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Absolutely Pure. ywder never varies. «A marvel of purity and wholsomeness. More economics) ordinary kinds, andcannot be sold in mn with the maititude of low test ‘weight alum or phosphate powders. Sold incans, Rorat Bakine Powper Co., 106 at. N.Y. 48t The BUYERS’ GUIDE ts fasued Sept. and March, each year. Sg 312 pages, 046x111; inches, with over illustrations — a ; HA | information gleaned of the world. We FREE to any a:i- ressipt of 10 ets. to defray mailing. Let us hear from nr. Respectfully, MONTGOMERY WARD «& CO. $91 & 229 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 11! SEXUAL hood quickly and posi- tively cured. Send for book mailed FREE to ail afflicted. Address, Howlin Medical Co., Buffalo, N.Y.,U.S.A. is Wealth! 18 1 Weakness & Lost Man- Dn EC. West's Nerve axp Bray Treat. (xT, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi- eta Rervons Pr its, Peep moe ee ervous ‘ostration caused he Use ortobacco, Wak: es, Mental Do- Softening of the Brain resulting in in- d leading to misery, decay and death, Age, Barronness, Loss of power @ither sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat- on byover-exertion of thobrain, self- or over-indulgon Each box contains ths treatment. $1.00 box, or six boxes sent by mail prepaidon receipt of prico, WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES eure any caso. With each order received bynes six boxes, accompanied with $5.00, wo will ‘the purc! r our written guarantes to ro. ithe money if the treatment does noteffect juarantess issued onlyby JOHN O. WEST & CO., 2 W. MADISON ST., CHICAGO, ILLS., Sole Prop's West's Liver Pills. i Shoe. tuk your retailer for Se Original 83 Shoe, Nene Genuincunless bearing this Stamp JAMES MEANS’ ———_ — — APRIZE Send? six cents fé4R-dctor postage, and Teeive free, a costly box of goods which help all, of eithersex, to more mon- Yerightaway than anything else in the Fortunes await the workers ab- ly sure. At once addresss True ‘& Co., Augusta, Maine, 17-1yr* $100 A WEEE. Ladies o1 gentlem n desireing pleasant table empioyment write at oncep © want you to handle an article of do- Mestic use that recommends atself everyone at sight. STAPLE AS WR. Sells like hot cakes. Profits POpercent Families wishing te prae- economy should tor their own qneit write tor particulars. Usedevery Roege reach of all. Circulars free receive = AMIPLE FREE. Ad- emo year round in every household. dress Domestic W's Co., Marion 48 6m. CED ADVERTISERS fan learn the exact cost ot any proposed line of advertising in American Papers by addressing 80. P. Rowell & Co., | Newspaper Advertising Bureau, 10 Spruce St., New York. 10cts, for 100-Page Pamph:e> came ugly at Colon, C: of the Galena. sent Judd ashore to de- THE STORY OF What Drove the N D. nant Insane saida the outside + the ex- Prestan be- t. Kane, then ample of poor Judd. Wi mand an explanation. Prestan prompt- ly seized Judd, the American consul, Wright, and M. Connos, the local agent of the Pacific Mail Steamship company, and placed them in the ‘calaboose.’ “Then he sent word to Capt. Kane that at the iirst gun the Galena fired, or | the first marine or sailor she landed, he would execute the prisoners. They were kept in the ‘calaboose’ all night, expecting to be shot in the morning. In the morning Prestan came to them and told Judd that if he would sign an agreement that the arms on board the Colon would be delivered up he would let them all go. «Judd did so and Prestan released his risoners. Judd returned on board the xalena and told what he had done. But meantime Capt. Kane had driven the Dagos off the Colon and towed her out into the stream. When Capt. Kane learned what Judd had done he said the arms should not be delivered to Pres- tan. Now, Judd had purchased his life by signing the agreement that they would be, so he immediately returned ashore and told Prestan that he could not keep his compact. “Prestan immediately put him in the ‘calaboose’ again, and the next morning took him out to Monkey Hill to be shot. Before Judd’s grave was dug. however, Col. Ulloa came dashing up with the overt troops, and in the tight udd escaped and went on board the Galena. “It was then that Capt. Kane landed his men, and Judd went with them, eager for revenge. That day the hor- tible massacre and the burning of Colon took place, and all day Judd fought brave! But for two nights and three days his mind had been under the most terrible strain and his reason gave way. “He is now, as you all know, a hope- less maniac, but I think his voluntarily putting himself in the power of Prestan, when he found he could not keep the promises to him by which he had pur- chased his life, is one of the most chiv- alric things of the century. When he went back he went to almost certain death, and he knew it. But he went ealmly and deliberately. rater than break his word. Now, how many people who read of the burning of Colon knew this story of Judd?’—New York Tribune. —$$<—— + = Theodore Tilton and Wife. Ii 13 now near! score of y y the Philadelphia Z'%mes, since a comely, graceful woman stood between the iace curtains that shaded the window of a lovely home in Brooklyn watching 2 slender, dark-haired man, who turned to wave his hand before passing out of sight. There was a smile on both faces as the hurrying feet of the pedestrian carried him around a corner and the woman leaned out of the window to watch his: vanishing form. ‘Two chil- dren played about her feet, and, so far as the ordinary eye could see, the house itself was the abode of domestic content- ment, if not love. The dark-haired man was Theodore Tilton, and the wo- man, it is needless to add, was his wife; but what home has undergone a sadder and greater change in the same relent- less time? After roaming from place to place the restless Tiiton has settled down in Paris, where it is announced that he means to stay. In a lonely chamber of the Protestant convent at Newark Mrs. Tilton sits and sews from day to day, the gray light of November falling upon ber furrowed face and lending an ashen color to her always pallid cheeks. Of the little girls that played at her feet that September morn- ing in Brooklyn, one, Florence, is living a student's life in Switzerland, and the other has found a home among friends in Chicago. They say that Tilton ex- pects to marry again, but the rumor is only arumor. It is quite too late for him to retrieve his former errors, what- ever they were, and he best serves him- selt by his dignified silence. For the other parties to the great controversy perhaps the same can also be charitably said. All the elements of a tragedy are contained in the affair, excepting the necessary death, and that is more than equaled by the unbroken silence which at least two of the principals maintain. ——> oe The substitution of glass flooring for boards continues to increase in Paris, especially in those business structures in which the cellars. are used as offices. At the Bank of the Credit Lyonnais the whoie of the ground in front is paved with large squares or blocks of roughen- ed giass imbedded in a strong iron frame, and in the cellars beneath there is sufficient light, even on dull days, to enable‘ clerks to carry on their accus- tomed work without resort to gas. Some romancer reports the discovery of a remarkable spring near Princeton, Ky. It is claimed that a spinster born in 1776, who has drank of this water, has changed toa blooming girl of “sweet sixteen,” and that an old man of eighty, who has several times drank of the water, feels as young as he did at twenty years of age, and is delivering temperance lectures. Good Results in Every Case- D. A Bradford, wholesale paper dealer of Chattanooga, Tenn., writes that he was seriously afflicted with a severe cold that settled on nis lungs: had tried many remedies without benefit, Being induced to try Dr. King’s New Discovery tor Con sumption, did soand was entirely cured by use of a tew bottles. nee which time he has used it in his tamily for all Coughs and Colds with best results, This is the experience of thousands whose lives have been saved by this Wonderful Discovery Trial Bottle tree at John G. Walker's Drug Store. | Silver heights, on the banks of the As- | RI GRAVY } ik §-Piace of the Hall- | * Breed Leader in the Northwest. No visit tot complete river from St. Bonifa tried numerous so-called remedies. To DuemoDthSp.,, @styles, $22 to $900. "Send for Cat- Tache. The , such Athlophoros is offered as a safe, eee slogue with ful Particulars, mailed free who, by their per and quickwure. Its success has been phe- UPRICHT PIANOS, —IN. —_————< long course of wise actions for the bene- fit of this region, have become _pre-emi- hent in their influence over the people | of the Canadian northwest. Sir Donald A. Smith, whose Winnipeg home is at | siniboine, was for many years the head of the Hudson & Bay company in this | country, and his influence over the peo | ple in the wide domain extending from the boundary to the Arctic circle and | from the great lakes westward to the Rocky mountains has been very marked. Archbishop Toche, whose province ex- tends all over the same wide territory is the revered spiritual adviser of the French and Indians, and also a sage | counselor for the whole country. These two men for a long period have been a reliance of the government in dealing with these remote people, and they were mainly instrumental in settling the orig inal troubles in Manitoba which result- | ed it its being made a Canadian pro- vinge. Riel very properly objected to some suggested modes of settlement, be- cause, as he said, the people of this re- gion desired to be equal to and not sub- ordinate to Canada; they did not wisb “to be the colony of a colony.”’ Cross- ing over the substantial bridge spanning the Red river between Winnipeg and St. Boniface, the attractive cathedral is in full view. The river sweeps grandly around from the west to the north, and on the edge of the outer bank is a road. A plain white fence borders this road with foliage behind it, from among which stands up the cathedral of St Boniface, with its tall, shining, tin cov- ered spire, a reproduction of those seen on the lower St. Lawrence. Above this is the large, square academy building, which is a school of the Sisterhood of Gray Nuns from Montreal, and adjoin- ing itis their convent. Below the church, embosomed in trees, stands the modest residence of the archbishop, a low, square-roofed house, yet comfortable in its appointments. St. Boniface college is behind. The buildings are construct- ed of the cream-colored stone found near by, and which is used so extensive- ly in Winnipeg. The chureh is of mod- etn build, e in 1860, to succeed the original burnt. it has t sent out ch, destroy- ed ed when the cl burnt, the fragments e t back to London it out, and, mishaps, tinal by ox { teams from issippi river. 'T “the traveling bells . But the most inter place’ is e oi t in the chur ard. It ve inelosed by a plain weod- en fence, with a cross, also of wood, stuck in the ground and aring the words “Louis David Riel,’ without other mark. His widow who recently died, is interred alongside without any mark, and, in fact, the graves show no evi- dence of any care being taken of them. The death of Riel by the-extreme pen- alty of theiaw, while still a cause of great irritation among the French of Lower Canada, has probably ended all prospect of French half-breed domina- tion in any part of the northwest where the English rule, mainly through the instrumentality of the Canadian Pacific railway, has now established its su- preme authority.— Winnipeg Cor. Lon- don Times. a What Western Women Read. Women are becoming greater read- ers, if I may judge by the eagerness with which the Il for the latest books. But they crave novels, and the cheap novels, too. ‘These “libraries” in p2per covers are preferable to the ordi- nary woman reader fora very simple reason—they can bend the backs, roll them up so as to carry them convenient- ly in their hand-satchels and throw them away when finished. I dare say the house of nearly every woman in good circumstances in the city has more or less of this paper cover literature in it, thrown as ke the daily papers read. I once made an books. I bought per covers, the other and when I would offer e lady she wonld want to ve book in “libra- experin two sels, oF in stiff ry.” «CO Ies to read a stiff baek boo d generally say.— A Books */be-Democrat. : Graceful Girls and Shufiling Men. “I never was in a city,” said a New York gentleman, as he stood at the en- trance of Wiliard’s lobby, to a Wash- ington /ost reporter, “where the girls carry themselves so gracefully as in Washington. Seé that young lady there. She is straight; her foot comes down upon th ‘ound without any un- evenness or twisting or turning, and she has the carrizge of a veteran army officer. Ali the Washington girls walk with style and grace. The young men to tind relief, even though th hausted the skill of various phy nomenal, and yettit is not surprisi! cause it wilt do all that is claimed The Athlophoros Co. will gladly refer any who desité to make an investigation to Sa parties who have been cured 'y at. Agentat Atlantic, Iowa, says: ‘ My rheu- matism first ap} extended down into the legs t! sciaticnerve. I suffered whethe t Tr standi or sitting, and it was with the pe Capital, a $66,000, difficulty that ¥ succeeded in hobblingto [EF +. my Offite each day. I consulted‘physicians, SURPLUS -- ($4,000 also tried every remedy I could learn of | great fears werethat I would always have send ether (carriage paid) on receipt of For lyer and. kidney Giscanes, ds in- Bank of Commerce - Kansas{Cit: re oe oy constipation, E headache, impure Fourth National Bank - St. Loui blood, éc., Athlophoros Pills are unequaled. 11 Hanover National Bank - New York TRASK’S MACKEREL A GREAT MISTAKE been made in the treatment m, neuralgia, and nervous or eadache. This is evidenced by the ulure on the part of thousands of sufferers ave ex- cians and BUTLER ONAL BANK, UNRIVALED ORCANS On the EASY PAYMENT system, from $3.25 NATI Constracted on, ss =e method of stringing, on MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CO, Boston, New York, Chioage. ng be- for it. Opera House Block, BUTLER, (MO.5 J. E Gillespie, Real Estate and Loan peared in the hip, and then rough the ‘KANSAS CITY. TIMES withow any good effects whatever. My JOHN H. SULLENS J. R. JENKINS, . Wu. E. WALTO C. C. DUKE,.. DON§KINNEY. it. AsI was writing a letter to this friend in Chiago, I casually made noteofmy rheu- matist, an’ thoughtno more about it. But my letier was answered very promptly, tell- ing meto use Athlophoros; also stating his | mothers case and cure which was more se- | vere than mine. 1 at once purchased a | bottle and by the time I had finished | taking it, my rheumatism was gone. I was alittle too quick to stop, it had not gone @tirely out of my system. I had anothe little attack, but another bottle of Athiophoros did the work. It has now been oer a year since, and I consider it an exellent medicine, and have recom- mendd@ it to others.” Every druggist should keep Athlophoros and “Ablopheros Pills, but wi are thea can- not be bought of the druggist the Athlo- phorosCo,, 112 Wall St., New York, will -Clerk and Coll DIRECTORS Dr, T. C. Boulware, Booker Pewell,§ J.M. Tucker, Green W. Wal udge y. H- Sullens, Dr.N, L, Whippié, - R, Simpson . Cc, . rank Voris, Ww, E, Walton, C. H. Du ches? J- Rue Jenkins, # Receives deposits, loans money, ard transacts a general banking business. We extend to ourcustomers every a¢- commodation consistent with sate banh- ing. regula price, which is $1.00 bottle for Attlophoros and 50c. for Pills. CORRESPONDENTS. BATES COUNTY National Bank, (Organized in 1871.) OF BUTLER, MC. Has becomes great newspaper in a very few years. It has secured wide circulation and influence in so sho! older newspapers marvel at its success. The record of its career is like that of Kansas City’s wonderful growth—more like fasciuating fiction than cold facts. 10 is only eighteen years old, yet it is read and admired by the people of the creat Southwest, now having over 2,000,000 popula- tion. the advan’ 3 for quick de- livery by sixteen railroads, Tak Timne is thoroughly distributed over an immense territory atan early hour. It has attained an unapproachable circulation among those whose favor is most zealously courted by judicious advertisers. Moderate for space and satisfactory results bave popularized its ad. | vertising columns. THE ‘I1weES {8 always | bright, newsy and entertaining, and is worth cae for now. tend for free premium is SELECTED SHORE Capital paid in, - - Surplus - - - $ 75.000. $ 31.000 IN PAILS. BY MAIL—IN ADVANCE—POSTAGE PAID. F.1. TYGARD, - - - - President. GUARANTEED CS) 7 Aw & 4; | HON. J. B. MEWBERRY Vice-Pres. fe TRASKR’S %*\ | JEG; CLARK | =>.) = 1 soGagneem LECTED SHOBE MACKEREL | ae “fs Address all communications to : Bansas Crry, Mo. | i} | DR. STRONG’S PILLS! eccare, | The Old, Well Tried, Wonderful E . | Health Renewing Remeaies. ——The Direct and Fast Line to—— 1 For the Liver. STRONG'S, SANETIVE PILLS 4 sianehcor. | CINCINNNATI, the Blood, Cleansiag from Malarial Taint fect cure and all re jock Meadache, Constipation Disorders, ouzhs,Co'ds, LOUISVILLE, WASHINGTON, BALTIMORE, PHILADELPHIA, AND NEW YORK. if your Grocer does not keep them | send $1.25, and we will send Pai! by Express, prepaid, to the nearest Railroad Station. ei { NTEDcrOR-scoTrs beautt- tul AGEN : Pisoirie, Corsets: AULIY Sample free to TRASK FISH CO. eg Satisfaction fuarantoc.. Address SAINT LOUIS, MO.’ DR. ScoTT, 842 Broadway, NF-Y YORK SOLID DAILY TRAINS to CINCINNATI and LOUISVILLE in 10 Hours, with Through Day Cars, Parlor Cars and Palace Sleeping Coaches. No Change ot Cars tor any class of pas- sengengers. $1. ‘$1. $1 THE WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOC 3 AT we ONE DOLLAR A YEAR_# The following comparative statement of a number of the most Prominent Weeklie published in the United States shows conclusively that the] WEEKLY GLOBE-DEM OCRAT is from 25 to 50 PER CENT THE CHEAPEST. WEEKLY GLOBEDEMOGRAT $7, LOUIS MO. (10, PAGES) 7 _ COLORS | DAILY TRAINS To Washing in 28 Hours, (4 hours quiker than the tasting time by any other line.) TO BALTIMORE IN 29 Hours, To PHILADELPAIA in 33 Hours. The dav express has parler cars, St. i y 7 | 1.00 Per Year | Lonis to Cincinnati, and palace sleeping Weekly igpune chi aE se 8 Pages |56 Columns 1.00 Per Year | cars from Cincinnati to Washington, Bal- ry Ti 0. 8 Pages |56 Columns 1.25 Per Year {nore and Philadelphia without change. 8 Pages {56 Columns 1.00 Per Year | timore ani u P' . 8 Pages |56 Columns | 1.15 Per Year The Nicut Express has sleepers with- |: Pages |56 Columns 1.00 Per Year | out change trom St Louis to Washington & Rages | 55 Columns | 1. Por Year | Baltimore and Philadelphia. No other =e | 8 Eee 33 Colamns | 1[00 Per Pear | line trom St. Louis runs a through sleep- ing car to the national capital. This is the only line ov which passen- gers can go on limited express to Phila- delphia without extra charge. Palace Buffet Sleeping Cars are run by the “O & M” on Night Ex- old Readibg Matterin Favor of the G.--D. 14 Celumns of § BEFORE SUBSURIBING, or renewing your subscription to anv other paper, send tor a SAMPLE COPY of theWEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRA1. PRICE OF THE 01HER EDITIONS OF THE GLOBE DEMOC’T. Daily, per annum 2.00 press from i- am : Semi-Weelly, per samara St. Louis to New York Postmasters and Newsdedlers are authorized to receive subscription or —ED A EE. W— d di h Without Chanxe in 36 Hours sen irect tothe BEST ROUTE to JACKSONVILLE are different. They shamble andshbufile. is because taey are all govern- Drunkenness, or Liquor Habit, be Cured by administrating Haines’ Golden Specific. It can be givenin a cup of coffee er tea without the knowledge of the person taking it, effecting a speedy and perma- nent cure, whether the patientis a mod- erate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. Thousand of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken the Gol- den Spectfic in their coffee without their can Dr. knowledge, and to-day believe they quit | drinkingon their own free will. No harmful effects results trom its adminis- tration. Cures guaranteed. Send for circular and full particulars. Address in confidence Golden Specific Co., 185 Race St., Cincinnati, Ohio. 49 1 yr. and bend over their desks | And Winter Resorts in the Southwes, The Double Daily Lines otf Parlor Cars GLOBE PRINTING CO., ST. LOUIS sini sats saci ie rates rt OO es A ‘ABLISHED 1637. It years since this medicine was ofered as@ | and Palace Sleeping Coaches by this line 3 | AHN Ronezc Vermont pom Sot ara trom } eeitiny it in almost unt all parts of the world to be the sev, 1 ST. LOUIS to CINCINNATI and | Sebreetay! worm Osutection Boman te free namo oreo fat LOUISVILLE ; have been Vermifuge continues £0 grow in favor daily. Osiidres often jook pale aad sotly from Se | making Jirect connections at both points : oar or, Oe oe ad cating Ta Ragan ietesingwhoiesomediet, | with morning and evening Express i ‘are indieations F tossing restlessly ins! ‘moaning and grinding the teeth, then be assured symptoms Trains, having Palace Hotel aude Shorr Hi “Slany a helpless ing Cars to Chattanooga, tlanta, q ons fan been fai = Savannal. and Jacksonville without | Sisedse which caused change. Ne Ferrys or Transfers by this EGS isunderstood, . Ithas been proved beyond correcenstanniy | Route! exist in the human system fro: WOTms. ‘Cor so surely as they ©: can Reema eene <” | with chete childres, cyomoved from by the timely use of B.A Fabnestcs Vermitaare. eS iy. it and it in their it fre- i is any particu! pet sicon from all pares ot the country testify 1 unitets tacceae, in tart,ie never failS-_fimaytic, | For tickets, — So jently been given to children as a safe pargative, not s ae Se on en eser to | infomation, call on cet Sf worms were discharged and immediate ree ase tie he burs of it. The simple name SC rkewrsroce s | connecting lines, West_ Northwest and be his own Judes it ust look closely and earefuliy to sce that the initials are > FanSEsTOCE, — Sarcee Orin St. Louis, at 100k | fied with nothing else- me N. Fourth St. Naw PeaxKits, Howarp Co., Mo. s s = Wi 103 N. Fou: . bg ove mk Co. of rer. Pe excelent jp 5226 ny ae — Sag es ~soat Givin Z ; z resscdt Sh, Fabpestock's Vermifuge, and found it 10| fotey Treipepeniing tas remedy uch of; |J.D.BARNARD W. B. SHATTUG, a ijecired effect. 1 think your sable in all cases where = Vermifuge : a hot safely begispensed with in an family. —— i HANDY, D. Pres't &Gen"l Manager, Gen’! Pass’ Yours.&c, J. W. HU LD. eee Ci JE. SCHWARTZ & (0., ¢. a. Fsnnectock a Co-» incinnati, Obio.