THE M'COOK TRIBUNE F. Iff. KIITOIKL. ! , , Publisher. ' McCOOK , : : NEB. STATE NEWS. NEBRASKA MISCELLANEOUS MATTERS. A directory of Hamilton county is being prepared at Aurora. Congressman Dorsoy left Fremont last week for Washington. Much of the corn around Fillcy has been cut up.for fodder. Thomas Newcomb of Welflcet was killed by the kick of a horse. The streets of Schuyler are soon to be lighted with electricity. The attendance at the Cass county ! air was fully up to expectation. The new Catholic church at Barneston is almost completed. The Gage county fair is to be held Sept. 30 and October 1 , 2 and 3. Hebron has voted $25,000 in bonds for waterworks by a majority of sixty. Seven persons were baptised in the Loup river near Taj-lor one day last week. The now Catholic school recently dedicated in Lincoln opened with 200 pupils. pupils.Tho The contract for building the new Union Pacific depot in Omaha will be let in a few days. Falls City will turn on its electric lights as soon as an important piece of . machinery arrives. Rev. H. Curtiss has been assigned to the pastorate of the M. E. church at Juniata another year. The enterprising citizens of Aurora are discussing plans for the establish ment of a public park. Olney Harrington , an old settler of Burt couuty , died last week at the ad vanced age of 84 years. The Lincoln divorce mill keeps up a grind that seems to discount all other Nebraska towns. The display of agricultural pro ducts at the Colfax county fair excelled that of any previous year. The installation of an electric light plant is being agitated by the leading citizens af Pender. The Sarpy county fair , on account of rain , was continued two days longer than originally intended. Gage county pioneers held a picnic at the Beatrice Chautauqua grounds , which was largely attended. The Bayard Consolidated Irriga tion Branch and Water Power compa ny has completed its organization. It is reported that some change is to bo made in the management of the Hastings asylum at an early date. It is expected that there will be 600 students enrolled at the state uni versity during the schoolastic year. It is rumored that the Union Pa cific contemplates putting in a double track between Columbus and Omaha. One thousand bushels of fine wheat from fifty acres of land is the way Will and Tom Hemmett's crop at Burwell torned out. A girl working at Eureka hotel , Dakota City , was robbed of $35 , it be ing the treasure of weeks of hard work in the hotel. If the question is not an impertinent one the Juniata Herald would like to know what is being done about the land movement. The Fremont social club which has passed through many successful sea sons reorganized for the winter by electing new officers. Postmaster Wolcott of Fremonthas instructions from the postoffice depart ment to advertise for a site for the new public building. The maple trees at Auburn , whose foliage was destroyed by the worms this summer , are putting forth a second end growth of leaves. George A. Gay , of Lincoln , is ac cused of his mother-in-law turning - - out of doors after getting hold of her $8 , - 000 worth of property. May Earl , a woman of easy vir tue , attempted suicide at Fremont by ! taking laudanum. A physician reached her in time to save her life. The republican convention of the forty-ninth representative district nominated J. M. Kilpatrick , of Wheeler county , for member of the legislature. The latest estimate of the corn of Otoe county is an average of thirty bushels. From Nebraska City south west it will be three-fourths of a crop. The by-laws of the Nebraska Terminal railroad and elevator com pany , with headquarters at South Sioux City , were filed with the secretary of state. The 16-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Berjaal , of Lincoln , was burned to death last week , her clothes igniting while she was in the act of starting a. fire with kerosene. A block of buildings in Blue Hill were destroyed by fire a few days ago , among other buildings the Munson house , a largo two-story hotel. Kobetz brewery at Wilber was de- staoyed by fire , supposed to have been of incendiary origin. The loss was $20,000 , with $6,000 insurance. The York schools have a total en rollment of 635. In the high school there has never been so large an en rollment at the beginning of the school year. Johnny Rogner , of Omaha , only ten years old. is a very bad boy , and that ho may bo made better has been sent to the reform school for a term of years. years.Rev. Rev. Stephen Goldsmith , who has been pastor of the M. E. church at Filley for the past two years , is suc ceeded fcy Rev. J. H. Beesy. formerly of Liberty. Rev , Goldsmith was only a supply and will take a rest next year. The Palmyra Eco reports that ton covered wagons on an average per day have passed through on their way cast. Drouth is said to be responsible for the movement. * The body of an infant was found in a vault at the Barnum house , in Ne braska City. There is no clue to its parentage and how long the body has been there is a mystery. Peter Mohr , a German boy who works on the farm of Dick McClimans. near Cumuli , was thrown from a load of hay and had the tibia and fibula bones of the left leg broken. Thieves broke into Coatcs1 store at Paxton and stole $50 worth of goods , principally clothing and jewelry. Two arrests were made but the detained parties established their innocence. When the September term of the Lancaster county district court com menced the other day it was discov ered that an important witness in a criminal case had been spirited away. The Presbytery for the Omaha district was in session at Craig last week. John Big-Elk , an Omaha In dian , spoke through an interpreter , telling what the white man's Christian ity had done for the poor Inclian. An old man named Kremling was carried by tho'station at Fremont and stepped off the train near the canning factory. Ho was picked up for dead , but regained consciousness and was found to bo only slightly injured. Prairie- fires started by a spark from a locomotive burned a quantity of hay in Sioux county , doing $800 worth of damage. For a time the town of Harrison was threatened and the citi zens turned out and fought the fire. Thirty tons of new hay , twenty head of hogs , one horse and the barn be longing to Lou Scott , on a ranch one mile south of Benkelman , were de stroyed by fire , the result of a 3-year- old son and a match. No insurance. One bay and one dark bay gelding were stolen from the stable of C. P. \Viltz , of Bassett , on the 14th instant. As yet no clue to tlie thief or thieves has been found. The owner offers a reward of $50 for the return of the animals. William Woods and Louis Webber , the Lincoln jewelry thieves , were brought into court the other day and sentenced. The former was-given five years and the latter three years in the penitentiary at hard labor , Sundays excepted. Goo. Cobb came into Harrison the other day bringing with him his eight- who had been allowed year-old son , never lowed to go to town since the family went to their country home four years ago. The boy had never seen a cigarette. A man named Doyle was run over and killed near Omaha by a freight train a few days ago. Doyle was drunk , walking along side the rail , and as the engine approached fell directly across the track. He was horribly mutilated. Eighty thousand acres of school land will be offered at public sale at Thedford , the county scat of Thomas county , on October 21 , and 80,000 acres will be offered for sale at Mullen , the county seat of Hooker countj * , on October 23. Last week the first long distance telephone system in the west was com pleted. The new system runs from Lincoln to Omaha and is built of cop per wire and double , forming a loup. Conversation can be carried on over the line in a whisper. Wm. Hess was at Norfolk charged with being the father of the child re cently born to Mrs. Marquartson , a widow who is being supported by the county. Hess denies the allegation and strenuously objects to being made a parent by process of law. T. F. Davis , a prominent farmer liv ing west of Filly , was badly injured by a corn cutter. The cutter is one drawn by horses , and has sharp knives about ten inches from the ground. Mr. Davis in some way got in front of the machine and was very seriously cut. The signal flags on the York school buildings have been somewhat changed and only two are used now. The square red flag , with white center is displayed at the thirty minute bell , 8:30 and 12:45 and a quarter of an hour later the stars and stripes are run up. The first wreck on the Pacific short line occurred atBelden. A mixed train , to which was attached the cars of the Chicago fencing company , broke in two , resulting in a thorough dilapi dation of several cars , including those of the fencing company. No one was hurt. The Nebraska telephone company is seriously considering the advisability of putting its wires under ground in Omaha , and practically all that re mains in the way is the passage of an ordinance by the city council. The system to be adopted will be the vitri fied clay. Sam Muhr of Freeport has a field of corn that will yield about fffty bush els per acre , and yet the field has never been touched by cultivator or hoe. Even the planter marks can yet be seen almost as fresh as the day of planting. Such is the story told in Banner county. Miss Florence Williams , graduate of the national school of education and oratory at Philadelphia , has been em ployed as a special teacher for the York city schools to instruct in physi cal training , voice culture and elocu tion. She will teach the same branches in the York college. The new court house which was given to Garfield county as a bonus for the removal of the county seat to Bur- well , is nearly inclosed and will be ready for the fall term of court , which has been adjourned by Judge Tiffany until November 18. A petition was circulated for the appointment of A. M. RobiiiB of Ord to the district judgeship - ship to succeed .fudge Tiffany , whosi resignation will take effect January 1. THE UNION PACIFIC. JIKL'OKT OF THE GROSS A\D -B.I-K.Yi.yG5 OF Till : SYSTEM. Chnuiircy Dcpctv makes an AddrcHKto New "Vorlc Farmer * at tlie State Fair A Bill PasinpN tlie Senate Appropri ating $30,000 for a .llonumeiit 111 WaHhltigtoii to the Ulcmory of John KrrIe Koii A Kccord of Oilier Pro ceeding * In tlio Senate and House of I cprc.sciitatlvcK. Tlie Union Pacific Sliowlnjr. NEW YOKK , Sept. 11) ) . The Evening Post , in a financial article , says'i ' 'The port of gross and net earnings of the Union Pacific whole system for July and for the seven months to July 31 , show again , as the earlier reports have shown , that the Union Pacific Denver and Gulf is the only prosperous divi sion of the Union Pacific system and the only thing that saves the Union Pacific from making a very bad show ing. For the seven months to July 31 the Union Pacific Denver and Gulf earn ings snow an increase of $482,477 , or 112 per cent , over last year , while the whole Union Pacific system shows an increase of only $238,725 , or about 3 per cent. This , however , is due main ly to the Oregon Navigation , which shows a decrease of $545.042 , or 73 per cent of its net earnings , as com pared with the same time last year. The total fixed charges of the Union Pacific Denver and Gulf for 1890 are about $100,000 per month , and its net earnings so far have been at the rate of $137,000 per month , or at the rate of 1. } per cent per annum on the $431- 000,000 of outstanding stock. Dcpciv to tlie Fnmicro. SYRACUSE , N. Y. , Sept. IS. Chaun- cey Depew addressed a large audience at the state fair yesterday. In the course of his speech , referring to the recent agricultural depression besides the largely increased production , he found further cause for it in the at tempts of speculators to corner mar kets. In view of the depression brought about by these causes it had become the highest duty of the American statesman and the American farmer to look about for remedies. The first act of the farmers should be to intelligent ly organize. In the present condition of the world organization is a necessi ty of existence. Capital organizes in corporations , labor organizes in trades unions , manufacturers organize for piotoction. ine farmers alone nave failed to unite in any efficient and prac tical way. In conclusion Depew said that in his judgment we are near the bottom of the grave in agricultural de pression and will soon begin to climb up the other side. In the senate on the 15th bills on the calendar were taken up and sever al passed , among them the senate bill to amend the act of June 19 , 1878 , to create an auditor of railroad accounts. This bill requires all subsidized rail road companies to transmit to the com mission of railroads a duplicate of all bills in service for transportation of passengers or freight , carrying of mails , express , or for any service what ever rendered for cr on behalf of the United States. The commissioner is to forward these bills to the proper ac counting officers , with such recom mendations as he may see fit , and the accounting officers are to report their action thereon to the commissioner of railroads. The conference on the rail road land grant forfeiture bill was then taken up and Mr. Sanders finished his argument. In the house Mr. McKinley - . ley from the committee on rules re ported a resolution for the immediate consideration of the tariff bill in the house , and after two hours'general de bate it shall be in order to move to nonconcur in the semite amendment ingress gross and agree to the committee of j conference asked by the senate and j house and without lurther delay or \ other motion proceed to vote on I the said motion. Tlie previous J question on the resolution was ordered yeas 11(5 ( , nays 71. ! Mr. MeKinley gave a ver/ brief statement - } ment of the senate amendments but j entered into no argument : > s to their i propriety- impropriety. The senate . amendments were non-concurred in j yeas 120 , nays 82. Mr. Enloa then called up his resolution in regard to Mr. Kennedy's speech on September : ] . Mr. Grosvenorof.Ohio raised the point of order that the resolution was not in order. The time to have called the gentleman from Ohio , Mr. Kennedy , to order was when that gentleman deliv ered his speech. The gentleman could not now be called to order for his ut terances. Pending action on the mat ter , the house adjourned. In the senate on the 16th the follow ing bills were passed : The senate bill authorizing the librarian of congiess to purchase at not exceeding $3,000 Townsend's library of national , state and industrial records concerning the origin , progress and consequences of the late civil war ; the senate bill to grant right of way through public lands for irrigation purposes ; the con ference report on the railroad land forfeiture bill agreed to yeas. 30 : nays , 13 a strict party vote. The house anti-lottery bill was then , on motion of Mr. Lawyer , taken from the calendar and passed without a word of discussion. On motion of Mr. Plumb the senate proceeded to consifeation of the house bill to repeal the timber culture laws. Mr. Plumb moved an amendment in the nature of a substi tute. Mr. Manderson moved an amendment providing that no more 640 ( instead of 160) acresshallbe em braced in one town site entry. Agreed to. Mr. Plumb also moved to add to the substitute a new section restricting reservoir sites to so much land as is actually necessary for the construction and maintenance of reservoirs. Agreed to. The bill then passed ; In the house the senate bill passed for the relief - lief of Admiral S. P. Carter. The sen ate amendments were concurred in to the house bill authorizing the secre tary of the interior to submit a pro posal for the sale of the western part of the Crow Indian reservation in Montana. Mr. Boutello of Maine , from the committee on naval affairs , reported a resolution calling on the secretary of the navy for information as to whether the Bethlehem iron com pany is using for manufacturing steel guns for the United States naval ores imported from Cuba or any other for eign country ; also whether ores suit able for such manufacture cannot bo procured in the United States. Adopt ed. The bill passed constituting Peoria , 111. , a port of delivery. The speaker announced the appointment of the following conferees on the tariff bill : Messrs. McKinley , Burrows , Bayne , Mills , McMillan and Flower. Adjourned. In the senate on the 17th the bill ap propriating $30,000 for a monument in Washington to the memory of John Ericsson passed. The house bill to amend the act of February , 1885 , so as to entitle men who have served thirty years in the army , navy or marine corps to be placed on the retired list with 75 per cent of their pay and al lowances passed. The senate resumed consideration of the senate bill to establish a United States land court and to provide for the settlement of private claims in the states of Nevada , Colorado and Wyoming and the terri tories of New Mexico , Arizona and Utah. After long discussion on amendments the bi\\ \ was laid aside without action. In the house the Langston-Venablo cace came up but was not disposed of. In the senate on the 18th the calen dar was taken up and the following bills , among others , passed : House bill to amend the articles of war rela tive to punishment on conviction by courts-martial ; senate bill to provide for the inspection of live cattle , hogs and carcasses and the products thereof which are subjects of inter-state com merce ; senate bill to revive the grade of lieutenant general in the army of the United States ; senate bill for the relief of women enrolled as army nurses ( allowing $12 a month to women who have for six months rendered medical service in any regimeal ! camp or gen eral hospital who are unable to earn their support , the pension to com mence from the date of filing of the application after the passage of the act ) . The bill to establish a land court went over unil tomorrow. Mr. Manderson presented a resolution rel ative to the death of Representative Laird , and , : .fter remarks by Messrs. Paddock and M nderson , the senate adjourned. In the house no quorum could be secured and adjournment took place. In the sen.'ite on the 19th Mr. Voor- hees introduced a joint resolution for an immediate increase of silver money by the purchase and coinage of 10- 000,000 ounces of silver at a price be low $12,929 within the next thirty days , this purchase to bo in addition to the amount required by existing law. Referred to the finance commit tee. The senate passed a number of bills , including the house bill to dis continue the coinage of $3 and SI gold pieces and the 3-cent nickel piece. The house bill to reduce the amount of 'nited States bonds required of na tional banks and to restore to the chan nels of trade the excessive accumula tions of lawful money in the treasury having been reached on the calendar , Mr. Sherman said its passage would help to quiet the present agitation in the money market , and undoubtedly the effect of the bill would be not only to prolong but encourage the na tional bank system. Mr. Plumb feard tlio bill would finally re sult in a contraction of the currency. While he agreed that the national banking system was wise and ought to be continued , it was plain to be seen that it was not long to be a sys tem having relation to the curren cy. The banks themselves wanted' ' to get out of that business. Con- givss could not afford to let tlie { national bank currency disappear with out supplying a currency in ils place. | lie believed tlia-t the business of the country was in greater m-ril than for yuars from a lac'c of a SJillici it circu- j kiting medi-.m. The bill went over , without action. In the house it was another day of roll calls and lillibust- , ering , and no business was done. Purchase of Four Per Cents. WASHINGTON" , Sept. 18. In reply to the circular of the treasury depart ment of Saturday. September 13 , in viting proposals for the sale of $16- 000,000 of 4 per cent bonds the treasu ry department has received offers ag gregating $28,000,000 , of which $16- 883,800 were purchased at prices rang ing from $125 to § 126.75 , the largest amount at one price being $8,500,000 at $120.75 , the next highest $3,693- 2tt ) at $126.50 and the next $3,326- , 750 at $126.75. An official of the j treasury department this afternoon called attention to the fact that , in cluding the purchase of bonds today , the disbursements at the treasury in thirty-two days had exceeded tlio re ceipts by $65,000,000. Vote. AUGUSTA , Me. , Sept. 20. Official returns of the vote for governor are as follows : Burleigh 64,199 , Thompson 45.259 , scattering 956 ; total 113.363. Burleigh's plurality 18,940. There has been no change in the list of senators as published. The next house will stand 110 republicans to forty-one democrats. Miss Georgia Smith of Dubuquc. la. , daughter of a prominent man , was horribly ribly injured by a runaway team. A DISASTHOUS WRECK FATALITIES FROM A SMASH-UP O.V TUK JIEADIXG. Conservative Intimates JMtico the Number Killed From Forty to Fifty and a Great UZaiy V.'ouiided Itodle Uclleved to be ISciieutli tlioVrcck Passage of Senator 1'nddorlt'M Kill for the Protection of Tree * * Director General of the. World' * Fair TIic Klver and Harbor Hill Signed. Wrcelc on the Reading Koud. RKADJXC , Pa. , Sept. 20. One of the worst wrecks ever known in this sec tion occurred last night on the Head ing' railroad , seventeen miles from here. Near Shoemakersville there is a curve where the railroad is about eighteen or twenty feet' higher than the Schuylkill river. Hero shortly before C o'clock a freight train ran into a coal train , throwing several cars onto the opposite track. Before the train hands had time to warn any approaching train of danger the Pottsvillo express , carrying about 150 passengers , came around the curve at the rate of forty miles an hou" and ran irtto the wrecked coal cars. The engine went down the embankment , followed by the entire train with its human freight. The scene was one of great horror. JLne cries 01 tne imprisoned passengers were heartrending. Some of the pas sengers managed to crawl out of their prison and aroused the neighborhood. \Vord was telegraphed to this city and surgeons and a force of 300 workmen taken to the spot. The work was blow and the dead and dying were taken out with great difficulty. Six dead and thirty wounded have been taken out. Of the latter some were brought here and others taken to the miners' hos pital at Ashland. Later. The Associated press agent nas just had direct communication with a representative at the wreck , who says conservative estimates place the num ber of killed at forty to fifty. It is al most impossible to estimate the exact number , and the horror of the situation will not be known until a late hour. One of the passengers who escaped with slight injuries said to an Associ ated PrebS reporter at midnight : ' When the crash came I was hurled from my seat. One end of the car splashed into the river and I was thrown against the side of the car with a force that partial ] } ' stunned me. I quickly recovered myself and managed fo climb upon the seats on that side of the car which lay against the embankment. I was a prisoner in the car. and while I was nursing my sprained ankle and wrist 1 realized that I was in a scene of veritable horror. Around andibcut me were human beings struggling in the water , screaming in fright , and some almost dragged me back into the water again. Four saved themselves as I did and the remainder struggled in the water and then sank out of sight. At o o'clock this morning 300 men are still at work , but making slow pro gress. Fifteen bodies have been taken . out. No more oodles have been taken from the scene of the disaster. John McDonough , Jack Nell and William Johnson , of Shanendoah , arc reported injured. It is still believed that twenty or more bodies are beneath the wreck. Nothing definite will bo known until the wreck is raised , which will prob ably be tomorrow. Protection of Trees. WASHINGTONSept. . 20. Senator Paddock yesterday succeeded in having passed in the senate his bill for the protection of trees and other growth on the public domain from destruction by fire. This measure , which has been strongly urged by Commissioner Groff , and which is to be antagonized by eastern senators on account of the stringency of its provisions , provides for the punishment of any person who shall maliciously or negligently sttfire to underbrut-h or prairie grass on any public lands of the United States , or who shall maliciously or by gross neirli- , geacy permit or suffer any fire which he may have lighted on private lands t to pass therefrom to public lands to the injury of trees or undergrowth upon such public lands. The penalty : inflicted is a fine of not lets than $1 nor , more than § 1,000. or imprisonment for a term of not more than three years , j the fine to go into the public school , fund of the county in which the trees or other growth so destroyed were ' situated. Senator Paddock has a num ber of statistics and statements from the territories , showing the disastrous effect of forest and prairie fires , and after considerable contention succeeded - ' ed in securing the passage of the bill. Klver and Harbor BUI Signed. CRESSOK SWUNG ? , Pa. , Sept. 20. , The president has issued a proclama tion extending the time for removing cattle from the Cherokee strip to No vember 1. Mr. Tibbott of the white house force arrived at 1) o'clock with the river and harbor appropriation bill , to which the president attached his signature , so that it is now a law. Director General of tlio IVorld" * . Fair. CHICAGO. Sept. 20. At the meeting of the national world's fair commis sioners the report of the executive committee was read by the secretary as follows : The directors of the world's Colum bian exposition having recommended George R. Davis for director-gener.il of the expositi > n , we also recommend this gentleman to the national coiumis- ( sion. sion.A minority report recommending j Dunial H. Hastings' was read byMr. . I fc'ewell and bigr.cd by William J. isuwell Of New Jersey , A. T. living of Illi nois , R. C. Kearns of Missouri and F. W. Breed of Massachusetts. At the request of the president these reports were laid over until the routine busi ness of the morning had been trans acted. President Palmer then an nounced the standing committees. On the first ballot Colonel George R. Davis of Chicago was elected director general. World's Fair Executive Committee , CHICAGO , 111. , September 19. The world's fair commission mot yesterday morning and President Palmer an I nounced his selection of an executive committee. This committee will name ( ( a director general and by virtue of its position will be the most important in connection with the exposition. The committee named is as follows : Mark L. McDonald. California ; R. C. Kerns , Missouri ; Henry Exall , Tex as ; P. A. D. Weiduer , Pennsylvania , all of whom arc commissioners at large ; John T. Harris , of Virginia ; William S. So-well , New Jersey ; B. B. Smalloy , Vermont ; E. B. Martindale , Indiana ; John Boyd Thatcher , New York ; Adlai T. Ewing , Illinois ; William S. King , Iowa ; II. G. Clapp , Ohio ; L. McLaws , Georgia ; Francis B. Reed , Massachu setts ; Euclid Martin , Nebraska ; P. R. Price , Kansas ; M. D. Harrison , Minnesota seta ; James E. Butt , West Virginia ; P. L. Williams , Tennessee ; Jos. Hirst , Florida ; R. L. Saunders. Mississippi ; L. II. Hershfield. Montana ; R. S. Good- ell , Colorado ; A. B. Brittan. District of Columbia ; James A. McKenzie , Ken- tucicy. The committee is composed of thir teen democrats and thirteen republi cans. The salaries are iixed as fol lows : President , $12,000 a year ; seerctry , § 10,000 ; director general , $15,000. Our Relation * \VItlt Canada. OTTAWA , Ont. , Sept. 19. Sir John MacDonald , premier of the Dominion , delivered a most important speech upon the trade relations between Can ada and the United States , at Morris- burg , Ont. Speaking of the McKinley tariff bill now before the United States congress , Sir John said that no doubt Canadians would rather the bill did not pass , but as the measure was about to become a law it would be well to con sider its commercial complexion. Whether the bill was dictated by un friendly motives , or owed its origin solely to the pursuance of a definite line of commercial policy , he would not undertake to say. He had no wish to impute unfriendly motives , yet un deniably its effects would be detri mental to Canada's intere-stj. It would check and have a tendency to diminish its volume of commercial intercourse * between the two countries. A Protest frnin Vnikt n. YANKTON , S. D. , Sept. 19. The chamber of commerce has issued an address setting forth the fact that many newspapers during the past year have been printing damaging statements as to the failure of crops in South Dakota and especially regarding the south western portion of the state. The ad dress protests earnestly against thc-o publications and says that while a few counties in the northern and central portion of the state have suffered from drought the past two years the general average crop of the state is not sur passed by Ohio , Indiana or Illinois. Wanted An Heir to 31O.OOO. ST. PAUL , Minn. , Sept. 20. Forty thousand dollars lies here in the pro bate court awaiting an heir. It was the property of Mrs. Marion Robinson , deceased. She had one son. Pieston K. Potter , a wild young fellow who went to California in 1871. since which time nothing has been hi > ard of him. If Potter does not turn up by October 1 , the estate will be divided between Mrs. Robinson's sisters. Mrs. Kelsey of Lexington , OMrs. . Potter of Howling Green , Ky. , and Mrs. Brant of Toncku. Kan. lie Klves a million . CHICAGO , 111. , Sept. 20.- John D. Bockafeller has just iven $1.000.00' ) to the new Chicago Bapti-t univer-iiy. in addition i.o the S'ljOO.'tf ) ' ) which hr contributed previously. This iuni'i- ccnt offer was l.-.Id befoiv the board and quickly accepted , as it in > ure- all the needed financial aid in the can\- iug out of the design. T.IYK SIOCK : /i.v/c.v. Quotation * from AVr l" rV , * ' / - * / ' > , .If. JjOttif , ( Jitl'ihit ttrnl / . * it * * * ? . OMAHA. Wheat No.2 70 tfj 'O'l Corn No. " mixed S 31 Oats Per bu S > if. Il ! Barley V ) & Gl RVP 41 < > 4I ; Biitter CrenmiTV i > < % lit Kutter Dairx- . ' . 14 fc. 13 > ! c s Pork Per bbl t > 7T 6tl ( > 7. > KKSFnsh r. ii. irt Honey , per Ib , new. comb Ifi c 17 Sprin ; ; Cliii'kpiis p > r do 1 Kl Si. i ( M J inon' Choire. j > r lior > " > f'f. J r.'J Onion XVw. Per bhl - ( . " > > ( % . \ OJ IJpan Naiies 2 TiD < 5 > 7. > Wool Fiiie , unwusheJ. per 2 > It < c l Potato < - < TTi Cc 1 01 Swret Potatops Per cju 2fl < J TO .Vpplrs Per bbl 3 fQ ( & . S r.O Tomatoes IVr bu 1 0 > < Te I i" Hay Per ton 7 > 4 ? 1(1.15 ( Ho s Mixed parking I IK ffc t 'i" Hops llfixy nriirht. t-Ji tTvl'-it'i Beeves Choice He T- -J U > < & ! .CJ xiv.YOIC. : : . Wliont No 2 red Qyi'7' I f'Vj Corn Xo. i SJS e. M Oat Mixed ne-ti-rn X * & -KI Pork I'i- > . . > ; _ a\ Lard u { 3 ( ft 7 > - CHICAGO. Wheat PPbn hcl 9 $ fa * * , ' Coru IVr l n li l 4 r t - < r > ' ; O.itPir bu hcl S" > ( { 5 T4 Pork tt o > fin s. Ho s Parkins and sliijiiiins. 4 10 ii | | J Cattle Xatis " 0 < t& r > 1'J sheep Xutixes 4 OJ < < i ! if ) bT. LOUIS. Wheat Ca li < J7 ; rr . Com Per lin-lii-l 42 C . 4-i > . O.its Prr bn > ! ipl : t ; ft. : c ' Hos Mixi-il packing i O ) iTe.-4 : Cattle Fe.'dcr- j -Ja fe ; { : i ) . mrx CITY. ' " " " Ho- : > Mixed . . . 3 9J & -J CO KANSAS CITY \Vhpat-No.2 ' . " . - tf > . jTtl < rn Xo. y 41) st O'l Cattle btockcrs au.i lecden ' . 2 IV. 64 : jj - , ' * Hoi * Miscd : : w ( Te. 4 : ? )