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i i m. r. '1 N: H- i1'. •-•. ,' «$, r? v- IV, :V: W & I :». ¥r-i'rv_: Jt I v. r-- & v & &i,. 1« ,: 'V ^r,f IP: ,' ^4' i:. 6, WILL ABANDON i WAR JIN MOORS Spain's .• \7 1 *V New Cabinet Hopes to Pacify Riffs. IELILU TO BE FORTIFIED Qwernment's Future Policy In Mo «BCCO Will Be to Hold Positions At- Heady Occupied and No Effort Made to Secure New Territory. Sultan's Assistance Will Be Asked .--"Sb Disarm Tribesmen. Madrid, Oct 2fl.—Lieutenant (Jen' oral de LtHjue, minister of war In tho new Liberal cabinet, confirmed in an Interview a report that the govern Kent had decided not to push furthe the Moroccan campaign. He spid that if the Liberals had been in power before they would have avoid ed the bloody and costly war and that henceforth the object of the govern ment would be to guarantee the safe ty of Melilla by the system of forti fied positions which were already oc cupied. Prom now on, the minister of wai aaid, the work of the army would be that of pacification and not of dom lnatlon and, while Spain would do fend the occupied positions, an effort would be made to induce the Rift's to dlserm and in this movement the aid Of the sultan's emissaries would be enlisted. De Luque added that though the Liberals disapproved the recent acta of repression at Barcelona Ferrer had been proven guilty on evidence and had been legally and Judicially condemned. HARD FIGHT OYER EVIDENCE Detente In Arbogart Case Objects to Ita Admission. St. Paul, Oct. 26.—A battle for ad mission of evidence, with Emma Ar bogast Timer on the stand, was the feature of the trial of Mrs. Mina Arbo fast on the charge of murdering i husband, Louis Arbogast. The partic ular point was that the state wanted to establish the finding of Mrs. Arbo fast's dress, soakod in blood, behind a bo* In the room where the murder was committed two weeks after tho tragedy- Mrs. Arbogast now sits at counsel table with hnr veil up. This is the first time judge or jury have seen her face. Scores of women standing in the courtroom were driven out almost vlo lently when they refused to move at repeated requests. AS RESULT OF A QUARREL Woman Shoots and Kills a Boarder. Chicago, Oct. 26.—Phillip Barrington Hardy, who came here recently front Toronto, Can., was shot and killed by Mrs. Anna Van Eyck, twenty-eight years old, at her home after a quarrel over money affairs. Hardy, who bearded in the Van Eyck home, had angered the woman when he went to the kitchen to wash his clothes. According to the police words fol lowed over financial matters and the woman ran to her room and procured a revolver. When she went to Har dj'a room he exclaimed: "You won't dare use that." Thereupon she levelled the revolver at him and shot him through tho heart. IN FEAR OF BOMB THROWERS RtiMlan Police Seem Helpless Before Terrorists. Odessa. Oct. 26.—The arrest ot wveti alleged terrorists here charged with bomb throwing has brought out. the fact that bomb throwing has lmd a wonderful revival In Russia, The efforts of the police to prevent these outrages seem of little avail. There were twenty-six successful or attempted outrages in European Rus sia and several in Siberia during Sep tember and the October figures prom ise to be even larger. With large numbers of expert" secretly producing bombs police ef forts at suppressing the unauthorized possession of explosives have little effect PRISONER ADMITS HIS GUILT Confesses to Murder of Woman Found Near Islip, L. I. New York, Oct. 26.—Frederick Geb feart, alias Otto Mueller, made a com plete confession of the shooting of Anna Luther, the woman he married In Newark, near Islip, L. I., In April, 199$. according to the police of Brook lyn. Mueller broke down, the police declare, and admitted the killing. He stated that he Bhot her because she had discovered that he had another Wife living and threatened to prose cute him for bigamy. Mfecause She Preferred the Stage. Washington, Oct. 26.—Enraged be cause his chorus girl wife preferred a life on the stage to his companionship William H. Short of New York city, In the west portico of the Union sta tion here, shot and perhaps fatally woonded her and then sent a bullet crashing through his temple. He died an hour later at the Casualty hos- J,' DEATH OF JUSTICE PEUKHAIV, Was Cleveland's Last Appointee to Supreme Bench. Albany, N. Y., Oct. 26.—Rufue W. Peck ham, associate justice of the United States supreme court, is dead at Coolmore, his mimmer home at Al tamont. Death was due to a eompli cation of diseases, heart trouble, rights disease and hardening of the arteries contributing. Justice Peckhani had been In ill health for some time, but his condi tion was not considered serious until recently. Following adjournment of the May term of the United States supreme court he came on fro.ii Wash ington with Mrs. Pcekham to spend the summer at Altamont, expecting to return for the beginning of th«* October term. A Will few days ago his condition became such that his physi clans said he was likely to die at any time or might linger for several months. Justice Peckham was a Democrat. He was born in Albany, N. Y., Nov. S, 1838, and had been on the bench, state and federal, for twenty-six years. He came from the court of appeals of his native state, a position which his father before him had occupied. He was the last of President Cleveland's Democratic appointments to the fed eral supreme court, Chief Justice Ful ler and .Justice White being the other two. He took his seat i& January, 1896. QUARTER MILLION DAMAGE RESULTS Terrific Btfler Eiplosioi at Pabst Plant at MHwauktt. Milwaukee, Oct. ?&.—As the result of a terrific boiler explosion In the power plant of the Pabst Brewing company Fred Stern, an employe In the engine room, is dead under tons of debris and Gottlieb Jehnert is in the Emergency hospital seriously and probably fatally injured. He is bad ly bruised about the head, right arm and back. The force of the explosion was so great as to throw nearby buildings off their foundations and to shatter win dows for many blocks. The damage is estimated by Gustav Pabst at $250,000. The big malt ele vator was moved three feet from its foundation into a private alley. Tenth street for a block Is filled with eight and ten feet of tangled debris. Flues and pipes weighing from ten to twenty tons were thrown all over the vldnitv. SOCIALISTS SWEEP SAXONY Conservative Party in Diet Has Been Completely Shattered. Dresden, Oct. 23. —The Conservative paity in the diet has been shattered by the sweeping victories of the So cialists at the elections. Out of thirty-four definite election) to the diet sixteen of the chosen mem bers are Socialists, while the Con servatives have fourteen and the Na tional Liberals four. ENDS HIS LIFE IN CEMETERY 8t Paul Business Man Drinks Bottle of Chloroform. St. Paul, Oct. 23.—M. Sorenscn, manager of the St. Paul knitting works, was found dead in a secluded part of Forest cemetery by Anthony Ambrosini, superintendent of the cem etery. Near Mr. Sorensen's side was found an empty pound bottle which had con tained chloroform. No reason Is known for Mr. Sorensen's suicide. WALSH GUARANTORS MEET Conference Looking to Sale of Bank' er's Railroads Held. Chicago, Oct. 26.—A conference looking to the sale of the Walsh rail roads was held here In John R. Walsh's office. Besides Walsh there were present at the conference John Zimmerman of Cincinnati and half a dozen Chicago financiers who guaran teed Walsh's notes at the time the latter's banks were closed. Zimmerman is 7 1 V, I Bald to be the agent Of a party of Wali street financiers, among whom are Edwin Hawley. DYNAMITE IN OAT BUNDLtS Threshers Make Discovery Jwtt In Time to Prevent Disaster. Rolfe, la., Oct. 26.—Sticks of dyna mite were found by threshers in sev eral oat bundles which they were about to hurl into the whirling grind ers of the threshing machine. There was a slight delay in the op eration of the separator, which made necessary the changing of the sieves. One of the men pitching bundles Into the machine sat down on one and fell Something hard under him. He pulled out a stick of dynamite. Furtbar amlnation revealed ethers. Pleads Guilty to Double Murder. Pierre, S. !)., Oct. 26.—In circuit court for Stanley county, at Fort Pierre, Isaac McC'or.n changed his plea front not guilty to guilty on the chnrge of murdeVlng William Toney and Charles Simmons of Sioux City near Kadoka last unc. The court set .WtdsMdiy aa ike -v WILL REGULATE DRI^iiii Steel Trust Hopes to Qet Better Re sults From Workmen. Pittsburg. Oct. 26.—The United States Steel corporation has decided to make an effort to control the drink ing of 25,000 persons in Fayette coun ty, Pa., interested in the mining of coke, and will invest $10,000,000 in order to obtain possession of the nine breweries now running inside the county. While the effort being made to merge these breweries is being con ducted in the name of the Pittsburg Brewing company it Is understood that the Steel corporation is back of th whole move and will try to regulate the drinking of the foreigners, it l» lng figured that at least 2 per cent better returns can be gleaned on tin millions invested there by regulating the drink of the coke worker—permit ting him to drink, but stipulating where and when he shall drink. The idea of the corporation Is to Increase the number of licensed drink ing places in the county so that all the workmen will be supplied, but to kill the sale of drink in bulk to the coke worker, it being alleged that the workman lays In a great store of drink when he is flush with money and then "lies down beside it." When the corporation secures absolute pos session of the nine breweries inside the county it is proposed to block all other beers In bulk from the county and not permit any of the nine brew eries to sell in bulk to the working men. TOWN HAS NARROW ESCAPE Citizens of Mobridge, S. D., Save Place From Destruction. Mobridge, S. D., Oct. 26.—The en tire population of Mobridge was forced to fight a prairie fire to save the town. The Are was started by a locomotive at. the river bridge and In a short time it was in the outskirts of the town, with the wind blowing a gale. Herman Ferguson's house and shop, A. C. Dykeman's barn and N. L. Nel son's outbuildings were burned and Rev. H. G. Booth's house, the school house and the Norwegian Lutheran church were scorched. About 200 acres of prairie land were burned over, destroying between 800 and 1,000 tons of hay in the stack. LEAVES ITALY FOR HOME Czar's Departure Guarded With Great Display of Troops. Racconigi, Italy, Oct. 26.—Emperor Nicholas has left here on his return honiewajd. He was accompanied to the ?tation by King Victor Emmanuel, members of the court and govern mental officials. As upon the emper or's arrival a great display of troops was made. A huge crowd enlivened the scene with Bhouts of farewell. Killed by Tainted Oystera. Celina, O., Oct. 26.—Charles A. Kloeb, chairman of the Ohio Demo cratic state central committee, Is dead at his home here from ptomaine poi soning. Kloeb became 111 Saturday after eating oysters. PASSING OF NOTED PERSONS CHARLE8 F. SPALDING, director of the Commercial National bank, the Hibernian Banking association of Chi cago and the First National bank of Marinette, Wis., is dead In Chicago. COLONEL JOHN D. HOPKINS, the father of popular priced theatrical per formances in the Middle West, is dead in St. Louis. He was about seventy nine years old. HENRY CHARLES LEA, widely known as an author, banker, scientist and publisher, Is dead In Philadelphia, aged eighty-four years. 6RAIN AND PROVISION PRICES Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, Oct. 25.—Wheat—Dec., $1.02%: May. $1.04^^1.04^. On track—No. 1 hard, $1.0.rV 1.0R%: No. 1 Northern. $1.04% @1.05% N* 2 Northern, $1.02%@1.03H. 8t. Paul Live Stock.* St. Paul, Oct. 25.—Cattle—Good to choice steers, $6.75@7.50 fair to good. $B.t)0©6.'?5 good to choice cows and heifers, $4.25^( 5.25 veals, $6.50(a 7.00. Hogs—$7.20 @7.60. Sheep—Wethers, $4.10p4.25 yearlings, $4.765B.OO spring lambs, $6.00@6.50. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Oct. 25.—Wheat—Dec., $1.04a« May, $1.04% July, 98c. Corn —Dec., r9V*c May, 64*4§)64%c July, 60s^ (ff 60%c. Oats—Dec., 40c May, 42*i«f42%c July, 39%c. Pork—Jan.. $18 95 May, $18.67%. Butter—Cream eries, 261iS0c dairies, ?3(?f28c. Eggs —lS(?/2( Poultry—Turkeys, 15c chickens and springs, ll%c. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago. Oct. 25.—Cattle—Beeves, $2.85WS.'0 Texas steers, $3.80g~'4.90 Western steers, $4.00(i)7.25 stockers and ieeders, $3.00@5.10 cows and heifers, $2.00^5.75: calves, $7.00# 9.50. Hogs—Light, $7.2.r@7.80 mixed, $7.45^^.00 heavy, $7.35f(8.00 rough, $7': 5Tj 7 .Fr» good to choice heavy, $7.!'6'(fS.00 pigs, $5.50®7.30. Sheep —Native. $2.10(f 4..H0 yearlings, $4.40 lanibs, $4.26^)7.20. DOWNWARD COURSE Fast Being Realized By Madi M»n People. A little backache at first. Daily increasing till the back is lsrne and weak. Urinary disorders quickly follow Diabetes and finally Bright'H disease. This is the downward coarse of Jud* oey ills. Don't take this course. Mrs. L. Thomppon, Dell Rapifta. 5. D., 8Mys: '*1 do not hesitate to recom mend Doan's Kidney Pilln. For three months. I suffered from a dragging down pain through my back and hip^ and often could hardly move. Having read so mnch about Doan's Kidnej Pills, I decided to try thein and pro cured a box. Before I had finished th» contents I found great relief and the troable has now entirely disappeared." For ssle by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the CJnitec States Remember the nsme—Doan'»—and take no other. P08T0FFICE SAFE ROBBED Yeggmen Secure $500 at St. Louis Park, Minn. Minneapolis, Oct. 25.—Yeggmen blew the postofflce safe at St. Louis Park, a suburb, and secured $500 in money and a large number of postage stamps. The cracksmen made a clean getaway. The robbers gained entrance by Jbrciug a back window, after which they had easy access to the safe. This was the third attempt at safe blowing in St. Louis Park within the last few months. ALARMED BY EARTH SHOCKS Residents of Catania, Sicily, Camped in the Open Air. Catania, Sicily, Oct. 23.—Several strong earth shocks were felt here They wore more pronounced at Aci roale, on the slope of Mount Etna. The people at this place, alarmed by the first shocks, rushed out of their houses and camped in the open air. Ten houses fell in the outskirts of Aciroale, but only one person was killed, a veterinary surgeon, who re fused to abandon his house. The whole Mount Etna region was severely shaken. KILLS TO SAVE HIS OWN LIFE Threatened Man Shoots Would Be As sailant on Sight. Jacksonviile, Fla.. Oct. 25.—Charles A. Husband, who was given a certain time to leave Jackscnville or be killed by J. H. Smith, shot and killed Smith when the two met. Smith had ordered Husband to leave town because of having seen Husband with Mrs. Smith. Mr. and ¥rs. Smith have been separated since 1907, when Smith killed John Milton for alleged attentions to her. Hus band was an-. -tcd. Deafness Cannot he Cured by local applications, as they oannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed cor dition of the mucous lining of the Eu stachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is en tireir closed, deafness is the result, and unless the inflamation can be taken out and thin tube is restored to its normal oondition, hearing will be destroyed fc ever nine cases out of ten are i aused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous Hurfaoes. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bend for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY A CO Toledo, O. Sold by lruggist8. 75. Take Hall's F»mih Pills for nnnatipation TO-NIGHT Nutiiv iif Stilt- Ki-al Estiit'. Bv virtue lit' an iinit-r andi'iiTtr nf ih»" roun- ty Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Oct. 25.—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 hard, $1.05% No. 1 Northern, $1.04% No. 2 Northern. $1.02% Oct.. $1.04 Nov.. $1.04 Dec., $1.01%: May, $1.04% Flax—To arrive and on track, $1.70% Oct., $1.69*. Nov., $1.69% Dec., $1.66% May, $1.68. court of Kingsbury county, South Dttkota. on tin' in tition of the undersigned, Frank Y. I .iM'ke. (fuurdinn of the estate of Kleaiwr Foley, a minor, for an order to sell the saiilj, real estate of the said Ehunor Foley, a minor« at a regular term of the county court within^ and for kin^sbury county. South Dakota, ore the 'All It ilny of November*. and it a pi caiv inR to the satisfaction of the said county courtj and upon reading and tilifcg the appearancef and consent of the heirs ana next of kin. UHJ well as the said guardian, Frank Y. Locke.^ guardian of the said Kleanor Foley, a minor| that they waive si verallv the service of notice of the said hearing mid tile publication thereof,, of the said order to show CHUHI' why the saidE: Mle should not be made at said time and place. Now, therefore, the said guardian, Frank Y Locke, hereby gives notice that the following described premises will be sold to the highest bidder for cash or upon the following terms and conditions to wit One third cash and the balance on a credit not exceeding two years, payable in grow or Installment* within that tfire, with such rate of interest as the court may dinvt, and uton note given for purchase miiney secured by first mortgage on the said premises to be sold. That snid guardian, Kriink Y Locke, will sell at pri vate sale on and after the-Ath day of Novem ber, IW, to the hi^'liest bidder on terms aliove stated. Bids for same may In* filed in writing at the law office of Farmer & Blewitt, in the dt v of Madison, s with J. F. Blewitt, or With Hon. E »ireen, county judge of Kings bury county, DeSmet. S. D. That said real estate to be sold is described as follows, to-wit: An undivided ne half interest of the south east quarter of -ection eight 81, township 107, north of range r. t. Lake county. South Dakota, west of the 5th P. M. tile southwest quarter of section 2!\ township 107, north of range 51, west of the 5th 1J. M., laUe county, South Da kota the west half of the southwest quarter of section 15, township 108, north of range 64. west of the 6th l* Lake county South Dakota, and the northwest quarter of section 10. town ship !(*, north of range M. west of the fith P. I M.. Lake county, South Dakota I Dat» thia Itith day of October, 1905) I FKANK f. LOOKK, Guardian of the Kstate of Kloanor Foley, a! V A 4 Chas. B. C. It. Kluxer, the jeweler. I0G() Virgin ia ave,, Indianapolis. Ind., writes: "I was so nick from kidney trouble that I could hardly walk a hundred feet. Kour bottlee of Foley's Kidney Remedy clear ed my complexion, cured my backaohe and the irregularities disappeared, and 1 can now attend to bunineas every day and recommed Foley's Kidney Remedy to al! Huffererp, as it cured me after the doctors and other remedies had failed— gold by all druggists. KnrlolFor Indigestion. Relieves sour stomach, palpitation ot the heart. Digests what you eat DeWitfs Kidney and Bladder Pills FOR BACKACHE (JR. H. P. GULSTINE, ...DENTIST- PHONE 293 Office over Tie Bit Store MADISON, S. DAM High Class furs Complete Stock of. my own make at Manufacturer'! PRICES Mail Orders Prompt ly Attended to AUGUST WILUGES SIOUX CITY'S FURRIER Sioux City, Iowa 1V0SE WHO ANTICIPATE Holding a Public Sale this Season see COL. NIGHBERT AUCTIONEER Twenty-three Years Exper ience as a Cryer nffiTF jinny GARNtfi otu II i IIIIH iwmw LAND IS THE BASIS OF ALL WEALTH and the demand lor Lake County farmJ is increasing. II F0U are in search of a Home in a Good Climate where you can raise Wheat, Oats Barley Cori\ Potatoes and in fact everything adapted to this latitude and where you can successfully carry on Dairying & Stock Raising and where your family will have the advantages oi GOOD SOCIETY GOOD SCHOOLS GOOD CHURCH FACILITIES Then come and see me, and I will show "ou iust what you want II you are renting land now, paying #3 to $5 annual rental, I will show yuu iust as good land and sell II to you at what you will pay out in rental where you are in three ye^rs, and will give you easy terms ot payment If you want a good location in Madison in Madison the past season and the cit^ is steadily growing in population. Correspondence Solicited MADISON, SOUTH DAKOTA. have such for vou. I lar^e number oi substantial buildings have been built Kennedy, VAL BLATZ BREWING CO. MILWAUKEE BEER on draught at FRED KURTH'S, J. S. MURPHY, PETER HEAGNEY Prioate stock, Wiener style, Bottle beer Kt all Leading Saloons in the city. L. J. AHMANN, Agent. Surprising, What Kodol Will Do For you, when you need it. But the longer you neg lect Indigestion, the more you will suffer before Kodol can restore Good Digestion* And, of course, Indigestion If neg lected long enough, brings on seri ous diseases in which Kodol cannot benefit you. Some of these there 1b no help for at all. There are, in fact, very few ail ments which cannot be traced di rectly to impure blood. And Im pure blood is always due to a dis ordered stomach. Use Kodol and prevent Nervous Dyspepsia. Kodol will effectually assist Na ture to secure a complete restora tion of good digestion. It does this by at once digesting all food In the stomach and keeping it di gested, until the stomach is rested and can resume its own work. Ko dol removes the cause—and the effect quickly removes itself. When it is recalled that Apo plexy, Heart Disease, Cancer—and even Consumption—are due to poor digestion and poisons thus transmitted to the blood, and throughout the systoni—the impor tance of maintaining good 'diges tion U at once realized. s. A V We knew what Koto! would do before ever the first bottle was sold. If we did not know just what it will do, we would not guarantee it the way we do. It is easy for you to prove Kodol —the next (or the first) time you have an attack of indigestion. And you will certainly be surprised at the results. It is perfectly harm less. There can be no harm in trying something that may do you a great deal of good—when it costs jom nothing if it doesn't. Our Guarantee Qo to your lrnntfi-t today ami (ret a do!* lar bottle. Tlitru aft« you have uned tli® entlra contents of the bottle if you can houeatly say, that It has not done you any Kood, return the bottle to the drujfurUt and he will refund your money without ours* tion or delay. We will tt.°n pay the drujr* pist for the bottU. D- i't hesitate, all druggists know that our fc aarautee is (rood. This offer applies to the lar(re bottle only and to but one in a family. The lar^re bo*» te contains 2^ times aa much aa the &ttf cent bottle. i Kodol is prepared at the labor* I tories of E. C. DeWitt 4b Co.fCfclcaga, J,