I J McCook Tribune F M KIMMELL Publisher MCOOK NEBRASKA Content is something you think other people have when they havent A negro recently fell seventy feet In New York and lost neither his life nor bis religion Some men find if more difficult to get divorced from their illusions than from their wives Georgia has a town called Shako Rag whose citizens however are said to be no great shakes Viewed through the smoke of his hookah all battleships look much alike to Sultan Abdul Hamid Krupps gun works are now working overtime and peace Is still looking in vain for the proverbial balm Hollands new airship may cost but 10 but it is likely to cost somebody his life before wo hear the last of it A man drank nine quarts of whisky and died Even the temperance folks must admit that rum has some value A New York society man has been fined for swearing Still the tailor may have given him great provoca tion That Boston society leader who has taken up the blacksmiths trade is gc ing to get on the black list if he isnt careful A western expert on alcoholism claims that the reason so many men fail to walk straight is that they cant see straight The czars edict abolishing whip ping in his domains will interest the heir apparent when he arrives at the spanking age In Georgia the catfish have taken to swallowing rattlesnakes The water must be almost as bad up there as it is in Kentucky Squabs have advanced to 5 a dozen in New York but the old familiar political squabble may still be had uyop most any terms Russia claims that flour is contra band of war and will do all in her power to discourage the hot biscuif habit within her borders The reappearance of the kissing bug at the seaside resorts is taken to mean that the sea serpent story is not good form this year In Philadelphia an actress killed herself sooner than marry Death lasts a great deal longer though than the average theatrical marriage If King Edward were to meet the emperor of the Hottentots would he wear the uniform of a Hottentot adJ miral as a mark of courtesy Love is the greatest thing in the world but it has its drawbacks when the loved one pawns your jewels without notifying you in advance Marie Dressier the actress has adopted one of those incubator ba bies and her press agent will now have something substantial to work OIK The new Holland flying machine costs but 10 Glad to see these littld modern conveniences gradually geP ting down to within 999 of their actual value Asuit against Armour for 1200 000 is said to be a friendly action The average man would take it as un friendly to say the least to be sued lor a million An irreverent contemporary de scribes society as moving along to ward Saratoga Those poker chips and Saratoga chips will soon be moving along also The birth of the czars son is expect ed to weaken the influence of Pobyed onostseff That will mean something worth while if the boy never does any thing else of importance Croesus the multi millionaire of an tiquity is said by scholars never to have laughed Probably made the pie laugh out of the other side oi their mouths though The young Russian Alexis has al ready been made an honorary colonel but this will naturally cause his royal mother less anxiety about him than if he were serving in the navy News that a citizen of Rochestei has died at the age of 101 lacks com nleteess The public does riot know whether his length of years was due to tobacco and alcohol or to absti nence Once a boyhood friend visited Ros coe Conkling when a law student Meeting a supercilious reception when he asked Studying to be a lawyer Roscoe he retorted You ought tc study to be a supreme court justice He meant it for a sneer but thats the way every law student ought to study No one can blame Europeans for believing that all Americans are rich A Boston woman left a quart of dia monds in a London hotel and wired back to the proprietor to keep them until I come over againjext summer - JKi1 Ji THE EASTERN WAR THE FALL OF PORT ARTHUR SEEMS NOW IMMINENT REPORTS OF CORRESPONDENTS Japs Are Now Within Main Defenses and Their Guns Command Town Capture All Outlying Fortifications LONDON The Chronicles1 corre spondent with General Kuroki cab ling under date of August 24 via Fu san August 25 says The fall of Port Arthur is imminent The Japan ese are now within the main defenses and their guns command the town Desperate fighting occurs night and day and the losses on both sides are enormous The Russians are making curious counter attacks but the Japanese are clinging to the positions they have won at so great a cost LONDON The Daily Mails Kobe correspondent in a dispatch dated Saturday last says Following is the position of Port Arthur The Japanese have captured all the out lying fortifications but the Russians still hold the citadel on Ahteshan Golden Hill forts and the forts on Tigers Tail and Liaoti mountains The Japanese are in possession of the parade ground and barracks un der the Anteshan fort on the out skirts The fall of Port Arthur is believed to be imminent It Is believed that the garrison will make a desperate sortie before the end comes LIAO YANG The Russians retired from Anshanshan yesterday after a fight which began on the morning of August 2G and continued In a desult ory manner all day and night Arrangements for a battle had been completed by night time when the order to retire was given on account of the situation to the east The order was received with dis appointment by the troops The re tirement was made in an orderly man ner The plain between Anshanshan and Hai Cheng was covered with Ja panese troops who burned the bridge and shelled the railway station after the Russian retirement The Russian losses amount to 300 The Japanese are advancing with great rapidity The position at Kaofengshilr at 2 oclock this morning was unchanged CHRISTENS HEIR OF RUSSIA Elaborate Ceremonies Mark Services at Church of Peterhof Palace ST PETERSBURG A wave of re joicing and festivity swept over Rus sia with the rising of the sun on the christening day of the heir to the Russianthrone culminating when the te deum softly chanted in the beau tiful little church of Peterhof palace announced the ceremony was accom plished and the news was heralded to the world without by the crash of can non and the chiming of innumerable church bells Notwithstanding the momentous events pasing at the front the whole population turned gladly for the time being from the more seri ous considerations to participate in the day of glittering ceremonial and pageantry at Peterhof where the tiny successor of the great white czar re ceived at the hands of the church the name of Alexis Nicholaevitch from which he is destined to pass in course of time to the dignity and responsibil ity of autocrat of all the Russias THE MOON BECOMES SPOTTED Observations of Prof Pickering of Lowe Observatory CAMBRIDGE Mass A telegram has been received here from Prof W H Pickering who is at the Lowe ob servatory California tending to con firm an observation of a snot on the moon made by him last month He saw a hazy patch in the large lunar crater Plato which had not been de tected before It was again seen on August 2 and 3 It had then grown dark measured about two inches in diameter and resembled a smalll cra ter The object is said to coincide in position with a previously record ed cratorlet but is apparently larger Renewed scrutiny in the last few days reveals the continued existence of the feature which now measures three miles across Two other tiny crater lets and a dark spot on the floor of Plato not previously reported also are announced by Prof Pickering Money to Aid Irish Cause NEW YORK John E Redmond the Irish leader and those who came to America with him Captain A J C Donelan Patrick OBrien Connor OKelly and Mrs Redmond were tendered a reception Sunday night in Carnegie hall by the New York Muni cipal Council of the United Irish League of America Mr Redmond Captain Donelan Mr OBrien Mr OKelly and W Bourke Cockran spoke Ten thousand dollars was either subscribed or paid in cash to ward the Irish fund Cable to Alaska Completed SEATTLE Wash Amid the cheer ing of 300 men and women the shrieking of whistles and the play ing of the national anthem the final splicing of the Sitka Alaska govern ment cable was made Sunday in the harbor ten miles out of Seattle Ten minutes later Mjiyor Ballinger of Se attle cut the rope holding the joined ends of the wires aboard the United Spates shjp Burnside and with a splash the completed wire connecting the United States and Alaska fell to the bottom of Pugent Sound S THE CROP REPORT Abundant Rains Have Fallen in Corn Belt WASHINGTON The weekly crop report Issued by the weather bureau is as follows The drouth prevailing in portions of the central valleys in the previ ous week has been relieved by abun dant rains but drouth continues In central and western Tennessee and is beginning to be felt in the middle gulf states and over a considerable part of Texas The central and north ern Rocky mountain districts and the north Pacific coast region are also suffering from drouth the prevalence of forest fires being reported from Idaho and Montana The latter part of the week was too cool In the lake region and unseasonably low temper atures occurred in the northern Rocky mountain districts and upper Mississippi valley on the 21st and 22d but elsewhere east of the Rocky mountain district the temperature has been favorable The principal states have expert enced a week of good conditions abundant rains having fallen through out the corn belt except in portions of Ohio and Nebraska Corn has made satisfactory progress in most of the Missouri valley and is gener ally improved in the central Missis sippi and Ohio valleys although a considerable part of the crop in the Ohio valley has been injured beyond recover- In the middle Atlantic states and lower Missouri valley early corn is now partly matured Spring wheat harvest Is generally finished except in North Dakota and northern Minnesota where rust is continuing to cause great injury Rains in North Dakota in the latter part of the week interrupted harvest ing Harvesting is also nearly fin ished on the north Pacific coast Reports indicate a general scarcity of apples in the greater part of the middle Atlantic states and central valleys but in New England New York and the lake region the outlook is more favorable a good crop being promised in the two last mentioned sections The reports respecting potatoes in dicate a good crop is generally prom ised in the more prominent potato producing states Drouth has im paired the outlook in portions of the Ohio valley however and rot and blight are increasing in Pennsylvania Throughout the central valleys and middle Atlantic states the soil is in fine condition for fall plowing which work is in general progress and well advanced in some places JAPS GETTING VERY CLOSE Chinese Say Assailants Have Reached the Home of General Stoesscl CHE to Chinese ad vies brought here from Port Arthur by a junk the Japanese were hotly pressing the Russian center along the railway and the Russian right in the vicinity of Golden Hill The Chinese declare that the Japanese occupied Taipingtse and penetrated along the railway to General Stoessels resi dence on August 21 As this report would indicate that Port Arthur had all but fallen the Japanese expert attached to the local consulate received the information with great reserve The information is accepted however as a confirma tion of previous reports that the Rus sians have been driven from Itshan and that the Japanese are very close to the southern forts and the eastern defenses The local Japanese under the lead ership of their consul are subscribing money and preparing to celebrate the expected fall of the fortress LETTER NEARLY FINISHED President Roosevelt Putting on Fin ishing Touches OYSTER BAY L I During the next three or four days President Roosevelt will put the finishing touches on his letter of acceptance It probably will be placed in the hands of a printer on September 10 The letter will contain approximately 12000 words The date of its publi cation has not been determined de finitely but very likely it will be on Monday September 12 The president has not received the representations said to have been for warded to him by the attorneys for the western federation of miners urg ing action by the national government in the matter of deportation of citi zens from the disturbed district in Colorado The department of com merce and labor through Carroll D Wright commissioner of labor and his agent has made an exhaustive inquiry into the Colorado labor situa tion and is keeping in constant touch with it The president is thus en abled to have practically first hand information on the subject As the matter stands now it is understood to be entirely improbable that any action will be taken by the national government Officeholders WASHINGTON In view of the approaching election the civil service cemmission has addressed a letter to the heads of all government depart- ments and bureaus calling their at tention to viointions of the civil ser vice law which have occurred in the last political campaigns and inclosing a circular containing a warning against the demanding or paying of political assessments and partisan activity of officeholders Prosecu tion and punishment will follow vio lations of the law SIRSKE TO GO ON THE CONFERENCE TO SETTLE MATTERS AVAILS NOTHING NO CONCESSIONS FORTHCOMING Strikers Have Not Changed Their Po sition and the Packers Prepared to Offer Only Such Terms as They Have Offered Before CHICAGO Conferences of the committee appointed earlier in the week to attempt a settlement of the stock yards strike with the parties to the dispute resulted in nothing There is no present prospect that they will result in anything in the future and the chances of an agreement be tween the packers and strikers appear very meager The strike leaders appeared before the committee and stated their side of the case They did not suggest to the aldenmanic committee that it make any overtures to the packers but simply gave their view of the sit uation Representatives of the packers then appeared before the committee After a session that lasted three hours Mayor Harrison said The packers have said just what they have said before that they are running their plants and have nothing to arbitrate and that there is no rea son why they should confer with the men We heard a review of the entire strike trouble and the packers say that in every city except Chicago and Omaha the strike is over and they as sert that with 70 per cent as many men as they employed in Chicago be fore the strike they are now turning out 82 per cent of the normal output Labor leaders tonight announced that in all probability the butchers strike would be settled peaceably be fore next Wednesday They declined to explain the cause of their belief but were positive in their statements that the strike would not be called off President Donnelly of the butchers has called all the members of the butchers executive board to meet in Chicago next Wednesday Union leaders and packers con ferred with the committee appointed by the city council to seek terms of settlement of the stock yards strike Separate sessions were arranged President Donnelly of the butcher workmen Matthew Carr of the allied trades conference board and Organ izer John J Fitzpatrick of the Chi cago Federation of Labor were se lected to represent the unions Presi dent Donnelly was hopeful It is a game of checkers said Mayor Harrison at the end of an hours conference with President Don nellys committee The strikers have not changed their position said the mayor and the meeting resulted only in the al dermen being given a full explanation of what that position is President Donnelly told of the history of the original strike the agreement to re sume work and the strikers side of the renewal of the strike WANTS AMERICA TO LEAD WAY London Newspaper Thinks United States Should Act at Shanghai LONDON The afternoon papers here take it for granted that if in tervention is necessary at Shanghai the powers will act together in up holding the neutrality of China equal ly against both belligerents The Westminster Gazette says If the American government will lead the way in this matter it will be doing a service to all the governments for it is high time that the neutral powers come to an understanding about the meaning and limits of Chinas neutral ity so as to be able to act together and arrive at a solution of the com plicated situation The Pall Mall Gazette considers that the powers should follow at Shanghai the correct precedent be set by Germany at Kiao Chou and insist on the obedience of the Russians to the order to leave or disarm without delay and thus settle the whole ques tion of neutral Chinese ports for the remainder of ie war MICKEY WILL GO TO SEATTLE Nebraska Executive Will See New Battleship Christened LINCOLN Neb Governor Mickey and twenty five invited guests will go to Seattle to witness the christening and launching of the battleship Ne braska A Nebraska girl probably Miss Maria Mickey will toss the bot tle of champagne against the hull of the vessel However the governor may object to any member of his fam ily handling intoxicating liquor and in that event the honor will fall to some one else The governor has no tified the shipbuilding authorities that he will be present Those who will accumpany him will be state officials and politicians Japanese Minister Visits Adee WASHINGTON Mr Takahira the Japanese minister called upon Act ing Secretary of State Adee to talk of the settlement of the questions connected with the presence of the two Russian warships in the harbor of Shanghai The minister expressed gratification at the outcome of the ne gotiations in the agreement to dis arm the vessels and lay them up dur ing the war but regarded it as es sential that the completeness of dis armament of the ships be established I to Japans satisfaction NdMEWS IN NEBRASKA MUST BE GOOD PAPER The Public Intends to Be Protected by the State Printing Board LINCOLN Hereafter all paper pub lished by the atate printing board will have to come up to specifications or it will be rejected Secretary Frazier of the board has just received from the manufacturers a paper scale a Mullln tester and a caliper by the aid of which any paper can be ac curately tested The Mullin tester is an involved contrivance operated by compressed air for the purpose of de termining the breaking strength of paper while with the calipers the gauge of the paper is easily deter mined and the weight completes the test It is the purpose of the printing board to make it impossible for bid ders to offer inferior substitutes in stead of the papers called for in the contracts let The practice has pre vailed to a considerable extent and often to the loss of the state The eventual result of the adoption of the testing apparatus will be to do away with the purchase of paper according to the name in the water mark and the selection of standard grades ac cording to the grade weight per ream and the breaking strength That will greatly simplify the business of pur chasing paper for the use of the many departments of the state gov ernment When all paper is bought according to the quality and weight the compe tition in furnishing such supplies to the state will be open to the world tinder the present system where the state officers make requisition for dif ferent brands the Nebraska dealers who have the sale or such brands en joy a practical monopoly of the bid ding for the supply of that depart ment PLUCKY GIRL SAVES LIFE Does Not Lose Presence of Mind When Gasoline Explodes LINCOLN Cool and alert Miss Lena Miller saved her life and the farm of her father near Denton A gasoline can exploded her clothing caught fire and the flames spread throughout the house Beating out the flames on her clothing she smoth ered the fire with blankets and saved the building She was painfully burned but her face will not be disfigured She is the 19-year-old daughter of County As sessor Miller The cries of Miss Miller alarmed her brother He hastened upstairs and found her battling with the flames Seizing a pail of water he came to her assistance but found that the moisture had caused the fire to spread so he seized blankets and as sisted her To Improve Platte River FREMONT A plan to improve ihe Platte river by turning the current which now washes against the earth bank west of this city over into the channel running south of the islands is being considered and will likely be brought before the county board Bind Over Alleged Horse Thief COLUMBUS Wj F Carter who is charged with stealing a horse and buggy from George Winslow a livery man here had his preliminary ex amination before Judge OBrien and was bound over to the district court Killed by Kick of a Horse LEIGH Miss Maud Fry the 17-year-old daughter of Jonas Fry a prominent and well-to-do farmer liv ing eleven miles southeast of this city vas kicked- by a horse and was almost instantly killed WOMAN BLOWS HER HEAD OFF Mrs Cole of Hardy Suicides by the Shotgun HARDY Mrs Wallie Cole who had been in poor health for some time committed suicide at the family home three and a half miles northwest of this place She loaded and cocked both barrels of a shotgun put the muzzle under her chin and discharged one barrel The right side of her face and the top of her head were blown off It is thought she Avas de ranged The corpse was discovered lying on the kitchen floor by two little girls who notified the men in the field Mrs Cole was the mother of a daugh ter 3 years old and of a baby 2 months old Accident at the Races BEATRICE Isaac Haddan an old resident of Southern Gage county was run over by a horse and probably fatally injured at Barneston A horse race was in progress when one of the animals jumped the track and landed among the spectators Look for Big Attendance State Superintendent Fowler has received a letter from Principal Crab tree of the Peru normal stating that there are prospects of an increased attendance as compared with last year He states that he is receiving more inquiries from high school graduates and experienced teachers than usual Some of the teachers are already coming in The work on the new chapel building is making good progress according to Mr Crabtree The walls are up to the first or chapel floor while the iron work is in place THE STATE AT LARGE The Burt county reunion has been called off The elevator of the Albion Milling company was destroyed by fire Fremonts new cannery is now in operation with one hundred men em ployed - Arrangements are about completed for the holding of a harvest jubilee and agricultural exhibit in Holdrege from September 5 to 10 Reuben Nance and Henry Frerlchs two farmers fought on the streets at Beatrice and the latter was badly cut about the face and head William Gumm of Julian went to sleep in the depot at Nebraska City and when he awoke found that fivo dollars had been taken from his pocket The grain stacks on the farm of John Hickey west of West Point caught lire from causes unknown and caused a loss of 300 partly covered by insurance August Bauman an aged farmer living three miles northeast of Sny der was gored to death by a vicious bull His dead body was found by a member of his family who went in search of him Burglars entered the Nebraska State bank at Milford and blew the outer door off the safe but got no money They were evidently fright ened away because the inner doors were not disturbed Word reached Leigh of the killing of Miss Maude Fry a young woman living with her parents twelve miles southeast of town She was kicked by a horse the blow striking her in the region of the heart Katherine Gamble of Kewanee 111 who is visiting with the family of Superintendent E L Rouse in Plattsmouth had the misfortune to slip and fall sustaining a painful fracture of her left arm Claude Morton youngest son of H H Morton lately deceased was struck and instantly killed by light- ning at the Spade ranch near Chad ron He leaves a mother and brother Harry who live in Chadron The preliminary hearing of Dr D L Meehan was concluded last week in Seward The charge was statu tory assault on the person of Bessie Corcoran an inmate of his home The accused was bound over to the No vember term of district court in the sum of 2000 Herman Nolte a farmer living near Roseiand was brought before County Judge Dungan in Hastings on the charge of assault and battery The charges were filed by his wife for alleged cruelty and beating their 15-year-old daughter He was given three months in the county jail Thomas Andrews and son owners of a large herd of high grade thor oughbred shorthorn cattle of their own breeding on their ranch three miles southeast of Cambridge left with sixteen head of their prize win ners to be on exhibition in Iowa Mis souri and Nebraska After attend ing the Iowa state fair at Des Moines they will return to Lincoln to the Ne braska state fair and from there their fine stock will go to the worlds fair at St Louis A council of ministers and dele gates from the several Baptist churches of Custer county after a long hearing has decided to recom mend that the ministerial ordinance of Rev S P Morris of this city be revoked and that he be excluded from the Baptist church This is the outcome or a sensational case re sulting in the divorce suit of Rev Mr Morris from his wife and the al leged alienation of the wifely affec tions of Mrs Day one ofhis parish oners The corner stone of the new Methodist church at McCook was laid on the 25th Frank Rhoades who was shot while picking corn for Carl Engberg west of Fremont died from his wound Arthur Canaga aged 17 em ployed by Vasholitz the butcher vol untarily went to the county jail and cleared the mystery of the shooting of Rhoades He said he and another lad were en route to the slaughter house with a 44 caliber rifle to be used in slaughtering He fired at a sign on a telegraph pole using it as a target He believes that it was this shot that killed Rhoades Last week Frank lams the well known horseman and importer ar rived in St Paul with his fifteenth annual importation of stallions direct from France The shipment contains about eighty head of fine Belgians and Percherons 2 and 3 years old and ranging in weight from 1800 to 2400 pounds At the disembarkation in New York the horses were placed on a special express train chartered by Mr lams from the Wells Fargo Ex press company at a cost of 2500 and brought through in quick time Miss Katie Bluechel a popular young woman of West Point has be come mentally unbalanced and was taken before the insanity commission ers for examination She was ad judged insane and taken to the hos pital at Lincoln Land Commissioner Follmer and Deputy Commissioner Eaton have recommended that the public lands not entered under the Kinkaid act be leased at not less than 3 cents an acre and as much more as the land will bring on the open market by competitive bidding b l M i vvJ i 1 r r i 9 I h C rj tt J Al r n i 1 If ii I