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You wouldn't read a long tariff ar- ticle would you? There is one of the great diffical- ties in the presentation of the sub- ject. The average man would pre- fer to pey the tax rather than wade through #ivesome statistics. There are points, however, which can be se concisely stuted that the most impatient citizen may read Wiil You Rewf it? 5 state elections resulted im increas- ed democratic majorities. In neither state did the people's party cut any perceptible figure ix that this new force in politiesauight | democracy. But in all of the pre- liminary elections it has been dem- them without experiencing ‘‘that tired feeling.” { This country needs wealthy men! because ne great enterprise can be; undertakez without a concentration , of money. Without great enterpris | es and the work necessery to their j acomplishment our dense population ould not exist. While this is true, is reprebeasible to abuermally in- «crease the wealth of a few at the ex- pense of the masses. This is the natural result of the McKinley bill. It not only protects the eapitalists ig their busiuess, but extends to the home life, and robs the great major- ity that the millionaire may indulge his laxurious testes with the small- est possible expenditures. There are notmany of us who can in- dulge our wives in seal skin sacques. An imitation of that costly wrap would meet every expectation in most of our homes. The McKinley bill reduced the duty on seal skin sacques 33 per cent, and increased the duty on imitation sacques 120 per cent. On silk linings there was no ad vance while cotton linings were ad vanced 285 per cent. Silk laces were advanced 20 per cent and cotton laces 50 per cent. On black silk there was no advance but black alpaca was adyanced 66 per cent. Broadcloth was advanced 20 per cent and cotton corduroy 114 per cent. On silk velvet there was no ad vauce, but on cotton velvet the ad vance was 100 per cent. Uncut diamonds come into the country absolutely free, while glass tumblers are taxed 180 per cent. On your flannel shirt you pay 100 per cent, on common mirrors 186 per cent, window glass 132 per cent, cutlery 116 per cent and all common woolen goods 116 per cent. To the man who pays the running expenses of the government by con- stant repression of the demands of both back and stomach some conso lation is found in the fact that acorns and cat gut are free from duty With hog feed and music he may be able to satisfy hunger and charm away the nipping pangs of frost. By mea~s of protected industries the east has sapped the life out of the west. To-day eastern people hold mort gages averaging $700 against each family in Missouri; £1,300 against each family in Illinois; $1,700 against each family in Iowa; $1,800 against each family in Nebraska,$1,- 000 against each family in Michigan $1,200 against each family in Wis- consin; $1,200 against each family in Minnesota, and $2,200 against each family in Kansas. Those are startling facts to the western farmer who by severe self denial is barely able to pay the taxes on his land and the interest on his mortgage. How is he to pay the principal? What is to become of him in the event of a few successive crop failures? —Nevada Mail. I suffered fara acute inflamation in my nose and head— for a week at a time I could not see. Iused Ely’s Cream Balm and in a few days I was enred. It is wonderful how quick it helped me.—Mrs. Georgie S. Judson Hartford, Conn. Being a sufferer from chronic catarrh and having derived great benefit from the use of Ely’s Cream Balm, I can highly recommend it. Its sales are far in excess of all other catarrh rem- idies.—B. Franken, Druggist, Sig- ourney, Iowa. Sir Charles Dilke—than whom thereare few persons better qualified for the task—has written the article on London for the series of papers on the Great Capitals of the World, now being published in Harper's Weekly. It will appear in the num- | ber issued October 5th, and will be superbly illustrated. The same num- ber will contain illustrations of the American fleet at Genoa, in connec tion with the Columbus celebrations | at that place; an article, fully ilus- | trated, on the return of Lieutenant Perry and the results of his expedi- tion to the polar regions;and portraits | of the principal athletes in the cham-| | pionship games of the present seas- on. i English Spavin Linimen t removes all Hard, Soft or Calloused L and Blemist es trom horses, Blood i Splints, Sweene mops Sprains all Swo » etc. Save $so by nse v the most known. Butler. Ww Mort ris, ne The electric light and power house at Warrensburg. Mo. was totally de- stroyed by fire yesterday morning. | Loss $25,000, no insurance. | district of Samareand, Russia. | Many school houses and churches 1 Cure, wh onstrated that the democrats have | | gained in their ancient strongholds, and that the republicans have fallen ) off in those states in which they were once invincible. There is certainly enoughin this fact to encourage the | belief the f that the policy of protection | y headway or that Benjaman Harrison is lil ely to be his | own usas City Star. | is not making « suecessor.— Electric Bitters | This remedy is becoming so well known and so popular that it needs no special mention. All who have used Electric Bitters sing the same | song of praise —A purer medicine | does not exist and it is guaranteed to do all that is claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of the | liver and kidneys, and will remove pimples, boils, salt rheum and other affections caused by impure blood — Will drive malaria from the system | and prevent as wellas cure all mala rial fevers —For cure of headache, constipation and indigestion try Ele ctric Bitters. Entire satisfaction guaranteed, or money refunded.— Price 50c and $100 per bottle at H. L. Tuckea's drug store. Edward Winkley, a Wyoming des perado wanted for murdering a con stable at Lander, was terday in the mountains and, 1 | | | un down yes refus- ing to surrender, was shot by a pesse. the first six to 397 million roubles, against 404 million 1891. The United States steamer Ben- with the caravels Santa Maria, Nina Pinta in tow, have arriv- ed at Gibralter. The war ship will take the caravels to Huelva. The ordinary revenues of Russian empire for the months of this year ammount roubles for the same period in ning ton It Should Be in Every flouse J. B. Wilson, 371 Clay St , Sharps burg, Pa. says he will not be without Dr. “King’s New Discovery for Con sumption coughs and colds, that it cured his wife who was threatened with pneumonia after an attack of La Grippe, when various other rem- | edies and several phisicians had done her no good. Robert Barber | of Cooksport, Pa., claims that Dr King’s New Discovery has done him more good than anything he has ever used for lung trouble. Nothing like it. Try it. Free trial bottles at H. L. Tucker's drug store. Large bot- tles, 50¢ and $100. This tact makes it necessary alwa ays to " have a remedy with which to combat The body of Leo Hep ple WAS | this formidable disease. A cough when found in a hole under his house | tah 1 readily be cured betore i hold cn the lung yesterday. He is supposed to have been murdered. Thi 2 3 is pretty good. Mr. John C. Goodwin, a carpenter ot | Danville, I!1., writes: ‘¢About two weeks ago a heayy saw log tell upon my toct verv badly crushing it, so that I was un- able to walk at all. I sent tor a bottle ot Baliard’s Snow Liniment and kept my toot well saturated with it. It is now] two weeks since that occured, and my foot is nearly well and I am at work. Had [ not used Snow Liniment I should haye been laid up two months. For healing wounds, sprains, Sores and bruises it has no equal. No Inflamation exist where Snow Liniment is used ou can use this letter.”” Beware ot all white Liniments substi- tuted tor Snow Liniment. There is no other Liniment like Ballard’s Snow Liniment. Sold by H_ L. Tucker. One hundred and sixty thousand immigrants have taken land in the have been erected for the use of the | | people. pay | RHEUMATISM CURED IN A “Mystic Cure’? for rheumatism and | nev ral gia rad y cures ini te 3 days. | ts action upon the system is remarkable sae mysterious. It removes at once the | cause and the disease immediately dis- | appears. The first dose greatly benefits | s. Sold by ] W Morris, druggi | 1 In both Florida and Georgie the jlana will stick to purity and hove: the} though a funeral procession awaits canvass, although it was predicted |in November, but I verily believe )T! jist, Dr. fon the beach at Little River, 4i-1y y, the old- est Congregational mirester in Lor-) don is dlead. ' 2 & Fatal Mistake. Physicians make no more tatal mis-! take than when they inform the patient that nervous heart troubles come from the stomach and are of little conse- j quence. Dr. Franktin “‘iles, the noted Indiania specialist has proven the ce n his new book on heart d ~ Dre M les mends | They were lashed to a raft made of | spars. jtice, having h Sam Joues, _the revivalist, says ebout the en g presidential elec- tion: “I believe old Grover Cleve- that because the people believe in exert an influance prejudicial te the | his purity and honesty he will go | triamphantiy | for the vext four years acd when bis | into the presidency out | subg, to his soli! second term is ended Le will yo lof office wept, bonored ard and leave the United S successor in office basis of industri broader prosperity bappines- than they have known for 100 years.” on a more aud greater Emil Kruger, a farmer of Lebancn Mo. shot and seriously wounded his wife yesterday with a shotgun. He then attempted suicide but failed. David Tuler, aged 60, a carpenter of Nevada, Mo., committed suicide by He was despondent from lack of yesterday iakiug laudanum. work. Bank Wrecker Edward S. Dann of Buffalo N. Y. died yesterday apoplexy. He to tried ou the day of his death. from was have been Shiloh’s Cough and Consumption Cure is sold by us ona guarantee. It cures consumption. Sold by H L fucker. The trail of D.B- Munroe, ieader of the free miners of east Tennessre in the recent war was begun at Clin ton Tenn. Croup, whooping cough and bronchi- tis immediately relieved by Shiloh’s Cure Sold atl L Tucker’s Prescrip- tion drugstore. Prince Pedro Coburg-Kohary, Aus tria became suddeuly insane and wus over powered only after a fierce fight. Fer lame back, side cr chest, use Shi- loh’s Porcus Plaster. Price socts. Sod by H L Tucker. Captain Adams of the British ship Arthur Stoue was fatally kicked and beaten by druuken members of the crew. Sleepless nights m ie miserable by thatterrible cough. Shiloh’s Cure is the remedy for you. Sold by H L Luck- er, druggist. David La Montague of Mich., and his wife tock poison to Essexville gether yesterday. She is dead and he is in jail. The Rev. James Spurgeon of London 1s eritically ill with quinsy. } You should not be without it. Every family i: liable tohave a_here- ditary taint of consumption in it. It may date back 3 ore 4 rati und Syrup when re consumption. ig relief i y affection or the Case, when used throat,] tion, in tis, asthm It is pleasa can always be & gs and atic , whooping cough, croup, Xc. | | ot the o take, perfectly sate and epended on. Sold by HL. Tucker. It has been decided that the Ernest Reman the French | scholar and author, shall have a state funeral to take place next Fri-| day- | | | late famous How to Succeed. 2 This is the great problem of lite which tew satistactorily solve. Some tail be- cause of poor health others want ot luck, but the majority trom def grit—want of nerve. They are nervous, irresolute, changeable, easy to get the blues and “take spirits down to Keep the spirits up.’ Thus Reese time, money, opportunity and nerve force. ere is nothing lise the Restorative Nervine,discovered by the great spe: Miles, to cure ases as headache, wate ostr tus dance, bottles and fire book of testimo at H.L. cker’s drugstore. Six bodies, supposed to be those of sailors were washed ashore Friday dis- asion, sleep wu. Consumption Cured. An old physictan, meonee trom Se ad placed ir. his hands by} an East India missionary the formula ot | simple vegetable remedy for the peedy | and penueneut cure of Cor mption, | Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and ali throat and Lung Aftections, radical cure for all Nervous C an suifer | and let it rise | following rece | of hair jewel j poses. They j the | wet sponge is laid on t | water CS through the perforations. ooo FIRESIDE FRAGMENTS. —To keep flies away from gilt frames, boil four or five onions in a pint of water and put it on with a soft brush. —Breakfast Rolls —Twocups of flour, one cup of sweet milk, one cup of water and one-half teaspoonful of salt Bake twenty-five minutes in a quick oven. They are very nice.—Detroit Free Press. —Tarragon Vinegar.—Put intoa wide- mouthed bottle one cup of freshly gath- ered tarragon leaves. and cover with a quart of good cider vinegar. Cork the | bottle and stand aside for two week shaking frequently; then strain and squeeze through a flannel bag. Pour into small bott cork, and keep in a cool place.—Christian Unio —Raised Cake.—One t of melted butter, two pounds white sugar, quarter ounce of mace, a teacupful ¢ yeast, one quart of mi to make a stiff batter. in a warm place to rise. it atnig until morning, then add one pound of stoned raisins, work weil | through and half fill your cake molds. } Bake ina hot oven f 1 | Boston Herald. | —Lemon Custard. ix eggs, i separately, three teacupfuls of one-half cup of butt water, five tablespoonfuls of cornstarch, two large lemons. Slice the lemons, and put them in the water to boil till the strength is extracted; then dip them out and drain the water. Beat the yolks, butter and sugar together, and pour the water over them: return to the jar, and when ready to boil stir in the starch; beat the whites toa stiff froth, and stir in lightly after it is taken off | the stove. —Boston Budget. —A large, padded chair, with a high back and high sides of the kind knowa as winged chair,” is espe sirable for an invalid’s room, as ports the head and is a protection on all sides against the insidious draughts. A simple table, just the height of the bed, two legs of which may be folded up, so that it may rest across the lap of the in- valid, is sometimes convenient to serve meals on. It is desirable usually to change the furniture in the room; to add fresh s of bric-a-brae, and take old ones: and tochange the pictures, soas to give the room, which has become monotonous, a fresh ap- pearance.—N. Y. Tribune. —Pressed Chicken. —This is a delecta- ble dish fora picnic and one that much more wholesome (at this season of the year) than pork in shape. Boil two chickens of pretty good size (if tough boil with a chunk of broken glass in the pot—this is an old Dutch way of making aged fowls tender) un- til thoroughly done and the bones part readily from the flesh. Pick them clean of bone and gristle, chop the meat as fine as possible, add a small handful of bread crumbs, season to taste with butter, pepper, salt and a little sugar. Pour in enough of the liquor to moisten it and mold ina crock under a heavy weight. Place in the ice chest and serve when cold and firm, cutting into slices and placin: upon a bed of fresh parsley. — Detroit Free Press. -A Delicions Cough Candy lightful cough eandy is made from the ot. and will be founda medicine well beaten ar, ; four cups of | a“ it sup- is them green y-—A de- most greea as beneficial to all who use the and are troubled with throat Break up a cupful of slippery bark, let it eupful of v twoi alf fill a cup with soak an hour ater. I flax seed and fill up to the brim with water, leaving it to soak the same time asthe slippery elm. When you are ready tomake the candy, put one pound and a half of brown sugar ina porcelain an over the fire. Strain the om the flax sced and slippery d pour over it. Stir constantly ins to boil and turn back to Then p Me it out and will k up into small crumbly pieces. A lemon j y be added if de- Be sure to use the same meas- uring cup.—I Home Journal. it little sired FASHIONABLE FINERY. New Articles of Ore tto at the ere Silver thermometers have active of There are sever: the market. New ring stands have eession of hooks. Ke Found been very inew dress-lifters in acircling pro- Oveasiv one sees a pretty piece The little medicine cups have a great success. In the present fashion proved proved woman's | oppor- | gowns the stick pin has a great tunity. | A new sily avy log | chain like that of ets, and closely fringed with | Black enamel chatelaine pins as bow- | knots with diamonds for po a touch of subdued eleg: Although the queen c’ superseded by the chate new designs still appear Very elegant. plates and platt silver gilt are Papas d for various pur- have plain centers borders rich in perforated ornament. Sponge drainers area new market. They are of perforated silver plate of article in ass with The e silver and Some new large silver brooch very Japanesque. They assum: ural forms.) Leaves or branches < flowers are copied minutely and have | the invading bug or worm on top.— | Jewelers’ Circular. The Silk Blouse. The biouse of fiexible ee preferred by the majority of the iffly-starched, “Vassar” shirt-waist. obstinate but void of the garrot torrid w for Infants and Children. “Castoria is so well adapted to children that I rec itas superior to any prescription kmowntome.” H. A. Arcusr, M.D., 111 So, Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ic, Constipation, va, Eructation, jeep, and prouiotes df Castoria cures Coli Tug Cestava Comp wsy, 77 Murray Street, N.Y FOR FORTY CENTS |You wrill receive the best Best Wreekly PAPER IN THE WEST, THE KANSAS GITY WEEKLY TIMES FRON NOW ’TILL JAN. Ist, 1893, FOR 40¢ SAMPLE COPIES FREE. e oO sce (“78 €SFA#O0OGCCBCO @ py i Ge ia Cay: feeb G ® FOR THE UNEXCELLED e @ Hunicke Bros. ° w=BULLION 9 HAT. e Hunicxe Bros. = oT. B.S eo e HAT. 3 MANUFACTURED SOLELY BY HUNICKE BROS., ST. LOUIS, MO. SOCSSOSCSCSTOCHOTCAVOHFSCHOCOSOOCHEE W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE em: ett ge nuine sewed shoet ib not rip; eet = aalicas, smooth Inside, Reeible fore comfort je, stylts ble than any other shoe ever sold at the tein. ustom-made shoes costing from $4 to 85. only $3.00 Shoe made with two complete urely sewed at the outside edge (as shown in cut), double the cheap welt shoes sold at the 5 th rip, having only one sole sewed cather Ou the édge, and when once Worn through are we le The two sol wot the We false DOUGLAS 83.00 Shoe when worn through ean’ be repai many ‘time necessary,as they will never rip or loosen from the up ure of footwear desiring to econo- nsider the superior qualities Ps, and not be influenced S8old at $3.00, tw commend Hitie “aie and ni ,, Han $3.50 Police and Farm. iO Fine. 4 by SRUTION- ati tu: Beware of dealers sub: Z shoes without W..L. Doug: am andthe price stam, Such substitutions are on bottom, raudulent and subject to prosecution by law for ob- taining money un- der false pretences. having ea them. s1 7293 eee panes are of the uote Bt ard of merit. lealers and general merchan' for sale in your place send di Postage free. W. L. Douglas, sale to shoe logue. If not Stating kind, size and width wanted. SILK DRESS — IS ses BNTLViUCE IT, ANTI- vered desolved and permanently remov s PAders he ne very. Dise: & part was sy ug afterward the hair was complete simple any eid a few SUL Drene yar cnisumption ih That dreaded and dreadful disease! s2yWhat shall stay its ravages? Thousunds say Scott's Emulsion of pure Norwegian cod liver oil and hypophosphites of lime and soda has cured us of consumption in its first stages. Have you a€cough or cold acute or leading to con umption ? ) in Make no delay but tal Scott's Emulsion cures Coughs, Ccids, Consumption, Scrofula, and all Anaemic and Wasting Diseases. Prevents wasting in chiidren. Almost as palatable ax .