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2 BR Bees e ND INDIAN STE (Quarantine Division.» AS ND IND (Qu penton Division. 426 4. 8TOCK COWS — eceipts, ranged 15 to 25 cents lower. tive sales: Price!No. se & 6s 6% Re pre: wenta- Price!No, Av. Sheep— Receipts, steady to ong. range from BO to ) to $3.25; culls, $18 to 81 Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Oct. 21.—Cattle—Rece' @. Good to prime stockers and feedrs, fed steers, $8.0@ $8.7546.00. Hogs—Receipts, 3,000. Mixed ¢ 33; k of sal 218, $6,700 $7.25 5 . Sheep—Rei GOON TH CHATS ‘rn sheep, 8.0@ wethers, $.5003.8 3.75; native lambs, 8. St. Louis Live Stock, St. Louis, Oct. 21.—Cattle—Receipts, 11,- ° rs and lights, $3.604 4.00; lambs, i. ers and feeders, 5. Hogs—Receip' Heavy, $6.75@6.90; builk of sales, 0778.85. Sheep—Receipts, 19.100. 4.00; lambs, $3.5005.00, Yearlings, 8.0@ St. Joseph Live Stock, St. Joseph. Oct. 21.—Cattle—Receipts, 3.0: top. $6.75. Hogs—Re 8, 9,300; top, $7; bulk of sales, $6.80 Sheep— Receipts, 1.9. Kansans City Grain. Kansas City, Oct. 21—Wheat—Sales by White Corn—No. 2, 58'%4 S8c. Mixed OatsNo. 2, G22. WMYA3I1e; No. 3, 30% 8.008 timothy, alfalfa, $6.00 10.00; 10.50; straw, 6.0 Cotton Seed Meal—826.50 ton tn car lots; Mnseed meal, $27.0 ton in car lots. Chicago Cash Gratn. Chicago. Oct. hard win- Ue; No. » northern ®. Corn—No. Oats—No. 2, we; s “December, May Tec. Corn—October, yvember, 5c; December, Hc; M July, 42\%c. Oats—October, 31\c; old, tec; May, 32c. St. Louis Cash Grain, St. Louis, Oct. 21.—Wh Kansas City Produce. Kansas City, .‘\t. 17Me doz. Butter—Creamery, extra fancy, separa- tor, 2c; firsts, 2c; dairy, fancy, 0c; packing stock, 15'4c; cheese, northern full cream, 11%@12c; Missouri and Kansas full cream, 11@12\%c. Poultry—Springs, 8%c Ib.; hens, live, See pound; roosters, 20c¢ each: ducks, 7%c; young, 9c; geese, 6c; turkey hens, 9 young gobblers, 10c; pigeons, 75c dozen; squabs, $1.00@2.00 doz. Choice, scalded, dressed poultry lc above these prices, Potatoes—Choice to fancy. ner bushel, small lots, #@55c; sweets, T5c@$1.00 bu. Frujt—Apples, per barrel, 03.003 oranges, $4.25@450 per box; lemons, $350 per box; peaches, per four- Wasket crate, 7%5@W%e; plums, per crate, %cG$1.00; cranberries, $6.75@7.000 barrel; eastern pears, $1.7572.00 per crate. Vegetables—Cabbage, WcG$) M per cwt.; onions, 50@7se bushel in job lots; cu- cumbers, per bushel, 40@50c; tomatoes, per bushel, 75c@$1.0; turnips, 25@30c bu.; . beans, green and wax, per bushe) box, ¥ $1.0081.25. : Satled 26 Miles in Air. London, Oct. 21.—Stanley Spencer, the aeronaut who recently made a ~~ guccessful trip over~London, traveled "4 25 miles yesterday in his airship. He | rose from Blackpool, but finding the J -northwest breeze too strang to make 21—Eggs--Fresh, southwesterly direction and ‘f — \ahded in the open country. t fe Union Labor Meyor. ros le 21—Union labor men ° to enter the local po- Bas and will endeavor to PUVY VUR Sales Japanese Party Here to Learn of Development of Machinery. Leader of the Party Says in Shipyard at Ke . Sieam Has Been Discard- ed and Blectric, Hydraulic or Pueumatic Substitated, A party of Japanese are in this country for the purpose of studying American methods of —ship-building and the latest developmeuts in hye £ draulie and pneumatic wachinery, The party consists of K. Matsukata, who is in charge of the journey and is proprietor of the Kawaski ship-build- ing yards in Kobe; M. Yamuroto, one of the company’s engineers, and M, Matsura. “In our Matsura; “* yards at Kobe,” said Mr. we have done away with All our pneumatic or Yamuroto is making tion of the develop- steam machinery entirely. power is either eleetr hydraulic, Mr. a special investi ment of pneumatie power in America | and will remain here for several months, 1 expect to leave for Europe early next month, do-boat which we are especially Our firm has already constructed a number of these boats for the Japan: | ese government and ‘have others near ing completion, None of them m less speed than 28 knots and we have reached as high as 31, “All talk of difficulty between this country and ours over Marcos island is nonsense, cant for that, Our countrymen have the greatest admiration for the United States and its acquisition of the Phil- ippines is considered a boon to the entire orient,” CHARMS KING GEORGE, buildin in Kes Miss Sybil § Jerson’s Voice Ene raptures the Ruler of the Little Greek Nation, “King George of ¢ heard the only singer who really “thrilled his soul,” his own way of putting it. Gen, Porter, the United States am- bassador to France, was walking one day with Miss Sybil Sanderson, the opera prima donna at Aix les Bains Varis, During the promenade they met the king and the ambassador in- troduced the American singer to the monarch, “Lhe three walked back to the Hotel Splendide, the king being greatly interested in Miss Sanderson's conversation, While they were talk- ing at the hotel it began to rain hard, The king remarked that it) was a gloomy day and suggested that it would be charitable for the singer to help while away the afternoon, Sanderson sang. Both the king and the ambassador were delighted and ‘the sovereign of Greece expressed his admiration in such glowi id frank terms that the singer w: embar- rassed. Afterward the king invited Miss Sanderson to dine with him, MOUSE PRESERVE PLANNED. ever according to Miss Grand Islavd, in Lake Snpertor, to Hecome the Breeding Place of Animal, Four moose calves passed through Duluth from the Canadian north- west by express the other day. The animals are the forerunners of a moose herd which is to be raised on Grand island, in Lake Superior, 35 miles east of Marquette and in the state of Michigan. The island consists of 13,000 acres, and is owned in large part by W. C. Mather, of Cleveland, president of the Cleveland Cliffs Iron company. Rh. E. Follette, of Chicago, vice pres- ident and general manager of the International Forestry, Fish and Game association, is in charge of the calves. The moose were obtained in Mani- soba, by permission of the Canadiin government. W. G. Mather is put- ting them on Grand island for pur- poses of propagation. The moose were captured for Mr. Follette by Indians. Gets Wireless Patents, The Patent office Gazette contains record of 13 patents on apparatus for the transmission of messages by wire- less telegraphy, granted to Reginald H. Fessenden, an expert of the weath- er bureau in Washington. The patents inelude a device for signaling by mag- netic waves, a current actuated wave responsive device, and a conductor for a wireless telegraphy apparatus. The apparatus for which patents have been granted to Mr. Fessenden was used by the government in the compet- itive tests of the wireless systems held on the Carolina coast some time ago, in which the government apparatus proved to be superior to all other sys- tems tried. Rare Book Is Missing. An old and rare volume of consid- erable value has been lost from the congressional library, and two detec- tives ofthe local bureau are trying to find it, The bopk is “Capt. Cook’s Thre@ Voyages. to the Pacific Ocean,” published in 1797. August Shauster, a government employe, took the book to his home by permission. He was sitting on ‘the veranda of his house reading the book and laid it in a chair while he went into the house for some- thing. The officials of the library say that it will be very difficult and per- haps impossible to replace the book. Shrinking. Poor liftle Cuba, says the Chicago Tribune, is a great deal shorter than ft looks om the map.” ‘here L shall visit the principal | yards of Eutope and study the latest | i ideas in tory interested. | The place is too insigniti-; MONEY FOR FIRIPINOs. | Proposition Favorable to Extending Loans to Farmers of the Philippine Islands, Some data egarding mortgage loans to small land holders under gov- ernment supervision has been for- warded dudge Henry C. Ide. tary of finance in-the Philippine is- lands, by Charles A. Conant, in the Philippines la purpose of who was st summer for the coinage and Mr. Conant | as un-| government guaranty are suce studying litions ther ns that mortgage lo: ! ful even under the conditions existing | in Turkey, and that Lord Cromer is | preparing to extend the system in Egypt. The National Bank of Egypt | has, already m vans of about 3-1 000,000 of this character, but as it isa commereial bank is indisposed to lock | up further capital in this form of se-| curity, A new bank is therefore in process of formation to engage ex: | clusively in small mortg nd agri-} cultural loans. The government is to guarantee dividends of three per cent, on the capital and is to employ the! public tax gatherers if necessary, to] collect the interest on loans. Mr. Conant said the other day: | “LE know that some means of aiding the farmers is a subject very close to the heart of Gov, Taft and Judge Ide, There is already a Spanish law inthe Philippines permitting the creation of mortgage banks, but it apy ntly needs the support and active initiative | ot the government to put a plan of relief for the small farmers in prac- j tical operation, Gov, Taft and his as- | sociates have so many problems before them that it will probably be some time before they will be able to take this up, but it will he greatly for the benefit of the Filipinos when they are able to borrow enough to equip them- selves with the best seed and with mod- ern tools.” RHODES’ GIFT COMPLICATED. Many Details of the Englis Will Delay Annouw of Scholarships, It is likely to be 1904 before the scholars who receive appointments under the terms of the will of the late Cecil Rhodes will arrive at Oxford uni- versity. The executors of the will find so many intricate details to be ar- ranged that there is litgle hope of get- ting the curious system working ear- lier. George Robert Parkin, principal of Upper Canada college, Toronto, who }has been appointed by the executors to prepare a plan for the allotment of the scholarships provided for in the will, will make a-tour of the British colonies to ascertain the views of the local authorities and report thereon, The executors will then draw up regu- jations governing the eligibility of! candidates for scholarships and with | regard to other matters involved in the bequest, So many complicated questions have been submitted for decision to the executors by governors and colonial premiers that they feel it would be unwise to expediie matters without a thorough knowledge of the opinions of all the various shades of thought and nationality embraced in Mr, Rhodes’ scheme. CROSS RIVER ON KNAPSACKS. The Novel Experiment Successfally Attempted by the French Troops at Rheims, A battalion of the One Hundred and Thirty-second regiment of the line, quarte ed at Rheims, has been making experiments to show that rivers ean be crossed by troops without resort- ing to s al appliances. In many parts of the country similar experi- ments have of late been carried out, streams being crossed on rafts or in rough-and-ready embarkations con- structed out of material ready to hand, At Rheims knapsacks were filled with hay and then inclosed in water proof tarpaulins, and in this way a raft was made capable of carrying a battalion over a stream 100 feet wide in an hour and a half. AMERICAN. SCHOOL DOL IN LONDON. The United States Method of Teach- ing by Correspondence Is to Be Introduced, Two officials of am American corre- spondence school have just left Lon- don after completing arrangements to establish a branch at London. They made a tour of England for some weeks and conferred with English la- boring men in regard to a scheme for forming a college where workingmen and women would have an opportunity of receiving the highest class of tech- nical education cheaply. A member of an English labor union will aceom- pany the men to the United States for the purpose of taking a course of study which will enable him to initiate the work in England. Big Chimney. To be hauled up in a basket in the funnel of a big smokestack, 150 feet to the top, and there to break a bottle of champagne on the side, was a young woman’s experience at Cineinnati the other day. Miss Cora Hagemeyer, the daughter of A. P. Hagemeyer, secre- tary and treasurer of the Baldwin Pi- ano company, took part in this adven- ture, ascending the great new chim- ney of the’Baldwin Piano company’s factory. A luncheon was served on top of the large new boilers. Girl Ascen W. K. Vanderbilt, J¥., who made the automobile record for a kilometer of 29. 2-5 seconds and the mile record of 42 2-5 seconds on a road near Albi, took several automobiles with him on his return to the United States. | | : E Muscles aching, bones breaking, strength failing. That's Malaria! Ayer’s Malaria and Ague Cure. ‘3tw&: Secret of Success. The secret of success is not so much in knowing how to make money as in the ability to hang onto it. We as- sist people in their efforts to save money. lithis matter concerns you, call and open an account. Famews __ ONE Feit (a Evers hod Makes you perfectiy safe in trading here. We adhere strictly to this principle be- ‘ause we believe one man’s money is just as good as anothers. Are we not night? Our goods are marked in plain figures. They are bought DIRECT From the manufacturers and leading job- bers in large quantities for spot cash, thereby doing away with the ‘‘middle- mens”’ profit. No matter what you want we can supply you at a saving figure. Every Price a Bargain. YOURS FOR BUSINESS, int Bros, PRODUCE WANTED. OOOO OODOOOREK K2O90O0O9O09O0OOOOOOODOO,_|"! Several of our young people have been attending the protracted meet- ing at Spruce this week, CPL Coleman and wife were the guest of Grandma Wilker Sunday. td ALTON TRUST CO. CO. OF BUTLER MISSOURI. Capital, Surplus and Profits : $68,300.00, Always has ready money on hand to be loaned on farms in Bates, Vernon and Barton counties, Missouri, at the Very Lowest Rates of Interest. Every land owner wanting a loan should call and get our rates before borrowing of others. We have a full and complete abstract of title toevery acre of land or town lot in Bates County from the U. 8. patent down to date, that we keep up with the records daily. We furnish reliable Abstracts at reasonable prices. Interest Paid on Time Deposits. ——DIRECTORS—— Wm. E, Walton, J, Everingham, J. R. Jenkins, John Deerwester, Wm. W. Trigg, TT. C. Boulware, Frank M. Voris, Booker Powell, C. R. Radford, O. H. Dutcher, Sam Levy, T. J. Wright, FRANK ALLEN, Sxcy. Wu. E, WALTON, Pres. The remedy? my America’s Famous Beauties | j | Look with horror on. skin erup- tions, blotehes. sores, pimples They idon’t have them, nor will ¥ one, who uses Bucklen’s Arnica Sa've. It 'glorifies the face. Eczema of salt rhenm vanish before it. It cures sere lips, chapped hands, chilblains. In- fallible for Piles, 25e¢ at H. b. Tuck- jer’s drug store. j Deepwater Items. Sunshine and pleasant weather was enjoyed by all last week, while | birthday dinners were numerous, and even wedding bells were rung more than once, Mrs. Anna Howard, of Johustown, jSpenta few days last week visiting relatives in Montrose. Protracted meeting at Spruce is progressing South Methodist church under the control of the new minister, Re Mr. Friddle was reported uitesick last Saturday. Mrs. Lillie Moore went to Montrose Wednesday shopping ; Mies Dallie Harbett, our Johus- | town milliner, did u rushing business last week. There was nv social hop at W. HH, Zimmer's last Monday night. A time was had by all Mrs. Bettie Olaf, went to Montrose Saturday on business Every Demo: nively at the v. Morgan Chambers and son, ratie voter, both old and young, should remember theday . 4, and east his ballot straight. The surprise birthday dinner given in honor of Grandma Wilker on last Friday, Vet. 17, 1902, by her grand: daughter, Miss Etta largely attended. years oll, and was born and raised in Mo. was in as good health as any one present. Forty six were present and marched to the dining room for lux- urious dinner, All stayed till a late hour and departed for their homes. AMr. Webb was sight-seeing in our midst a few days ago. J. E. Kash and family have moved to Vernonvcounty tomuake their future home. Mr. Kash owns a farm in that county, We regret their de- pature but our loss is that county's gain. George Shelton and Leslie Oftill have been training their hounds this week. They are preparing for a live- ly chase on Thanksgiving Day. Rey. W. R. Howard, now of Eldor- ado Springs, but formerly a resident of this conuty, with his many friends in this section several days last week. He also tells us he had just closed a 2 weeks’ pro- tracted meééting at Oak Groveschool house Grandma was 77 She enjoyed the surprise and was shaking hands Rose, Milins USE {Calcura S04] Assisted by CUTICURA OINTMENT, the Great Skin Cure, for preserving, puri- fying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, pe Nigel maybe Bag, Fond and for all the pur- eS comet ‘” toilet, bath, and nursery. of Women use CUTICURA SOAP in the form of baths for annoying inflammations and irritations, or too free or offensive perspirations, in the ager) of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative, antiseptic which readily suggest the: ves to i Ee Peng No amount of persuasion ne oe ence acd the reat hi beautifiers to use any others. Complete Treatment for Consisting of CUTICURA SO4P = oe of eon and scales, a (ie, tly allay itching, sowed on, & beypation, and soothe 6 and heal, and Re CURA RESOLVENT PILLS (25¢.), to’ cool and cleanse the blood, Curtcvra RESOLVEXT Pius 1S nad Coated) are a new ay hen ery nomical substitute for the liquid UTICURA RESOLVENT, as well as for all other blood purifiers and humour cures. In screw- si atta so Dat Allison, was