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The Tribune. r, it 1 1 u t t'.y, HANMK It. HI IHIHT. r.llten.nrt fnt,Hlirl, olisrltltKlf Of V , ........ St SlomK...... ..1.(10 .HO I Threr Mrtnth... ...... .S ! birdie I. optr. ....... .OS Riliiou iloes riot consist in join ini t lie rliurch. It is the tiht rt'hi hun of man to od mid humanily. It in light living, right doing and right thinking. It is not in a name on the chun.h hook, hut in a life lived. f.mntd inorlllif to lit. r( ol CotirrMlB lh wi of. st Rkh Hill. Knd -! w.ll mt. 'ft A frightful milrond accident oc curred last Saturday ntnr station called Wnlifttenil. on the Grand Trunk line, in which thirty people were killed jnJ many more wound- J. The train was running at the rate of fifty miles an hour and run into a freight train. It was an ex cur&iort train and ol course crowded. 'is r v1' 'j'' (j v ' i- 'W 7 v. fir'' w The friend of Wm. II. Wallace, the Kansas City Democratic candi date for United States Senator, are moving to secure his election. They will have a Urge delegation at Jef ferson City to work to that end. Success is not an impossibility. Wallace is all riRht on the money question and we don't suppose he would want to pilch any govern ment officials in the Missouri river. The greatest asset of any country is the brains of its people. A. I. Law, M. P. Bank robbers blew up the bank at Union. Mo., early last Saturday morning and got away with about $15,090. The settlement of the coal bill seems likely to be almost as diffi cult and perplexing as the settle ment of the coal strike. It is said that J. Pierpont Morgan was very proficient in mathematic when a school boy. He seems to have been figuring ever since. Is it possible that any American citizen can forget the woe and weariness of the land under the Wilson-Gorman law of t3-t7f M. Edmond Therv in the Econ omiste Europeen says that the Eu. ropean budgets have increased from 19,837,000,000 francs in 1891 to 19.090,000,000 francs in tGot. Of this increase 3.263,000,000 has gone into the armies and navies, 5.300,000.000 into the railways posts, telegraphs, telephones and public works and toe rest to various services of the state. The military expenses of Europe have risen from 4,612,000,000 in 1891 to 5,324.000, 000 in 1S96 and 7,875,000,000 in 1001. Of this last figure about 1,600,000,000 francs is represented by the cost to England of the South African war. In 1S91 the military budgets of the dual alliance amount ed to i,6oS,ooo,ooo francs and that of the triple alliance to 1,457,000,- 000. In 1901 the dual alliance ap propriated 2,135,000,000 francs, an increase in ten years of 32 per cent, and the triple alliance 1,958,000,000 an increase of 34 per cent. '1'.... ! a ITT". .r.l...!- The policy of pruii clion is the foundation ct 011 1 whole iinhiMi system. Nine-tenth of our indus trial capital is invested, nine-tenth of our industrial wage scales and other arrangement are iii:m!c, upon the supposition that this nation will continue by law to receive (ho home market for home pioduccts. To begin to repeal the tariff would be to disturb all thoc ar rangements. It would unsettle bus iness. It would destroy commer cial confidence in the future. It would bring on bard times. That is what tariff tinkering by the Dem ocratic party always ha done in the past. That is what it certainly will do again. On the other hand, the Republi can method of dealing with the trusts is to let the tariff alone for the present and seek other methods of curbing trust abuses. The Repub lican patty believes that the trusts can be controlled without taking trie risk of bringing on hard times. The Republican party is confirmed in that belief by its success in bring ing trusts under control, notably in the present case of the hard coal trust. New Haven Leader. Onl'r ( t'uttlit'Htioii tn Term 'II in J. 1.. MrCoHli.il, I'lalitliif. Vs. .Incnti 'Arnold, lvf.ini;ui!. N.-.-.v WM ilny eonii'H tlm philntltt by hU nttor. iii-y, T,-hipliloii& llnli'M, mid lti-pr-nrlntr to (hi HiitliifiK'tliin ff the court tlint tln ilrr.'iulniit, Jnc ili Ar nold, 111(1(11. rvt.d(!!t of tllt Htllll' of MiHxiHirt, mid t U.i t tlm onlinnry ii-o(m of Jiiw enn not b wrved up on hill). It I14 ui'ilcivd iy till' court Unit pulilliiit Ion hi- luii'h', nottfyhiK hlin, the mild difrtidiint, that mine, lion li'iH lnvn (nnni'iii'd naliiHt hlin, by pclStlon, In the I'lrt'itlt I'ourt of I'atiis county, Mistiourl, the objeet and gcncrnl tint lire ( which notion U to obtain n decree frtmi Hnld Unto J county t hx'iilt t'iurt. under the pro- s visloim of Section (.'.1 of the lteviKfd HfV. Ill I! II leli 1IM:l Alnoiioie To tn vjr.t l!iU splendid woik of kc.ii in-c mid nit is finer find better thixi rver, is statinB it mildly. The demand lor it is far beyond all pie vious ) cut. To say lli.it such re mits, unt-l i ig tl.H'iif.h thirty years, me not bused upon sound sense and uselulnc, is an inMilt to the intel ligence of the millions. Piof. Hick, through tins gient Almanac, and his fumous family and scientific j uirnal, Word and Winks, is doing a woik for the whole people not approached by any other nun or publication. A fair test will prove this to any reasonable person. Add ed to the, most luminous course in astronomy for 1903, forecasts of SACRIFICE PRICES IN KUtiitoHot MWoiirl.lsiiii.eoiiflrinlii' storms and weather are Riven, as never before, for every day m the year, all charmingly illustrated with nearly two hundred engravings. The price of single Almanac, in cluding postage and mailing, is thirty ckn is. Word and Works with the Almanac is $1.00 a vear. Write to Word ani Works Pr i.ishisg Co , 2231 Locust Street, St. Louis, Mo., and prove to your self their great value. Special One Way Low Kate. ' On Dec. 16, Jan. 6 and 20, Feb. 3 and 17, Mch. 4 and 17, April 7 and 21, the Frisco line will sell tickets at one-half tare plus $2.00 to points in Atkansas, Indian Ty., Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico. , The Venezuelan trouble with Germany, Italy ai.d England goes to The Hague Court of Arbitration at the suggestion of the United -States. Wholesale critics of the tariff would commend their sincerity if net their wisdom in showing what particular schedules are harmful to the country. , The courts ot Europe don't set very good example for their people. The Princess or Saxony was com pelled by the brutal conduct of her royal husband, to leave him. She went with a better and a handsomer man. Castro, after finding out that Un cle Sam will not protect him in his efforts to repudiate honest debts, has agreed to have his troubles arbitrat ed by the powers with Uncle Sam on hand to tee that no unfair advan tage is takeu of the South American country. Insane 1'atieuta Ate 3O0 Chickens. The Missouri State Insane Asy lum, No. 3, at Nevada, gave Christmas dinner to the patients. The following was consumed: 200 chicken's, 43 geese, 50 gallons cranberry sauce, 14 bushels Irish potatoes, 500 bunches of celery, 20 gallons of chowchow, 40 gallons of tomatoes, 250 large loaves of bread, 125 gallons of coffee, 2,000 bana nas, 475 pounds of candy, 40 gal lons of milk, two and one-half cases lemm cream, 250 mince pies. American Pis and Kipling. Goldsmith rhymed of the (roosoberrj !e. Whittler found a thome In the pits try laden with goldoa pumpkin. Rud fard Kipling, the strenuous poet, dotel n apple pia of the American brand ihe kind hia American mother-iu-U makes and baa sent to New Yorlc foi a glass rolling pin that the crust maj m rolled in England a he remembers it here. Simplicity talka of pies." But eo d Senilis, whether ft be for art varlmu romrrierce. P. T. Ba num, the noblest showman of them all. not only talked pies but ate them, and bad never a dys peptic day of repentance. Therefore, the eager critioa who will claim to tvi reflected In Mr. Kipling- glass rolling pin the signs of his passing in poes and potency will read the-reflection wrong. The ready Rudyard will con fute them yet with a lusty ballod of tin pastry cook. The American taste for pie eami from England by way of the Pilgrim Father. It Is a matter of poetic Justin that Mr. Kipling has taken it back t Britain In its now highly cultivated state. If he eats bis fruited, crust foi breakfast he will only follow a practice which he must have observed in N England and which rumor lately da ciared to be threatening faddish fash ionable circles In the country at largo But however and whenever he con sumes his pet pastry, Mr. Kipling ii sure of beat wishes for great joy in hi! glass rolling pin from the pie eaters a: Nw Tork especially from the hal! million who attend daily to a factor) output of 2iK),0'0 round plates of temi Ution. New lork World. In filHiutiff tltlo to the follow liitf (U Horllx'd reiil ontnt', nit unto, lyliitf and lu'lngr in tlu county of llnten, in the istnte of Missouri, to-wlt: The west lmll of tht- northwest quarter of itKn tlilrty-four (34), of township thirty-nine (:!!), of rnnir tldrty-tlmv (!J, nnd tlint the record titlt! to mild bind lie jaTfeeted In fctiid plaintiff, nnd uiiIoxh the hhI4 Jncoli Arnold, bo and npinvir at till court, at the IH-Xt t'-rin thereof to ! lKiruii and liolden nt tlieeourt hotiM1 in the city of l.iitlT, In mild county. on the loth day of February, UHKl. iiiul aimwer or ploml to the jn'titloii lu an Id catiKo, the s.-ime will bo taken as confined, and Judgment will lie rendered accordingly. And Ii It fiirthor ordered that a copy hereof Ik published according to law lu Tiik Jlh'it Hir.t, Tiuiu nk, a wwkly iiewwpnpiT printed and pul- lislu'd in Hilton county, MiNiiurI, for four weekH tnieeei.shly, the l.-it In sertion to Ik1 at ieat tlftwn tlayH be fore the rlnt day of the next term of the Circuit Court. A 15. Lt iiwii K, Orcult Clerk. A true copy of the record. Wltm-M-s my hand and the will of the Circuit Court of liatoH county, tliiw 'SUl (lav of iKfflulier, X. B. Lrnw-WK, Circuit CJeik. H You have heard many a boastlul man say, "I take a dtink whenever I want to." lut that is Hot the trouble. It is the chap who takei a drink when he doesn't want to who is throwing himself to the dogs and depriving his family of bread. And the cursed too1 calls it bring a 'good fellow." New Yotk Picks. Women in New Zealand. A man with daughters need not feel ashamed in New Zealand. He'i a political power, a big man iu the district in w hich he resider. All women over twenty-one years of age can vote, so the man with cruny daughters often decides a clostly contested election. Tiien, again, (women are much sought after mat rimonially, for they are out num bered by the men two to one. There is no need for a woman be coming an old maid. The women are good dressers, and the styles ere as nearly up to date l)tue of London and New York. The United States civil service commission, in its annual report has this to say about the number of aged persons in the service of the government 1 ''The age at which persons become superannuated varies gieatly, but 70 years may be takeu as the general age of the end ot activity. Two invetigations made under authority of Congress, one in and one in 1900. show that the txtenl of this evil at the present time has been considerably exaggerated. In the eight execu tive departments at Washington in lSy3 ihrte weie 22S persons of 70 ycais of age and over gut of 1 1 ,657, cr almost exactly 2 per cent. In Hjoo there were 2O2 persons out of 10,167, or a iitt'e over 2 per cent, w bile the number of pn 1.0ns of So ycais sod over had actually tie Cieased duiing these seven years. An investigation conducted by the I'uUcd States Civ il Service Kelnt siitnt Association in the spungol j.2 shovvtd lh.it there wue only 3U pi(.ns over 7 )ers of age in dipaMinents and (edit si ct!icts at Washington oui vt 15,6, or 1 p7 rtr "iil IIW CAN'T It isn't a qurtliun of his winning a race, but a jurui.u of brinif ahle only to kerp sftuut. Tlir rim a who is suflrrtn from luulnutntion i like the fettered swimmer. 11 is ttumncb and its allied vrgnns of digestion and nutri tion ere diseased, it is not a question with him of inning In the race for Imai eru but of simply keeping up under snv circunislanres. iVheuever diseiw affei-ts the stouidcU it is affccliug also the blooil uj the health of every or f;an of the Ixxly, 1 or blood is only fuoil converted into nutritiuu and nutri tion is the life of the body ud every organ of it. Doctor 1" I tret's Golden Medical lntcovery cures diseases of the stomseh J ami other organs of digeation and nutri tion. It purine I He btoo.1 suit cnahles the perfect nutrition of the body which means perfect health. For sis lonsr yc-sra I suffered with Imlip IUa snd uiy ltvr mni ki.lury, which tHU-U ut IjcmI dtictuiS la otir country." wittrH Ii 1,. S4;.i. sell. r-Mj.. of W.klv. eniii. WilliMin Co., Va. - I MtScir,i wilh ntv Hloniscli and Imik Kji a Hig tniir. Miid sltrl IsbinK a ' cart lMti ttl tiilu iuc liviu lhi ductots I c(ra o ljd I cvild haiilly du a tLty s ut k Would I(mv tlraia-tik fMitus iu tl suU, and Mind t-u. 1 b-,t.u Iukmik Ir. I'lri.v (.ldrit Mriltest lliwuvciv sad ' I'lrs-Mtil friW ' Hrlutc I had tkcu bi.ll i4 hc M.dtd luii' I li to bt-l rrlirw-d. I is wixt tMOa sttd ums1 tlirtu attd am bsi'j.y W I HN, Wiy UlS lH. I'lCliX. Ao-et co sulalitute fur 'Golden Med ical Inwovety." There ia mthi:i) "just as fMl" f"' diaraars of tile stomach, blood and lunj;- The Connuou rWuae MctlU-al Adviser, nod laij(e liKea, iu pacr covers, is sent fife on iecciit of SI one-cent atamjis to psf espriim of mailing I'uly. Aadicas lH. IU V. a'idve, ii!lit IS,' V, If you want to supply yourself nnl family with good reading lor the winter wilh less money than anywhere else, call at TttR Tiiiiu'ne ollice and get from three to five good papers tor the price of one. v Success Calendar MEN NOT THB ONLY DRUNKARD 3 IU ports From London Show That in temperance Am one Women Is Increasing. At a meeting of the Women's unlet ot the Church ot England Temperanei society, which was held recently lt London, there was a general agreemeui! 11Mrt imiiilH-r. among the speakers that tnteuperauci la ths use both ot spirituous lUnmri and dmrs was increasing among wo men. Ail classes wer aQected, but tin drug habit la mora prevalent amuns. the wealthy, while gross drunkenliesf is shockingly common among the poor. The bishop of London said that hi had atatistics before him which showeC that out ot on thousand women In certain workhouse ona-half were then for drink, and he told an axtonUliIni story of th abandonment ot factor) girl to this vice, lt was a rusio: among them to farm what were knows as spirit clubs. In which contribution! wers accumulated for the purchase ot liquor. Tries wera regularly assewea for a grand celebration on Christian evo, when the money went for wins, and spirits and cake. The bishop was ot the opinion Ihnl sheer poverty and Ha attendant worries was ths cause of so niu h of ths inti-m perance among women, and dwult par ticularly upon the Inilueui w of environ ment "It was In ths Last end district not so much ye pig that mails tbs sty as ths sty that mads the pig, and thei fure all this Intemperance was vcr uiurh bound up with the qsii-.ilion ol tti b-trr bouaicg of the woriiiu tlaaacs." In that sentenee and all that lt im plies mill be found one of the reason for the spread of municipal Hia!l.:i in England and Scotland. The clcanl'i, out of the slums of great cities hit bfn considered absolutely eaaKiit'al t ths health and rporal oc the toniuiua. lty, but It wsa Impossible lo effect iht neceaaary changes so long as the slums continued to bs rUn revenue producers for grasping landlords. Paastug to ths ether eitreme of clety, the speaker Indicated that uml-r work, like overwork, was resixmijllj't for so esceaaive Indulgence In IriU Hi rsute. Elr T. Barlow, physic ian to l! king, aald that one of the rperlal f tur s of feuials Intemperance was se cret drinking, and among the cliiil causes of this secret drinking amors women was lack of occupation, as wH as sorrow and worry, bo.lliy wrakrie -a and the various forms of pa'n whh were temporarily relieved by alcohol It Is lulei-eatlng to cote also that I'.l eminent physician thoroughly dis countenanced tt e Idea that d.-ii' '..in Dt-sa should be treated primarily .is s dUraae or an Inheritance. It should b( treated, he suld( as a slu. 4 'hi. ai'j K cord-llersld. Magazine n utorelioune or trrns ury Century lilctloimry. . The Valley Magazine is a verit able storehouse of literary trwisure. Ksrt.-iyH full of good thought. Stories full of "the human." l'oetry -beautiful thoughtn lu in r- fect verse. Critical Art Idea Strong, vloruim, fenrlcuB, by nint-tin of minlyslw, well liiforined on thi-ir aubjevt or they don't write uliout tlu-m. New? Ven, nt lciiit not old, but m-iiHonod In tlint lti euiitrlbutors lire rlje in exiKTicni-e, nnd In their fed vigor of tlioimht. SeiiHoiied iiIho lu that it lacks not llavi.ir In never lint. Though but lifty eenta u yenr the HtibM'ripti'.m in limited to pernon of rutlicr more tlntn onlinnry intelli m'liee since other fall to ste the delicacy of detail nnd shrink from tho boiilnt-Hrt of the foreground of tliid liitiMterpht-o of publlcutlou. I'.uy this mi ii t li'u lf.Hii.' for five ct-utH from your. iiewMleuler, 1! be don't keep it neiid uh ten cents for three inoiitlm' trinl Mitis.rlptli)ii wbli-li will incliide the mijierb Chrint- WILLIAM M.MtlO.V llLLUV. ITHl.lMIIKU St. IvM't, Mo. wjTUi; puhlirthvr of Suffons hnve iwiue nn exipiiaitely etigmved twelve-leaf Cnleiidur. This Cahlldiir in one of the flnont exainplea of the famous CVdortype frocew, which ex celln llthi'Krnjihy in lt Ivniitlful noft tone nnd colorlm;. The twelve do hliiM urvMir'iglual imlntliijfs inndo for 'SueceW by Atuerlca's learllng nr- tUtH. nhd rejireselit aubjecti of pelt eral nnd Inspirational Intercut. The orlninnl ol the one for leeeiiilMr,'for liiKtatire, la a tnoKt t-xqullto pnlnt lug by the fiiiiioun nrtlnt, .1. C. ley endct kt r, r .nwiitlng "The Three Wlc- Men of the L'iit." The SL'tX KSS Culendnr will bo wilt cntinly Fl'.KK of elmrgx? nnd ptwtpnldto liny nddriKS on nipient. THE SUCCESS CO Dept. S. I'nlverslly BIJ'i. WsshtnjlonSi) NEW YORK ri dm jrs U 'H ZsA ijflS Hiing your Job TsiHt. NH bflke. woik t j The Tub TamuNK will gu.raritt? you latitfactioa co job priutiog. The Kansas City Star (Evening) . The Kansas City Times (Morning) AND The Kansas City Sunday Star ' 13 Complete Newspapers a Week 3 DELIVERED BY CARRIERS OR SENT BY MAIL, POSTAGE PREPAID, 10 6EEJTS A MEEK. Subscribers failing to receive Morn Evening or Sunday Editions promptly by carrier or by mail should report tho faot to THE IIAfiSnS CITY STAR, IC -V IV CI X v, .MIHHOUIVI, LADIES' WOOL WAIST GOODS We are offering the remainder ot our fancy wool waistings at a sacrifice, m order to close out the entire lot. These' -waistmgs were very cheap at the regular price, and the sac rifice price should make them doubly attractive. Fancy wool waistings, very . handsome, were 75o, ... 60c French Flannels in plain colors were 50c- - 40c. Corduroy waistings. in red, blue, brown, green, grey, black and pink, were cheap at 65c, - 40c H. V. GEIGER FAMILY OUTFITTER SLCCtSSOR TO W. II. flSlllR & CO. PAW. 3 M'lm W MA IK K9 With the coming of January, comes our Great Glcaring and Stock Reducing Sale. It is the same old cry, hut most welcome one to the people, livery year we inaugurate this won drrlut and popular Pre-Invcntory Sale. Every January the people espect it and arc not disappointed. Hundreds of people wait for it. Hundreds of peoplo are btiK-littcd ty it. Hundreds of people know what it means to tlietn at Jl Money Saver. Hundred of people know that the price, on gootls, is acliislly reduced as represented to be. Hundreds of people postpone nuking their Winter 1'urchases until we have stalled our January Prc-Invcntory Sale. We take inventoiy of stock l'tliruary ist, 1903. We begin our REDUCTION OF STOCK 5le Jan. ist. Our utock must be jjreat deal imsllcr by February 1st. The prices on all winter goods will be made with ihal end in view, Juin the January thiong, ou will find it at the store of the "DICCEST AND BUST." GOWLES-PcElIBBCN MERCANTILE COMPANY, Cioocstandocstr IUcliHlll, Mo. t 'ex. v,1 i 5 V SIS' m in 1 v Vi y 1 , ii'. n m i m Li 0