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An Uonsnal Runaway. Nevada Mail. One of the most ex g runaway Lever saw was that at Peter Myers) farm yesterday afternoon” said W. $. Creel to-day. “I was driving along the road | when four horses attached to a self binder commenced ruuning. The driver was unable to hold them. and + jumped off his seat. Freed from all | 4 restraint the horses made a wild cir-| duit the standing The machine remained in the bundles simply flew out of it | turough grain gear, and They came about as fast as a man could pitch brick, and appeared to be one continuous stream “After hundred | yards the leaders fell down and the! wheel team the binder over | hem. I suppose that one of the orses must have been killed or per manently disabled, as it did uot get up. After I had gone a mile or smore I looked back und the was still down. “When the machine stopped it seemed to be working to perfection and throwing bundels as well when it started.” running several pulled animal ; as Smith’ s Army Starving. Grand Junction, Col., A few Smith's army, straggled in here to- day. They report about 150 of their comrades at the starvation | and thirst scattered along the desert between here and Salt Lake. The Rio Grade Western will not carry them, and the trainmen have strict orders to keep them off. “General” Smith endeayorirg, vith poor success to send aid If something not done nany deaths may be expected. June 21.— industrials, members point of is here and is to hem. is Barn and Three Honses Burned. Lexington, Mo.. June 20.—The ee stable of Kelly & Sons was qutirely destroyed by fire this morn ing at 2:30. Five horses and all the vehicles and harness were consumed. The loss is $6,000 with no insurance. Kelly & Sons had an, entirely new utfit and had only been in business hree months. The stable is on the ite of Green & Kelly’s stable which was burned last November, at which time twenty-three horses perished. Ballard’s Suow Liniment. 4 Mrs. Hamilton, Cambridge, Ills., says: Thad rheumatism so bad I could not _ {raise my hand to my face. — Ballard’s Snow Liniment has completely cured me. Itake pleasure in informing mv neighbors and triends what tt has done tor me. Chas. Handley, clerk tor Lay & Lyman, Kewanee. Ills., advises us Snow Linimeut cured him of rheuma- Atism Why nottry it? It. will surely do you good. It cures all inflam ation, wounds, sores, cuts, spratns, Sold by H. L. Tucker. etc. Senator Palmer's charge that the rotection states hired negro substi- tutes to do their fighting is another ssault upon the “American system.” he Senator does not reflect that taking industrious persons into bat- tle paralyzes the industries they leave at home. In our next war we shall doubtless exempt from military duty all citizens engaged in manu- facturing any article upon whicha customs duty has been placed.— , Post- Dispatch. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world for Cute ti) Bruises,Sores, Ulcers,Salt Rheum Fever Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chlblains J Corns, ind all Skin Eruptions, and posi- by) tively cu-es Piles, or no pay required. I is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts per boxt \ For sale by H. T Tucker, druggist. 21.— Jerry | mpson Better. %* Washington, D. C., June } Jerry Simpson arrived from Berke I) ‘Springs today. After an absence of A nineteen days he has gained just nineteen pounds,and as the Populist 1 Gongressmen gathered around him at the depot, he remarked, ‘Guess | you have come to meet a pugilist.” His complexion was ruddy and he had evidently received every atter- tion. He is still, however,very thin, but his physicians expect him to put! on flesh very rapidly. The presence in Washington of pottery workmen from ‘New Jersey who say that their employers have closed the potteries merely to keep down wages, and who believe that they would be better off under free trade than they now are, is rather confusing to the high tariffers. The) manufacturers have been importing rather than give their workmen em- ployment. It is clear that the Jer- ey potters have been standing un-/| der the Bohannon umbrella until | when Brashear | pole and stru | killing him instantly. jrendered and of} they are damp and discouraged.— Ex. Tragedy at Avenu: City. St. Joseph, Mo, June 21.—The g City John |here tod | known n of that place, came }involved un altercation a | negro named Strother Bras} ho resides in thi y 3 i ‘drinking, and followed Brashear to his house, trying to pick a row After Brashear stepped inside of his | gate Lilly struck at bira w a club, | icked up a hic OU k Lilly over the rashear sur- head, 13 10 jau | path of the people is with Brashear. | Lilly leaves a wife and daughter. Dred Unuer The Kate St. Jose bs Afo:, Howard Atkinson, master Atkinson, Ainsworth} hospital this morning after under- 21—D June lied at going a surgical operation. On won| | day Dr. ne cherri which produced strangulation of the| bowels, and later mortification set The operaticn failed to help him. He was one of the best known young physicians « of this city. Atkinson ute son Oxford, N.Y, June 18 —Jonathan D. Rogers, an octogenariau resident itl of this place, met a horrible death last week While inspecting th hogs early in the morning on the farm of Preston Rogers. near her he was taken with fainting spell and fell over a low fence into the peu When discovered by his daugiter- in law, an hour afterward, the life less body of Mr. Rogers was lying in the center of the pen. Tis cloth ing had been tornin shreds and the hogs had lacerated the body.portions of which they had eaten. It was nec- essary to kill one of the animals and wound two others before the body could be removed. Cyclone at Ft, Dodge. Ft. Dodge, Ia, June 19.—A cy- clone passed over this city this even ing and partially destroyed the stations of Mvorland and Callender on the Rock Island railroad, eight miles west of here. A farmer named Goodard, living between these places was instantly killed. Several reported injured. Physicians from this city have gone to the scene. Thousands of dollars worth of prop- erty are reported destroyed Details are hard to obtain. are “George,” she said, in a low voice “would you make a great sacrifice to my happiness?” “Certainly,” he replied “Would you quit smoking for my sake?” “Quit smoking for your sake!” repeated. Then, after a silence, exclaimed hoarsely: you nothing. I will quit smoking for your Hereafter when I smoke it shall be exclusively for my own sake.”—Washington Star. he he “I can refuse sake. Policeman—“You say you always refuse to sell a man liquor after he has as much asis good for him?” Bartender—“That’s my rule. When he begins to see double, I! bounce him.” “Ana good rule it is. But how do you know when he begins to see double?” “When he hands me five cents for a ten cent drink and insists that he paid me ten."—New York Weekly. Macon, Ga, June 21.—News was received here today of a double tragedy in Crwford county. Wart Dent and O. P. Wright had a diffi- culty in Dent's store. Wright cut Dent across the abdomen. Friends interfered, and Wright went across the street and was followed by Dent who,with entrails protruding,plung- jed a pitchfork into Wright's breast | and broke the fork to pieces over his head. Both men will die. The strike of the coal miners is nearing anend. They are going to work in many of the eastern states and in a few days more, from indica- tions, there will be a general scram- ble for places. A deputy U. S. marshal was shot from ambush and killed near Wag- oner, I. T, Sunday, by the Cook gang of horse thieves. Jim Cook, leader of the robbers, was shot to pieces by the officers and captured. N. P. Bennett startled passengers on a Kansas City street car by cry- ing out, “I am dying.” He was tak- en from the car, and placed in an ambulance, but died before he reach- the police station. He was 80 years old. a brother of Post-| | e| “ i | dlers who were arrested for violating | | | Three or four Democratic Repub! canizers would not amount to shucks |if they had not a solid Republican body with them r with a |reliable Democratic majority of 10 | would !ong azo have done what the House d:d_ It would have passed a tariff bill and put sugar on the free aist ; Gorman and Brice have not been able to hing only by combi- mation ina close Senate with the Republicans It is purely Rapablican ae that they have been doing Republicans have been for delay. | They have been for every increase jof rates. They have be the port aud comfort of Gorman Aes have been for rrapt, oppres | Brice. every- ive, de- procrastir g iw jthe opposition to the Wilson Bill. | | They are responsible for G seme jana Brice. for « rthe s 3 { f the lobby or the Sugar trust. -——Republic. aud In July the Republicans are going | to carry five | figures will satisfy them in estimat- ing their majority. Missouri, and only In August they | © ready to admit that their count-| ing may be somewhat erroneous, but they are going to carry the state by a big plurality. The gentle breezes lof September somewhat their enthusiasm and they ar dampen admit | that the Democracy has a fighting {show October frost-bitten of | their candidates, they acknowledge lthat the Democrats may elect some | thing—just a wee bit to keep the party alive. In November they generally busy counting to see who are left after the Democratic; cyclone has struck them. Thus it has been for the past twenty two years, so it is now, and it will continue to be for years to come.— Osceola Advance. When the chilling breezes of have some are noses so A project is on foot to invite Glad- stone, England’s grand old states- man, to visit America. The idea is to have an invitation issued signed by a large number of the represen- tative men of this country tendering | to the famous Englishman the hos- | pitality of the nation. Chauncey | M. Depew has been selected to mail the If Mr. Gladstone comes, his reception will outrival those tendered Lafayette and Kos- suth.—Kansas City Times. invitation. Mine toing to Work. Eight or ten miners from the Rich | Hill district passed threugh here| Wednesday morning going to Yale, Kansas, to go to work in the mines. “Seventy-five or one hundred men have left the Rich Hill district with-| in the past two weeks,” said one of the men toa Mail reporter, “to get work in new mining fields. They were forced to go to work as they| had nothing “—Nevada Mail. to live on. When Ponce de-Leon sought to find The fountains giving back lost youth, | It may be that he had ia mind | That draught which seems to tne | | atruth | Out of the fable ages old. For drinking it the old grow young: It is, indeed, a draught ‘of gold, | Surpassing all by poets sung. | The draught meant is Dr. Pierce's | Golden Medical Discovery,of course. It isa most potent rejuvenator of the weakened and depilitated system. | It drives out all poison,all impurity, enriches the blood, and makes the old and worn out feel young and vig- | orous. Ponce de Leon didn’t dis | cover it, but Dr. Pierce did, and he! rightly named it when he called it a! “Golden Discovery.” ; Dr. Pierce's Pellets cure permas| nent/y constipation, indigestion and | headaches. All dealers. Knoxville, Tenn., June 20.—Jas. | Santeler, alias Burgin, who has been | a terror of North Carolina for years, jand bas killed a dozen men, has jae been arrested at Maryville. \ Rewards amounting to $2,000 | have been offered for him dead or) alive. s Electric Bitters. | | This remedy 1s becoming so well/ known and so popular as to aeed no} special mention. All who have used Eiectric Bitters sing the same song of praise.—A purer medicine does not ex- ist and it is guaranteed to do all that is claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all} diseases of the liver and kidneys, will re- move pimples‘ boils, salt rheum, and other affections caused by impure blood will drive malaria trom the system as well as cure all malarial fevers. For cure for sick headache, constipation and indigestion try Electric Bitters—entire Satistaction guaranteed or money re-| tunded. Price soc and $1.00 at H. L. Tucker's drugstore. | dozen ‘oceurred in |most orderly, ' county | tions of this Braddock, Pa, June 19.—The ex-| tent of up the damage by the cloud the Turtle Creek Valley 1 -yening Was in- reports The fore upon the v of the storm and Plum crops wert y build were wrecked Sandy Creek lage the w 2 in the streets to| adepth of ten feet. More than a! houses were the unprecedented torrent *Poor old up admirably under the N Missouri” is standing disorders of the day the ste d where there has been a strike the most per- fect order has been {til matters be adjusted be tween miners and their employers Not a sivgle Coxey army or compa- py has been organized in the state. In fact, Old Missouri is one of the P and best states in the union to live in.—Kan- sas City Times. maintained un could nceable Nevada, Mo., June 14.—Two suits for $10,000 each were filed in the Cireuit court here to day against Marshal H C Alderson. The plaiutiffs are two traveling rug ped- a local ordinance forbidding the sale of merchandise within the corporate without license. The men were employed by a Des Moines, In, firm by whom, it ts thought, the suits are instigated Mrs. George Morford, of Kansas City, Chris- tian Science for the past year, was seized with nervous prostration Thursday of iast week, retired to bed and all efforts of the physicians to arouse her from a deep sleep failed. In her trance she would get up and walk about the house, and at one time went to the table and ate a light meal. Sunday her reason returned as suddenly as it left her but she can giye no account of her strange action who has been studying evening “We closed out the last of the Columbian two cent stamps Meon- day,” said Postmaster Allen to a Times reporter. ‘Tbe postoflice de | partment sent out all the Columbian | issue on January Ist to the different postoftices, with instructions to get rid of them first before selling any others. We have other denomina issue, but no more twos, which are a thing of the past and will not be seen again except in the hands of stamp collectors.” The coal miners of this country have learned that the tariff on coal has nothing to with raising wages. If an increase is wanted in that commodity they must look to the mine operators. It is estimated that in the Pitts- burg, Pa. district the miners have lost by the strike in wages $1,800,- 000. The general average over the country of loss to the miners is esti- mated to be over $10,000,000. | What Can’t Pull Out? Why the do pock dropping. Can only be had with cases stamped W Sold, without extra charge j for this bo ing), through Sold ontright, no rent, no royal y|to City, Village or Country. N« home, shop, store and office. ae Rence and best seller on earth. ‘| Agents make from $5 10 $30 day. ‘One in a residence means a sale tp all the . Fine instruments, no tors, anywhere, eny distavtce. ‘Vase ‘an be put up Stegeeninn all Drogas, Send ae for Dynal, Wileex BpeelGe Coy broke full | sandy Creek | washed away in great labor | f j riot has es Colic, Constipation, Diarrhoea. Eructation, rves sleep, and promotes ¢ Osstace Coup asy, 77 Murray Street, N.¥ MANHOOD RESTORED! grees — guaranteed tocurea iseases.such as Weak a3 Power, Headache. W ess,all drains and lc " yi overexertion, youthful errors, ex ulants, which lead to Intirmity, Consum Vest pocket. $1 per box, @ for BS, by Plsive a wri ts, | “A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR-| GAIN.” MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES SAPOLIO —ELY'S CREAM BALM Clea the Nasal jeanses { Ss, Aliays Pain and Inflammatio: Heals the Sores, Restores Taste and Smell, and Cures ——It is Quickly A BRos. Sei Warren 8 THE TWICE- re WEEK TIMES, $1.00 Two Papers $1.00 Por for the Per Year. Price of one Yoar, Less Than one Cent Per Copy. The Kansas City Times, January 16, 1Sg4, began issuing The Twice-a- Week Times. Hereatter the thousands of homes in which the | Weekly Times has been a welcome guest will receive that unrlya!- ed paper twice a week. The price remains ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. 50 Cents for Six Months, 25 Cents for 3 Months, Phe Literary and News Features, w h tor neatly a Buarter of a Cen- «Weekly sn the West, be The Twice-a-Week Times will continue 2 Newspaper and Magazine in One. ORGANIZE CLUBS. fo any one who will send TheyTimes Fiye New Yearly Subscription tor the Twice-a-Week Times, with draft or postotlice moneygorder tor $5 the paper will be mailed FREE FOR ONE YEAR. Address THE KANSAS CITY TIMES Sample copies free Eansas Coty, Me. 7 . | tury have made this the greatest maintaimed, will . You see them everywhere. Columbia Bicycles Their sales attest their popularity. Catalogue free at our agencies, or mailed for two 2-cent stamps. POPE MFG. CO., Boston, New York, Chicago, Hartford. (. HAGEDORN Elegant World's Fair Views =} The Old Reliable | GIVEN AWAY pHoTocRAPHER ——_BY—— The St. Louis Republic {TEN PORTFOLIOS of WORLD'S FAIR VIEWS, each portfolio con- taining 16 views and each view ac- curately described. Views of the Mail Buildings, State Buildings, the Midway. Views of Statuary, etc i These ten portfolios will be given without cost to anyone who will! send five new yearly subscribers to The Twice-a Week Republic, with $5.00 the regular subscription price. | Address THE REPUBLIC, St. Louis, Mo. North Side Square. Has the best equipped gallery in Southwest Missouri. AlJ Styles of Photographing execut +d in the highest style of the act, and at reasonable prices. Crayon Work A Specialty. All work in my line is 1 herp Sie to give satisfaction. Call and «ee samples of work. C. HACEDORN.