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K. C. Pitts burg & Gulf Time Tabla. Arrival and departure of traine at Worland. NORTM BOUND. » Freight dally except Sandy 12:10 p m} 5 eee = Saae LExpress daily - - - 1 cobs SOUTIL ROUND, Express daily = - eght daily except Sanda: pm - pm am pm Remember this is the popular short line be- tween Knngas City, Mo., and Pittsburg, | Kan., Joplin, mo. Neosho, mo., Sulpher| ' rings, Ark., Siloam Springs, Ark,, and the | direct route from the south to St Louis, Chi- | cago, and points north and northeast and to Denver, Ogden, San Francisco, Portland and | Bean toon ne morrawest No expense has p 0 make the passenger equipment of this line second to none in the west. Travel via the new line. NOHUE, r Agent, is City, Mo. SE SE nd a ENE Aa MEMPHIS SILVER CONVENTION, | = Senator Turpie is Made Permanent | j i i Chairman ot the Southern | Meeting. Memphis, Tenn., June 12.—The largest meeting ever held in this country for the discussion of a sin gle economic question convened at the Auditorium in this city to day. While an overwhelming majority of the delegates of to-day’s convention called in the interest of the free and unlimited coinage of silver at the ratio of sixteen to one, came from this section of the country, the rep-| resentation included almost every state south of the Ohio and west of the Mississippi, from Puget Sound to the keys of Florida, and for the “Mexican boundary to the Potomac. Aside from Tennessee, Mississippi | had the banner delegations, num bered upwards of 200 men, who were seated in the center of the lower floor. Immediately on the left sat Louisiana's 150 delegates; on the right were grouped representa- tives from Florida, Virginia, Cali- fornia, Utah, Colorado and a number of other far western states. In the gallaries next to the stage on either side were scores of silver men from Tennessee and Arkansas,while above them were arranged the representa- tives of Georgia, Kemtucky, the Car- olinas, Alabama and other small del- egations. The gathering was notable for the number of men of national reputation who were pres- ent, half a dozen senators and a score of congressmen occupying seats on the stage, while on the floor at the head of their respective state dele. gations were governors, ex-governors and a number of ex members of con- gress. Lo morrow witl be devoted to speeches by some of the visitors and the consideration of the report of the Committee on Resolutions, of which Senator Jones, of Arkansas, is Chairman. Politically, the most significant incident of to day's proceedings was the emphatic statement of Senator Harris, of Tennessee, who, it has already clearly been demonstrated, is the controlling spirit in the man agement of the Convention, as to the object of the gathering, and the single subject to which it is expected to confine it’s deliberations. Assaulted a Woman. Guthrie, Ok, June 13.—Little Man and Red Lodge, two Cheyenne Indians, were arrested at the Indian issue house near Watonga on Mon | day, June 10, and thrown into jail in| this place. They were arrested on | the charge of assault, their victim being an old woman by the nawe of | Hays whose home is in G@ county. The arrest was made by the sheriff | and his deputies from G county. This is the second assault that) has been committed by Indians on white women within the last two) years. The Howling Wolf assault has encouraged the Indians in their fiendish work. Howling Wolf com- mitted an assault on a little girl in| the summer of 1893. He escaped from jail and since that time has) been dodging around in Blaine cous- ty, and the sheriff is charged with being afraid to try to capture him. Excitement here is intense. The people have become so disgusted | with the sheriff in the Howling Wolf matter that they talk strongly of going after the Indians with Win-| chesters. Little Man and Red Lodge | will be taken to G county for trial. F. H. Blindet of Jefferso- City, | has the contract for building the | new addition to the State Industrial | Baim and to all appearance School for girls at Chillicothe. The new addition of cottage and school room, when completed, will, it is be- lieved, meet all the wants of the state for the reclaiming of girls that ~ may be sent there for some time te come. jin the Eastern and Middle States. | west to Denyer, aud from St. Louis} The Turn in the Tide. Under this heading “Bradstreet’s,” in it’s latest issue, prints a table which presents the recent industrial revival in a striking manner. In’ this table, which is the result of a! Pd special investigation by that paper, | 5 seventy-five cities east of the Rocky | a @ =} Mountains are covered, these points, a being separated into three divisions. | The most important of these divi- sions comprises the leading points an Fee In that region eighty seven industri- al establishments have started up since April 1 this year giving work! to 30,009 employes. The Western and Northwestern division, covering the leading places from Cleveland |~ ways pays ‘the highet 1 Produces north to St. Paul, shows resump- tion of work in ninety establish- _-aecmmmane ments, which give employment to! is 21,000 persons. Inthe South and) Southwest fifty establishm-nt« giy- ing work to 2,490 persons have started. Thus mills and factories in cities east of the Rocky Mountains idle previously have resumed work 227 Harness an Fink’s Leather Tree Saddle in the past two months, giving em- ployment te 53,400 persons. This | is a highly encouraging exhibit. Another part of the table shows) that 140,000 persons at the points in the Eastern and Middle State division had their wages advanced, | voluntarily in most instances, since | April 1, 28,000 in the Western and Northwestern region, and 10,000 in the South and Southwest, or 178,- 000 in all. An equally significant part of the table is that which shows that only 36,000 persons in the three regions named—that is, in the coun- try east of the Rocky Mountains— have struek since April 1, and but 25,000 of these have struck for high- er wages. At this season in 1894 the strikers were several times as numerous as this. Here is marked evidence of the industrial improvement of the past two months, and this change, of course, is reflected in the entire business world. The stock and grain markets are stronger, railroad earn- ings are increasing and bank clear- ings are getting close to the highest figures of the most prosperous years of the past. In all branches of trade the highest figures of 1894 are left far behind. The Treasury situation, too, improves with the general busi-| ness revival. For a week or two the gold reserve has been only a few hundred thousand dollars below the $100,000,000 line, and the general tendency is still upward. The time is close at hand when gold importa- tion will! set in, and this will further strengthen the reserve. Government | revenues continue below expendi Deubi single the M The Decision, That the reader derstand the may clearly un- the Su- preme Court on the income tax, and why itis declared unconstitutional, we will try aud give the point, brief and distinct. The constitution says: “No capitation or other direct tax decisions of shall be laid, unless in proportion to census or enumeration directed to be section 9, clause 4. hereinbefore taken.” Article 1, This is direct taxes are appropriated among the several States according to their jrespective members, counting the tures, but the monthly shortages! whole number of persons in each are declining. Probably they will) State, exclu jing Indians not taxed. disappear altogether before Con- gress meets. All the indications) point to a continuous advance in all the more important lines of trade. Nothing like a boom, however, is in sight. The improvement is slow, but it is more solid and permanent | pererence tc on that account. It is the rapid} their levy—that fact advances, those which start wild | the tax unconstitutional. It is not speculation and establish fictitious | avainst the tax because it is direct, values, that are apt to be delusive. | put beieg —Globe-Demoerat | The Supreme Court holds that a 1 property on is a direct tax. This being so, theu the fact that the tax under the late Congress is tax on real or pers incomes from eithe ja tax upon the individuals without pulation in renders direct it is net apportion- {ed among the States according to Ai Muciaals canoes: their respective populations. This Washington, D.C., June 13 2 Ggqsh is the vital defect.—K. C. Journal. |retary of Agriculture Morton to-day Poisoned. abolished the division of microscopy, Emporia, Kan., J: 12 Af and of his department, which has been | Mrs. Thomas P. Bu of this ¢ presided over by Dr. Thomas Tay-| Miss Beayant, Normal student from lor. The exstension of microscopic | Olathe, and Miss Minnie Bender, a work to other divisions has left the! division of microscopy, as such, little to do, and at least five divisions, Secretary Morton says, have done jp their tea at supper last night. by that division has been reassigned. | A-colored girl named Sarah Rob- Secretary Morton’s action is in no/erts, who was working for Mrs. way to reflect on Dr. Taylor. Burns, is in jail charged with pur- milliner from Newton, employed by Mrs. Flint, were all poisoned by rough on rats, administered to them Springfield is mourning a missing |Star. She is the wife of Browning | ing- Evidence shows that she pur- Star, and he has invoked the aid of }chased rough on rats yesterday at the Kansas city police to find her. Mr. Star claims that his wife desert- ed him more than a month ago, and went to Kansas City, and he desires her to return to him without further delay. of the poisoned people are now sup- Miss Bender is still very sick and confined iv her couch. No reason can be assigned for the girl’s deed except despc cy, be cause all the boarders were to leave “There is Banger in Delay.” Since 1861 I have t ertrom catarrt i tried = : services were no lomger needed. Terrible headaches from Sennen long suffered are gc late Major U.S. V Buffalo, N. Y. Elv’s Cream Balm has com ed me of catarrh Is Your Tongue Coated, vour throat dry, your eyes I d and do you tee! mean lland inflam jing. Your liver and Kidney are not failed, Many acqu d | doing their w Why don’t you take itwith excellent WV. | Parks Sure cu It does not make Steqens, Caldwell, of | you feel bette -you nothing-— 3 Cream Balm is 50 cents. a Sold by H. L. Tucke: A. O. Welton Fancy Groceres, a Provisions of QUEENSWARF AND GLASSWARE CiCARS AND TOBACCO, East Side Square. Butler, Mo- McFARLAND BROS. | MeFarland Bros, the pioneer} harness men of Bates keep every hand harness from $3 to $15. all styles and prices, from the cheapest to best STEEL FORK SADDLE” made in this country. your old harness and trade in on new ones. Butler Missouri. posely doing the wholesale poison-! the drug store of D. W. Morris. All | posed to be out of danger, although | TREASURE SEEKERS ACT. | |a Mining Town Already Staked Out in i | the Gold Regions. , Oklabema City, Ok, June 12—) | For several days past rumors have been current of the discovery of gold in paying quantities on Boggy | ereek, abeut fourteen miles south-_ | west of Arapahoe, in the western Manifold Disorders Are cecasioned by an impure and im poverished conditio i in ECZEMA, RHEUMATISM 9)) na Bil Kind 8. People are flock- rms of blood di s.S.S. ed tre | part of the Territory. It is claimed {that some very rich leads have been lfeund and excitement is running at | the highest pitch. ling into the supposed mineral region | | from eyery point of the compass | ;Companies have been formed and) market price for County |teports say the precious metal is be-} jing taken out in vast quantities aud | | hundreds of people are staking off | — claims. | CLEVELAND SEEKING j jand platted under the mining laws. | May Call the Nationai Committee To- | Dhe principal find is oe the head of | gether to Act on the Silver Craze | Boggy creek, within fifteen miles of| Washington, D.C. June 7.—The | Arspanec: but ipsa clauned /trecings | caidentin exid tobe considering ae befouad SO EGC | the plan of having a meeting called cae oe ie Cas cones ie use of the National Democratic Central joes oe aes couneys& distance | Gommittee to take some action to- et Boots soppy nye eel watt straightening out the party —— QEEAIH 2s nee. et that! tangle over the financial question. poner ete baying) Gog) Hess Be RCN majority of the men composing i cae moun ene ener oe ARE | the committee is reported in support De eee ae ee EPO, 8ny- | of the Administration's financial pol- | eae HUE Cea Ue peek of icy, hence a meeting of the commit- (se ere discovery is seventy-five | tee could result in nothing unfriend- | miles from a railroad, and it is diffi ly t& the President: He et course: | cule to aoe Cee neDoues a | would not favor the plan of the She aes oues DES tious coat enmmittes calling a national Conven- | ports and adds to the fabulous ex- Cured by any address PT SPECIFIC CO., Adanta, Ga. A PLAN A mining touwm has been laid off Saddlery, South Side Square Butler Mo. a tion according to the resolution of the county, Mo. They | tent of the discovery No sue = ak cree ef i ben mone h in y N Ri ©*- | Tilinois Convention, but the plan ng t horse owners need. seen as been created Dy 20Y | under consideration is to have a com- A x mineral! discovery in recent years s a é e wagon harness from $10 to $29; ¢ oy Paces mittee meeting and obtain an expres- LIKE OLD CALIFORNIA. sion against the efforts of State com- mittees to hold State conventions and attempt in that way to formulate national party policy. The President is said to regret what he realizes as a very bad split in the party, and it is to overcome this that induces him at this time to seek a plan that will hold the party damage to the minimum buggy harness, 37. 50 to $25: see a Becond Perry, Ok., June 12—The gold fever in the Washita country, Okla- homa, seems to be catching all over the territory. Many people passed through here to-day for the land of the gold mines and many people have come from all over the Terri- tory. A man living in Perry, who is and old gold miner, says he knows every foot of country on Boggy creek, the place where the treasure jis found, and he says the ground is pregnant with it Saddles of “COW BOY Bring cFarland Bros. Mrs. Bellah Released. Liberty, Mo., June 11.—-The case against Mrs. Anna D. Bellah, charg- ing her with defrauding Lem Lin- coln, of Excelsior Springs, out of $120 last summer, was dismissed here today. The prosecuting at torney stated that he was unable to get the cashier of the Quaker City National Bank, of Philadelphia, Pa., on which bank the check was given. The bank official was a necessary witness, aud therefore nothing was left to do but dismiss the case. Mrs Bellah indictment at Clinton county for defrauding Mrs. The Indians have always kept the mining region guarded. Several men have been pee N Oh palled in years past by the Indians SLL OR EXCHANGE «:-| for hunting the precious metal in the vicinity. The excitement is greater | than the Kickapoo opening created. | REAL ES over John sow pr A. S. MILLHORN. R. B. Speed has sold his interest in the Nevada Mail to C. J. Waldon, late of the Fayette Advertiser. Mr. aoe |Speed was one of the very best he ae | newspaper men in this state and the this | fraternity will regret to lose him. | As the Daily Mail, which was a wel- Currency Fight. jo was under afternoon. Precinct conyentions, oe a : J. M. MeMichael out of $150, but preliminary to the meeting of Hae COE A une putes during | the indictment was declared defec Democratic St Convention | Speed's Proprietorship, has ceased tive and void, so she was set free to June 25, at Loui le, will be held pro) puts is 16s daily SpRcanet cee we! go, and at once left for Liberty. | were apprehensive that something! on nest Salut’ out of the ordinary had taken place. day, the 15th. To offset the effect |. Meee ura etc nae SEEMS ig aes jin the Mail establishment. We hope} of Congreesman Patterson's speech 2 faerie 3 the new management will be able to the free have secured : Congressman Wu. J. B Ne_| keep up the well-earned reputation = ee z - | of the Mail as one of the best county “| papers in the state. throughout Kent Absointely Pree. Any reader of this paper can get The St. Louis Globe-Democrat Ab- solutely free for three months. Read the offer in this issue aud take ad- vantage of it at once. The weekly | Globe-Democrat is issued in Semi- Ti ae | Weekly sections, eight pages each Nevada, Mo., June 13.—Mrs Jno. meeadey and Friday, sei every accempanied by his wife and daugh-| Thilhower, aged 50 years, and the} week, making it practically a Semi- ter, Mrs. G. P. Jackson of Sedalia, | mother of married children, cut her | Weekly paper, yet the price is only is expected to arrive in Owensboro|throat near Sheldon, this eouniy, | Pe dollar ayear. In politics, it os this week to visit her sister, Mrs. R. | this morning. He mind was unbal pee Perera, we eueseey eee aed ts eect | = ei | the news, and is absolutely indispen- 5 Triplett. She was found | cable to the farmer, merchant, of The free silver men, together with lying in her fronc yard with a deep | professional man who has not the many of his old friends, will petition | gash in her throat and « bloody |time to read a large daily promptly Senator Vest to spex ‘butcher knife by her side. It is | and keep thoroughly posted. Sample “ thought she cannot possibly recover | Copies will be sent free on applica- 2 ? ‘ | tion to Globe Printing Co., St. Loui although she failed to sever either | yfiggouri. ss the jugular vein or any artery. \ silver men an of braska,for a speech at the tabernac on June 16. Senator G. G. Vest of Misseuri, | anced by sickness Father Crazed. Ind, June 12.—Wm.! r of pretty little Bern- | oe us | who was beaten to death! Henry Rabe, a well to do German! with stones by Gilbert Bowsher, the | farmer, was indicted for mur Laporte, Collins, f ice Collins, Murdered by a Maniac Mother St. Louis, Mich., June 11.—Mre. der in H. 1 | erman Becker, aged 34. and two boy murderer, has bee i ‘the first degree by the gris j as ‘ ? : a) eset eee er 8 y the grand JU'Y | children, aged 4 and 5, were found bemoaning in his mad deli i exi n, fa ; 13 De noaning in bh s mad Jelirum, the at Lexingto : Lafayette c punty. | today by her little demented boy in untimely fate which has taken from| Rabe and his wife had a quarrel a aalt ath il j : sag, eee z | \a back cellar with bullet boles in him his idolized child. | few days ago, and she rao from him | ,._- pees oa Frese peas a saws ae He sh wi | their heads. Thelittle boy was shot Raynes eso : ot : —— and ae ee - z shot at her ee jia the left temple, the girl in the left r are prostrate with grief, ey mCCSters The ball cheek, Mrs. Becker in the right tem the sudden derangement of Collins, passed entirely through her body at | ‘ : | the hi She ena eS jple. They must have been dead for being the last. pathetic feature of the | t™e bips. She lived three days in | : i i i eae anata yy «, | terrible agony and died. He is in | least two hours when found. it ime is ut paral! a}. z 2 : ‘ ‘ : out parallel in jail and is terribly crieved over the is Claimed that Mre. Becker was not the history of the State. ies i ad mind and ils Es ctdink te Soca ice affair. of soun — an¢ ; there has been % ,, 25 : trouble in the family of late. § aud pitifully laments the killing of The Wabash passenger, freight Shp aee eo Fi wi — eee : umes depot and stock yards at Glenwood, | left a letter eaying that she was sick oe ries o was his piey. | barued at noon on the Sth. Except | and so were the children, and they ate. e boy has an ungovernable | record books it was a total loss. \ as 1 ] temper and the deed was committed | ‘io ste in a fit of sudden passion They were Germans and she had been notitied that her | | generally when you get up in the morn- | |sparks originated frow a freight 49340 feet. probable tuat ary action will train. en by the authorities Isok er. | | About colds and cou, e sum-| jMertime. You ma © atickliug cough or a little cold or baby may have the croup and when it comes vou ought | toknow that Parks cough Syruy is the | best cure for it. Sold by H. L. Tucker. fsa Ee eae None of the neighbors heard the re- Fort Worth, Tex., June 11.—At} port of tke revolver. Rising Star, a remote village in! See Eastland County, yesterday in a Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, quarrel, G W. Ricketts shot at W. The Best Salv A. Foster, but missing him killed | gruises,Sores, Ss Ella Foster, his 14 year old daugh-/ Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, ter. Will Fester, son of W. A rests oor are Eruptions, er Foster, then shot and mortally | S¥¢i¥ cures Piles, or no pay required. | is teedsogive pertect satisiacti wounded Ricketts. There had been pep mit a Price2s MH ecteat a family feud for several yeers. \Fer sale by H, L. Tucker, druggist inthe world icer: t Rheu: