M'COOK TRIBUNE. 7. M. KIAXMEIX , Publisher. McCOOK , - : - - : - NEBRASKA NEBRASKA. Blcyclsts In Beatrice are requlrei to carry lights. The project of building am audi torium at York Is being agitated. Revival meetings are in progress at Elnrwood and the attendance is largo Grand Island's beet sugar factory has begun operations on this year's crop. Twelve coach loads of Blair school children recently visited the exposi tion in a body. Burglars entered jthe store of E. 11. Hass at Syracuse and stole a lot ol shoes , clothing , etc. The attendance at the Scott's Bluff county fair was large , and a fine speed program was given. The State Seventh Day Adventlsts have been holding a very successful camp meeting at York. Large crowds were in attendance. The governor sent a cablegram to Manila announcing the appointment of Stotsenberg as colonel of the First Nebraska in place of Bratt , resigned. Thomas C. Stuart , a brakeman on the Fremont , Elkhorn & Missouri Val ley railway , was instantly killed at Beemer by being crushed between the drawbars while attempting to make a coupling. A long petition signed by relatives and friends of the David City company of the First Nebraska volunteers was sent to Governor Holcomb petitioning him to reaueist the First Nebraska mustered out. Fred Wels , a general dealer in Fre mont , who has been in court a number of times , was fined $100 and costs for selling cigarettes to a minor. The complaint was made by Mrs. R. Olds , whose little son bought the little smokers. The case has been appealed. Mrs. Henry Kluke of Richland , Dodge county , had a warrant issued for the arrest of her husband , later causing his appearance before County Judge Cuba , where was effected an agreement that Mr. Kluke should re main away from the farm upon pay ment to him of $200 per annum. William Rhodes , aged 60 years , and the head of a family , committed sui cide in Lincoln by hanging himself tea a rafter in the barn at his residence He had been engaged in the laundry business and had recently failed and this , coupled with continued ill health , led to the despondency during a spell of which he committed the act. The Otoe County fair at Syracuse was a great success. The exhibits in all departments except fruit were the best that have been displayed in a number of years. The attendance was good. The president , A. F. Codding- ton , in appreciation of the good work done by the superintendents of the various departments , tendered them a banquet. A Juniata dispatch says that seedIng - Ing is being rushed , the early sown is up nicely , and looks very fine. The acreage will be about the largest in history. Another steam thresher has been shipped in to help in finishing the threshing. There are still thou sands of stacks of grain to thresh and more than a dozen machines have been at work. Mr. and Mrs. Zack Tanner of Lyons received a telegram from Boblo Beach , Fla. , informing them of the death of their son , Orr , by fever. The many friends of this young man were very much surprised on the receipt of this sad news for the reason he was a per fect picture of health when he enlisted in the Third Nebraska , Company E , at Wakefield a few months ago. At the school yard in . - suiand Glen Lemon and Frank Granger , two mem bers of the high school , engaged in a 1 scuffle , when the Lemon boy pulled out a knife and made a lunge at the Granger boy , stabbing him within an inch of his heart. Granger started home from the school house , but did not get far before he fainted from the los of blood. His case is doubtful. The following is the mortgage rec ord for Dodge county for the month of September : Chattel mortgages Filed , seventy-one ; amount , $40.168.98 : released , fifty-three ; amount , $39,833.- 19. Farm mortgages given , eleven ; amount , $11,075.06 ; released , fourteen : amount , $13,381.50 ; Town and city mortgages filed , eleven ; amount , $3.- 117.37 ; released , fifteen ; amount , $11- 759.25. Henry Thornhill , sentenced to death in the district court of Hamilton coun ty in 1889 for the murder of William Barrett , and who broke jail on the night of September 29 , 1891 , after a lapse of just seven years has been found in Tennessee and returned to jail in Aurora. He was brought by an officer of that state. There was a re ward offered for Thornhill , and detec tives have been on his track for some time past. Mrs. George Wakeman , a widow , liv ing in North Exeter , met with a rather serious accident. She had been to a neishbor's on some errand and was returning home , taking one of the un frequented streets in that part of town , on which a half-bred Jersey cow was tethered. The animal lunged at her striking her with one horn back of the hip in the fleshy part of the leg. tearing a hole four Inches long , and throwing her so forciblyto the ground as to dislocate and fracture both bones in one wrist and sprain the other quite badly. A strong plea is being made by the relatives and friends of Company G of Geneva , to secure .their discharge and much disappointment was felt when It was learned that President McKinley had left it with Governor Holcomb to designate which of the regiments should .be mustered out Henry Holland , a. resident of WIs- ner was bound over in the county court as West Point on a charge of stealing a horse , buggy and harness , the property of Enoch Black , who was visiting in Wisner at the time. Sher iff Phillips pursued the thief and cap tured him and the stolen outfit at Herman , Minnesota Troops Leave for Deer River and Cass Lake , SENT BY'STATE AUTHORITIES , They Are Xot So Sure Tlmt the Danger Has Passed Doaplto General Ilucon's Telegram to "Washington Tlmt the Fighting Is All Over. MINNEAPOLIS , Minn. , Oct. 10. The government has notified Governor Clough that it has revoked the order putting the companies of the Four teenth Minnesota volunteers nt Duluth - luth and at St. Paul under his orders. He had all preparations made to send the Duluth companies to the front nt once to protect the settlers and was arranging to mobilize the remaining companies at St. PauL He supposes that the revocation is due to General Bacon's message suj'ing that there was no more danger. lie added : "I shall pay no more attention to the war de partment. If necessary I will issue a call for volunteers , arm them with such guns as I can pick up and let the government go to the devil. I am tired of doing business with Washing ton. There is too much red tape about it. Orders are issued one minute and revoked the next. I am not an alarm ist , but it is the safe thing to be pre pared. It will reassure the settlers and perhaps prevent an outbreak. " ' The governor has received a mes sage from Mayor John II. Ncavers of Brainard saying : "I have just re turned from Walker. Indians concen trating at Leech Lake in large num bers. Think they held council last night. Situation looks grave. " W. F. Street wired government from Bemidji , west of Cass Lake : "While I do not regard situation here as alarm ing , our people are much disturbed. If you could send village authorities 200 stands of arms they will be grate fully received. lied Lake Indians re ported irritable. " Batteries A and B , Minnesota na tional guard , left at 8 o'clock this morning for Deer river and Cass lake via Duluth. They are in command of Major Libbey. One battery is from this city and one from St. Paul. They are all that is left of the state militia , the infantry companies having all been mustered into the volunteer ser vice. They are equipped with a Gat- ling and a field gun for each battery and each man carries a saber and re volver. This trip will be made in eight hours. WALKER , Minn. , Oct. 8. At the In dian council held at the reservation a demand was made by the government through Indian Agent Sutherland that the men concerned in the killing of soldiers near Bear Island be given up to answer to the charge of murder. Marshal O'Connor and 250 troops commanded by General Bacon will move to the agency on the reservation at 10 o'clock this morning. Boats were chartered last night and another effort will be made to apprehend the twenty Indians for whom the marshal has bench warrants. When the troops arrive at the agency runners will be sent out and the men ordered in. In case they do not respond , Marshal O'Connor , backed by the troops , will go after them. Information given out by one of the Indians at the council yesterday was that nineteen young bucks composed the force which engaged General Bacon's command near Bear Island. Gay She Gwen Ay Yosh , or as the English version would be. Strong Voice of the Wind , was the leader , and directed the plan of battle. The band , excepting the killed , are now on Bear Island , and refuse to come in or take part in the council. It is likely that such renegades as they can induce to join them will make things lively for several months , confining themselves to depredations on small settlements. The report that Bog Ah Mah Ga Sink was killed by one of the sharp shoot ers is denied , the chief having refused to take part in the attack. Thirty-five Indians put in an appear ance at the town of Lothrop , nine miles south of here , last night. The women and children were gathered in a building and the citizens are guard ing the town. MARRIAGE WAS HIS BUSINESS Milwaukee Folico Find a Man With From n Dozen to Twenty Wives. MILWAUKEE , Wis. , Oct. 10. The Mil waukee police have found an alleged polygamist , who , they say , has from twelve tp twenty wives. His name is Frederick William Doesing , but he has many aliases. The police have so far reported the names of only three wives , but they allege that Doesing has been in the marrying business for profit for twelve years and say there is no telling what is the limit of his list. list.Doesing's Doesing's plan was to advertise , stating that he was wealthy and de sired to marry a woman of refined tastes and some means. In each case he is said io have fled after securing what money his newly acquired wife possessed. The Knight Templar Conclave. PITTSBUHG , Pa. , Oct. 10. The-first of the Knights Templar to arrive for the triennial conclave next week formed the grand commandery of Cal ifornia. They were met at the Union station and escorted to Carnegie hall. Grand Master Thomas will arrive here to-night. He will be given a reception in Carnegie hall. CANTON , Kan. , Oct. 10. C. F. Nelson of DCS Moines , Iowa , committed sui cide on a Rock Island passenger train near here last night. He shot himself m the presence of a carload of passen- cers. KILLED BY AN ANGRY WOMAN Mrs. MoICInley'ft llrothor Murdered nt Canton , Ohio. CANTON , Ohio , Oct. 10. Gcorgo D. Saxton , n brother of Mrs. William Me- Klnlcy , was shot ( lend ut 0:10 : o'clock lust evening In front of thu residence of Mrs. Kva 11. Althou.su , widow of the Into George Althouso , 111 ! ) Lincoln nvc- uuo , where ho is presumed to liuvu gone to mulco a cull. Flvo shots wuru llrcd , three of which entered his body , mid Mrs. Anna C. George has boon placed tinder arrest on suspicion of the murder. Suxton was unconscious when neighbors ar rived and began investigating the cause of the shooting , and was dead when physicians and oUlcers arrived , the physicians having expressed the opinion that death was instantaneous , three bullets having entered vital spots. "Mrs. George is the divorced wife of Sample C. George , who formerly was a tenant of Saxton in his downtown business block , conducting a dress making business. Her divorce was ob tained in Dakota and a proceeding later filed in local courts by the hus band against Saxton , charged that Saxtou had sent her there to secure the divorce , the proceeding hero being a suit for damages for the alleged alienation of the wife's affections. This case has been through all the in termediate courts and was passed upon by the state supreme court on an in- tcrpleading and finally remanded for hearing on its merits here. Before this occurred , and on Wednesday , a settlement was effected , Saxton paying George 51,823 on the claim set up of ยง 20,000 for damages. It was common talk that Mrs. George had made frequent threats of taking Saxton's life. Many of these threats are said to have been sent through the mails , and the federal grand , jury sitting in Cleveland last fall indicted her for alleged improper use of the mails. Mrs. George gave bond , and the indictment , so far as it is known , is still alive. Sample C. George , the husband , is now reported to have been married tea a second wife for more than a year. He is reported married in Wheeling to Miss Lucy Graham of Alliance , and the marriage was kept secret until af ter the settlement with Saxton. As soon as George got his damage money from Saxton he announced his mar riage. Mrs. George claims Saxton de ceived her and deserted her. HELD FOR WIFE POISONING , J. J. Kunkcl of Lnwroaco In Jail With out Bond. LA\VHTNCE , Kan. , Oct. 10. J. J. Kun- kel was arrested here yesterday on a coroner's warrant , charging him with poisoning his wife , who died ten days ago. He was sent to jail without bail to await preliminary hearing next Friday. Mrs. Kunkel was the second wife of the man accused of killing her. She had one daughter , 15 years old , and Kxmkel had three children. The union of the two families did not prove to be a happy one. About six weeks ago Birdie Cummingore , Mrs. Kunkel's daughter , died in great agony , after the attending physician had pro nounced her out of danger. When the doctor returned for his next call he found her dead. There was a glass of malted milk which Mrs. Kunkel told the doctor she had taken and immedi ately began vomiting. The doctor took the milk home with him and kept it until it was presented before the cor oner's jury the past week. The stomachs of the two women were analyzed and found to contain arsenic. Kunkel has been a merchant in this city for twenty-five years and has had a good many friends. For the past three years , however , he has baen under suspicion by his neighborsxfor poisoning other members of his fam ily. His father-in-law is cited as the first victim. The old man made his home with the Kunkels , and it is al leged that , becoming tired of it , Kun kel gave him a dose of medicine that caused his death within a few hours. The first Mrs. Kunkei died wiih con vulsions. There was much talk at the time that Kunkel poisoned her , and the fact that he collected 80,000 insur ance on her life added to the belief that he had a hand in getting her out of the way. Four children were left. Freddie , the youngest , was the next one to take sick. His life was also in sured , and he died under suspicious circumstances. THEY MUST HURRY , Spanish Not to Bo Fermltted to Delay Evacuation. WASHINGTON , Oct. 10. President Mc Kinley has cabled the United States military commission at Porto Rico that the island must be evacuated by the Spanish forces on or before Octo ber 18 , and intimating that the Span ish commissioners be so informed. In case of the failure of the Spaniards to complete the evacuation by that date , the United States commissioners are directed to take possession of and ex ercise all of the functions of govern ment , and , in case it is found to be impossible to secure transportation for the Spanish troops by October 18 , they may be permitted to go into temporary quarters until transports can be se cured to take them to Spain. McCoy and Maher Matched. NEW YORK , Oct. 10. Kid McCoy and Peter Maher were matched yesterday to meet in a twenty-five round contest before the Greater New York Athletic club on December 5 for a purse of 510- 000 and division of the gross gate re ceipts. An Ex-Mayor of Now York Dead. NEW YORK , Oct. 10. Ex-Mayor A. Oakey Hall died last night of heart [ ailure at his home , at OS Washington square , South New York , aged 70 years. A Surgeon Testifies Before the In vestigation Commission , CONDITIONS AT CAMP THOMAS When Dr. GIHltt Citino to ChloIctitntuiKit Ho round Open Slnlcii Nour the Kltoli- ont Hotfpltali Were Overcrowded for I < nclc of WASHINOTON , Oct. 10. The wnr in vestigating commission began its pro ceedings to-day with Major Kinmutt Gifllu on the stand. Ho was a brigade surgeon at Camp Thomas , and told of his visit to the second divis ion hospital in July last , when ho said ic was overcrowded. In each tent and under its Hies there were eight or nine men , where there should have been from four to six. There was a sullicicncy of physicians and Major Giilin was sure they were competent men. The majority of patients were suffering from typhoid fever. He thought the crowding of the hospital was from lack of sufficient tcntage , n. fault due to the surgeon in charge. Dr. Giflin made his visit to the division hospital to see a man in his brigade who had been shot in the leg. lie found him in a tent with ty phoid fever patients and consequently had him removed. The division hospital surgeons were competent in their profession , some of them being some of the most competent in the United States , but they were not men of executive ability. He considered the water supply good. The sinks were poorly located. They were too near the kitchens and were too shallow. Many of them were only seventy-five feet from the company kitchen and were open when he arrived. He then had them moved farther back and gave directions for daily disinfection and covering. By this time , however , the regiments were all infected , as he thought , by the flies going from the sinks to the mess tables. Dr. Griffin was given charge of the construction of the Sternberg hos pital upon the first of August and after the hospital was constructed was chief surgeon there. He said the tents comprising this hospital were 14x15 , floored and supplied with four beds each. There were 100 tents and a number of wooden buildings. Five hundred and thirty-three was the largest number of men at the hospi tal at one time and , all 'told , 1,127 men had been healed there up to last Thursday. Of these 86 per cent were typhoid. There had been sixty- seven deaths at the institution. The cases sent to him were generally the most dangerous. He had twenty-five contract surgeons and regular , and 167 female nurses and 159 members of the hospital corps acting as nurses. WRECKED A DINING CAR , Injured In a Collision In Omaha Railway Yards. OMAHA , Neb. , Oct. 10. A double headed Fremont , Elkhorn & Missouri Valley freight train ran into the rear end of an Omaha passenger train in the yards , three blocks north of Locust street , at 10 o'clock this morning. The last car on the passenger train was the dining car "Delmonico. " It was split almost in two length wise. Harry Jones , waiter , of Chicago , was killed , and Otto Home- dale , conductor of the dining car , of Boone , Iowa , was fatally scalded. The seriously injured are : J.Vester - heide , Omaha ; M. W. Brandt , engineer freight engine ; Mike Smith , engineer freight engine ; Erank Speck , fireman freight engine ; Madden , fireman freight engine ; D. F. Danner , Pullman car porter ; Otto Parsons , waiter in dining car , crushed and scalded , Omaha. The occupants of the dining car were totally unaware of the approach ing freight and until the rear end of their car was lifted from its roar wheels and split in two on the boiler of the big freight engine. PANA MINERS WILL STAY ITOUT Offers of Work In Other Klines Refused by the Strikers. PAN-A , 111. , Oct. 10. W. H. Barrett , superintendent of the Kansas and Texas Coal company , is endeavoring to secure white union miners here to go to Huntington to work. He is meeting with little success. The men say they are determined to remain here and fight the operators and blacks to the bitter end. They say they ex pect to win the strike , but can accom plish nothing so long as the military are continued here. Captain Craig , the militiii commander , says the troops will be continued here indefin itely according to his last orders. The strikers received a message to-day from Brookside , Ala , , saying another train load of negroes would leave Birmingham for Pana to-night. The miners will endeavor to head off the blacks in the southern section of Illi nois and send them back to Alabama. Ghouls at Fenn'a Grave. LONDON , Oct. 10. An appempt was made early Thursday morning to steal the body of William Penn , whose body is lying in the graveyard of the Quaker Meeting house at Jordnns , Buckinghamshire. At daylight the in mates of a cottage nearby found that Penn's grave had been partially opened a couple of feet of soil had been re moved and spade and soma newspa pers v/cre lying near. The burial place lies secluded in a valley , and apart from American tourists few people ple visit the spot. BACON SAYS IT IS ALL OVER , The Wnr Department Notified That ttto I'lllngera Are Whipped. WAHHINOTOW , Oct. 1U IteporU re ceived by the officials of thu war and Interior department from the Indian outbreak are of a rcaiuiuring character and they now feul that thu uprising may bo regarded us over. The follow ing IK General Jlacon'it latent dispatch. WAI.KKJI , Minn. , Oct. 8. Arrived hero ut noon with my detachment in good condition. Thu killed and badly wounded have been hhippcd to Fort SnulliiiR. The JndiniiH have been budly whipped and left the country adjacent to the light. Kn route here other Chlppewa bunds dlbplayud white ilngH along thu lake shore. Much talk hero of general Indian outbreak. Will ascertain /acts and report later. Find Colonel Hurhach ut this place with 200 men , Third infantry. Will remain myself and keep troops here awaiting developments. Kegret exaggerated rurnoru pub- lishcd resulting from my Inability to communicate. Have been in no dan ger of massacre and need no reinforce ments. Colonel Harbaeh'H coming was in good time in sending out boats. BACON. ALMOST A CLASH. Uattlo Narrowly Averted nt Munzarilllo SpanUh IimUted on Delay. MANZANII.UJ , Oct. 10 A fight was narrowly averted between the Spanish garrison under Colonel I'arron and the United States troops under Colonel Kay , who arrived here from Santiago to take possession of the ci'y. The arrival of the Americans had taken the Spanish commander by sur prise , and he had represented to Col onel Ray that he had received word from General Blanco informing him that the date for the American occu pation had been post poned to Octo ber 10. Just before a clash of arms seemed almost certain Colonel Ray received a dispatch from General Wade explain ing that the commander of the Span ish troops at Manzanillo had requested a delay until October 10 and that the formal evacuation was therefore , post poned. The United States troops remain in the barracks by permission of Colonel Parron. Mad rid Business Men Meet. MADRID , Oct. 10. A large meeting of business men was held here yesterday. After a number of violent speeches had been made regarding the govern ment's conduct of affairs , the meeting adopted a series of resolutions aiming at the improvement of the economic situation , including the withdrawal of permission to the Bank of Spain to increase its note issue by 2,500,000,000 pesetas , the payment of the interest to foreign debt holders in pesetas and not in francs , large reductions in the public expenditure , including the pe- sions , the closure of the military schools for the next ten years , the re duction of the oificers * pay and a vote in aid of the sufferers from the war. The Great Fire at Hiinkovr. SHANGHAI. Oct. 10. Details just re ceived here from Hankow , the treaty port at the mouth of one of the trib utaries of the Yang Tse Kiang , show that the fire which broke out there on Sunday last destroyed 10,000 houses , devastated about two miles of built up ground and did damage to the extent of from 5,000,000 to 8,000,000 ta els. Paris' Big Building Strike. PARIS , Oct. 10. The strike of the. laborers here has extended to nearly all the building trades , and it is feared the railroad men will join in the move ment. Work on the exposition build ings and underground railroad has completely ceased. Abotit GO.OOO have one out on strike , and the situation is causing consternation. Foreign Soldiery In China. PEKIN , Oct. 10. A detachment of sixty-six Russian soldiers , with two seven-pounders , twenty-five British marines and thirty German marines arrived here to-day and marched through the city to quarters assigned to them. They will protect the lega tions of , Russia. Great Britain and Germany. The Chinese appear to be ccwed. Wants Fay for Her Thronu. HONOLULU , Sept. 2S. Ex-Queen Lil- ioukalani will leave for Washington about the middle of November to press tier claims against Congress for re muneration for the loss of her throne and the revenue from the crown lands , for which she feels that the people of the United States owe her some pe cuniary compensation. Will Bo Sent to Doliiiriiro. SAN FRANCISCO , Oct. 10. In spite ot everything that has been said to the contrary , another warrant will be issued for the arrest of Mrs. 1'otkin 'or the murder of Mrs. John 1 * . Dun ning and Mrs. Dean , and she may bo extradited and tried in Delaware for lier crime. Change In Colorado Folltlan. DENVER , Col. , Oct. 10. Simon Gug genheim has withdrawn as candidate of the anti-Teller silver Republicans Tor governor. It is understood that n , [ usion on state nominations will newt t > e made with the Republicans. United States Interfere * . LONDON , Oct. 10. A dispatch to the Pall Mall Gazette from Lisbon says the Delagon. bay negotiations have been deferred until IS'JO , owing to the United States insisting upon Portu gal's strict observance of the agree ment that neither the railroad , the harbor nor public lands at Lorenzo Marqucz be alienated until the Berne award is completed. The United States is interested in these proceed ings on account of the estate of the late Colonel McMurdo , an American , being involved. The October Atlstle. The Atlantic continues to do yeo man service la leading and pointing the way to the handling of great na tional Issues. In me October num ber the Anglo-American question Is treated from the American side by Hon. Carl Schurz , who opoas the number , and from the English stand point by Albert V. Dicey , the dlsUn- gulabed Jurist , who follows him. In. eplte of enBentlal differences of idea and treatment , both the distinguished authors substantially agree In desir ing an International friendship be tween the two countries , but without a-ny hampering or entangling alli ance ; In healing all present differ ences , and In arbitrating future ones : and they look forward hopefully to the benefits that will ccmseaepntlr ensue , to the peace and happiness o the whole world. Tim New Frank f lle" * Popular Beginning with the next ber ) number. Frank ix-slie's Monthly will be changed In form anl dreefl. Its price will be reduced u > 10 cents per copy , one dollar per as.- num. Mre. Frank Leslie , whose as sociation with Frank Leslie's Popu lar monthy has been the chief factt > r in its success and fame , now res ss * direct editorial control of the maga zine , after three years' rest and so journ abroad. This congenial -work will occupy Mrs. Leslie's attention. Germany S ntl a. Ship. Too. BERLIN. Oct. 7. The Gerzaan Bhip Kai&erin Augusta has left Slao- chou for Taka. at the entrance of the Peiho river , with thirty marines , wbo will be sent to Pekin to act as a frasrd for the German legation there. Prince Henry of Prussia will probably be ap pointed to command the sqasdroa in tended for the protection , of Cerssar interests in China. Bolte to Take Stephen * * Place. JEFFERSON CITT , Mo. , Oct. 7. Llea- tenant and Acting Governor A. H. Bolte will take Governor Stephens' place on the program lor "ilisieeri Day" at the exposition at Os& & & , Monday. The other speakers for tie day are State Senator E. W. Ma jar of Pike county. Senator Cochr&ne ajxj Congressmen Joy , Pearce and Birth- oldt of St. Louis. "The Real Sherman" by Artinr 3n- chanan in Ainslee's for October fe an analysis of the great statesman's ziras and abilities , with some revelatSoas oe the real cause of his reslcaaUoa a * secretary in April of this rear. "T3w Wonders of High Explosives" is aa ex ceedingly interesting article oa iai * very mysterious subject by Tfce&oc Waters. "Cattle Rustlers is the title of a description of the ways and 2eaas of life of those hardy western cow boys , from whom the famoes Roech. Riders were In large part recreited. These and much other attractive mat ter , all adequately illustrated. comWae to make Ainslee's for October rank with the best magazines of its class. Prof. Benjamin Ide Wheeler. cT Cornell University , has -sritxea a life of Alexander the Great. will be one of the leading featvree of The Century Magazine daring tfcr coming year. The papers vrill be richly illustrated with pictures br Andre Castigne. Louis Loeb and osi ers. At this time of ernpire-iaaklar : projects , the career of the Maceeoafaia conqueror is of particular snggestlve- ness to modern statesmen. During a recent revival meeting preacher asked all in his congregstioa to rise up who had read a passage la the book of Hezekiah during tie past month. About a dozen arose , soiae oJ them long-time amen-coraer ckarci. members. The evangelist said : "Wky. God bless you. there is no such bo fc in the Bible. " A roseate fiusb o'er- sprend some cheeks that had beaa sal low for years. They realized at oac ? that the preacher had tumbled to t&etr hypocrisy. Pittsburg Dispatch. A Connecticut clergyman oa a r < cent Sunday gave out the foikrwtes : notice : "The regular session of th Donkey Club -will be held , as uswii. st the close of this service Mewbers will line up just outside the chr * i door , make remarks and st&re st t w > women who pass.as is their customs Any member known to escort a yoac woman to church like R man aa4 sit with her like a gentleman , will x promptly expelled from meiubijrsklp. Don't imagine n doctor life isn' worth living. LIVE STOCK AND PRODUCE Omaha , Chicago and X tr York MtVct Quotation * . OMAHA. Flutter Creamery ! > eparator. . . IS A 2fl Hutter Choice fancy country. W a VI Kpps Fresh , per do * . . , . VV a VIs Sprlnc Chickens IVr pound t a s Prairie Chickens S J * A 3 * K Lemons -Per bo\ 4 T.a tlV Oranees-I'er box 37 % a 5 < < 'r.uUH rrles Wlsoonsln.pv > r l > o.VI a \ ? * Apples I'or V > arrel XW H S $ * Honey Choice , nor \Hiunvl 1 < A tt Onions I'or bushel lift H 4 * l ean Handplcked navy t 3 * a rotators I'or bushel , now. . . . . .ts sHay \ Hay I'pland perton 5W a SOUTH OMAHA STVKKMAUKVir , HORS Choice Hcht . S * \ HORN llfuvyvelplUs . 3 < VS Hcef. steers . $ S > Hulls . . . 2 S5 St : ( : s . 3 M s4 Calto * . 4 Western feeders . . . Cows . . . . . Heifers . Stockers and feeders. . . . , . S W a W Sheep- Muttons . . . . . . . 3 V ) ( \ \ \ Sheep UrassVst i rn . . . . . * W a t W CIUOUUV. WheatNo. . 2 spring . Corn Per bushel . . . . . . . . W a SVS Oats Per bushel . . . Hnrlev-No. 2 . 3 a 41 Kyc-No.2. . . . Tlmotliv sieed. per bu . 2 5Kat Pork I'crevrt . t i\T Lard Per 100 { lounds . . . . . * W a 4 Cuttle Western Uaneors . 2 JO a 4 Cattle Native beef steers. . . . . . < v\ H I v Hoes-Mixed . rt n J xN Shiop Lnmbs . . , ? A a W Sneop WeMornnJnnKvr * . . . . 9 JO a 4 A NT.vr YOIIK. MAUKHf. Wheat No. 2. red winter . Corn -No. 2 . Oats No. " . . . . . . KANSHS CITY. Wheat No. 2 spring . Corn No. 2 . oats No. 2 . . . . . . . Sh"op Muttons Hogs-Mixed C.ittle StooUer * and