* , * . _ xc - - ; : . . ' " . . . . r p. . J . . _ _ _ I , , . Hie Valentine Democrat : > al : i - VAIiENTENE , NEB. : ' : < l , ' L 31. RICE , - - - - Publisher . l , ' " UNCLE SAM'S \ LEPERS : s list . / ' , , ' _ " TOTAL NUMBER TRIVIAL COM' PARED TO INHABITANTS. r 1 - > V Iowa One of Twenty-Nine States Re. porting No Recognized Cases to the ' t Public Health and Marine Hospita , . Service. Washington C. : Iowa is one of . the twentj'-nine states that have re ported no officially recognized cases ol i i leprosy to the United States public health and marine hospital service Fourteen other states and territories \ ' : . report a total of 139 cases of leprosy I an the United States , Louisiana lead [ . ing with fifty cases and Florida and I J : California following with twenty cases : ' I each. 'I I Though the federal health officers report that leprosy appears to be under ! ' . . control and dying out in the north , ! / central portion of the United States ! Minnesota still has sixteen recognized lepers Wisconsin and Missouri one , each. The leprosy commission author ized by congress in 1901 , however , found twenty cases of leprosy in Min nesota , sixteen in North Dakota , three in Wisconsin and one in Iowa. North Dakota and Iowa now report entire freedom from the dreaded disease. The total number of lepers in the United States is trivial , however , as 'compared with the great population of the country , but federal health officers ' are giving special attention to this dis- ease owing to the abnormal fear that exists in regard to it. Then , too , the insular possessions of the United "States have brought the disease more I to the attention of the health author I 7 ' ities of the government. The Philip- ; ; pines ] are reported as having 2,330 of- I " ficialljr recognized cases of leprosy , \ Hawaii : , 764 cases ; Porto Rico , 17 , and : the canal zono , , .J. : i ROADMAKERS TO MEET. . i ( National ] Association Gathers at Colum . . I I bus October 26. ! ! : Columbus , 0. : The American Road- ) i inakers' association will hold its sixth \ f I annual convention in this city begin- r I ning October 26 and continuing three I days. : The sessions will be attended i. \ . I I ! " .by delegates from every state. ' The convention will be held in j + I i con- : ' I - junction with the annual convention of : \ ! the Ohio Good Roads federation. ; j , ! A feature will be construction of a ; I stretch of highway at the state fair ! ! i grounds to demonstrate the scientific principles of road building with the aid I I -of modern road - machinery. . I I 1 ; LOANS TO LABORERS. I : ! ' -Swedish Government to Stem the Tide , _ of Emigration. I Stockholm : With a view to stem- . I ming the tide of emigration , which I threatens to deplete the country of i agricultural laborers , a national sub- scription has been started to obtain , . . funds for loans to laborers left unem- ! ployed after the recent big strike. The : loans are intended to enableAhe pur- i chase of small farms and will be made i -repayable within ten years. - I I Atrocities in the Congo. : Brussels : New atrocities in the Con- : go independent state have been reveal i , ed by an officer of a rubber company. He charges that between 1907 and . 1909 a number of the companies tor- i : tured and killed many natives , posted ii I ! armed sentries , chained and impris- ohed the natives , forcing them to ivork. \ Prohibition Law Defied. "Mobile , Ala. : State and county of- fals here have abandoned efforts to ' .get convictions of violators of the pro- hibition law. More than 100 cases . have been tried , and the result has 'been either a mistrial or acquittal. Nu merous blind tigers are being opened } , 3n this , the fourth largest city in the Ii i I -sou tho I , - I ; { Rapid Vaccination. ( New York : All known record for ! - rapid vaccination are believed to have : been broken at this port. The Greek I ( . steamer Themistophole was detained ; at quarantine from 7:30 a. in. until 3:30 ; ; : : ; p. in. until 1.045 emigrants from Pa- tras and other ports l had been vac-cm . ated. ' . , . , , \ . . . Bishop Here Dead. Atlantic City. N..1. : The Rt. Rev. William Hobart Hare , bishop of the J Episcopal diocese : of South Dakota . died here Saturday night after a long 3 . . illness. He was 72 years : of age. Sioux City live Stock Market. , . , "Sioux City : Saturday's : quotations on the Sioux City live stock market . \ . follow : Top beeves , $ 7.00. Top hogs , 97.45. . . Bullion for Egypt. London : Bullion amounting to . 135,000 sterling was withdrawn from the' Bank of England Saturday for shipment to Egypt. o a. Raleigh , Nl C. : The board of gov- ernors of the American Textile associa- " - tion has ordered all the big cotton mills : , : . . of North and South Carolina to close " down for a period of from 14 to 30 1 . days , in order to curtail the manufac . ture of cotton . . . . . ' t , . . . . 7.z' .effiT'ai - - , = - . - : - - . . . - - . - - - - - ' - - - - I LOST IN SAN DIEGO DESERT. Unknown Family May Have Perished of Famine. San Bernardino , Ca ! . : It was report- ed here that an unknown family : , lost in the desert of San Diego , Cal. , was traced to la comparatively short dis tance from the west side of the irri gation canal , but whether the people found the water or were guided farther away through some of the various can- yons and arroyos in which that coun- try abounds is unknown. The family outfit was found five miles east of Ca- rise creek by T. H. Kellogg , a mining man. man.When , the three horses refused to go farther over the burning sands and one fell dying the man had unhitched them from the wagon , and leading the staggering animals and followed by his suffering family set out across the rocky hills and parched plains. There was every evidence of extreme suffering to those who followed the trail. Kellogg says the family stopped for rest many times and that their trail shows they must have been in sore straight. All efforts to learn the family's identity have been futile. Chicago : Miss : Bertha Dougherty , a Chicago school teacner , who read of the family lost and believed to be per- ishing in the California desert de clared that she believed that the ill fated sufferers were her brother , Jay , Dougherty , of Santee , Cal. , his wife Cora and their three children , Lois , aged 10 , Robert , aged 6 , and Elizabeth , S years old. DYCHE WILL ACCEPT. Tells Cook He Will Make the Journey 1 Up Mt. McKinley. Lawrence , Kan. : Dr. Frederick A. Cook wired Prof. L. L. Dyche. of the Kansas state university , from Duluth Saturday , as follows : "Will be pleased to have you join Mt. McKinley : expedition. The details of that expedition will be undertaken shortly. " Prof. Dyche wired his acceptance. Prof. Dyche will soon start for the cast , lecturing between Kansas City and New York where he will join Dr. Cook. The object of the lecture course is to raise funds to enable Dyche to go on the \Iti McKinley trip , although the University of Kansas will help pay the . expenses. Since the announcement was made that Prof. Dyche is to go with Dr. Cook he has been besieged by persons , , : ish- ing to accompany him , including sci entists , naturalists and newspaper men , and also by requests for his auto- graph . DELAWARE IS SPEEDY. Battleship Driven at Rate of 21.98 i I Knots an Hour. Rockland , Me. : American ship- builders demonstrated their bility to push the battleship Delaware / the high- est developed marine fighter in the world , in a standardization test over ! a measured mile course Saturday at a ' speed of 21 .98 knots an hour subject I' to tidal corrections. I In accomplishing this feat 30,000 I horse power , the greatest ever attained I by a first class battleship , commonly known as the dreadnought class , was developed. The mean of the Delaware's runs Saturday was 21.44 knots an hour , a margin of .44 of a knot over the con- tract with her builders , the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock com- pany. The big fighting craft put ] out to sea .Saturday afternoon for a four hours' endurance run. Tries to Murder Wife. Carthage , Mo. : Edward Brooks , a miner , 25 years old , attempted to mur der his wife by : cutting her throat Sat- urday while the two were walking on the electric line track towards Webb City. Brooks escaped with officers on his trail. Mrs. Brooks probably will die. Denies Telephone Deal. Cleveland , 0. : James S. Brailey , Jr. , of Toledo , 0. , Saturday made a posi- tive statement denying that the Bell Telephone company interests have se- cured the independent companies con- trolled by Brailey through his recent purchases. Despoil Finnish Convent. Czenstochowa , Russian Poland : Dur- .ng the night robbers entered the chap el of the Pauline convent here and despoiled the image of the Virgin of the Robe with its pearls , the diamond- studded qrown and many votive offer- ing of jewels. , Senator McCarren is Dead. New : York State Senator Patrick H. McCarren died shortly after 1 o'clock Saturday morning after a brave fight for life following an operation for appendicitis. His family was at his bedside. St. Paul Minn. : : : Dr. Frederick A. Cook , who lectured here Saturday evening , announced that Prof. L. L. Dyche , of the University : of Kansas , has been definitely decided upon as one of the members of his forthcoming l\1J : McKinley expedition , having accepted . : . . . . . the offer. . Amount of Cotton Ginned. Memphis , Tenn. : The report of J. A. Taylor , president of the National ; Ginners' association , indicates that there has been ginned to October 18 , 5,320,000 bales of cotton , which is near- ly a million bales less than was ginned in that period last year. : . Harvester Plant for Moscow. I Moscow : A party of Americans has arrived to establish a plant for the manufacture of harvesting machinery. : I = = = -c " ' - _ _ - - . _ _ , _ _ _ _ - - _ - _ _ _ _ - GOLD IN EUROPE. II I I Foreigners Insist on Americans Pay ing Maturing Indebtedness. ( . New : YorkNew : York bankers are not entirely agreed as to the influence ! of New York credit operations in hav ing forced the sensational advances of ! the last two weeks in the Bank of Eng Eng.l land's official discount rate. Current estimates of New York's ' borrowings from foreign markets have run as high as $500,000,000 for the sea son. Jacob H. Schiff asserts that much exaggeration had attended these estimates. It is a fact , however , that New York clearing house banks con tracted on loan account $110,000,000 from the last week in August to Oc tober 16 without evidence of any corre- sponding liquidation in the stock mar ket. These loans were- supposed to ; have been transferred to a large extent to foreign banks. A : rhe same time the country's foreign trade has been abnormal in the heavy value of imports and the scanty exports , leaving no ad equate supply of exchange to meet ma turing indebtedness abroad. ' The rapid rise in forcing exchange I rates in New York for several days I past shows that foreigners are insist- ing on payment of maturing indebted ness and indicate that exports of gold may be involved in meeting the re quirements. FOR TRIPLE MURDER/ Trial of Six Cattlemen Attracts Much Attention. Basin , Wyo. : The trial of Edward Eaton , George Sabin , Herbert Brink , Ihonias Dixon , William Keyes and Charles Farris , cattlemen , for the al I leged murder of Joe Alleman , Jules Lazier and Joseph Emge , sheepmen , on April 2 , 1909 ! ) , is attracting great attention in the range country. ! The charge is made that the grand jury : was illegally drawn , only a frac tion of the list of electors being used and that while several prominent sheep ; men were drawn on the grand jury , the cattle industry was not rep resented at all. reD'1 It is alleged that this was the result of a deliberate plan by the officials oi the county. ALL CHARGES DISMISSED. Indictments Against St. Louis Man Dropped by the Government. St. Louis , Mo. : Six indictments against E. G. Lewis , originator of the "Peoples Bank , " and widely known as a magazine publisher , were nolle prossed by United States District At torney Blodgett before Judge Smith McPherson in the United States dis trict court here Saturday. These were the last of a series of. charges made against Mr. Lewis by i the postal authorities Several years : ago and in which no action had been . , . taken by , government since May } , 1908 , when Judge Riner of Cheyenne. Wyo. , refused to submit the case to the jury , holding that there was a lacl ; I of evidence. Ban by Government on Buying Stocks on Installment Plan. Washington D. C. : A scheme for the selling or buying of stocks en the installment plan has been put under the ban by the postoifice department by the issuance of a so-called : "fraud order" against the Guaranty Securities company at Los Angeles , Cal. According to allegations of postoffice' inspectors the i company was engaged in the purchase and sale of stock for people not having sufficient capital to pay the necessary money outright. ! ' . Payments for the stock -vyere accepted on the installment plan. It is alleged by the inspectors that no attempt was made to purchase the stock ordered , although the money of I the purchaser would be retained. CHINESE UNDER ARREST. Suspected of Having Been Smuggled Over Mexican Border. St. Louis , Mo. : Immigration In. spector Dunn , of St. Louis , received a telegram Saturday from Dallas. Tex. , informing him that fourteen Chinese who arrived in that city October 15 have been arrested , suspected of hav- j I i ing been smuggled across the Mexican r border. Inspector Dunn believes these I are the Chinese who occupied a "room" in one end of a freight car I containing alfalfa hay , which reached St. Louis Friday from Belan , Tex. \V 1en the car arrived here it con tained bedding and provisions in the little room scooped out in the hay. but no occupants. Saves Child's Life. Wilkosbarre. Pa. : Seeing a child playing on the \ trade ahead xof bim at Ashley. John Knaiji.an ; : , ouginecr , . the Central Railroad of Now Jersey , I applied } ! the " : nicrcency ! : brake1 to his long train of rxml cars so suddenly that the train tn'kl'd m the middle , throwing several cars from the track. The locomotive bloppod a few yards from where the child was playing. Young Hunter Accidentally Shot. Black Creek. Wis. : Emil Hinz , aged 13 , was shot in the left leg while loading a revolver. He was preparing to go hunting. Socialists Win Seat. Coburg. Germany : The socialists won another scat in the reichstag at Friday's elections in this city which had been regarded as a stronghold of the national liberals. The turnover is attributed to dissatisfaction over the new taxes. Mt. Vernon , Hi. : . Mrs. Elizabeth ' Bernard , aged 70 , died from burns re ceived when 'her clothing accidentally I ' caught fire. , - . i , \ . : . .J : , . _ . .L 4rlTA Y4a- - - , - - - - - " - - ' " - - " " - , * * ti ti * * 4 * Ti t * _ a .Tti * * * t , * Iii NEBRASKA STATE NEWS fit , rJ n 4T , , _ _ News of : the Week . J ; * { , \ in Concise Form I - - ; , r # \ * * * * * * l * i * l/ * * * l * ± * BATHING IS COfi > ULSORY. Ban is Put on Dirty Children by Oma- ha Officer. Compulsory bathing once each _ day is the latest edict that has gone out from the office of Probation Chief Bernstein , of Omaha. For the purpose of cleaning up the boys of the street and other children who are neglected , a bath , both plunge and shower has been installed in the basement of the city hall , where soap and towls are supplied. It is open to boys at all hours of the day. So far the boys are taking kindly to the new order of things , but it required a little , force- to get the movement started to - ward the faucets. Keeping clean is not going to end with the children of the street , for Superintendent Davidson , of the pub- lic schools , has joined in the crusade and has directed his teachers to send home each and every child that ap- -pears in school with dirty hands and face. FALLS FROM AUTO. Sirs. Frank Spear Instantly Killed Near Pic ; ' : crei. : , Mrs. Frank B. Spftar , of Diller , was instantly killed two miles north of Pickerell , being thrown from an auto- i mobile. She struck on her head , break- ing her neck. i Mr. and . .Mrs. J. Smith Diller , of Dil ler , Averill Fouts and Mr. and Mrs. Spear formed a party that was motor- ing from Diller to Lincoln in Mr. : ; Dil- ler's machine. Near : Pickrell , a cul i vert that had been . washed away , left a hole in the - . oad. In crossing it other occupants of Hie t car succeeded in hold- I ing their se.ats , but Mrs. Spear was thrown out. The car was not over- turned. Mr. : ; Spear is a druggist at Diller and one of the prominent citizens. Mrs. Spear was of middle age. . &ONK : SAFE DEFIES CRACKSMEN. : Work : Over Tlirco Hours Trying to Open It Without Success. After working from 1 o'clock until 3:30 : in an effort to break open the strong box of the \Tanley state bank , robbers gave up in disgust and de parted , taking precautions , however. to leave no clues behind as to their identity. The bank was robbed October 29 , 1908 , and the robbers secured between $2,000 and $3,000. The officers then procured a new safe and placed the monoy in a specially strong steel box inside the larger one. This the bur- glars ! found it impossible to break open and too heavy to cart aaway. Nine ex- plosions of dynamite -were heard by residents of the town , but none was brave enough to investigate. Quarantine is Necessary. . Inasmuch/as . some articles have been appearing in the public press to the effect that the state board of health is not much concerned over the quar- antine against spinal meningitis. State Health Inspector Wilson desires it to be known that it is very important that every case be quarantined , as it is ntagious. Robbers Arc Foiled. The vault of the Farmers' State bank . at Shubert was blown open by burglars. The vault was completely wrecked and the small safe containing the money was thrown by the force of the explosion into the middle of the room. The noise caused by the explo- Ion scared the men away. Commission Men Hang Back. The law requiring commission mer- chants to register their names with the secretary of state and give a bond after paying a license free of $10 is evidently pretty muc\i } of a dead letter. : Up to this time only seventeen have taken out the licenses and of these five are grain merchants. Every one paid his money under protest. . . . Girl Hit by Brick. While on the way to school Helen Hirmon , the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. : Tony Hirmon , of Wymore was struck on the nose by a brick thrown , . by some boys. The nose was smashed and an operation was necessary. se\"er- il pieces of bone being removed. Aetl $ Man Commits Suicide. The father of : \11' . - ch nz- . living norjheast of Sutton. cnmmiltod ruiriJc by hanging himself : to a tree in the orchard. Old-Time Doctor Dead. Dr. Thomas S. Grant was found in an . . . . unconscious conditioji In his room at Nebraska City and taken to jail , be- cause of the lack of a hospital , and there he was found dead in his bed. Sanclbiirr Causes Death. James Keenan , aged 92 years , resid- ng : on his .farm one mile east of Brok- en Bow , died of blood poisoning re- sulting from the prick of a sandburr. Mr. Keenan was born in Ireland in the yqar 1818. ! . Against Sunday Paper. 1 Rev. C. H. Rogers , of the Plymouth church , in an address at Lincoln , spoke against the Sunday paper and the Sun- I : day street car. . . _ - : . ' : i , ' . . " " .1 ; ' : . ; , . . { ' ; . h ' : : . : : , ' . l . _ . _ . . yra.c - - - - - - - - - BIENNIAIi SESSION HEM Nebraska Catholic Knights : of Amcri. ca Meet at Hartington. The thirteenth biennial state counct of the Catholic Knights of America for Nebraska convened at Hartington last week. The meeting was preceded by ! : a solemn high mass , celebrated by Very Rev. Joseph Ruesing , of West Point , state president of the order. The delegates and state officers met in St. Michael's hall and the reports of the president and secretary showed a ma- terial gain in membership in the state : and an excellent prospect for exten- I sion of membership for the future. Very Rev. Joseph Ruesing , of West Point , was elected delegate from the state ' to the supreme council of the order , which meets at Asheville , X. C. , in May , 1910. The following state of- ficers were unanimously elected : President , Rev. Julius Hettwer , of : Stuart ; vice president , Nicholas Funk . of Randolph ; secretary , Charles Weiss , ' of Hartington , and for treasurer , John H. Lindale of West Point. GRAND OFFICERS. Odd Fellows Elect the Following Named Men. The grand lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows elected the fol lowing officers : I Grand patriarch , J. P. Carson , of Lincoln. Grand senior warden , Captain J. Iarks , of Omaha. Grand high priest , E. H. Newhouse of Red Cloud. Grand junior warden , S. R. McFar- : land : , of Madison. Grand . scribe , D. P. Sage of Fre mont. Grand treasurer F. B. Bryant , of Omaha. Grand representative , C. B. Doughty , of Norfolk. Fined 81,000. Chester H. Smith ; postmaster at Plattsmouth , appeared before Judge T. C. Munger in the United States court at Omaha and entered a plea of guilty to an indictment charging him with submitting a false and erroneous account and voucher to the auditor of the postoffice department. He was fined $1,000. The fine was paid be- fore Mr. Smith and his attorney left the building and Smith was discharged from custody. No Funds Say Regents. Because the state university regents have failed and refused-lo locate the two experimental stations in western Nebraska under the act of the last legislature , which appropriated $5,000 for one and $15,000 for the other , to be paid out of the temporary ' 'universi ty fund , B. K. Bushce has filed an original action in the supreme court asking for a mandamus to compel the regents to . .compjy with the law. Is Murder Suspect. J * imos Miller was arrested at Lin- coln and is held on the charge of de- serting from the army. Papers and , pictures found in his pockets indicate that his true name is James E. Gin- gery. who is accused of the murder of William Welsh , at Moline : , Ill. .I . Boy Brought Buck. Elinr Miller : , the boy who escaped from the reform school in Kearney and made his get-away on a stolen horse , was found at his old home north of Minden and brought gack to the school by an officer of the institution. - - Nccdlmm Chosen Moderator. At the annual meeting of the dele- gates from the Congregational church- es in Lincoln O. M. : Needham , of Al- bion was elected modyrator for the coming year and Rev. S. H. Buell of Grand Island the assistant modera- tor. Suit for Interest by County. Of the 90 cases on the district coun in Beaver City nine are for divorces. The most important matters are the suits of the county against the former county treasurers for interest on coun- ty money deposited in excess of the bonds of depository banks. . lvtMiesi\v Wants "atcrYorks. . An rction ; will soon be i held ir Kene aw. tho second town west of Hastings ' > n the gUrlin , tln. for the law i ( ' 1' Se : : .111111 i r > f lv } : uLs : : for the ( tab- lishing m a ; rater : :3t'm. . . - - New lcilding at 'rand LsJand. Mayor Henry Schuff has let con tracts for the construction of a two- story brick restaurant building oppo- \ site the Union Pacific depot at Grand Island at a total expense , without fur- niture and equipment of $20,000. Liquor Case at Corthmd. : . Melvin D. Welsh , a druggist at Cort- land was brought to Beatrice on a charge of selling liquor without a li - cense. Ma.sonridcs Files . \I > pcal. John Masourides , the Greek who killed Officer Edward Lowry at South Omaha last February and who was sentenced to be executed January 3 . 0 , has appealed his case to the supreme court. . . ' , ' - . ' " ' . . . ) . : : : , . : : . . . ' . " ' . , . . . . . - " - - . n . . _ - - . . . - . . . - - - - - - - s-- " - - : ; ; ; ; ; - - - - - m- -.k 4 - . " t . . BC1AL t"j : ) j ; - ' ' ' -h . . . . . . . . . .f.:1"1 / : ' ; t. . ; . . . -.r , - . . . . . . .1' . .w . : - : : _ : _ , : .1 _ 'f. . I ' - - ; - / - : j- : ' $ , ' ( ; : - " . . , . ; . f- , ' , AiD ! . , . . . . ' - $ . " " . I , . L ! . . a ' 1 : ; : ' . \ ' . - ; ; : .A' - . . ( . . ' _ -.rU ) tFNAjNCIAL = i.'f : fNl\ l CHICAGO. Dun's Review , published by R. G. Dun & Co. , says : in "Trading defaults exhibit some crease above the normal , but a high the daily average of payments : through banks is in evidence and the Indus ; trial conditions testify to sustained progress in production and distribu- tion. * > tion."New demands form a notably large aggregate for iron and steel , with prices for foundry supplies firmer for distant deliveries. Rolling mills have ample contracts for steady day and night work until next spring. Con- tracts for structural materials and in- volving rather large tonnages are , un der negotiation. . . . "Stormy weather and the Columbus ' 7 - liciiday interrupted movements of com- modities , factory outputs , grain and flour , and ' the markets for breadstuffs were quieter than in previous weeks , but live stock arrivals gained moder ately and there were larger shipments of corn and provisions. Tho approach- i ing close of lake navigation causes , more rush for vesels to move mine and forest products , and the freight rate for grain to Buffalo rose . to the high est this season. "Earnings of the Chicago steam roads sustain favorable comparison with former high gross , and there is much installation of new rolling stock and planning for track extensions and other improved facilities to meet ex - panding demands of transportation. "Lower temperatures stimulated wider activity in general merchandise here and throughout the interior. Stocks undergo seasonable reduction in the leading retail lines , especially of heavy clothing , blankets , woolens , housewares and food products. "Bank clearings , $266,353,148 , exceed those of the corresponding week in : 1908 by 9.5 per cent , and compare with . . . . l $269,577,109 in 1907. "Failures reported in the Chicago district nuaiber 36 , against 24 last week , 21 in 1908 and 18 in 1907. Those I with liabilities over $5,000 number 10 , against 7 last week , 2 in 190S and ' in 1907. " . ' ! . ' " NEW YORK. . ' - Improvement is the order of the day in trade , collections and industry. Freezing temperature , light snows , or killing frosts , coupled with freer crop movement , have helped retail trade and collections at the West and North- west , while lower temperatures and high prices nd free marketing of cot- ton have helped distribution at the south. Jobbing trade has been coinci- dently benefited by reordering to fill broken stocks , and the distributive trade side accordingly presents a fa , " " * . vorable appearance. / Trade at first hands feels the stimu , . lus in more confident buying for spring , though the unsettlement in t , - goods trade , due to high cost of mtr terial and talk of curtailment , still re tards trade in this line. However , the' tendency of cotton goods is undenia ' : bly upward and buying : appears sught- \ ly more confident at the higier prices , . . . asked. From industrial lines the same - story of full order books and of longer hours now comes , payrolls are expand- ing , and available skilled labor is re- s ported closely employed , with less idle- ness noted than for two years past. Business failures in the United States for the week ending with Oct. 11 , were 222 , against 203 last week ; 244 in the same week of 1908 ; 207 in : 1907 ; 170 in 1906 , and 178 in 1905. - ; Bradstreet's. r J . I OF l , ! i 1 l Tfl ' EE I.t 1 I . I I , Chicago-Cattle , common to prime ; ' ' ' $4.00 to $8.00 ; hogs , prime heavy , $4.50 I-- to 57.85 ; sheep , fair to choice , $4. ? _ . - / to $5.25 ; wheat , No. 2 , $1.17 to $1.20 ; . L corn , No. 2 , 59c to 60c ; oats , standard , 'i. l ' I / 37c to 39c ; rye , No.2 , 70c to 73c ; hay , ' J \ timothy , $8.00 to $14.50 ; prairie , $8.00 f j t i to $13.50 ; butter , choice creamery , 25c \ I 1 to 29c ; eggs , fresh , 20c to 25c ' pota- .1. I \ toes per bushel , SSc to 50c. k : ; : Indianapolis-Cattle , shipping , $3.00 i. ' , ; to $7.50 ; hogs , good to choice heavy. i ; ' .l $3.50 , to $8.00 ; sheep , good to choice , J r r : I $2.50 to $4.50 ; wheat , No.2 , $1.20 to 1. 4 t $1.23 ; corn , No. 2 white , 60c to 61c ; ; ' , r . oats No. 2 white , 39c : : to 40c. I ' . ; t'f St. Louis-Cattle , 4.00 to $8.25 ; i. i ; < . ; . : hogs , $4.00 to $ i.75 ; sheep , $3.00 to ! ,1 $4.75 ; wheat , No. 2 , $ L26 to $1.27 ; 1 corn , No. 2 . 60c to , 62c ; oats , No. 2 , . . 'c'- , SSc to 39c ; rye No. 2 , 70c to 72c. $ . - . ; Detroit - Cattle , $4.00 to 5.25 ; hogs , - f _ - : < $4.00 to $7.50 ; sheep $ 2.50 to $4.00 : ; J r wheat , No.2 , $1.25 to $1.27 ; corn , r * vo. i e , i . } { 2 yellow , 63c to 64c ; oats , standard L 40c t9 42ce , ; . , No. 1 , 75c to 76c. , I' : . Jb 4'1 Cincinnati Cattle. , $4.00 to $6.25 ; ' 4 i hogs , $4.00 to $7.65 ; sheep , $ 3.00 to ' $4.25wheat _ , No. 2 , $1.25 to $ 1 . ? . . . g. ; - 1 I "f' < > - , corn , No. 2 mixed ' ' if . , 61c to 'G3c- oats' ) No. 2 mixed 40c ' ; I l' , to 41c ; rye , 'No.i. . . ! ) 77c to 78c. V t New York - Cattle , $4.00 to $700- ' I hogs , $4.00 to 8.30 ; ' sheep , $3.00 to t N $4.50 ; wheat , No. 2 red , $1.25 to $ l . 97. 1 , corn , No. 2 , 6Sc to 69c ; oats , natural ' ; ' ; \ , . white 42c to 45c ; butter creamery 26c to 29c ; eggs , western , 24c ti 27c. 1 . . . . . . M- " J ! -rt.- " . . : IIi . . > . . . : : " " ; : " . .l ' ! _ ! o. . . . . _ . . . . . . . . . . . " ' . " . . " - . ' . - i - ! 1' _ I