By F. M. KIMMELL. OFFICIAL CITY& COUNTY PAPER. $1.50 A YEAR IN ADVANCE. ALL HOME PRINT. An , there McKeighan , Mack ; you are there. THE national republican ticket is overwhelmingly defeated. The man of destiny Grover Cleveland will reign for the coming four years. THE voices of Tom and Jerry will soon cease to preach the gos pel of calamity on the floor of the house of representatives. Little did they imagine a few weeks ago how real was the danger of calam ity to themselves notwithstanding they appeared to be so familiar with old Calamity himself. PUOF. C. L. INGERSOLL of the chair of agriculture has assumed O the duties of director of the uni versity experiment station. Diffi cult as it would be to find a man to carry on the work performed with so much success by Prof. Nicholson , there is no doubt that Prof. Ingersoll will bring new fame to the university through his management of this important auxiliary. He is a pains-taking scientist , a hard worker and an earnest student of all the problems that come before the farmers of this state for solution. Journal. BENJAMIN HARRISON set a worthy example by standing up HI for his state , which cannot com wini neurasKa in ncuuess and growth. In an Indianapolis speech he said : "It is one of the best elements of our strength as a state that our form lauds are so largely possessed in smaii tracts , and are tilled by the men who own them. It is one of the best evi dences of the prosperity of our cities that so large a proportion of the men who work are covered by their own roof trees. If we could perpetuate this condition , we must maintain the American scale of wages. " only wheat is going to market at a rate altogether un precedented , but the flour mills of the country are also breaking pre vious records. There has been an increase in the volume of sales to the domestic trade but the for eign demand and flour remains light , though direct exports last week were higher than the week before. The explanation of the sluggish foreign demand , as given by good authorities , is that Europe hopes to buy both wheat and flour at still lower prices and will not stock up until the supply of wheat in this country is more definitely known than it is now. HARDLY a day passes without news of the killing or maiming of some unfortunate railway employe while coupling cars. A bill now pending in congress proyides a rem edy for this by making the adop- iioii of safety couplers of uniform style compulsory upon all railroads in the United States. This desir able measure should be promptly passed in the coming session , and as President Harrison is strongly in favor of it and the house has -already .acted favorably upon it , ihere is good reason that it will "soon become a law. The lives and limbs of railroad employes should be protected so far as legal enact ments can secure this result. YEAR by year the crowds at the tombs of the murderers of Hay- market Square grow smaller and smaller , and the space in the news papers devoted to the "anniversary celebration" grows beautifully and appropriately less. The attempt to make martyrs of the five An archists is not even consequential enough to be called a reputable fizzle. There is nothing to justify the attempt. The dend "murderers were noisy incendiary roisterers without conviction , and almost without principles. They preach ed a doctrine which is distasteful to the American idea of civilization and to the American plan of gov ernmental progress. And it will be very hard indeed to find a halo with any lasting luster to fit their contracted brows. CHINESE GBOCERHS. AN ORIENTAL STORE WITH QUEER KINDS OF EDIBLES. a Chinaman's Delicatessen Iv Like. A Veritable Museani of Guntronomy A St. Louia Firm That Sells Thing * That the Chinese Eat. On the corner of Tenth and Locust streets is s little Chinese shop that has about it the red and white air of a laun dry , but it isn't. The sign in front of the store says "Chinese and Japanese groceries. Sun Yah Sue & Co. " It was at one time a fancy goods shop , but the owner concluded groceries would pay better. "People are compelled to eat , " he says , in explaining the change. The owner's name is not Sun Yah Sue , how ever , and there is no company to the concern at all , but it is run by a single proprietor. The proprietor's namu is Jeu Hon Yee , and he put " & Co. " on his sign because he saw it on several other signs in the neighborhood , and thought it had an air of business about it. As for Sun Yah Sue , that is not the name of any personage whatever , but is simply a motto chosen by Mr. Yee. Its literal meaning is "Believe in Jesus. " so that any one passing along the street and translating the sign would bo surprised to see a grocery store run by "Believe in Jesus & Co. " Mr. Yee sells groceries , but none of the kind that are seen upon the table of an American , if we except a little rice and tea. The kinds he sells are those which tickle the palates of the dwellers in the land of Confucius. The writer yesterday had the pleasure of witnessing a shipment of freight un packed which had just completed its long journey from China. The ten or twelve large boxes covered with the odd but well known green paper and inimi table characters , all securely wrapped with strips of cane , had at a glance a foreign look about them. When the boxes were opened , however , and some of the goods taken out , the foreign ap pearance was increased many times over. Everything was stored away in a very careful and compact manner , each arti cle being separated from every other by little improvised but effective partitions in the large boxes. There were strange looking nuts of all sorts some from the marshes along the Yellow and Blue rivers , and some from the rugged upland region between the Yangtze and its great tributary , the Min. The water nuts from the low lands , growing in the ponds and the swamps like lilies the root forming the nut had the soft black mud from their eastern home still cling ing aronnd them. When cut open with a knife the juicy white meat was evi dently as fresh as it was the day it had been taken from the faraway banks of some lonely swamp. There were dozens of kinds of dried mushrooms , numerous kinds and quali ties of macaroni , jars of the most de licious ( ? ) sauce , boxes of queer red rasins , casks of dark brown oysters , which , it is said , swell to many times their size when cooked ; ginger root so strong and biting that none but an ac customed tongue can endure its taste , dried fish in endless variety and appear ance , sticks of sugar cane , which were really quite palatable , beautiful little bamboo baskets of the finest tea , kegs of long , slender cucumbers in a thick , black sauce ; vegetables something like beets and carrots and potatoes , but really like none of them ; black seagrass or seaweed , which , when "wash * wi' flesh water , " is supposed to become a most luscious auxiliary cooked with stewed meats ; and last , but not least ( in price ) , the inevitable birds' nests , wrapped in tissue paper and inclosed in delicate half pound paper boxes at four dollars per pound. Indeed , while the amount of each kind was not very great the variety seemed almost endless , and the prices were a revelation. The water nuts , which looked like buckeyes , sell at thirty cents a pound. They are used , sliced up very fine , to cook with meats , etc. The mushrooms are eighty cents to a dollar lar a pound , and look very much like our own. The lowest priced dried fish are thirty cents a pound , and the best kinds a dollar. They are shipped in great numbers during the summer months , when other meats cannot well stand the journey. There is a kind of duck , however , whose legs are dressed , placed in tin cans , which are filled with oil , and shipped to any distance. Packed in this oil these legs will keep fresh in definitely and are considered a wonder ful delicacy , retailing at ten cents each. The black seaweed which is cooked with meats sells at seventy-five cents a pound and other things in proportion , while the little yellowish sticks known as birds' nests bring four dollars a pound. Mrs. Yee says it is an excellent thing for children and a magnificent ingredi ent for soups , as no doubt it ought to be. In explaining the different articles and their characteristics Jeu Hon Yee had to show considerable dexterity with the English language. He would call over the name "ho she" some little time before he could explain with clearness that it was an oyster. When he picked up a "hung jo"neitheritsnamenoritsappear- ance gave any evidence of its being a raisin which it . "Gum " , was. gum chui" is a sort of cauliflower kind of vegetable , which is not a gum at all , nor is it meant forchewing , except incidentally insoups ; j while "cha gua , " a little box of four wax balls containing medicine ( selling at ยง 1.50) ) , never did secure its English name while the writer was present. In fact , the entire shop , with everything jammed up close together , and with its strange appearance , name and odors , has an un mistakable foreign air about it. One Dan close his eyes and with bnt it slight effort of the imagination find himself in iorne faroff oriental village. St. Louis 3rlobe-Democrat. Still There. "There's gas escaping , " said Eunting , miffing the air. "No , " replied Larkin , also taking a miff , "it seems to be here yet. " Ex- A Democratic View. BENJAMIN HARRISON and White- law Keid are worse beaten in the electoral college thau auy men who have run for president and vice president since Horace Greely's campaign in 1872. They will receive barely more votes than Greely would have , had he lived until the college met. Cleveland and Stevenson will receive more votes in the electoral college than any candidates have ever before had. The transfer of Ohio to the democratic column raises Cleveland's vote to over 800 auc reduced Harrison to not more than 100. The exact figures according to the latest returns are : Cleve land 303 , Harrison 109 , Weaver 32. N. Y. special to Deuvei News. THE Nebraska warehouse appears to be rather difficult to understand in some of its provi sions. The recent decision o : Attorney General Hastings as to the meaning of the iuspectioi clause is to the effect that owners of public warehouses must no store grain of their o\vn without having it inspected in the same manner as other grain. One firm iti this city seems to have misun derstood the- law and , perhaps , others have done so. This , we believe , is not the first time thai it has had to be iuterperted. Bee J. W. Tram m ell is up from Ox ford today. Banker O. Frost of Bartley is in town today. The latest returns show Ne braska to be safely republican on national and state tickets. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. EDWARD . B. SHAW , Regimental Blacksmith , HAS Ol'ENKI ) A BLACKSMITH : - : SHOP ON MARSHALL STREET , Opposite Milliard's lumber yard and in O'Neil's carpenter shop. / Will Cure Interfering Horses & Contracted Hoofs or no Pay. I ALSO HAVE A FIRST-CLASS WAGON : - : MAKER. C3T1 will iilvo you value received or no pay. Prices reasonable. CURTIS & BATES For a Clean Shave or S An Artistic Hair Cut. REAR OF CITIZENS BANK. McCOOK. - - NEBRASKA. PERFUMES TOILET SOAPS AND Fancy Articles LW. McCONNELL & CO. Druggists. / Established 1886 , Strictly One Price. FALL AND WINTER 92-93. Famous Clothin Co. " = SEE OUR IMMENSE LINE OF = OVERCOATS AND ULSTERS , UNDERWEAR AND OVERSHIRTS , GLOVES AND HOSIERY , NECKWEAR AN MUFFLER S. ASSORTMENT IS THE LARGEST OUR PRICES THE LOWEST. McGook , Neb. JONAS EN6EL , Manager I I 1 ( If ffi o o M u ( D M a