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| | A Sound Liver Makes a Well Man Are vou Billious, Constipated or trou- bled with Jaundice, Sick Headache, Bad taste in mouth, Foul Breath, Coated tongue, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Hot dry skin, Pain in Back and between the s:oulders, Chills, and Fever, &c. If you have any of these symptoms, your Liver is out ot order and your blood is slowly being poisoned, because your liver does not act properly. Hersine will cure any fisorder of the Liver, Stomach or s. It has no equalasa Liver Medi- cine, Price 75 cents. Free trial botile at H. L. Tucker's Drug Store. 44-1 yr. — US 7p WeAM ")'H “SINVHOUSIN - UF@INNT - AUCTIONEER, I will cr; sales in any part of the coun ty. Twenty years experience. Charges asonable. Satistaction aranteed, Call on or address D. V. BROWN, But'er, Mo. ga *52-3m WwW. A. ROSE, LIVESTOCK AUCTIONEER. Will do business in Bates, Cass and adjoining counties. Address me at Hat risonyille, Mo. Reterence.—First National Bank and Bank of Harrisonville qt John Atkison’s Pension Agency. Over Dr Eyeringham’s store rooms West Side - Buter. Mo. WANTED—CHICK ENS EGGS I will pay the highest market price for chickens and egg delivered at my store at Virginia, Mo. Talso have good feed stable in connection with iy store. Netson M. Nestierope. WH. H. Larimer. Church G. Bridgeford. eee ee Ed. M. Smith. CONSIGN YOUR—— CATTLE, HOGS and SHEEP To LARIMER, SMITH & BRIDGEFORD, KANSAS CITy. eee em ats They want your husines and will send you the mar- ket reports free. Write them. New England Magazine ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY, fhe LITERARY MAGAZINE OF BOSTON Le- Story and {tis unique, containing American gends, Traditions, History, and Poetry, Phitosophy Music, Science and Art peut: Soe = AFew Articles for 1892. STORIES OF SALEM WITCHCRAFT, Illustrated, PHILLIPS BROOKS Dlustrated. JAMES PARTON lustrated. HOWELL’S BOSTON lilustrated TRICITY Illustrated STORIES A PROMINENT FEATURE, THE FUTURE OF E "OU want this carefnliy edited and finely il- lustrated literary magazine of Boston, whether you have any other or not Every Number Finety Ittustrated It treatsof American Subje precent. Social questions are discussed in its columns. Price, $5.00 a Year. Send loc. copy For sale on all news stands. Address. NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE 85 Federat. Street, Boston, Mass Notice of Final Settlement. Notice ithereby given to all creditors and all others interested in the estate of Richard Cooper, deceased, that 1, Charles H. Cooper, administrator of s: tate, intend to make final settlement thereof, at the next term of Bates county probate court, in Bates county, state of Missouri, to be held at Butler Mo., on the 9th day of May. Ise. Q CHARLES H_ COOPER, Administrator duet Bow- | past and | for a sample | JEFFERSON AND CLEVELAND | ; These Were Names to Corjure by at the Ann Arbor Banquet. | | Ann Arbor, Mich., April 13.—Jef-| birthday celebrated \here in a manner worthy of the oc | |casion by the democratic club of the) university of Michigan. Prominent democrats from all over the siate! were present and the affair assumed | |the complexion of a great pulitical | Every principal city inj ferson’s was | gathering. jthe state was represented and up | ward of 200 mocrats | prominent « sat down to the tables as guests of the oecusion A. S. Car | son of this city opened the ex “cise | with a short prayer, after which the! |guests sat down to an elaborate |banquet. After dinner Prof. Curtis | Don M | Dickinson as toast-master. | Mr. Dicki son, who, he + jintroduced ex-Postmaster son ceulogized Jeffer d, was the founder of } Mr. Dicki 8ou's remarks were greeted with eu thusiasm, and when he finished his remarks he Winans, who welcomed the democratic creed. Governor the of the evening on the part of Ann Arbor, the university and the state. | introduced | pects! He raid that emergencies may 3 i rise and pass, but principles are imi ita- | ble. The party had been founded on a basis of equal rights to all, and though other par-| had and fallen, it. still stood us the defeuder of the peopl He referred to the tariff and democratic ties risen enrren | : | ey issues which would come ep in the coming campaign, d said that | the democratic party could not fal to profit by their discussion The Hou. W. C. Ewing, pi of the Troquis club of Chicago, w side: as | next introduced and delivered the speech of the evening Among other | a “True | democracy does not cousist in sim things Gen. Ewin said: ply professing the doctrines of Jef- | ferson as theories of government, | but in day by day applying them to | our political environment. In the | approaching campaign the democrat ic purty will survive or perish in al manly struggle for tarilf and reform | because the demecrats believe that equal and exact justice to all men can never be attained under asystem that burdens upon one class of citizeas | for the benefit of another class. | “If the democratic party, wfth the | sublime courage of conviction, will adhere fewlessly and faithfully to! the great of government imposes the politica demand of the hour—tariff reform — aud will have the leader that cers} viper oversha lowing wisdom to choose | } as its marvelous wan | who has demonstrated his prefereuce | “A | for right and defeat rather than| 1 wrong and success, we will go forth | to battle thrice armed and move with | resistiess wight to « great victory under the great Cleveland” | When Mr. Ewing ti plause was fairly deafeuing, and it nearly five minutes before it subsided. The other were JK Barkworth, of Jackson; J.J. Enright and W. H Russel), of Detroit; Hon | W. C. P. Breckinridge arrived in the Was and spoke in an eloquent {Future of democracy.” | Letters of regret ‘and read from ex-President Cleve \laud, Senators Mills, Carlisle, Black burn and Daniels; Congressmen Har ter, Bryan of Nebraska, Gorman of Michigan, and Hoar of M setts; Governors Peck of Wisconsin jand Russell of Massachusetts. Over | 500 persons were present and the affair was in every way a graud suc ished the ap- | was speakers | | | | evening ym sachu cess. Ponounced Hopeless, Yet Saved. From a letter written by Mrs Ada! E Hurd, of Groton, S. D., we quote: | “Was taken with a bad cold, which | | settled oa my lungs, cough set in| and fivally terminated in consump | |tion. Four doctors gave up saying | | I could live but a short time. I gave myself up to my Savior, determined if I could not stay with my friends on earth, I would meet my absent ones above. My husband was ad- vised to get Dr King’s New Discov ery for consumption, coughs and colds. I gave it a trial, took in all, eight bottles: it has cured me, and thank God I am now a weil and hearty woman. Trial bott'es free at H L Tucker's drugstore. regular size, 50e and $1 pation, loss of all Price to and 75 ¢ HL Tucker. symptoms of ; by water and is practicaily on au!‘ te Isan 1 E ry ae row Is Was led less nights made miserable by out audnealy all the wires are dowr. rible cough. «Shiloh’s Cure is ‘lowest estimate placed ou the loss of | \life in the flooded district is ldeclined to act in the matter of an| appropriation for the Lowndes} county, Mississippi, flood suff rers | WATERY GRAVES. Two Hundred and Fifty Negroes Lost in the Deluge. ce of recommendation | in the abse from him. The governor iunmediate- ly wired several citizens of Colum- bus for a statement of the situation. ies PUG IIS) Upon receipt of their replies be tce | Lakes of Muddy Water. day wired Congress: Jackson, Miss. April 13.—The | lows: lowest estimate placed on the loss, “City of Columbus feeding 500 of life in the flooded district is 250 | homeless negrees. Meu refuse all of whom are negroes. While the Work on railroads, although offered damage is in the vicinity of Col Two hundred tents bus, which is on the bank of the | needed; altheagh many really need to, ms Tombigbee, a small but navigable | supplies, the wisdom ss river which rises iu the mouutaius vi, weett dis ng rations is northeast doubted. Water falling slowly Lue dispatch to the governor from | Mississippi aud flows south skirting the easteru border of Mobite Coiun the state aud emptying into dus states the loss of twenty Biy. More than 3,000 families in) lives in the ri oud of Cole the counties of Lowades, Mourve | bus re tue loss in the }] ‘4 1 yy and Noxubee are reposted Lomele-s 3 € Forty aid suffering for the necessaries |iles of feuce and at least balf the of life, which are being supplied now |¢:bins and out houses in the Tom-} vee Valley Was w by private subscriptions red away, 2s } occurred it ts a bridges of any size except | the A similar overtlow 1574, but the higher thau thea and suff: bound to follow on bridge across the Bigbee| Waters are DoW even e at Columbus. Many mules and most | the “wos. of ti overtlowed see- Tue ‘ i es to nccept work at $1 al unless Congress 2 eattle lu uous are drowned. THE COUNTRY 4N INLAND SEA. eee 5 7 : de uile their familics are des 2 | Memphis, Tenn, Apri! 13.—East ene rene pe des ave Cestilute;) Mississippi bas beea the s heeds tue appeal for assistance rerusal of) aud beiug fed by charity clearly in-| dicates that the ne, et to be rrees ex oue of the most appalling ftl> inj eaebe al ip t : S i rr tee ry he povertuluent. in the United Stites within the last = eee week, aud the world beyonl thet HARTER EXTORTION, | I state knows little of the destruc 5 7. = state knows little of the destruc Naiaple of che Way McKinley aids of property aud the loss of hfe that the rise in the tombigbee River, has entailed | Monopolists to Make Pxtravagart | Profits. | | ‘This river winds its) way | Boston Herald. The Fa with the Alabama a! yaiorous de souch,touching Columbus and form- Rover News, witich is a! iagu janction ender few niles above Mobile Bay. The /t priats the following iu are- river ts fed by a dozea quick-rising | cent issue: mounludastreuns that for the last Mr. Ackroyd, the English minu 2 ae z seve: divs have been filling it until | facturer who : now, above Colu the proportions of an Near C been terrible ade a propositioa to sumed iecal capitalbsts to establish a plush 1 sea. dia, it Las a factory here, has succeeded in rais- ing capita: for a factory to be locat jed at South Portland, Me. Saturday night hun-| address this week before the Lewis dreds of negro families in the bot-| tou beard of trade Mr Ackroyd stat toms went to bed feeling secure, but | © 1 that, with a duty of 110 per cent, pefornmomine diny were larcused| jit costs $5.50 per yard to land for Rereicd: Ss ee the |Cis8 made suk plush iu New You ky = “" (which he could make at $4.75 uplaids got away to a place of safe | per yard and at that fivure realize a ty wth little help, but those in the! profit of $150 per yard. bott ms found escape was cut fi Au of (tou of the methods ot our piotee- their rickety huts ia hope thy! a tive tariff Ace few hours the waters would subside: iment, ow at int rluavus the loss of isisavery interesting revela- and they clambered to th+ tops rdine to this state- the duty added it The rain poured down in’ torrents! would cost to daad) foreizu mace all of Sunaay, aud the water bound} sulk piush im New York i2 per prisoners saw that their only {can ve mauufactured in of escape was boats that ouutry, aecording to the state- thought ther landlords would to bring them to dry land. a Cost shove, at $3.25 per vard, or at ceat a yard more} ivhsh cost of only 63 This would ING WORSE EVERY HOUR Mobile, Ala, Apri: 13.—The Tom- bigbee river at Demopolis, Als, unply tuitafa duty of 30 per cent were imposed upou imported foreign Z tuule sik push it’ would be amply resing at the rate of six inches an A I pi sulligiest to cover difere ice in th hour, and great areas of lowlands : cost, While a duty of 40 per ceut ad | s margin of 40 for profit to the Bat vot duty charges which planted with corn and cotton are , | Valorem would give vk under water. The rise trein 8 o ele son each yare last night was three feet Bea yen The river is within 74 feet of the high water | American of S74, and will probaly pass that) © peau pot today Tie Alabama ud 3 Southern Railway traek is subuet of tk Mntnutacturer with co defended on the grouncs s kindy adaty 110 4 Great | recent has which, aceording to| the authority we lave given, permits eduear Epps Station, aud the trains | °C? Mt of that road are using the East Ten na of | Olan + Xtravagapt opportunity nessee road tu Meridiau, Miss. of the protective; To an] | | { | | | Sounded anime! the part of tie monufactur- surrounded j & West Point, Miss . is edy for you. Sold bv HL Pack- Every bri i away, aud much stock has been lost. | The hotels in West Point are crowd- eiwith water boundd passengers. | The tirst through taiuv for Mobile| i ) on the Mobile aud Ohio went out 4 Monday night, but raim began falling | | again, and it looks now asif the flood | g would be greater than before. ge in the couuty is washe THE POST OF Five | | —-+0e+2e+— AWFUL LOSS OF LIFE | Carries a full line of Jackson, Miss., April 14.—The! Writing Paper of all kinds, Tablets, Pencils, Inks, Pens, and everything usually found in a first-class establish- ment of this kind. of whom are negroes | . = Most of the damage is in the vi | St, Louis and Kansas City cinity of Columbus, which is on the DAI p bank of the bank of the Tombigbee, | LY APERS, but more than 3,000 families in the counties of Lowndes, Mouroe aud | Noxubee are reported homeless and | Magazines, Fashion and Sporting | suffering for the necessaries of life, | PAPERS. which are being subscriptions Another overtlow 1874, but the now even | higher thau then and suffering is bound to follow unless congress heeds the appeal for asistance. NEGROES REFUSE TO WORK. Jackson, Miss 14.—Gover- nor Stone yesterday received a tele. 250, all | “SOU UNVIUVAON ‘op “SIL OOS PUY OULO; qauduoro op uloay Also all the latest We want your patronage The Post Office Drug Store. Is weli stocked with Dre nd Patent Medicines of all kinds ' as well as ‘Toilet and Fancy Articles. supplied now by) occurred in | waters are brescrip and accurately € caret! gram from Congressman Allen ad-j co ed, vising him that the house committee | DAVID WALKER, Man | i i CASTORIA for Infants and Children. “‘Castoria is so well adapted tochildren that I recor ‘ud it as superior to any prescription known to H. A. Ancugs, M.D., 111 So, Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, Kills Worns, gives sleep, and promotes di ion, Without injurious medication. Tag Cextacr Compiny, 77 Murray Street, N. ¥ NEW FIRM? NEW GOODS? Having purchased the stock of guods known as the Grange store consisting of GROCEREIS & DRY GOODS, I desire to say to my many friends that I have re yer -d the stock and fitted up the store room in shape and T would be glad to have all my old friends eall and see me. PORDUCE OF ALL KINDS WANTED. I will guarantee my prices on goods to be as iow as any store in the city. Call and see me. TL. PETTwys. Lu WEBSTER’S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 2, ENCLISH - REMEDY for Coughs. Colds and Consumption, Is beyon: question the greatest of all modern remedies. it will stop a Cough Inone night. It will chec aColdinaday. It will prevent Croup, rellev: thma, and CURE Consumption If taken i ne. IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE eencercoaneeusucscencccssesecuncssess = A GRAND INVESTMENT : WHOOPING COUGH For the Family, the School or the Library : OR The work of revision occupied Hy : Caution isu das ge be adi tone. i —may save their lives: You! oye : sGIST FOR ‘ST. IT TASTES GOOD. F HrsT Ruecesssescnccsuscencocscensaccncaacs The tnt : H L Tucker, Agent® = coe New Discovery by Arccident [== HAT WECK, FACE, ARMS OR ANY PART OF THE Piast Cy mtn Zs y We will py bottle guar Anti. Hairine we will pre nosent with each order. acy AQIAS. MMO NI LS 3 HTL MPO] MOD» MUO. $F MUOAy 88 UAL oyqnoq aoouoid oy} “sorg pt & 97 00° ATGaVS AO ', $ 07 OTS wor ssouawy Ayunoy soyg Jo ueut ssouauzy *Cajunoo sity aL epuar , | 1d puv sep fys [8 Jo serppeg ) < ‘OW SOUL tiny <38nq 0 OW & o-- ‘ ge eae { 7 j *y