark. The new Catholic church at Battle Creek was dedicated last Sunday. It is a brick building 37x76 feet and fitted with mcdern conveniences. People are charitable after all. When a man goes from a $50 to a $100 job his friends blow about It, but wben be goes back to 140 po sition nothing Is said. Virgil Jnohson, of Seward, had bia arm caught in tbe machinery of a thresher engine and both bones be tween the wrist and elbow were brok- en. ' ) The build! ngoccupied by the Fair banks, Morse company and th American Press Association at Oma ha, was guMted by fire. Eightr thousand dollars is the loss. Dorcbster now boasts of ber rural free delivery mail routes. Route No I has been in operation for the past year The two new routes have Just been opened. In all a rural popula tion of more than 1,500 Is served by these three routes. Carbolic acid was tbe instrument that James Babbit of North Platte a Union Pacific employee, selected to end bis life. He is a young man and was despondent, but as he tried to commit suicide at home, his parents called a physician and bad him saved. During the abserce of the county jailor, James Eiema. a prisoner at West Point, asked Mrs. Jacobs, the jailor's wife for a glass of water. Wben she handed it to him through a partly open cell door he knocked ber down and escaped. Too Old for Kids. Sarcasticus and his wife were going to the theater. 'Will you please go In and get mj goats off the dressing table?" said Mrs. S. "Your goats?" queried the puzzled Sarcasticus. "What tangle have you women got now?" 'I'll show you!" snapped the wife, ind she sailed away, and soon returned, putting on her gloves. 'Are those what you mean? Why, I call those kids." "I used to," replied Mrs. Sarcasticus, but they are getting so old I am ashamed to any longer." Washington Times. Maine' Toothpick Town. Only one characteristic dlBtlnguishei the little village of Strong, Me., from the thousands of others that are scat tered all over New England. This la the peculiar industry which serves to jttpport the entire community. Strong Is famous for nothing but Its tooth picks, but It is known In the trade as the place from which come the major ity of toothpicks that are used In the United Stntcs. One of the oldest settlers of the county died of heart failure. Philip Thomas, who owned a farm two and ooe-half miles west of Yutan, was found dead in Lis bed. There was only a son of 12 years at home at the time. Mr. Thomas had been a wid ower for many years. The mortgage report for Gage coun ty for the month of October Is as follows: Number of farm mortgage filed. 18; amount, 29,341. Number of farm mortgages released, 28; amount, $39,436. Number of city and town mortgages filed, 26; amount,- 116,641. Number of city and town mortgages releasd, 22; amount, $12,815 Falls City was visited by a terrific- electrical storm last week. A clap of thunder awakened most every one In town and much damage was done, especially in the east part of town, where window glass in many of the houses was broken. At one points portion of the sidewalk was lifted, ind the current went Into the ground bursting the water main. Many peo ple said It was the worst clap of thun der they ever heard. A hard rain (ell. l'.gg Consumption of lOnginnil. Eggs consumed In England durlns the past twelve months would, It .'omputed, fill tipwnrd of 40,000 railway trucks. Of tlic.se only one-tlilrd were F.nidlsli. and lu consemienee tin enor mous sum of money whs sent out o :he country thnt might be kept at honid hnd those engaged In rural Indiistr ' been ullve to their opportunities, say Pearson's Weekly. Ailttto' The Hindoos ne Jeve that Adiin. Si the side of (c 'Adam's peak," i- i i.cnve. ! C. ;. I nicse nil be-bin-lei lu n ca ve il I'lt.iiu known as :nl of Ccjion. A Waterspout's Activity. The rotation of a waterspout nt tho surface of the sea has been estimated t .'i."i4 inlli-H (in hour, or nearly sis fillc-ft a minute. lilt ton by a Fly. After Ilerr Kiistof, a Hungarian po lice magistrate, was bitten by a Ity, blood poisoning set In and be died lu excruciating agony. A gasoline lamp exploded in Tay lor's pharmacy at Plalnvlew setting the store on lire It was saved by the heroic work of Miss Maud Taylor and Hugh Grlflln, who carried the gaso line lamp and two large cans full of ;;asnllno, all on fire out of the store Into the street.. The explosion took1 place while Hugh Griffith, the Jew. eler, was pumping air Into the lamp, and was caused by a leak. Mr. Srlflin wns severely burned about the face and bands He saved his life by rolling In the mud in tbe street. The daraiiuo to the drug stock is illght. Mr. Grillin's relatives have been nt.'tlf'Kid He came to Plalnvlew from Bancroft a short time ago. A wreck occurred on the Missouri Pacific onc-liair mile south of Portal. An extra collided with a regular freight train. Both engines were de molished and live cars wete splin tered Into kindling wood. Tho en gineers and firemen of both otiglnei jumped and escaped injury. One cn ?tneer hurt his leg by Jumping but ot serlotmlly. It Is not known what jaused the wreck. It was a head end jolllslon. pica iur "; - r.m.nt in 23 minutes. eggs, western, 20c to 24c It mesa. juio oi .-..