"LIVABLE." AaOld Faahlonad Word that Bx What It la Intended To. 'Tea," said Mr. Farren, decidedly, "Milly MuitIh U a nice girl clear through, and if anybody ought to get along easy wllh a trylu' uiotlii-r-lii-law, he ought. A more livable person I never knew." "Livable'" repeated her listener, "Livable? That must be a local word. I don't think I ever heard It before." "It may be local," rejoined Mrs. l'nr ren, a trifle loftily, "and It may be bad, and It umy be food; but anyway. It's Jiwt what I uieau. M lily's livable. She's been brought up !n a Jl .Invalid and she's had to be, if she meant to be com fortable herself anil let oilier folks be couifoiiable, too. There were more liv able folk when I was a girl than there are now, and I think the big famiiirs bad a good deal to do with it, tho.inh of coarse not everything. "There were plenty of people then who never got their corners worn d wn, no mutter how ninny brother and nls ters they had: but even when they rasped, tho.se days, they not along to gether after a fashion. Nowadays, lai.d! Sometimes It stumps me fair and square why the nice people I know In Dice families can't seem to stand each other' little ways. "Oil, 1 don't say it isn't no; when the doctors say they can't and It generally ends in doctors why, 1 suppose they truly cun t. It's nerves, and nobody un derstands nerves unless the doctors, jind I'm a lung way from belli;; sure that they do. 1 1 tit Just you count up some time the families where there's always one member mysteriously off visiting, and then the number of folks you know that separate when they'd naturally stay together, If only they -uuld hit it off lone sisters and only surviving bachelor brothers, and moth ers and only daughters, and all sorts of family remnants that ought to be each other's best comfort. Hut as goon as they try living together, one of 'em gets nervous prostration, or has hysteric xpells, or Is ordered off quick to travel somewhere where the climate doesn't agree with the other one. They're fond enough of each other, generally, ami they aren't generally ugly-tempered; they Just aren't livable. "It can't be endured, always, and It can't be cured, sometimes; but I'm firm in believing it tould be prevented most times. If, when folks first began tc Jinrden in their own little crankums, i and fret over the cranks of the folks , they cure most for. they'd stop and think where they were getting to; why, liino times out of ten they'd pull up In time, aud get their nerves and feelings and foolish frettlngs tight in hand be - fore they run away wllh 'em! : "Yes, that's what I surely do believe. Uid outside the great, big, deep foun dation ylrtueR, If I had a daughter, the little virtue If It is a little virtue I'd 1 father have her have than any other "iwould be Just that being livable. It's n all-round, life long blessing to whom soever it concerns." "It may be good or It may be bad, or , It tuny be local," nsented the listener, thoughtfully, "but whatever It Is as a word, livable Is a good thing to be. I'll swu that." Tlio Break I'tint Food Family. John Snra'.t will eat no fat, .or wjfl he touch the lean, fie scorns to eat of any meat; . He lives upon Fooditie. Itut Mrs. 8pratt will none of that; Foodinc she cannot ent. Her upeeial wish is for a dish Of Kxpurgnted Wheat. To William Hpratt tlint food is flat On which his mater dotes. Ilin fsvorile feed his special need is Kut a lleupa Oats. I$nt luster Lit nili't see how Will Can touch such tasteless food. As breakfast fare it can't compare, : She says, with Shredded Wood. (Now, none of these I.ennder please; Me feeds upon Butli Mitts. VliiIe sister Jane Improves her brain With Cero-Grnpo-Grits. Lyeurgua Voles for Father's Oats; 1'rogginc appeals to May; The Junior John subsists upon Uoeeda Bnyla Hay. torrected Wheat for little Pete; Flnkfd I'hie for Dot; while "ISub," fl'be iufaut Hprnlt, is waxing fst J On Untile (.'reek Near Grub. Chicago Tribune. WugR lii I'onnoKu. The people of Formosa have Just lie come up-to-ilale enough to have a rail road track of their own, and a detailed reHirt of lis construction has been for warded to the stockholders, many of whom ure Frenchmen nnd Englishmen. The rails are English; the locomotives tire English and American; the brldgo work nnd girder are American, and the rolling stock Is native built on America u trucks. The labor employed was Formosan and Japanese, but the work was done under the direction of "French, English and American en f loecrs. The rntc of wages paid per day to the machinists and laborers fur niali an Interesting contrast between tbe value put upon work In the Oecl dead and Orient. Tbe Jap, on an aver age, received one-third more tban the ForiuosHii, and tbe day was of ten hours. Ilerev Is tbe schedule of the highest rates paid: Carpenters, 02 cents; sawyers, M cents; masons and plssterers. NO cents; , roofers, (18 cents; coolies, 37 cents; workmen on scaffold ing, r2 cents; navvies, 47 cents; paint trs, iSH cents; blacksmiths, 70 cents. Wlicti It is known at a funeral that Ihe deceased picked out tbe liytnna and arranged the program la advance, tbe women present find Uie ejecaaloa m sweetly huUi al stoat aajey- USE CORN FOR FUEL MDGE COUNTY FARMERS ARE BEGIN NING TO USE IT. SWATHED IN DEADLY FLUID WOMAN BURNED TO DEATH IN CAGE COUNTY DUE TO GASOLINE. DISCOVERED UNCONCIOUS Pcrochcd tht Stove With a Saturated 'Ctr-meot-Ao Omaha Lawyer found Dead ty Ihe Koadslde. Fremont, Neb,, .Ian. 13. Ilistorj jfems about to repeat itseir In Dodge i'Minty. Farmer are beginning to burn corn for fuel as they did In the arly nineties when It was selling for leu cents a bushel and the crop was overwhelmingly large. Now It Is ""t so much the fact that corn Is low In puce but that fuel Is high find in some cases practically Impos sible to get that acjunts lor the use iif cum as a heat producer. Only the poorest part of the crop is being devoted to that purpose. I'art of the corn filled late and was caugbthy the frost and It Is this which Is being utilized to supply the place of fuel. Coal Is very bard to get in Fre monk Citizens are going from one dealer to another endeavoring to se- '.ire It but are met everywhere with foe response that more orders are al ready on ha d than can be OlietJ. The dealers have no coal in stock and rely only on what they have ordered. The situation Is as acute us It could be withuut entailing cen tral suffering. A local resident tried In vain today to get some nut soft coal and finally bought half a ton of anthracite for $7.W. It is actually easier to get the anthracite product than the hitumlDous article at pres ent. Poorer people have been In great need of fuel of any kind during the zero weather. Children have been seen going along the railroad tracks picking up pieces of coal or out in the timber across the river gathering branches to bring home. Some who are in good circumstances will have , to resort to burning wood If the Dres- ent condltlonscontlnue much longer. Lawyer Found Dead Omaha. Neb., Jan. 13. W. D. Beckett a well known lawyer was found frozen dead Monday at noon. His boy was lying two miles west of Benson near the Little Paplo creek. Henry Rapp, a milkman, found It tod reported to the coroner. As the milkman reported that the body was net there when he passed early in the m 'tnlng life had evidently not been extinct many hours. The limbs were frozen stiff but the body was no yet rigid. Mr. Beckett was forty-four years of age, He leaves a wife and four children, two of the children by a former wife. He was a prominent attorney for many years, but during the pist year has been dilnking heavllv. Ills wife recently s ied for a divorce. The last time Beckett was seen as at 1:30 Sunday morning when his nephew, Mr. Wood rough, talked to him. The nephew supposed he was then on his way to his room at the Her Grand hotel Instead of go ing there he evidently started Into the country toward Benson. During bis professional career In Omaha Beckett was a member of several firms and had appeared as counsel la some of the most Important suits tiled In tbe courts. At one time he was the law partner of Judge R. C. Read. Woman Burned to Death. Wjmore, Neb., Jan. 13. Mrs. J W. Roberts, tbe wife of a prominent farmer living south of town, died this morning from the effects of a terrible burn. Mis. Roberts had been washing a waist In gasoline, Saturday evening, and had gone near the stove wllh It. The article tu''k Hre and before she could help thorsclf the (lames enveloped her. She thiew a camet over her head and ran out of doors, where she fell In an uncon scious condition., and was In that utate when the family returned from town late in the evening. No Extortion at Des floinea. Des Moines, la., Jan. 13. The soft coal operators' association of the Dej Moines district held a meeting tlitsj ftern.xin and decided to icfuse tq ell cool to Des Moines retail dealer! and teamsters who Have In the past or may lo tbe future sell coal to con sumers for more tban 13 a too, tin retail price Used by tbe association, Doubt Legality of Will. Cincinnati, 0., Jan. 13. A pecu liar contest began here In the pmhati court today when the widow of I tit lite millionaire, John McCormlck Gibson of this city, who died at Aibevllle, N. C a few months ago, presented for probate a copy of hit will, made from stenographic nntef alleged tt hive been preserved bj Atorney wens or Asneviiie. ' Hk. n,l.l..l III it I- ,4 'hJ 2 1'rlSli f.n,i if Jl baa never beta found lloo tbe otaU of Mr. Olbaon. TAFT WILL REMAIN. Stan It PbrtlMliet for lideflitte WriMad.Uila Hit Work Period- Washlntgon, Jan. 14. After ma ture consideration It has been decid ed that Judge Taft shall remain in tbe Philippines as clvij governor The decision was reached only after tbe president had discussed the Phil ippine question thoroughly with Sec retary Root and the other members ofthe cabinet, and with Vice Gov ernor Luke E. Wright, who has been In this couutry for two months. For several weeks it has been re garded as settled that Gov inor Taft would return to this country, perhaps In a few months, to become a Justice of the United States supreme court. President Roosevelt indicated to Governor Taft in a letter dispatched to the Philippines more than a month ago that he could hate the apppnint merit to the supreme bench if he de sired It. It was the president's purpose to name General Wright as civil gover nor of the Philippines. As soon as it was learned in the Philiopines that Governor Taft was likely to leave the islands cabled pro tests began to pour in on the presi dent from prominent Ftllipinos. Even yesterday the president was In receipt of a rabelgrani Irom some of the nif'si Important interests in the Philippines urging the letentioo of Governor Taft as civil governor. The protests receive! In no manner re flected on Vice Governor Wright, for whom the people of Manila and of the Islands generally, have the highest regard, but It was pointed out to the president that Governor Taft was Ideally equipped fur the position if governor, and that any change at this time would be disastrous to the ar chipelago. It was maintained that I Govrenor Taft's relinquishment of his post would retard the. devclope nient of the islands fully five years Governor Taft is known, as one high oillcial expressed it, "to be thoroughly wrapped up in his work In the Philippines." Ilis ambition has been 1 1 round out his career as a justice of the Uoitid States su preme court; hut he has become Im bued so entirely with the spiiltof the great work to ba accomplished in the Philippine? and so perfily In sympathy with 'he ideals of the best classes of the Inhabitants, that he hesita ed to relinquish his post at tills time, eveu to accept the rlis in guished honor the president offered to confer on him. Today iD response to the president's letter offering to biro the supreme Justiceship, a cable gram was received from blm, sug gesting with a sincere appreciation of the tender made to him by the president, that it might be better for blm, In view of all the circum stances, to remain where ho was. After this It was announced unolll clallv, hut entirely authoritively, that Governor Taft would remain In-' dolinltclv a civil governor of tbe Philippines. Languish in Mexican Jail. Kansas City, Mo., Jan. If. Form al recognition of the oft tepefied charge that railroad employes who are Americans are discriminated against under the criminal laws of Mexico, and that many of them me now languishing in Mexican prisons without having been tried, was given today by division No. f" of the order' of rallriad conductors, at a meeting held In this city. Division No. 53 by vote appointed Its presiding (.nicer, W. II. Hollis, as Its representative to start a national movement for a searching inquiry into the matter. Ihe movement also contemplates that three other great orders of American railway employes, the en-i glneers, trainmen aud firemen, will become Interested in the Invesllg - Hons. The four orders have (iUO.lH rf members. The action was the result of an ag itation started by Hariy II, Adams,' formerly a locomotive engineer in Mexico. While employed on a Mexi can railroad on May 2, P.iO, Adams says that his engine and seven cars were wrecked and that he was abso lutely without fault In can ting the wreck. Ilis 1 f t leg was crushed and later had to he iiinpuated. Adams says that oven before ha re ceived medical nUentlon he was' taken before a magistrate, atieslkncd and then thrown Into prison where he remained a month. Other Americans arc in Mexican prisons, he snys, whose trains were In wrecks through no fault of tbe prisoners, and some of them have been In prison seven or eight years Adams, while In prison met some of these men, who begged him to ap peal to some of the railroad men In America to Interest themselves In their cases. Plague Hard to Control. Mazatlan, Tex., Jan. 14. The plague does not yield as rapidly ;s was hrped tn the new SiOltury pre caution and medlcnl treatment. Six pors'insdled yesterday and eight fatal Chscs are reported today. The num ber of patients In the Lnzarcto is Steadily Inrceaslng. V II 1 lllin II U, Hit., dull. II II "Ported here that a ease of bubonic Bi.ull. ha. hn fm.nrt in th. minin flnlhi... L..... Lf T.. It J of BBtoplM to lbit ittUi THE STATfc CAPITAL Mrnters of the Letlslatme Gather la Llacola id Proceed to Orcanize the Lefisliture. MESSAGES OF GOVERNORS As Interesting Reception fcy the Outgoing and Incoming Chief executives The State Officers Swoio. The state legislature Is now fully oiganized and in working order. mely-iiine members of the House of Representatives gathered In Liu- coin last week to perrorm this doty one member having died since elec tion. The thirty-three senators weie all on hand in due time and ready for work. Many members reached Lincoln Sunday and some earlier than that and all were on baud before Monday night. The usual preliminary skirui i . t . ; ,i isoiiug was none, inougti mere was not as much excitement as usual. Monday was the busy day with the candidates aud woikcrs, as well as with the army of busy seekers after appoint merits to the numerous small er positions about the legislature. As early as Sunday eveulng the re publican members held a conference and agreed upon Hon. W. II. Har rison, of Grand Island, fcr president protemoore of the senate. That par ty having a large majority in both houses it went without saying that Its nominees would be elected. Mon day evening John II. Mockett. Jr., of Lincoln, was nominated by the re publcans for speaker of the house and John Wall for chief clerk. When te two house convened at noon Tuesday Chief Justice Sullivan was called in to administer the oath to the members, and the above named were elected. A. R. Keim, of Falls City vas eiected secretary of tbe sen ite. These preliminaries being fin ished the two branches of tbe legisla ture were duly .organized ana ready for business. They then adjourned until Wednesday. At eleven o'clock Wednesday both branches convened. The only busi ness transacted was the announce ment or appointments am canva-s- Ing the vote, for state odicers. This done, adjournment was in order. Thursday, Immediately after as sembling the house and senate met In the house of representatives in Joint session and proceeded to Install the state officer'. Chief Justice Sullivan, accompanied hy associate Justices Holeomb and Sedgwick ap peared at the speaker's desk and ad ministered the oaths of office to the state officers elect. Governor Savage read his message as also did Gcver nor Mickey, after wh!h the legisla ture took a recess until Tuesday af ternoon. In the evening a reception was held lo the senate chamber, which was attended as usual by a throng of onople. It was a gala occasion and oassed off very smoothly. LITTLE SAYIQS Men are prone to forget the sensi tiveness of a woman's disposition. Women snout at the utility of thinking twice before speaking once. Men dislike to be considered lack Ing In ability to size up a schemer. One-hair of the Imports Into this country are of materials for manufac ture. Canadian trade with Great Uritain has Increased over 0, 000,000 the past year. Men are possessed of the Idea that women are buund to take their ad ylce. Women often show an obstlnancy which Indicates want of mental bal ance. Women aro disposed to overdo the evidences of gratitude for favors shown them. Men resent the linpuf aton of seek ing association with what Is c tiled swell society. Women usually make the most of an occasion which seems to enhance their social status. Men frequently fall to enjoy pleas ure because or a disposition to demand more than a fair share. Women often Indulge In extrava gant expressions ii. a way lo lead to unfortunate circumstancs. Tenty-three thousand 'tables coy cred with hieroglyphics have been brought from Nippur, In Mesopotamia by Prof. Hllprceht. The water power available on tbe Pacific slope for produclnuj electric energy Is equivalent to thecombua. tlon of 300,000.000 tons of coal a year, A ureat many mod'sh women are wearing the heavy, mercerized chev lola ao much In evidence last sum mer.but whether cotton, silk, or wool, white Is the approved color. In 1880 the value of farm product of the south exceeded that of manu factured products hy more than 1200, 000,000, whllo In inoo manufacture! etceeded farm products by mure than lUO.OOO.OOO, though during that per iod the number of persona engaged In arlci't.ure Increased 34 per otot. Nebraska Notes William Wyorj an aged citize; of Plattsmouth, fell on tbe I".-) and broice two ribs. Mrs. J. W. Roberts, of Wymore, died from the effects of terrible burns of a gasoline tire. Fire destroyed Archie CaropbelFa burn at Hastinsg. Loss $300. No Insurance. Walter Houston of Gerlng, charged with the murder of Clarence Fuller- t m on October 5, has been acquitled Henry liurrow, a German farmer of Klk Creek, had his ankle crushed by falling beneath amoviug wagon. Ncal Milligan, a compositor on the Falls City.Uiur.ral, fell and broke his left arm. The Nebraska State Horticultura society held its annual meeting in Lincoln last week. At the annual meeting of the Chadron Volunteer Fire department ollicars for the ensuing year were elected. During the revival meetings at Nebraska Cily at the Free Methodist chinch Miss Ties burst a blood vessel and nearly bled to aeatb. A child of Mr. Illoora on his way from Urighton, Colo., to Nebraska City, died from the bitter cold while they were encamped near Coumbus. The Gibbon Normal and Business college notified ifs students that t lie college will close. Inabillity to make evpenses is given as the cause. The high school building at Wol rn cn lias been destroyed by hre.tl e origin of which is unknown. A pnl- cv of $750 expired several days pre vious to the .'ire. Preparations are being made by the First Christian church at Beatrice, tn build in the spring at a cost of $10 000. The t,ew church will be erected on the site of the present frame structure. The Lincoln district Epwoith League held its two days' session at Waboo last week. The meetings were held in the Methodist Episcnpu church. There was a large attend ance. Oscar Werlker of Pierce has been adjudged insane and will be removed to the asylum at Linoon. Wedkcr has become so violent that it is con sidered dangerous to have him at large. The cattle stealing case against 'Four Spot" Hurlburt of Gering, was dismissed after the evidence showed that the brand of the com plaining witness, Mrs. Haynes of Alliance, was not recorded wllh tbe state brand commission. Mrs Thomas Colbert, living ceir Memphis, was taken to the insane nsylum at Lincoln. She tried to hang herself last week tut was res cued hy her hus'iand Her mother Is an Inmate of the asylum at the present time. The farmers met at Edgar to com plete the oragni.ation of the Farm ers' Commercial association. One hundred and twenty farmers had taken shares at $75 each and three times that amount was guaranteed Articles of incorporation and by-laws were adopte 1 and a board uf dlrei- tnrs elected, The value of self-help is being felt w th new power by the citizens h round McCook, and an organized effort Is to be made fur the bend t of southweslern Nebraska to secure enterprises and Industries, to pro mote the culture of sugar beets und encourage the location of a beet sugar factory in the Republican val ley in the near future. Southwest Nebraska Industrial association is the name of the organization effect ed. The organization commences Its existence Hb a membership of over fifty, which will be materlaly In- reased as the matter is brought to the attention of the people and the purpose of the same becomes better known. Unceasing efforts have hern and aro being made to recover the body of George Ruehl, i f West Point, who was drawn under the Ice at the dam ncarlvja week ago. but without success A mass meeting of citizens wascalled and a committee appointed to super vise the work' of tho volunteer searchers. Nearly the entire mem bership of the local lodge of the Woodmen of the World or which de ceased was treasurer, turned out and are cutting the ice away and search ing the bottom of tho dam. Tbe weather being so cold and the water being fifteen feet deep renders tbe work very difficult. The search will not be abandoned until the body Is found. His wife Is prostrated with grief. Charles Etherton has been aricstcd at Fremont for stealing a solt of clothes, an overcoat and $21 from E. A. Docherty, a butcher at the Va' ley house. Etherton was traced by bloodhounds to the railroad and fol lowed by the officers to Fremont where, he was found wearing the stolen clothes and with 117 of the money, the rest having been apent Id a sporting house. . FAMINE IN SWEDEN THIRTY THOUSAND PEOPLE ARE FACING STARVATION EATING BARK FROM TREES FlSt UPPLY FAILS AND POPULATION ARE DESTITUTE TRYING TO SAVE CATTLE De;imation Threatened If Assistance Is Not Furnished. Limited Help Given London, Jan. 17. Telegrams from Stockholm confirm thejdistressing ao- ounts of famine in northern Sweden,! as given in these dispatches. j About 30,000 people are affected by this famine, which extends from the sixty-lirst to the sixty-seventh degree u irth latitude and from the Gulf of Pothna and the Russian border Into the interior. Tbe starving people are eating; bark, which is dried, ground into! p iwder, mixed with stewed Iceland moss and made into a kind of famine biead. Coincident with tbe failure of the) crop is the extreme scarcity of fish. The lisiiermen return from their ex peditions empty handed. Even ptmargin, usually found In great numbers in the stricken district,' have almost completely disappeared. Jt is estimated that the expenditure -jf about $(5,1)00,000 will be necessary! to save the population from decima tion. Thus far about $200,000 has been subscribed, of which sum over $12, 500 was sent by Swedes in the United States. Tins amount does not in- elude the money necessary to sa3 the breed of cattle which alone cani, live through an Arctic winter, oi! jupply seed for Uie spiing sowing. The peasants are making great) sacrifices to prevent the exterminu tlon of their hardy northern cattle lo previous times of scarcity good fodder was obtained by mixing rein deer moss and aspen bark,. Now this is not available and fine ly chopped twl ;s of biich. willow and ash are substituted. The mixture isi boilel and'ted to tbe cattle warm, but; i; is found that the milk of cattle) fins ted caused typhoid fever. Thiai and ocber discuses are ceitaln to spread unless relief is hastened Tbe situation threatens a repetition of the terrible famine of 1807, when tbwos-j ands died of starvation aod typhoid. A special commisssioner of tba Swedish government, who has just returned from the scene of tbe dis-i tress, emphasizes the necessity for tba adoption of immediate plans to abate the distress. His report has caused a most paln-j ful impression and will, it is hoped,; enhance the national efforts to pro vide remedial measuies Up to the present 1,300 carina Is and $1,100,009 represent the total qunntity of pro visions and fodder shipped te the (amine stricken area. Acts Worthy of Savnges. San Franci-c, Jan. 17, Among the passengers on the steamer New-j p rt, from Panama and way ports,, were Lieut. Arthur II. Dutton ands 3. J. Many aud four enlistd men of the American-manned Colombia cruiser Pogota, which sailed from this port Oelohcr 7. They hpeak in any thing but en thusiastic terms of their experience iu Colombian waters. "A triiflng odeoso was at time punlshea by 100 lashes on tbe bare back with a flexible cane. Mea were) shot for mete nothing. "A few days after peace was de-i clurcd two liberal officers who bad re-i fused to acquiesce in the conditions,! hut were captured were taken to the1 Cbl iqui foi tress in Panama and there lahhud brutally until dead. "Some prlsoneis who had beeni taken after a particularly stubborn, resistance, had their legs or armi cut off. or their eyes o ears removed and were then released to go ma Inert through life. Some died from loss of; blood "One of the several schooner loadeo with .refugees which Bogota, was to wing, sprung a leak In dee at water at sea. Tbe refugees was res cued and tbe captain and crew of rive men were about to follow them, when the Colombian official In charge orderd them back on board tbe oiiomed schooner. Let them perish wlthln.be exclaimed. The iwi un fortunates, Innocent of any wrong doing, were left to their fate oat the sinking schooner without sal la ana) no boats." Shoot Nefroea to Death, Anglcton, Tex., Jan. 17. Late last nlgbt several men entered a o4l of the county Jail In which Hanson O'Neal and Chailcs Tu'stli" wera. oiuiiicd, with a number of other neg iocs, and shot lie Un riiwu tn death. The other nnsoncts were warned lo cover their heidsj wiiu blankets which ibiy did. The negroes ere chained with the murder of Onuurity Attorney U O. 8mltb at GulumbM several weeks eft.