M'COOK TRIBUNE. F. Br. KIMMKLL , I > ublfher. ! McCOOK , - - NEBRASKA r BRIEF TQfGRAMS. The disappearance of Lieutenant Colonel Count Snoilsky , military at tache of the Swedish-and Norwegian legation In Berlin , Is attributed tex x > -mental derangement. At Emma , Tex. , J. W. Bryan was shot and killed by Thornton Jones , as the result of a misunderstanding aris ing from improvements on a place Bryant claimed to have leased. Between $3OflO and $4,000 was se cured by a gang who dynamited the vault of the Dalton City fill. ) bank. Although a posse was quickly formed , no trace of the robbers has yet been found. Four masked men entered the farm residence of John Thompson , near Leb anon , O. , bound , gagged and tortured Thompson and his wife until they sur rendered $300 in money , their jewelry nnd silverware. Thomas A. McNcal , who a month ngo announced * his candidacy for the United States scnatorship of Kansas , withdraws and leaves the field , so far as he is concerned , to Senator Baker and J. R. Burton. The farmers in the Lower Fort Gar ry district , northwest of Winnipeg , re port serious losses by the mysterious disappearance of oattle. One farmer has lost eight animals. An organized gang of cattle lifters is at work. By the explosion of a large boiler at Blankenbeckler's saw mill , near Sneedville , Tenn. , William Edwards , engineer , and Pleasant Trent , fireman , were instantly killed. Jesse Mahan and Lee Gordon were fatally injured. One of the main buildings of the Stormont hospial in Topeka , Kan. , vr > destroyed by fire. The fire was discovered in time to permit the re moval of the inmates in safety. Lessen on building , $10,000 ; insurance , $9- 000. William Haywooil , former consul general of the United States to Ha waii , and afterwards collector of in ternal revenae , arrived in San Fran cisco en route to Washington , where he is to represent the Hawaiian Plant ers' association. At Rockford , 111. , a cablegram was received announcing the sudden death of William A. Talcctt at Jerusalem. Mr. Talcott was president of the board of trustees of Rockfonl college and prominently identified with busi ness interests. William Pratt or Anita , la. , was at Chicago with two cars of yearling steers of his own feeding. Mr. Pratt is an extensive feeder ar.d now has eights cars of steers on feed. He re ports less cattle on feed in his part of Io < va than usual. A tablet io General John M. Corse , the union commander of the remark able battle of Allatoona Pass , in Geor gia , where the phrase originated , "Hold the fort , for I am coming , " has been placed on the walls of the fed eral building in Boston. The four Cudahy brothers Michael , John. Patrick and Edward represent $15,090,000 lusiness capital , all of it kept at work at a tremendous rate by the men who has amassed it , says the' Chicago Times-Herald. They employ - /ploy 6,000 men , and have plants at Omaha. Milwaukee. Sioux City , Louis ville , Nashville , Wichita and Los An geles. A man answering the description of Pat Crowe , who is suspected of being the leader of the Omaha gang of kid napers , was seen to jump from the Union Pacific train from the east at Denver when it slowed up in the rail road yards. Later in the day a sa loon keeper who knows Crowe well , informed the police department that ha had seen him on the street. Nearly half a million irom other parts of the world have come into the United States during the year 1900. seeking permanent homes. The details of immigration during the ten months ending with October , gathered by the immigration bureau and pub lished by the bureau of statistics , in dicate that the immigration for the calendar year will reach about 4GO.OOO. Ex-State Senator Vernon H. Burke , who was disbarred from piacticing lavr two years ago as a result of the sen sational Burke-Dellenbaugh trial , was reinstated by the circuit court at Cleveland. Burke can resume the practice of his profession on January 1 next , according to the decision Rear Admiral W. S. Schley will be detached from duty as commander-in- chief of the South Atlantic squadron during the coming spring , in antici / pation of his retirement next October , when he will be 62 years old. Emperor William's decree lengthen ing medical study , as a remedy for the overproduction of physicians , meets witn the aproval of the profes sion. Official statistics show that over crowding of the medical profession in the large cities is plain. Berlin has one physician to every 798 of the pop ulation , Breslau one to every 775 , Hall one to every 735 affd Koeuigsberg one to every 681. Oscar Aaronson. the bicycle rider , died in a New York hospital Saturday afternoon : rom injuries received in his fall in Madison Square Garden. Dr. J. R. Sutherland was lulled in n. runaway accident at Albuquerque , N. M. Dr. Sutherland \vas born in * Canada , but served as a UnitedStates army surgeon in the civil war. Count yon Blumenthal , the oldest field marshal in the German army , is dead. The government of Chili , which re cently invited tenders for 400 freight cars , has accepted 300 from Doeche & Co. and 100 from W. R. Graca Co. , all of American manufacture. Count Zeppelin , the aeronaut , will coon address the German Colonial so ciety -upon the prospects of utilizing his airship. The condition of Prince Oscar , Duke of Scanic , eldest son of the crown ciriuee of Sweden and Norway , who lias been seriously ill , is sow mucli improved. Porto Eico More Generously Treated Thaa Any of tlio Territories. PEOPLE SATISFIED WITH THE LAWS T.ocal r.cglnlutaro lias Authority to Re peal the Tariff If It WiHlic-s , but 11ns Not Uouo So All in 1'roKrciislug Fa vorably. CINCINNATI , Dec. 2D. Senator J. B. Foraker has made a reply to the re cent speech at Ann Arbor , Mich. , cf former President Harrison , in which Mr. Harrison criticised the Porto Rican policy of the government , char acterizing it as a departure from cor rect principles. In a speech before the Manufacturers' club of this city last njght Senator Foraker said on this point : , , All -the questions arising under the Porto Rican legislation are soon to be passed upon by the supreme court. For that reason I do not care to discuss them at this time , but it is in order to eay that -the view taken by congress , as reilccted by that legislation , was cred itable to the generosity , patriotism and the industrial spirit of the American people. We found Porto Rico as poor as poverty could make her. She had no money , no credit , no system of taxation of any kind. She wanted a civil gov ernment and a revenue to support it Wo gave her a far more liberal civil government than was ever given to any territory prior to the civil war , so far las participation in it by her people is concerned , and we dealt by her more generously in providing sup port for that government than we have ever yet dealt with any territory. In requiring her to pay tariff duties on imports from foreign countries we did only what we did with Louisiana , Florida , California and all our other territories ; but in allowing her to put these duties , when collected , into her own treasury for the support of her local government , we did what was never done before for anybody else ; for in all other cases we have not only required the payment of these same duties , but we have also re quired them , when they were col lected , to be paid into the national treasury at Washington for the com mon benefit of the whole country , and , as to duties on commerce between Porto Rico and the United States , we did net levy 15 per cent , but we re mitted S5 per cent of the existing on a number cf articles , and the whole duty en al the rest , and provided that the 15 per cent should be remitted af ter March 1 , 1202 , or sooner if the legislature of Porto Rico shall pro vide , and that in the meanwhile all collections of 15 per cent b"th there and in the United States , shall be paid over to Porto Rico for her own support. We made this provision be cause it was the best and least bur densome way possible to raise indis- pensible revenue for their govern- and not because it was in any sense of my benefit , to either our government or other people. The Porto Rican legislature is now In session , but neither that body nor any member of it , nor anybody else , has taken any step to repeal or alter the tax system so imposed by con gress. On the contrary , all testify alike to the highest satisfaction with what congress has done , and the re quest will be almost unanimously made that the provisions enacted may be continued , if not indefinitely , at least until some satisfactory sys tem cf proper taxation may be sub mitted. In addition , it should be stated that congress , also in tie same generous spirit , exempted Porto Rico from all internal revenue taxation another favor never before extended to any part of cur people anywhere. Yes , it is true that the legislation for Porto Rico was a "departure , " but it is not true that it was a "departure from correct principles. " BOER LEADER NOW IN TRAP. London nml the Continent 1Ie > tr That Dovret Has Ilron CsiptureiZ. LONDON , Dec. 29. Persistent re ports are in circulation in London and on the continent that General Dewet has been captured. The British Char tered South African company received this information from a source in which it is accustomed to place im plicit confidence. The War office , how ever , is without any confirmation of the renort. CAPETOWN , Dec. 29. General De- wet's attempts to break through the south have Leen frustrate- ! and he is now reported to be at Senekal with a large commando ; holding the country between Fecksbrug , Senekal and Win- burg. General Knox is holding the country between Lady rand and Winburg : " The eastern parties of invading Boers are being constantly Inrasseu and driven back toward the Orange river. The Yeomanry who were captured near Britstown have been released. JOHANNESBURG , Dec. 29. The Boers damaged the new Kleinfontein and Chinese batteries yesterday. riwvw You e'JT ? WASHINGTON , D. C. , Dec. 29. Af ter January 1 , in making the calcula tion of the per capita wealth of the United States , the Hawaiian islands. Alaska and the Indian. Territory will be included. The probable effect will be to slightly reduce the per capita \vealth , which now is about $27. Kxtruditlon Easy , WASHINGTON , D. C. , Dee. 29. A request was received at tLe State department - ; partment today from Governor Pin- gree of Michigan for the extradition of Charles J. Thompson , who is char ged with forgery committed at De troit. Thompson is now in Cuba. The State department , taking the ground that the island is at present solely under 'control of the United States military did not undertake to go into the merits of the application , but transmitted the papers at once to the War department. 8100,000 In Money uu * Negotiable Pnjicr Stolen from u jtlull Suck. DETROIT , Mich. . Dec. 29. A mall pouch , containing $100,000 in negotia ble paper and an unknown amount of money was stolen from the Michigan Central railroad passenger station at Wyandotte , Mich. , some tlnle last night. The last mall for Wyandotte arrives at 10:28 on the Michigan Cen tral , and , owing to the lateness of the hour , it is left in the station until morning. When the two mail sacks were thrown from the train last night Night Operator Richard threw the pouches under a seat in the corner of the waiting room. He then went to his home in Detroit. Today , when Mail Carrier John McCIeary came to the station for the mail sacks , he missed one. About the same time George Bessy , a driver of an old wagon gen , reported at the station that a pouch , ripped open and empty , was behind an old tank a short distance from the station. Archbishop Goes for Saloons. MINNEAPOLIS , Minn. . Dec. 29. iA Times special from DubuQuc , la. , says : " Archbishop Keane , since his ap pointment to the seat of Dabuque , has taken strong grounds against the use Jof intoxicants. On several occasions Sie has preached temperance sermons [ that would have delighted old John JB. Gough , if he were alive , and liquor kiealers are considerably worked uo over his strong oposition to their trade. An extensive property on Sev- 'enth and Main streets , belonging to 'the church , is occupied by various [ tenants and among them is a saloon , ; iun by ex-Mayor Olinger. The latter rhas been served with notice to vacate jthe property as soon as possible. The archbishop says no property belonging - ing to the church can be used for sa loon purposes. Women IMicl u "llliucl IMff " MATTOON , 111. . DSC. 29. About twenty women of Longview last mid night raided a "blind pig" that has been running for some time in spite of the officers cf that little town , brcke in the door , gathered up all the battles and jugs taey could find , car ried then to the street and there smashed them , spilling the contents on the ground. The prcprieicrs of the place had been arrested several times , but their trade was so good that they were will ing to pay their fines each time , re opening the place immediately after ward. Despairing of having the place closed by this means , the women de cided to take the matter into their own hands. Ktttitiaii Tomlcrctl Morris * Phice. WASHINGTON , Dec. 30. The presi dent lias tendered to Fred Rittman of Cleveland the position of icurth audi tor of the treasury , made vacant by the tragic death of Auditor Morris. Mr. Rittman has for some fifteen or ; twenty years been engaged in tlie banking business in Cleveland. He is about 50 yelirs old itands high in busi ness circles and is a lifelong friend of Senator Hann ? . He is also known by President McKinley. It is expected he will assume his duties on the first of January. Cbmiqrc from Ci-vlto : WASHINGTON , D. C. , Dec. 29. The general board of the navy , presided over by Admiral Dewey , has taken up the question of the transfer of the United States naval station from Cn- vite and its permanent establishment on Subis ; bay. At the samp time the special 'board of naval off.rrnow making inquiries in the Philippines as to the best site for d permanent naval station has ca.bled TO Washing ton for a full prmipnicHt of boring ap paratus in order to learn whether there is suitable foundation at Subig bay. ItnnlcerR T.o o Curios PHILADELPHIA. Dec. 29. Several large collections of counterfeit notes were recently conficated 5n this citv by Secret Service Agent Griffin. The collection of bogus bank notes even as curi-os is prohibited by law. A bank cashier , whoe narae Agent Griffin refused to reveal , suffered the IOPS of the finest collection of counter feit bank notes seen in lecent years. It was with many nritosts that he parted with his collection. Other cashiers lost smaller collections. Siirnnr Silvi Cornea Soon. WASHINGTON , D. C. . Dec. 29 Uni ted States Change Beaupre , at Bogota , informs the State department that Carlos Mar tines Silva. Colombian min ister for foreign affairs , has been aj- pointed minister to the United States and will sail for his pc-c in the course of two weeks. Mr. Thomas Herran1 has been appointed secretary of lega tion at Washington. Col > in * > f S mply COMVPUPK. WASHINGTON , Dec. 20. The cab inet meeting today lasted two hours , but after the meeting all Ihe members united in saving it was barren of re sults. "If all the cabient meetings of the coming century are as barren as the last one of this century you news paper men will have very little to write about , " was the way one of them put it. A thrifty farmer's wife made her husband throw away his pipe and smoke hams instead. DETROIT , Mich. . Dec. 29 Ex- Quartermaster General W. L. White , who was sentenced to ten years in prison for complicity in the state mil itary frauds and pardoned by Gover nor Pingree two days later , today paid 21,000 as the first installment of the $5,000 fine imposed by Governor Pin gree as a condition of the pardon. The money was paid to the treasurer of Ingham county. The governor - stipulated lated that the fine should be paid in installments of $1,000 before January 1 of each year for five years , to reim burse the county for'the expense of convicting White. THE STATE LIBRARY ASSOCIATION. A Fair Keprcscntation at Iho Meeting Held In Lincoln. , LINCOLN , Dec. 3l. The State Li brary association met hero in conjunc tion with the teachers' association. There were ten libraries represented. The first paper was read by Prof. W. E. Jillson , librarian of the Doano col lege library. Miss Dennis of the Lin coln city library read a paper on "Li brary Co-operation in Lincoln. " She urged the systematic planning of the development and management of Lin coln libraries , so that each may com plement the other. Mr. Brigham cautioned the Nebraskans - kans against making the mistake of getting a library commission with no means of support , as has been done in Georgia , Kansas and. New Jersey. He said : "No state can afford to let a popu lar demand for libraries die out for want of sustenance. No state can af ford to let the library movement with in its borders fritter away in vain attempts on the part of benevolent but financially weak organizations to per form educational functions which do not properly belong to them. The duty of the state to lester and develop free public libraries is quite as im perative as is the duty of the sate to foster and develop free public schools. The reasoning which lies at the base of our public school system also sustains the superstructure of that system the public library. If it is worth anything to the state to have an educated citizenship , it is worth more to have a well-bred , intelligent , happy , home-loving citizenship ; and what more directly to the purpose than the free publK : library ? The schools that cost us so much money and are worth far more than they cost ou- fortunately lose their hold upon a large majority of the children of the state before they reach the critical age of 15. A vital question for the citizen is : Should the education which makes for good citizenship cease at the very point at which the serious business of life first projects itself upon the young mind ? Statistics everywhere confirm the conclusions of the criminologists that the blossoming period of crimin ality Is- between twenty ami thirty years of age and the criminal's train ing years are from the first conscious ness of manhood and womanhood , caily in the teens , to that dangerous period of action beginning early in the twenties. The community that has nothing to offer the young but the licensed saloon and the regularly-fined and therefore virtually licensed broth el and makes no move for the enrich ment of community life through the entertaining , instructing , reforming and elevating influence of good liter ature deserves its heavy expense bill for criminals and paupers and also deserves the disgraceful record and awful consequences of criminality. The state that makes no effort to induce communities to raise the standard of citizenship by placing the incentives to high thinking ana right living within the easy reach of all is throw ing away the opportunity of the ages. " Immense Crop of "Wheat. M'COOL , JUNCTION , Neb. , Dec. 31. Ten thousand bushels of first-quality winter wheat is the amount. Mr. Kuns has just stored in his granary , the yield from 300 acres just threshed. At pres ent prices these 300 acres have paid Mr. Kuns nearly $6,000 or about CO per cent interest on his investment for one year in York county lands. Kr. Kuns has just purcnased a $12,000 residence in York , ana after this his sons will run his farm and be will live in York. Taken to the Penitentiary. PLATTSMOUTH , Neb. , Dec. 31. Sheriff Wheeler made a trip to the state penitentiary , taking with him Charles Sheppard and Harry Hickscn. Sheppard is the young colored man whom Judge .lessen sentenced to eigh teen months for stealing a money bag containing about $51 from John Shiap- pacasse's store. Hickson was convict ed and sentenced to one year for com mitting forgery. Struck by Passenger Train. ORD , Neb. , Dec. 31. As Mr. and Mrs. Hasek were going home Saturday night they were struck by a Burlington passenger train and Mrs. Hasek very badly hurt , though it is thought she will recover. Her foot was crushed and back hurt. The accident occurred about G:30 a mile west of Ord , where the wagon road crosses the Burlington in a deep cut. IJecovers Hibtoleii Stock. NORFOLK , Neb. , Dec. 26. H. E. Glissman has recovered at Pilger twelve head of his cattle that a thief , had driven there to ship to Omaha. The "rustler" escaped , but the station ' agent gives a good description of him and Mr. Glissman has instituted a vigorous search. Gold Bricks In Soap Wrappers. NEBRASKA CITY , Dec. 31. Several of the grocers in this city were "taken in' by a smooth young man who pretended - , tended to be selling soap at greatly re duced prices. After the soap had been delivered and paid for and the young man had left town it was found to be a very inferior article. Representative Jesse Overstreet ol Indiana has made public the fact that he has prepared a bill relating to the country's finances , which he will in troduce before the present session of congress adjourns. olil Hired Livery Team. DAKOTA CITY , Net ) . . Dec. 31. On the 17th inst. William Temple , a farm hand employed by County Commis sioner L. Blanchard. went to Jackson and hired a livery rig from Coroner B. F. Sawyers to canvas the immediate territory for a jewelry concern. After being gone three days Mr. Saw3'ers started an inquiry and with Sheriff Sides found that Temple had been in Sioux City with the " > g , but from there he could not be traced. Officers in surrounding towns were notified and the other day Shenii' Sides received word from Marshal Booser of Oto , la. , stating that he had hip man in ? jmbo. i AUDITOR CORNELL IS ENJOINED. The Maryland Cnmmlty Company Gotu Out HVrlt. . LINCOLN , Neb. , Doc. 29. The Mary land Casualty company , through Ed- son Rich and Stevens , Love & Framp- ton , its attorneys , filed in the district court a petition for a writ of injunc tion restraining Auditor John F. Cor nell from revoking Its license to do business in Nebraska and from pub lishing any derogatory report of its condition. The plaintiff alleges that recently ( date not named ) William F. Schwind and James C. McNerny of Lincoln came to Baltimore and under the au thority of Auditor Cornell spent two days in a "pretended examination of its affairs , for which they put in a claim to the plaintiff of $070 for fees. On tlie refusal of the plaintff to pay this it is alleged Schwind and McNer ny offered to accept $450 , "which amount was and is unjust , unreason able and extortionate and which amount the plaintiff refused to pay. " It is further alleged that Auditor Cornell threatens to r ° vole the plain tiff's license and to publish a report showing it to 'be in an unsound con dition unless the claims ot the exam iners are satisfied. Such action , it is alleged , will work great injury to the plaintiff , not-only in this , but in oth er states. It is further alleged that the plaintiff is sohent and eligible to transact business in Nebraska. The temporary injunction was grant ed by Judge Holmes and th" hearing fixed for January 2 at 10 o'clock. of Cnstor Conntv. LINCOLN , Neb. , Dec. 29. Senator F. M. Currie of Broken Bow is in. the city. Speaking of the coming ses sion of the legislature the senator said that the western part of the state would have tome important matters to bring before the lawmakers , the most urgent of which is an amendment t the revenue law. "Custer county , ' said the senator , "has enough money to her credit in the form of delin quent taxes to pay its running ex penses for throe years r.nd wo will ask the legislature to devise a plan by which we can secure the greater part of these funds. Und r the exist ing conditions practically all real es tate taxes have to be collected 'by ' sales the same as in the foreclosure of a mortprngo. The property has to be ap praised and must bring two-thirds of the pn.praisorl valuation. In the case of man } ' western counties the county has to bo the purchaser in order to secure itr lion 'and to do this must , in many instances , nay to the holder of the title in the land several hun dred dollars. If much property is sold to the tnnnties under this system they would lind their funds exhausted. "It has boon sueiiG-stPd that the leg islature provide that , in the case of sale of property for tTxcs. the valua tion be- dispensed with r.nd let the Ifind bring1 what it will at forced sale. Whether this provision would be con- stitutionnl or not I do not know , but some scheme must be devised for the collection of taxes. " < /on luofor T.oi-V Mnrf-illr Hurt LINCOLN. Neb. , Dec. 29. Conductor j Edward Locke of the Missouri Pacific was seriously injured in an accident that occurred at Union. He was the conductor running on the Omaha-Kan- sas City train , and at Union h ° was , assisting in coupling in the Lincoln cars. The ground was vf-ry slipnery c and in attempting to get en the train a after he cut out a coach he slipped and Ml across the rails. One car ran over him , reducing his If ft les ; to a pulp and seriously mangling the oth er. A surgeon was called and it was found necessary to amputate the left leg and a part of the foot of the right leg. The unfortunate man was taken to Kansas City , his homo , where he died , ell was one of the oldest con ductors on the read. E LINCOLN. Neb. . Dec. 29. The State A Banking board has aporoycd the artis clos of inecnviration of the State bank of Ruskin. The new bank has a paidtz up capital - > tx-k 'if 7 500. The incorporators - A porators are A. G. McGrew , M. Bolton and F. M.7cGrew. . cj It is assorted on reliable authoritv that Lincoln will have a new national bank within the next few weeks. Plans ; ti for the organization of the institution have been so far completed that it will lie posFilile to open i\ \ ' , doors for n , busmen about Febrtnrv 1. if not soon er. The promoters of the enterprise are mostly Lincoln business men. - P' uIit : t n Gr iJo Pros.-- ! ! : . LINCOLN , Neb. . Be" . 2i > . John Riley - ley of 1001 Francis street Belmont. was struck and almost fata-ly injured ta by a Missouri Pacific trr-in. He wa * > driving , with his son. across the tracks on North rourtoenth street when a long train of frpistt ca.-s Hacked down upon him. The son ps.-aixvi injury by N leaping : from the vehicle- , but Riley was S ; caught by one cf theirs and cra gcd a ] along on the ground for a distance of st SCO feet. His left arm and left leg stS wex afterwards . : amputated. w wvi vi OOALLALA. Neb. . D c. 29 , W. A. Forsyth , head of the f.rrn of W. A. C ( Forsyth & Son. groc ° rs of this city , aj was found dead in his bed. He left < - , his plico of business early in thf oven- ' ' ing. feelingas well as usual. Mr. Forsvth came here in the palm' * days ei : and was one of Ogallala's iFadiaj- busi titl ness men. Ke was seventy-six vears tlel old. Heart tailure was the cause of el death. elR i R rirircnl iVitli Stpaliiis : tr MADISOX. Xeb. . Dec. 29. Charles 13 Spiece , Robert Lovelace and Will Hale thm of Battle Creek are confined in the m county jail , charged" with stealing : a wa on load cf hogs from F. J. Hale. ' The robbery was perpetrated Tuesday night and the following evening the in hcrjs were located in Madison. Mr. to Fraer. . who transacted the deal , wenr to Battle Creek and sa/s be identified . . Spi , e. Later Lovelace Avas pushed l and it is alleged he r-onfussed. One of the trio , Talf. i ? only a boy. s T.onilon'g "Tupponiiy" Tul > rK. "The 'tuppenny' tubes are a great Institution in London , especially for Americans , " remarks a New Yorker , who had just returned from the other side the other day. ' "They are among : the chief attractions , nnd it is a fav orable diversion to purchase a ticket . The tickets for a shoot through them. ets are almost counterparts of our ele vated railway tickets in New 'iork. The 'tuppenny' tubes , " as ho explained , "is the namo'of the underground rail way. They ore doing a great business in London , and there will be more or thorn soon. Americans promise to have control of nearly all the systems. " " Kcforred Him to Oiio AVIio Know. A now bit of Washington gossip tells how one day last winter Senator Chandler , of New Hampshire , being about to enter the senate chamber from the public corridor was accost ed by one of two little girls , who had wandered in there. "Mister , what does it cost to go in there ? " said the- child. At that moment Chandler saw- Clark , the Montana millionaire , can ing around the corner. "Ask that man , " said the New Hampshire man , "He knows all about it. " L , ft Ills iMvr ItookH In Hln Ofllre. The late Senator Davis was known as one of the foremost students of Shakespeare of the present day , and in his home he had a magnificent library. A remarkable thing about this library was that th're was not a single fo'.v book in the collection , for during chc lost twenty jears of his life he ran do it a rule never to bring his l4usine. cares to his fireside. IJcwoy Arch < ; < ) to ClivlrlcHton. The navy arch in Next' York City is not yet to depart into thdi rubbish heap though it is to be disposed of as rubbish , for President Gitggenheimfr of the muni-'ipal council says that un der the city charter there is no other way. So the South Carolina Inter state and West Indian exposition will receive the crch. which will he taken down with . ; 11 the care possible , ami transported to Charleston , where it will be reconstructed. LOW RATES TO THE SOUTH. Excursion tickets at reduced are now being sold by tlie Cliciio , Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway to the prominent resorts in the Sovib , in cluding Jacksonville , Fa. ! ( Mobile , Ala. , New Orleans , La. , Savannah , Ga. . El Paso , Tex. , which are good for return passage at any time prior to June 1st. 1901. Information regarding rates , routes , time , etc. , can be obtained ' " * application to any coupon ticket agent of the Chicago , Milwaukee & St. 1'aui Hallway. Eat little meat and see that it is cooked. Try Magnetic Starch It will last longer tc"an any other. * Running water often gets its start from a spring. There Is u Class of 1'ciiplo Who are injurc-1 by the use of coffee. Recently there has been placed in all the grocery stores a iifwpreparation called GRAIN-0 , mad i of pure grains , that , takes the place of coffee. The most delicate stomach receives > it without distress , and but few cin tell it from coffee. It does not cost ov ; r one-fourth as much. Children may flnnk it with great benefit. 1.1 cents and 25 cents per package. Try it. Ask for GRAIN-O. The fcwor airs sonio musicians can play the moio they put on. Your clothes will not crack if you use Magnetic Starch. A pessimist is a person who doesn't expected the expected to happen. You Can Get AllenV Foot-l'iuo Free. Write to-day to Alloti S. Olmsted , Le Roy , N. Y. , for a FREE -.ample of Allen's Foot-Ease , a powder. It cures sweating , damp , swollen , aching feet. Makes new or tight shoes easy. A cer tain cur" for Chilblains and Frost-bites. At all druggists and shoe fores ; 25c. It is a remarkable fact that only sen sible persons ever agree with us. If you have not tried Mnjjnr-tic Starch try it now. You will then usf no other. No matter how changeable a man may be he- always wants a little more hange. Thirty minutes is all the time rc- mired to dye with PUTNAM FAZE- -ESS DYES. Some people seem to think tha they ave an inherent ability to mitfe mi - .akes. STOCK MEN ALL COIIIC. The fourth annual conventica of thr- National Live Stock Associaion : at Salt Lake promises to be the largest md most interesting gatheing of tockmen ever held in this -/matST 5alt ; Lake City is going to cov3r itself ivith glory in the manner in wiich the risitors will be entertained. 7he cci- fention wiil be held in the Assf > mbi lall of the Mormon church and a prand oncert will be tendered the dIe ates md visitors in the Tabernacle on the irst evening. The programme of tt entertainment committee ccnt inplatf vcnts for each evening of the conven- ion and after the convention adjourn ihere are excursions to the miu Isewhere. Colorado is going to send large delegation and the D nw-er & 5o Grande railroad will run agf'spccial rain , leaving Denver Sunday , ,1 fanuary , which will reach Salt La ike City he next day in time for the co : | nanttee neetings. Tile fare for the rotund trip vill be 518 from Denver , C oloracio iprings or Pueblo and one faii re from 'ther points in the state. Thr , 'se ' cons - enipiating going should engag- s > ep- ag car accommodations at once S. K. Hooper , general pa igenr , Denver , or see any Rio Grand0 icket agent. It will be a d ligh" nidwinter trip , and no stockr. ! interested in the industry i o.u not to a + iend the meeting.