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P MARKET REPOKTS. . THEY BE MPA} ] 2 } a THEY BEAT TR COUMNT. |) REPU OR) Spruce Items. ice an “a =“ | Tate acest a Girts Got the ¥ale Society Proposes_to Found a - Tip Hunt and wife are reported x to strong Repr 8 est of a Sleeping Car University in China—New Way F ry ‘ Wat, nee vet. price |. Three vert and pretty Ohio girls are Consens to: Samet. For the first time in the history ot ; Russians Are Removing Women | runt is thought to be out of danger. : : 63 13 sean Sao coy to the credit, if credit it be, of ——_ civilization a university is planned as| and Children and Aged and Infirm Mrs. H. Lair is very sick with bil- 17S 5.10 | 5S. ....ls 475 |baving got the advantage of a sleeping Belgt the basis of missionary work in a for- from All Stra’ Points. ‘ 100 3. | 3.......... 42 333 | car conductor. Three’ girls were in Pranahereet Me Pema a eign country. —_ ious fever, but we hear to-day she le NATIVE HEIFERS. ,_| Pittsburg as delegates to a convention. Pesulation ef Abest ‘fwe The Yale Missionary society, which much better. 3 it. Gs ax |At the close of the convention they Thousand Five Menéred. started a small school in China three pryy THE LATEST STORY OF ATTACK. Mrs. G. Quick has been sick the "em 300 | 18. ‘st i {Started homeward—somewhere in the years ago; now states that the pro- * | past week. NATIVE COWS direction of Toledo. All of them wanted ‘ moters feel that it is practically useless inge! family 37 " : Altenberg, or Moresnet, the little G. W. Kretzimger and left “we {i F 2 plaka oon tapenlggrterngraiode ied ‘aanel district in Germany, barely | ‘© try to make any sweeping impression | at st, Petersburg the Newipapers Are | hore for Galena, Okla., sometimeago. zw j@isappointment, upon their arrival at! covering one and one-half square miles} the natives of China unless they | Speaking Kindiler of the United States— : 4 the Union station they were told that] °°) see fn population of about 2,500, | Work upon the children. ‘They have | Mall Advices from Viadivostok Declare | A card from them says they were in 3% [only one7unoccupied berth remained. | ®* ees . | therefore decided to try to establish a Chinese Brigands Are Terrorizing the | three days’ drive of their home. i 4.10 “Could w ae has ceased to be, Prussia having sur ~ District of Ninguta. 97 3.00 | 33 3 ould we take it?” asked the one IM) -oiaered her claims, dating from the university as the center of the mission — James Newberry is here at present, the guest of his brother, Hon. J. B. Newberry, and family. Mr. and Mrs. Art Gilmore and lit- tle daughter spent Sunday with Mre. Gilmore’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. I.N. \ Lawrence. 1. M. Kretzinger went down to Rockville on legal business Monday. Mrs. Nancy Drake was born near } Cynthianna, Harrison county, Ken- tucky, May Gth, 1842. When yeta child, she removed with her parents to Moultrie county, Ills., where she grew to womanhood. In early life he united with the Smyser Christian church at that place. She was mar- } ried to Samuel Drake June 6, 1865. In 1872 they came to Missouri and settled ona farm in Henry county, where they have since resided. De- ceased leaves a husband and two children, J. B. Drake and Eura I. Kretzinger. One daughter, Ina H., died in early childhood, andanother, Mrs. Ila Newberry, passed away less thanayear ago. Mrs. Drake’sdeath was due to blood poison resulting trom afrozen finger. All that medi- cal skill, all that kind and sympa- thetic hearts and hands could do, was done to stay the dread destroy- er but to no avail. A particularly sad feature of this case was that the | brown, looking singularly innocent as work in China. frond . Napoleonic period, to Belgium, in view St. Petersburg, March 1—The mili- she circled her arm toward her compan] (¢ . cash consideration. This nook of According to the scheme they have | tary authorities are causing to be re- NATIVE STOCKERS | | ions to explain what she meant by “we.” territory where Holland, Belgium and | Just outlined they wish to have it in- | moved from all strategic points in the The sleeping car company has a frigid Prussia meet, belonged to Austria clude seven departments, including &! far east the women and children and demeanor. But the unusual request of from 1793 to 1814 Following the preparatory school for children of from | 9); aged and infirm men, so ‘that the four to six years’ preparation, a normal necessity of protecting them will not and Prussia claimed Moresnet. school, theological, law and medical de- | pe added to the other duties of the | the bars to actually smile. But of course They agreed in 1816 to let the in- | partments, the academic course, and &| troops and in order that all supplies school in literature and journalism. | may be available for use of the actual The Yale Missionary soctety will en- | combatants; Soon they were back. “Could thi®} ronupiic, governed by an elected deavor during the coming year to de-| ‘There is no confirmation ofthe Yin one,” said the first speaker, “remain UP} mayor and ten councilmen, the stat- velop the present school which is e8- | Kow report of the London Daily Tele- graph that the Japanese again bom- barded Port Arthur yesterday, but news of another attack at any moment would not be surprising. All the papers here print prominently but without comment Commander Marshall's report of the Vicksburg in cident off Chemulpo, Korea, and the reasons assigned in the United States for its not uniting in the protest of naval commanders against the action of the Japanese, These statements will doubtless clear up the misappre- hension existing here concerning the affair, Coming simultaneously with the announcement that the state de- partment has decided to countermand the orders that Edwin V. Morgan, ap- pointed United Sfates consul at Port Dalny, proceed to his post, should have a good effect in allaying the anti-Amer- ican irritation. Mail advices from Vladivostok séy that 500 Chinese brigands are terror- izing the district of Ninguta. Their leader, Yaventen, proclaims himself invulnerable to bullets, Advices re- celved by mail from Irkutsk, Siberia, say that local firms whose employes $1 the girl delegates and their pleasing i . pe ‘f th Belgium on The market wee smiles caused the austere official behind Napoleoale settlement | be . Representative sales: 3 o. Wt. Price m* 72.43 $4cly| he could not do it. The girls, much de- habitants rule themselves and since 5.35 | BS..16 AS 4 ls 4 lected, trooped olf. then Moresnet has been practically @ 4 ww % W134 in the dressing-room?” This most de- Yapoleon, The tablished in China, so that ft will ap- mompts, cok jada - on cidedly is against the company’s rules, reed Apeadcendyellg ae stamps | Proach in scope the proposed university. b, $4.60G6.15; culls, $275; bucks sg | 28 the dressing-rooms are for the use} or either country, trade was abso- At present Lawrence Thurston, @ of all passengers, and besides, the lights lutely free, and the people were ex- graduate of the class of 1898, isin charge Chivage Lt go out at ten, “We'll take it anyway,” oe betas calito service. of the work in China. According to a cao, March 1.—Catt) as she deposited a $5 note, “For one, bar ate rh and Belgium had a dispute | recent letter from him the American Rent two or three?” the ticket seller asked. |) yor-the Galmet-zine-mines_in-Mores- people have the full confidence gf the “Three, of course,” replied the tri,| rot in is4i, but It did not result in a| Chinese authorities because of the fair gees oa jokingly. chanke in the government and the treatment accorded to China since the matked Getting their check and change, the republic got along well until a tew | Boxer rebellion, and therefore it is pos- sible for America, but would be impos- sible for any other nation, to establish a missionary university there. passengers boarded the train, all three months ago, when gamblers from in one Seat. This seat they occupied Liege obtained the counell’s consent to until the tickets were collected, when erect a gaming pavilion in Moresnet Ea, western ge | one of the sirls retired to the day coach which was designed to rival Monte lambs, $4.50@6.0; ra to keep vigil until one o'clock, while the Carlo. The concesstonaires agreed to 6.0, othe r two slept. At that hour she stole] y 114 electric rallways to neighboring St. Loute Live Stoo. into the sleeper, roused the slumbering | towns, to maintain the parks and va- Soule, March 1 pair and took the place then vacated by | rious institutions, and to share in this ative steer the girl who had planned how to get way the profits of the roulette tables -jahead of the Pullman company, even] yity every inhabitant. though it meant sitting up half of the A casino was opened recently and night, WOULD FOUND NEW STUDY. South Bend, Ind., Bishop Says Theo- logical Schools Should Ews' ish Chair of Common Sense, Bishop Isaac Joyce, who presided over the Northwest Indiana Methodist conference recently in session at South Bend, wants to found a chair of com- mon sense in theological schools, In reference to his wishes the bishop said: “It is a real fact that God calls poor boys to the ministry, and they are forced to go through many sacrifices in order to the German and Belgian press con- tained reports of the distinguished persons surrounding the tables, espe- cially rich youths from Cologne. The attention of both governments was drawn to the anomalous status of the territory and a quick exchange of '|NEW SPEED RECORD BY RAIL, ser Train Makes the Phenom. Omaha Live *tock. ha, Ma Ree Native st *] One hundred and twenty-eight miles} communications resulted {n an agree- a " cigs . not * "+l ip a25 minutes, ‘This is the new world’s] ment that Prussia would sell her reach the place where they are fully | have been called into the service of the only surviving daughter could sve | record for long-distance running made] claims to Belgium. equipped for the work of the ministry. | army are continuing to pay the married | be with her mother in her last sick- 5.) by a passenger train on the Baltimore & - PANES The pioneers had no theological train- | men full wages and the unmarried men | ness being herself confined to her bed. p-| Ohio road the other day. PLAN LAKE’S BIGGEST BOAT |ins, or, at nd the ipods of theo-|half pay. Letters from Vladivostok | Deceased was a lady of many ad- bina (me at . - logical schools, Therefore, their |dated February 17 say that the war- : owes, The vlistance traversed is between = y 3.10; common and stockers, %275@] Chicago Junction, Ohio, and Garrett,| S™tp» lders at Lorain, ©., Design | preaching was genuine and right from | ships in the harbor on that date were miraole qualities. Quiet and unas- lambs, $5.00(/6.00, ind, At one place on the rune apsed 1 ne Ste Whose Capa- | the heart. the Rossla, Gromoboi and Rurikend {suming in manner she lived an exem- —— city Will Be 10,000 Tons, “1 do not wish to be put down as|and the transport Moskova. The port | plary life, doing good every day. She of 85 miles an hour was reached. This was the maximum, Bursts of speed at the rate of 70 or 75 miles an hour were frequent. No stops were made, The train was made up of five cars, and pulled by engine 1,460 in charge of En- gineer William Dunton, This engine is of the new Atlantic type, weighing 177,000 pounds, It is the most powerful style in service on the Baltimore & Ohio, An extra large wa- ter tank helped in this remarkable per- formance, saving stops for water. From Garrett into Chicago another engine of the same make took the train, F On this run a speed of 76 miles an hour September, 3i\c. was reached. The performance be- St. Louts Cash Genin. tween Chicago Junction and Garrett Louis, March 1.— could have been duplicated had the elevator, ; | train not been blocked by a train ahead, 2 hard, 2@9zc. to which it was running as a second sec- track, 46c. O: was frozen hard and the ice breaks was scarcely able to clear the channel, The Japanese attempted to blow up the dock at Vladivostok but did not succeed. They escaped. A Japanese barber at Vladivostok, deeming himself insulted by a Russian officer, shot him dead and then dramatically an- nounced that he was a captain on the Japanese general staff and was not used to taking insults. Stopped a Leak In One Ship. Port Arthur, Monday, Feb. 29.—The Russian torpedo boat which sought refuge in Pigeon bay February 26, was subjected to a terrific fire from the Japanese cruisers, One shot pierced her hull. The boat was beached, the leak was stopped, she was refloated at high wajer and returned to Port Arthur. was a kind and devoted wife and mother. Funeral services were con- ducted by Rev. Cowan Wednesday at 11 o’clock at the Union church, aud the remains were laid to reat besides the two daughters. Frontz, against the theological schools, but I do wish those schools would introduce a new chair, and call it the chair of com- mon sense, It is needed in the training of young men for the ministry, Some of them actually lose their best traits by too much book-learning. The preacher should be skillful in himself, and the school should help his skill to reach the hearts of men. “It should be the first thought of a” preacher to appreciate first that those who come to hear him are always full of heartache, and they are looking for consolation extended to them in such a manner as will be effective, and will act as a balm for the affliction that is troubling the soul.” City Gram A contract was closed the other day at Cleveland, O., for what will be by far the largest vessel on fresh water, The boat is to be built for a syndicate head- ed by A. B. Wolvin, of Duluth, and its eost will be $500,000, The ship will be built at the Lorain (O.) yard of the American Ship Building company. The big craft will be able to carry 10,000 tons of freight, and will be 560 feet long over all, 56-foot beam and 32 feet deep. De- spite the immense carrying capacity of the new steamer, the special hopper con- struction of the hold will make it pos- sible for her to take on a full cargo of {ron ore in one hour and unload it in five hours. The largest vessels at present on the lakes are the Gates, Hill, Elwood and Edenborn, of the steel trust fleet. They REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. By Warranty Deeps, AC Wintermute to Jno F McKee lot 11 bik Amsterdam $750, Dollie Steele to Francis D Ress lot 5 bik 62 @ Hill $1 and Ex, Rosie D Starr et al to Wm E Walton und -int lets 11 and 12 blk 24 west side ad Butler 6240. B F Kepner to J O Medeari3 03 a see 7 Spruce S3474. Catherine Schafer to John Mulcahey 80a see 38 Mound $3400, E 8 Boal to H I Harris 80 8 sec 20 Osage $2406, oo. : . tion, This necessitated slowing down é A2@A2ygc; N white, 45!¢ savend tikes id measure we mom an ont * —— Minnesota Farmer, While Dixging in | First Complete Train Across Lake Balkal. | g1iy"¥ Tyeard to S C Pettus 8 8 sec 10 Orage ~ * Cd cargo record is that of the Edenborn, His Potato Patch, “ ds ‘ : ed ee, Er The distance of 131 miles between Gar-| | nich afew weeks ago unloaded at South oan ai atch, Discovers Irkutsk, Siberia, March 1. ~The first’) " W W Henry to J Osman trect sec 15 Mt Pleas- aoe ity, March 1.—Egss—Fresh,| rett and South Chicago was, however, Chicago 9,864 tons of ore, Although a ich Mine, complete train traversed Lake Baikal | ant gio. i, " Al covered in 153 minutes, making the 5 ; on the ice railroad at 11 o’clock Tues- | ¥ @ Ruddell to A V Sims lot 26 and 27 Cenck- ’ yer Creamery. extra, ; Gatty. | ole ran of £80 miles in $78 minutes boat of this size can load at any ofthe =n Ishpeming, Mich., mining man, |day morning. It consisted of 25 cars. lins ad Passaie $800. Me; packing stuck. ; cheese, | W 25: 2 \ Pas iar o . cm “ . . en tall a a +) : Tia pecord te in tall & oh encuaesal pthigr tra a who has returned from a trip to the | Russian Ship Blocked in Suez Canal. ~Anna K Thempson et al toJ EB Thompson 234 ports, Conneaut and Sow cago, Vermilion range in Minnesota, brings| Port Said, Egypt, March 1—The Rus- | 4 secs 14, 15 and 35 Mt Pleasant 16000. witry—Springs, We per Ib; hens, one. BS cer iis turkey bene, tie 1b, —_______ .. docks Targe en tO cae ie carne | che Feport that while digging in his gar-|sian cruiser Aurora, due here from | Dose Gamer eC F Moulton 49 aaee #8 Hik- hy gobblers, pigeons, ade jer | USES BIBLE AGAINST TRUSTS. oe re “fl Hehe age pase “at the | #e” om lands belonging to the Minne-|Suez, has been blocked in the canal | bart $1200. ; scuabs, $1.00¢ per doz Choice ae new Dost will be ready sota Iron company, near Soudan, an |since midnight probably by other ves- ou Griggs 46 8 20018 opening of navigation nextspring. Austrian farmer came across an im- DOO’ A’ LIDE, | mense body of soft ore, the first ever M OF STEAMBO. TS found in that locality. Explorations sels. The Russian torpedo boat-de- stroyers have arrived here. Will Command the Baltic Fleet. Hed, dressed poultry lc above these| Ex-Semator Hill, of New York, in Ad- bs, ime—Per dozen—Snipe, $1.00; ducks, dress Declares Scripture Does Not lard and redheads, $2.00; mixed, $1.00; Sanction Modern Corporations. Yettis Bergman te EC Wichen 6 ® sec 11& 120 a see 12 Hudson $4700, F L Dickerson to T A Latham 808 sec 16 Mt. ges mne Government Engineers Will Blast Out have now disclosed a bed of ore 300 feet | Sebastopol, Russia, March’ 1.—Vice | Pleasant $4050. acres, arr ee ‘aves’ Former Senator David B. Hill, of New Toboggan in the Mononga- wide, several hundred feet long and of | Admiral Bezobrazoff has left here for | A D Atkins te Jennie K Barrett 1188 sec 6N Kes, $2.50G2.75 per box; lemons, $.0)| YOrk, addressing a gathering at the hela River. unknown depth. Cronstadt to take command of the | Home #000, box; grapes, $5.00A6. per cask; cran- Rockland county fair in New city Two years ago the farmer cleared the | second division of the Baltic fleet. Ad- | Warren White to Geo Hand 60 a sec 16 Eikhart Government engineers are about to| patch for the purpose of raising pota-|miral Bezobrazoft is greatly beloved | *!7%. 062.80 — the other day, said regarding combina- wt) tions: “I do not find anything in Holy omg oat Paiva bee olate Pry 7 Writ which contemplates the accumula- tion of wealth through the instrumental- ea ies came. ity of gigantic corporate trusts designed NEWS NOTES. for the prevention of legitimate competi- tion in trade or the creation of monopoly ess ee cea hed bys in business, or anything that authorizes iE sho non | the watering of any stock except live older, a farmer near Shawnee, stock upon our farms, or anything that vad crushed to death by a falling justifies the enrichment of men except a through the old-fashioned and Scriptural ¢ ress will appropriate $20,000 for} method of earning that which they shall ‘onal rifle range at Fort Riley, possess, “The tremendous combinations of cap- | € Superior is frozen over at Bes-| jtal which have been formed in recent . Mich., the first time in the mem-| years, whereby the cost of living has the oldest inhabitant. been unduly advanced, the multitude of Jes Bratton, of Red Oak, Ia} schemes which have been devised to from the Missouri river bridge} control the channels and avenues of aha, Neb., and was drowned. | trade, the unreasonable restrictions O'Neill, aged 19, of Omaha, | which have been imposed by statute upon clubbed to death by a po-| ourcommerctal freedom in the pecuniary abolish a picturesque feature of navi-| toes, and, although the soil appeared to | by the sailors, many of whom gathered oie SEE DS eS gation in the Monongahela river, near | be rich, the tubers did not . eS - Brownsville, ». They Ee bass out a cently, while in cnnentie sh a —_ gah ao een EN lal lial latina section of the bottom of the river, soit} mining man, he mentioned his experi- Here's News for the Jay . will be possible for packets to go up and] ence, and the latter, curious to ea Mukden, Manchuria, March 1—The Ped ea ecard Hematreet 318 a sec 6 down without silding over the stone | the reason for the failure of the crop, |troops are in excellent spirits expect- | Wm Dalgety to Bert Homan 90 a see 10 East bottom, that has been worn smooth as | paid a visit tothe farm. Arriving there jing to meet the Japanese soon. The | Boone $780. glass by the action of the water and the | he turned up the earth at one or two | Japanese fieet has not attacked Port | Al WixtoLE Wix10a sec 5 & 8 Hudson steamers, which have slid from one pool | points with a shovel, and discovered | Arthur since February 26. The Jap- net. to another. . that the garden was located in the cen- |anese are greatly discouraged by their | ,~ A Pigott toJ W Ewing 90 seo 38 Mt. The plane over which it has been the | ter of an iron deposit of probably untold | failure to block the harbor. eR Leas te aah = the see statelne aie Ded value, covered by barely enough soil Deference to Jewish Familles, Home t18. tt to Jno F MeKissick 20 a sec 1N c js at the entrance vf pool No. 6. | to hide it. Kieff, Russia, March 1.—The gove] Bessie Bre’ For years this has beew a shallow place Sma ae! ernor of Kieff has instructed the lo- bik 8 HIM St end Re, eee in the river during the summer months.) PIGEONS CAUSE REUNION. cal police not to interfere with the | BD Wilson to K Mont Reilly pt lots 5 andé Until a few years ago the captains _—_ families er servants of Jewish surgeons | Dik 75 B Hill $5000. used to tie up their steamers and wait | Brothers Separated Twenty Years | who have gone to the far east, although Ino T Horner to F P Sergeant 80 s see 19 until the rains descended and gave Ago Meet at a Poultry Show the law forbids them to remain outside Rockville $9000. them water enough to go across with- at Ellenville, N.Y. the pale. Wm M Campbell toS N Kinion 160 9 sec 1 out scraping the bottoms off their Anecinenen inane Walaet outo0, steamers. This practice continued un-| Emil and Adolph Reiss, brothers, who, WANTS ‘TO BOOST SALARIES, | , Cornthe Johnson et alto Geo N Craig 0 til one day a boat got away from her | had been separated 20 years, met at the ——_ aia penta ae ‘who was attempting to ar-| interest of those who ostentatiously| crew and started across the slippery | Hllenville (N. Y.) fair the other day, Gallingor’s Bill Gives President ®75.000, Psat Nev’ Beak to Max Weiner. 40 0 c0090 1 style themselves the captains of industry! plane of rock. Instead of hanging on | Each had supposed the other dead. Vico President $15,000, Speaker 12+ [SUMMIT of the post office at Hum-| are largely the modern creations of able it, the packet went shooting across, The! When boys they had a great fondness 000, Cabinet Members $15,000. 106 is & 188 blastn dat aga lots 181 182 183 Ark., blew up \he office with and designing men intent upon vastand fost of the runaway boat opened the for pigeons, and both went to the fair} Washington, March 1.—Senator Gal- Decause they objected to a| wnearned riches and are neither sane-' eves of the rivermen, and theyshave * Ellenville because of the exhibition | linger introduced a bill increasing the Fifteen Killed By a Fall, ter. tioned by Scriptural injunctions noF since then taken the slide with impunity, %t the poultry.show, where they each en- | salaries of the executive officers of the t of W. N. Votaw, of can they be justified by honest and un- tered anumber of birds. Emil, who lives ' government and also of senators Ned by the! Selfish public policy.” Kansas’ Only Chance. tn New York, learned that certain fine! members of the house of cows id rattle box, Montana isin first _with the story pigeons had-been entered by a —The- : Still Doing Business, of trains being stopped by grasshop- J. Kelly, well known to Mis- As a slight relief to the monotony of | pers. Kansas will have to fall back vad * getting killed himself the Moroccan pre- |; now on that one about the hoppers eat- jearned th the legislative agent of the | fender has turned up again and casually | ing all the green painted box cars, says this time the two Seoteaes ‘oer are the cabinet, 16 000 each; aking Powder trust, 1s now 80-/ xj11eq 1,000 government troops, says the | the Washington Post, ye in London. Chicago Chronicle, not necessarily for Boultz, editor of the Menom-! pubiication, but merely as an evidence As Banetetys Amusement, Leader, was found dead in A Chicago man has given his relatives , that he is still doing business at the old ’ have been | $1,000,000 because he wants to see what fs supposed to have stand. they will do with it. Let us hope, says Lese Majeste. the Chicago Record-Herald, the fun will Emperor William says Martin Luther) be worth the price, and that this form was the greatest of all Germans. The! of amusement may become popular. to $500,000 through the Chicago Record-Herald asks if this isn’t —_ j Charlotte Miller, © -Vit-| 2 tittle disloyal to grandpa? * A Dettente Matter. - | meet peau Soe EE The Philadelphia Inquirer remarks) . A Hasband Trust. that a nice point of international law. ‘The Indiana woman who has a collee-| may arise touching-the relation of the tion of 14 husbands is about the first} Monroe doctrine to the contestants in says the Chicago Tribune, who had | sase New Jersey and Mexico go to. way