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Ce Sea | ALL OUR EPARTMENTS Dress Goods, Silk and Velvets, Flannels, Blankets, Ladies Underwear, Hosiery, Boots and Shoes, Carpets and Oil Cloth, For the Fall Trade are Complete and Larger than Ever. FPrices Lower than E:ver. We extend a cordial invitation to all to inspect our stock before buying elsewhere. SAM LEVY & CO. Butter Wanted. I want your Butter and will pay you 15c per pound for good solid) stock. W. G. Womack. | Cash Grocery. | The excursion trains run to Kan- sas City Sunday over the different lines of railroad, carried upwards of twenty thousand people. If you have sick or nervous head- ache, take Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. They will cleanse the stomach, re- store healthy action to the digestive | organs, remove the effete matter (the | presence of which depresses the | nerves and brain), and thus give | speedy relief. | Baltimore's foremost citizen, Enoch | Pratt, isin vigorous health at 86, and the active head of several large | corporations. He wanted to give, Baltimore a library, and so just} spent $1,300,000 without troubling his heirs with the business. —Ex. Having a large amount of cash on | hand we will make small loans on reasonable terms and at low rates. Will lend on real estate running from one to five years with interest payable once a year and allow bor-| rower to pay part or all at any time and stop interest. Money here in Bank ready, no delay. Also want loans with good personal security. 28 tf Mo. Stars Baxx. | The Record will have to hatch up| something else for a campaign lie. | The sugar trust deny the report put | in circulation that sugar has been raised in price since the passage of the new tariff bill. The trust says | there has been no advance whatever in the price of sugar, and that the | slight advance made during the fruit | season was the work of the whole. | sale merchants. Aus. looks to the Chicago Inter-Ocean and Globe- | Democrat for information and some | times they muddle him up. B. F. Wilson, of Grant City, | Worth county, Mo., shipped in a lead of cattle which he expected to feed on the farm of his father R. C. Wilson, southeast of town. But) before he had made arrangements to feed he sold the lot to Mr. Hen- | dricks. After spending the week | visiting relatives he took his depar- | ture for home Friday, taking time however,as he passed through Butler | booming Tires. He reported the, drouth very destructive in his sec-| tion, crops a failare, and grass in the | pastures dry enough to burn when | he left home. | gratulations to the happy parents. Some special bargains at D. W.| Ifthe Atkeson meeting Saturday Drummond’s new store. See his|evening was an indication of the card. 30-tf. Jc lotlof shorsesaiine inilosaouth| the land, it was “might small indica- of Sedalia are affected with a dis-|tion-” The multitude was noticable ease similar to black leg. | for its absence.—R. H. Review. The Osceola Advance reports hog | The dispatches state three thous- cholera in various parts of St.|#4 people gathered at Eldorado Clair county. In Taber township Springs Monday to hear the joint the disease is epidemic. j debate between the congressional e i . |candidates in the district. Judge Friday John Siegal, a farmer liv-| DeArmond was the fist speaker. ing near near Kirksville, was gored | almost to death by a bull which he was leading to water. The popular nominee for circuit clerk ou the democratic ticket, Stew- art Atcheson, was in the city Mon jday and favored us pleasantly. Stewart is running strickly on his merits and is not abusing his op | pouents. He said that so far as he knew they were all clever gentlemen and would make competent clerks, but unfortunately, only one could be elected, and under those circum stances he thought he would make the best one. The congressional delegate from Lafayette county is intructed to vote tor Tarsney, who has no opposition and will be renominated. Mr. and Mrs Silas Levy were made to rejoice Wednesday evening by the arrival of a little daughter to bless their home. The Times extends con- If the Rich Hill Review is to be relied upon the populist rally at the Hill Saturday night, was not worth The latest reports of the vote in ; the Ashland district give Mr. Owen a three line local notice, and the Re- | eS — oF oi: ow 4 = 5 | is stated rE reckinridge eye ine) Bretey Teuebleres net: | will contest on the grounds of illegal j votes. Thecongressional committee ' will meet Saturday and cast up the vote of the district. While Breck inridge has a majority of the com mittee it is said several members of the canvassing board, who are Breck- | inridge men have stated they would not go behind the returns, Jet them be as they may. J. M. McGaughey, of Sprague, aged 72 years, a Mexican war vetran, member of the Masonic fraternity, and a resident of Bates county for the past twenty-five years, died at his home the 13th inst of consump-| tion. Five burglars alt negro boys aged from 9 to 15 years of age, broke in-| to the store of the Devore Fruit The campaign dodger, started at company, at Lamar Monday night, | Rich Hill, by the populist candidates, broke open the safe and took $500 | will have to get on a hustle if it sur- | out of the cash drawer. captured and confessed. They were vives our prediction of living it will take up T. J. Hendrickson’s Out It Goes. The electric light company re- | Laws, favoring the railroad corpora- fused to longer supply the city with- tions, amendments impossible be-' out compensation for the service | cause of the lobby and how the lob- jand Monday night the plant was | by controls the legislature,” and in- shut down and darkness once more | flict this nuisance en their readers, reigns supreme over the beautiful | we will guarantee decomposition in little city of Butler, who but a short | three weeks. The boys can find | time ago was boasting of her enter- | these articles in the Union, but we prise and inviting home seekers to | notice they do not appear simultan come and live among us and enjoy | eously in the Populist, as hereto-| these luxuries we had planted in | fore advertised they would. this city for your cemfort, edifica- | Se tion and pleasure. For failure te} The Modern Beauty provide for retaining these improve- | Thrives on good food and sunshine, ments the blame must rest where it | with plenty of exercise in the open must be held responsible for a fail-| her face blooms with its beauty. If ure to provide adequate means tc sustain these necessary improve- ments. Business men, what think you of the situation? tive Syrup of Figs. mighty hosts of populists abroad in | through the campaign. However, if | | series of articles, “Discriminating | The case of E. M. Crig. of Rich Hill, against the Mo Pacitic for personal damages, on nccount of having been injured in alghting from the train, having gone aboard to assist a lady, was demurred out of court at Clinton last week when the case was called for trial. The suit was for $10,000. The populist ticket in Kansas this year will not be elected. prediction. Kansas will return to its vomit,the republican party bya round majority. Since the state bas been in the hands of the populist party the basest corruption is charged in ost every branch of the govern- tment machinery from the governor's chair to the insane asylum. The charges made and proven of the dia- bolical treatment of patients iu the charity lustitutions of the state are tco heimous ity and unfit for publication f for aluost for ¢ nothing: else, a state governinent so polluted in sin should be over thrown and stamped so deep into the earth it would dizzy a buzzards head to fly over the hole. Every good citizen owes it to himself, bis country aud his home, to stand for the right, pray for the right and vote for the right. Ignorance, im | beciligy. corruption and rotteness in the mavagement of state ments should not be allowed to exist | for one moment in this land of the free and home of the brave. There woverte Mark the | ‘to Eureka fore, itis the duty of every good | citizen in Kansas to see that he casts | his ballot for men of integrity, of | trust to greedy aggrandisements or put the charity asylums in the bands cf men without brains and whose brutal lusts predominate. If this result is gained the states of Kansas and Colorado will not again be plac- ment of the men who now hold sway in these states and stand as bright and shining lights in the populist party. What the states of Kansas vative democratic administrations. | 5 Per Cent Off. ed under the control and manage- | | evening he honor, ata who will not pollute the’ S. W. WALTON DEAD. { Stricken by Death in His Bed at Eldo- rado Springs. Seymour Enterprise. Like a clap of thunder out of a| clear sky came the announcement last Monday morning, from Eldorado Springs, that S. W. Walton was dead. No details could be obtained and everybody were hoping against hope that the report was a mistake. But the verification came shortly putting our community into mourning and | expressions of sadness and sympathy | for the bereaved children could be heard on all sides. Ever since the death of his wife, | which occurred last January Mr. Watton had not experienced a well | day, being affected with a serious heart trouble. Several physicians | were consulted but to no avail and! about six weeks ago he went! Springs, Ark., to try] the medicinal baths there. After re- | maining about four weeks and stead- | ily improving each day, he concluded | to leave there and returned home / feeling better than he had felt for a; long time. | Early last week he started to vist | his mother at Clinton and sister at El- | dorado Springs, thinking to improve | his health by the trip. It was while} on this trip that he was stricken by | death and his family and friends | were plunged into deepest mourning. | His end came peacefully. In the} retired evidently in! good health in the mourning, when they went to arouse him for break- | fast he wasdead. Noevidence of a! struggle were visible, on thetable by | the side of his bed was his medicine and and a spoon indicating that hej had taken some of it during the night. | Mr. Walton was one of the most prominent business men of our coun- ty, large hearted and genial, he won, the favor of every man with whom} he had dealings. He was enterpris- | ing and progressive and had built up | | a large trade at his establishment in | and Colorado need to put them on; a higher plain is wise and conser- | I wil! duplicate any other Grocery | man’s advertised prices on groceries in the county papers and give 5 per | cent discount for cash and produce. | to drop in and subscribo for the | belongs, and the citizen council | air. Her form glows with health and | So bricg along the paper that has \the prices in and see for yourself | Yours Truly, her system needs the cleansing ac- | that I will do just as I agree to do. | tion of a laxative remedy, she uses | Remember I am selling wire nails at | the gentle and pleasant liquid laxa- | 3c a pound. Linington. He was born in Cooper | county in 1847 and lived there until | 1883 when he came to Webster coun-! ty, settling at the place his business | Was carried on until his death. i He was one of the most devoted of | parents, his children were the prid of his life and everything that he! do was done to promote their! welfare. He wastwice married and was the father of eleven children,two of whom are dead. The funeral oc- curred Wednesday, Rev. Broaddus officiating. He was buried in the! Masonic cemetery. | The deceased was a brother of our} felliow-townsman, Hon. W. E. Wal-| ton, President of the Missouri State | W. G. Womack, Cash Grocer. | Bank, who attended the funeral. The revival meeting held at Clin- tou by Rev. Cole closed Sunday with over 600 conversions. The ; Same results can be had in Butler if the christian people and preachers will all pull together. Attend the Got $1,500 Damages. Graves & Clark, attorneys for W. A. Ephland, in his suit against the Mo. Pac. railroad, wiu agaip,and a Henry county jury add $300 to a former judgement. The case was tried Saturday at Clinton. The first trial of this case (the facts of which are familiar to our readers) took place in this city anda judgement for $1,- 500 was given. An appeal was taken by the railroad and a reversal by the court of appeals on a tecknical point in an instruction was the result and then the company took a change of venue to Henry county and the above is the result of the trial. The railroad will appeal again but Mr. Graves feels confident that the ver- dict of the jury will be sustained in the final disposition of the case. Gentleman esided in Connecticut, but in Honolulu, writes: “For 20 years past, my wife and Lhave used Ayer’s Huir Vigor, and we attribute to it the dark hair which she and I how have, while dreds of our acc ances, ten or a years younger than we, are either gray-headed, white, or bald. When asked how our hair has H retained its color and fuliness, we reply, ‘Ey the use of Ayer’s Hair Vigor—nothing else.’” “In 1968, my aManced was nearly bald, and = the hair kept fall- ing out every day. I induced Tho fort who now hertouse Ayer’s Hair Vigor, and very soon, it not only checked any further loss of hair, but ineed an entirely new growth. which has cmained Inxuriant and glossy to this day. I can recommend this preparation to ail in need of a genuine hair-restorer. It is alt that it is claimed to be.”—Antonio Alarrun, Bastrop, Tex. AYER’S . HAIR VIGOR