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CALIFORNIA Best Personally Conducted Tourist Excursions —TO- fan Francisco, Los Angeles Leave KANSAS CITY EVERY FRIDAY VIA‘ THE Great ROCK ISLAND and Scenic Line. Tourist car via southern route leaves | unconscious in the y Kansas City every Wednesday. An economical, pleasant and comfortable way of reaching the Pacific Coast in the Latest Improved Pullman Tourist Cars. Write for information and literature to J, A. Stewart, G. S. W. P. A. Kansas City, Mo. KANSAS ROUTE eet na) Farmer Fools Robbers. | Mattoon, Ill., Nov. 1.—James Reed | @prominent young farmer living near Dana, Edgar county, while at | work in a field plowing yesterday af- | ternoon, was approached bya stran- ger who said Reed was wanted at the house on business. Reed suspected trickery, and dropped behind on a pretext, and placed his gold watch and a large sum of money in a fence corner. When his yard was reached the stranger drew a revolver. Reed|, knocked the weapon outof his hands and felled the assailant with his fist, when an unseen confederate sand- bagged Reed and afterward chloro- formed him. The rebbers sought everywhere in vain for the mis-ing valuables. Reed's wife found him ard upon her ree turn from a shopping trip te vaa. The robbers were traced to Clirisiuan, but escaped, sulphuric acid to the same dispatch, declares that the mixture of quicklime and sul- > and that the result of theapplication of such substances to Czolgusz’s body will result in preserving it as effect- ually as if it were placed iu alcohol. Let the GOLD DUST twins do your work.* Czolgosz Was Well Preserved. A special dispateh to the Posi-Dis- patch from New York states thet the efforts of Warden Meade of the Au- burn Penitentiary to destroy Czol- gosz’s body may have resulted in its preservation Warden Meade, according to the seu saree, Mesa ‘THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPARY, Chleugo. dispatch, covered the body of the as- sassin with quick lime and then pour- ed over it a carboy (150 pounds) of 4 Newark, N. J., chemist, according | ., phurie acid produces plaster of paris | ;| demand at firm prices. !] tractors are taking all the desirable ani- MARKET REPORTS. —teniin Kansas Nov. 264; calve The market was Representative sales TEXAS AND UNDIAN STEERS (Quarantine Division.) Ave. Price.|No. Ave. Price 0 $3.00 1.. - 890 $3.00 42 43 6 3.0 0 XAS AND INDIAN COWS. (Qurantine Division.) 66 2 2 4,890, lower. 2.—Cattle—Receipts, dull b 3 i... Hogs—Receipts, mostly 5 cents The market was Representative 26 222 $5.90 | 6. 5.87%] 88... 5.67%) 17... $5.90 5.85 5.65 5.60 5.25 4.95 was 12. Sheep—Receipts, 2,349. The market steady. Following are the sales: - 12 315 | 7 Horses and Mules—Receipts were small this week. Prices remain practically steady, but there was «ore spirit to the trade in horses. Mules sell slowly at quotations except warrior and miner classes, for which there has been a strong British army con- mals as fast as they arrive. The south- ern demand is slow for this season of the year, Prices range as follows for sound, set - viceable horses, 4 to 7 years old, Extra good kinds are worth more and extry common kinds are worth less: Horses: Drafts, good Drafts, 1,500 to , good to choice.. common to fair medium , good to fa . Southerners, common Southerners, good to extra, 45,00@ 65.00 Plugs 5.000 15.00 Prices range as follows for sound, ser- viceable mules, 4 to 8 years old, in good hair and flesh and well broken: $ 65.006 105.0 1,700 Ibs. extra 115.00@150.00 + T.O0@15.00 40.00@ 75.00 45.0000 75.00 75.00 up 20,004 35.00 LeFT NUTE in LOVE S?iUry¥. Chieagoe Man Causes Trouble by Not Using the Long-Established Family Post Office Park the his called L. D. Kidd, avenue, Ch family post offi in notifyi {wife that he had been suddenly jout of the city, and, in consequence, dered. The family post office is a jtea urn. Mr. Kidd left the note tell- ing of his departure in a book which she had been reading, with the result that as she was too excited to con- tinue the love story she didn’t learn the true state of affairs until the other day. Mr. Kidd and his partner went home earlier than usual Monday aft- ernoon, When Mr. Kidd reached his house a telegram was waiting for him, calling him to a brother in Iowa. Mrs, Kidd was out calling, and, after leaving a note telling her that he was going to Lowa, the husband went downtown. He put another note in Mr. Rose's desk in their oftice explain- ing matters to him. Mrs. Kidd did not find the note, and she hastened years Fred to the office, and eventually wound up the search for her husband at the home of Mr. Rose in Englewood. - 95 260 Mrs. Kidd thought he had been mur- | | amma gir | | atpenter & Shater Manufacturing Co. We Pay Casu For Poultry» Eggs» Hides, | Furs and Wool. Get our Prices. We Solicit your Patronage. Carpenter & Shafer Mifig.Co. Found Long Lost Child. St. Joseph, Mo., Nov, 1.—The re union of a father with his daughter after long separation was effected queerly here yesterday. For 20 Schwartzenberger of Louisville, Ky., has been searching: for two daughters who had been left Not finding him there she collapsed, | with strangers soon after the death and Mr. Rose reported the strange | of his wife in St. Louis. disappearance to the police, and then continued the search until five o'clock the next morning. When he went to his office a few hours later He was poor and dispirited, but left the children, as he supposed, in good hands, with: and | the promise that he would call for opened his desk he found the note of |them as soon as he could secure tw the partner about whom all sorts of |home violent deaths had been surmised ly- ing before him. Mrs. Kidd was noti- He went to Kansas and uc cumulated a fortune. He made sev— Mules 13% to M4 hands, fat, broken’ 30.00@ 40.00 14 to 14% hands, fat, good hair 35,00@ 45.00 My to 15 hands, fat. 40,00@ 70.00 fied at the home of Mr. Rose, and, her ]eral trips to St. Louis, but was never mind being at rest, she went home /able to locate his missing ehildren to her novel and found the note for} He advertised, but this also proved CITY “A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR- WEEKLY TMES Fifty-Two Issues (wenty-Five Vents, Kansas City Times Co., Kansas Crry, Mo, Joun Srpastian, G. P. A., Chicago, —_— — The Best is the Cheapest. Not how cheap but how good is the question. The Twice-a Week Republic is not as cheap as some so-called newspa- pers, but it is ascheap asitis possible to sell a first-class newspaper. It prints all the news that is worth printing. If you read it all the year round you are posted on all the im- portant and interesting affairs of the world. It is the best and most reli- able newspaper that money and brains can produce—and those should be the distinguishing traits of a news- paper that is designed to be read by GAIN.” MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES ‘SAPOLIO Moderation & human consti- tution is very much like a fire, and the way many peo- ple try to take care of their health may be compared to the way a careless kitchen girl looks after the cooking | stove. One minute it is raging red-hot, and then suddenly, first thing you know, the fire is out. People are sometimes led to believe that a medicine which has a sudden, tremen- dous effect must be truly wonderful. They forget that it may be merely a tremendous “draught” which imparts a temparary false effect of brightness and ‘‘fire” to the system, but suddenly drops it lower than before. tt fal! There is no sudden, overwhelming effect about Ripans Tabules. Some people think the prescribed dose is too slow, and double it to get a quicker effect. But nature her- self is slow, moderate and regular in accomplishing her best work. The Tabules relieve acute headaches, indigestion and nervous depression almost instantly. But their effect all members of the family. Subscription price, $layear. An newsdealer newspaper or postmaster will receive your subscription or you may mail it direct to Tue Repus.ic, St. Louis, Mo. | 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trave Mai:. Desicns Copvricuts ¢. sketch and description n: our opinion free whether : - table. Communi: on Pate: cy for securiny ate h and Fa 0» Iau £Cc aoroneden NeW YORK ably ent Tece 15 to 15% hands, fat... «+ 10.00@ 85.00 15%-16 hands, fat with quality 75.009166.00 16 to 16% hands, extra 115, 0600138.00 Chicago Live Steck. Chieago, Nov. 2.—Cattle—Receipte, 0. Good to prime steers, $6.00@6.9; stockers and feeders, $2.00@4.25; Texas fed steers, $3.00€1 4.10. Hogs—Reeeipts, 61,000. Mixed and butehers, $5.7046.05; bulk of sales, $5.70@ 5.87%. Sheep—Reeeipts, 1,600. wethers, $3.50@4.25; western sheep, $8.00@ 3.75; native lambs, $2.50004.%. St. Louis Live St St. Louis, Nov. 2.—Cattle—Receipts, 500. Beef steers, $4.306,70; stockers and feed- ers, $2.00004.00; Texas steers, $2.50€)4.90. Rei J Pigs and lights, 16.15, ative muttons, 405.00. he § i $3.0003.8; lambs, Omaha Live Stock, Omaha, Nov. 2—Cattle—Receipts, 500. Native beef steers, 6.40; western steers, $3.7 $3.0@4.40; stockers and feeders, § Hogs—Receipts, bulk of sales, $5.70@ Sheep—Receipt stock sheep, $2.804 $5.70@5.90; Common and jambs, $3,500.60. Kan 2.—Wheat—Sales by 66067. psa 70C. y 56. timothy, $8.00@ alfal $9.00@ Linseed meal, Chicago Cash Grain, ved, 71% hard win- Good to choice her. Mr. Rose will return to Chicago next week, RICH GOLD FIND. Two Men Claim to H uable Discovery Se North of Tucson, Made a Val- ty Mil Charles R. and Porter W. Flen have recently returned to ‘Tucson, Ariz., from the Galluro mount where they report a remarkable discovery, The rich find 70 miles north of ‘Tueson, the vein of ore, according to the Klem- ings, is 200 feet wide and 6,000 feet in length, A eanyon cut the vein for 200 feet, expo on either side the the cut. The Fleming that from the bottom th canyon to the surface the outerop pings of ore will run from five to one thousand dollars to the ton, They estimate the amount of gold in sight at the enormous sum of The Tucson Star, of that plac au- thority for the th the story told by the Fleming brothers is authentic, and that it has verified the If the tind the report prospectors of ever vol yold located and Urrough he ore eth of entire lore sert of $7,000,000, statement facts as above turns out as rich brought by -the seems to indicate the gold made in Arizona, TESTING ELECTRIC MOTORS. ven. its two it will be one patest discoveries Great Possibilities May Be Renlized from EB ments to Be Made in Karope, “If an elec rent from ove pon w mary s ly track, cnt ordit . . iJ * Ripans Tabules act in accordance with nature, and WANTID:—A caso of bad health that RIP ANS wil pain and proleng lite, One gives relief. Note tiv R the supstt ite, REP ANS, 10 for mit, dat led to any address not benefit. They banish P-A-N Sou the package and drug store, Ten for 6 cents, for i} i os ce samples and ene thousand testimonials will be wail warded to the Ripans Chemical Co., No. |v Spruce St., New York. Onr fee returned if we fail. Any one sending sketch and description of invention will promptly receive our-opini cerning the patent- ability of same. “How to Obtain a Patent” sent upon request. Patents secured through us advertised for sale at our expense. Patent taken out through us receive special notice, without charge, in Tae Parent Reconp, an illustrated and widely circulated journal, consulted Manufacturers and Invcsivrs. Send for sample copy Fit{i&. Address, VICTOR J." EVANS & CO., (Patent Attorneys,) WASHINCTON, D. C. Evans Building, McFARI,.AND BROS. Yarness aod ~ Saddlery Buooies and Surties, ‘Road Wagons and Spring Wagons Wage SGuae and see ux; get our prices atid Flarness $10 to $30; Single Turnesa $7 to $25; Second-hand Harness $3 to 2 , uip_Vebiu! SAR deFAKLANG GKOS., Butler, Mo. you qill surely trade With x 15 ; Saddles, all styles Wheat yey May Tt December, mber, 36e; Futures cerber, 7 be Oats B6%Le; ST ye; iy M St. Louis Cash Grain, St cash, 2 white, 49%c. Kansas City Produce. Nov. Kansas City, Eggs—Fresh, 170 Butter—Creamery, extra fancy separa- tor, 19c; firsts, 16'e; dairy, fancy, 16; packing stock, 12c; cheese, northern full cream, i0c; Missouri and Kansas full cream, 1c. 5 Poultry—Hens, each; springs, 6% 6c; turkey her over 7 pound pigeons, $1.00 do: poultry le aby Potatoes— lots; car lots, bushel Fruit—Apples, $1.00@3.50 cranberries, $6.00 per Pears, $2.0002 Vegetable: navy beans, per ewt. Onions, Se@$1.15 bushel in job lots. live, 6e; Ib.; roosters, ducks. young, young, weighing young gobblers, 5¢; Choice scalded dressed these prices. °@$1.10 per bushel in small Me; sweets, TAM per ec per barrel; Rich Man Must Hang. Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 2.-The su- preme court has decided that Joseph Keith must be hanged in the state prison at Michigan City for killing Nora Keith, a young woman, at Elber- feld, Ind. Keith was a rich man. He hid the girl's body in a well and Inter threw it into a creek. Smatipox Killing Nebraska Indians. Souix City, Ia., Nov. 2.—Smallpox is decimating Indians on the Winnebago reservation in Nebraska. The medical force to care for them is inadequate. Every town within 20 miles of the res- ervation has armed guards to keep away every Indian. From One Whale. 50 Barrels of O11. San Francisco, Nov. 2.—The whaling bark California has arrived from the Okhotsk sea with 1,050 barrels of sperm oil, 50 barrels of whale oil and 295 pounds of bone, resulting frem a catch of 38 sperm and one right whale, Secretary Long will ask congress for mon¢y to build 40 more naval vessels of alt from battleships to tugboats. unsuccessful, Yesterday Mrs, N. M. Dearborn, of Denver, Colo., while visiting at ther home of A. M. Brown, aecidentally heard the story of a queer old Ger man who always talked about the- loss of his children, With the assist ance of friends she learned that the _Jold gentleman was to be at the First National Bank on animportant busi- hess matter. She was waiting when he arrived The inherited features of her dead mother caused Schwartzenberger to s his long-lost He at once inquired about the recognize her at once child. younger daughter, and was greatly distressed upon being told of her death, which occurred in’ Denver te year ago, Setting a Prisoner bres Aman with rheumatisms is sa pr soner, His fetters are none the less galling because they are invisible To him Perry Davis’ Painkiller comer as aliberator. Rubbed well into the swollen, stiffened joints it not merely . drives away the pain, it makes the muscles pliable so that the prisoner becomes a free man, There is but one Painkiller, Perry Davis. 50 ets, Case of Plague at Glasgow. Glasgow, Nov, t.—Another cas of the bubonic plague has been cer -| tified to here. Large numbers of peo ple who have been in contact witl the plague cases or suspects have or 60 ps 0 to 1 iwenti { travel between | \merion yorevolu interesting in.a report partment from (« 2at Ber receives tiric trains which a the-mitttarsy tt 1. Every vauration for nrinaed, we interest by the countries, and struction m: to awalt the ments. railway éon- o have paused ese experi-+ y be resil Berlin Servants May Strike. derlin is threatened wi domesti Hitherto Germany been comparatively free of the dearth of servants which has troubled United States and England; now it is the turn of the Fatherland. The wom- en domesties of the capital show a tend- eney toward social democracy. - cently they have been meeting in pub- lic assemblies to denounce the existin system of hiring, to claim higher wages (a cook can now be had for five dol- jars a month.) more free time and a larger liberty in the way of social in- tercourse with friends of the opposite sex. The socialists are doing a brisk business with the disconnected Berlin domestics and those who are follow- one | reatmeht | Deen isolated. The foreign consute re refusing to ‘unit ae \ barmaid who was recently trans _[ierred from the Central Station TH tel (whieh belougs to the Caledoniat railway) to the station at Airdrie, is pronounced to be suffering from th plague. S100 Reward $100 dhic-to cure in alits stages, Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh he} only positive cure known to the medica _traternity, C. rh being aconstitution requires, a constitutiona | Hall’s Catarrh Cure is take nternally, acting directly ‘upon th blood and mucous surtaces of the tem, thereby destroying the foun: ot the disease, and giving the p; strength by building up the constitu and assisting nature in doing 1 disease, strike of |The proprietors haye so much faith ir» has | its curative powers, that they offer On Hundred Dollars for any case that i* the tails to-cure. Send tor list of testimon ials. Address F. J.. Curney & Co Toledo, O. g@proold by druegis = 75c Ashland, Ky., Nov. 1.—John Mur phy, 64 years old, a well digger, wass caught by a cave-in. For hours men worked to get him out. A rope was placed under his arms and 25 men tried to pull him out, but legs were so firmly wedged that body was pulled in two. his Does It Pay to Buy Cheap? A cheap remedy for coughs ane} ing the movement with attention pre- coldsis all right, but you want some- dict a revolt next spring. Pays Dearly for His Enmity. thing that will relieve and cure the> more severe and dangerous results o¥ throat and lung troubles. What Three thousand and four hundred shal] youdo? Go to a warmer an@ dollars is a tall figure for a sheep to more regular climate? cost, but such is the amount a farmer Yes, if possi ble; if not possible for you, then irs near Paris was recently made to Pay. githercasetake the onLY remedy thas Three years ago a lamb escaped from its owner's fields and mixed with the flock of a rich neighbor with whom its owner was not on the best of terms. The neighbor, instead of returning the lamb, kept it and hadit branded with his initials. A lawsuit followed in the cantonal court, then the tribunal of common pleas, the court of appeals and finally in the court of cassation. The real owner won the case, the appellant - paying the casts to ly $3,400. has been introduced in. all ¢ countrieswith success in severe throat and lung troubles, ‘‘Boschee’s Ger- man Syrup.’ It not only heals and stimulates the tissues to destroy the | germ disease, but allays inflamma- tion, causes easy expectoration, gives a good uight’s rest, and curess the patient. Try one- bottle. Re- commended many years by all drug- ists in the world. Get Green’s Prize Imanac.—H. L. Tucker, Druggist. . ~