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K. C. Pitts burg & Gulf Time Tabla. | Arrival and departure of trains at Worland. NOKTH BOUND. No. 7, Freight dally except Sunday 12 m »m | m p } xpressdaily - - p BOUTIL BOUND, Expreesdaily - - - pm| rieght daily except Sunday am) pm mber this is the popular short line be- Knnsas City, Mo., and Pittsburg, Kan., Joplin osho, Mo-, Sulpher loam Springs, Ark. e he south to St Lo cago, and points north and northeas Denver, Ogden, San Francisco, Po: points west and northwest. No expense has been spared to make the passenger equipment of this ne second to none in the west. Travel yia the new line JAS. DONOHUE, Gen’l Passenger Agent, Kansas City, Mo. PRESIDENT CLEVELAND'S GRETS, RE- In Dechning a College Degree He Reminds the Faculty That He is Nota Graduate. Wilberforce, O., July 1.—Through the faculty students and alumni of | the Cireuit Court he won, One Pension Case. 0. Louis Post-Dispateh Justice Long cf Michigan has de- termined to carry his case to the United States Supreme Court. In but -the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia reversed the Circui and ruled against the Justi The case is a typical one, as illus- trating the conscienceless greed of some of the patriots who are fond of proclaiming their country. Justice Long has been for seven years a Judge of the Michigan Supreme court, “performing a large amount of judicial work with great ability and success,’ and receiving from the State a salary of $7,000 a year. Besides performing regularly seryices to the participates actively in campaigns, making public addresses and other- wise showing exceptional mental of the Wilberforce University were greatly disappointed by President Cleveland's declination of the degree of LL. D., which it proposed to confer upon him, the terms in which he couched his declaration robbed their disappointment of any bitter- ness. President Mitchell informed Mr. Cleveland of the faculty’s intention in a letter dated May 21. In reply Mr. Cleveland wrote: : Executive Mansion, Washington. June 5. 1893. Rev. S. T. Mitchell, R. M. LL. D., My Dear Sir: Your letter of May 21 has remained unanswered this long on account of a slight indisposition from which I have just recovered. I am very much gratified by the ac- tion of the Faculty of your Univer- sity in expressing their desire to confer upon me the degree of Doc- tor of Laws. I must however be en- tirely frank with you, for I have new ideas or perhaps prejudices, on this subject from which I find it is im- possible to escape. Iam not a graduate from any col- lege—I wish I was. 1 do not think I am entitled to a collegiate degree, and a few years ago resisted in the face of much persuasion, the bestow- al of such a degree upon me by Har. vard University. In these circum. stanses I am constrainedjto ask your Faculty to permit me to maintain my consistency by foregoing their kindly intention. You and they may feel sure that I will take the will for the deed, and be as much gratified by the action they have already tak- enas if the degree were actually confered. Yours sincerely Grover CLeveranp. Hopeful of a Conterence. London, June 29.—The Bimetallic League is pleased that the Marquis of Salisbury is again Premeir and its members are preparing for some active work at the approach- ing general election. The members are pleased wiih the weighty character of the signatures which they obtained to the recent memorial, showing that bimetallism has representative supporters among the bankers, including eight direct ors of the bank of England, and also & number of prominent members of the industrial classes and the labor organization. The league is convinced that the bankers’ anti-bimetallic memorial was inspired by Sir William Vernon-! Harcourt, Liberal Chanceller of the Exchequer, who was forced to sup- port the bimetallic resolution in the House of Commons when he saw the possibility of having to appoint delegates to a conference The League explains the absence of Mr. Balfour's signature by saying that he and Henry Chaplin thought it discourteous to sign a memorial ad- dressed to the leader of the House of Commons when they were leading his opponents. An exchange suggests that the petrified log recently found in a zine mine at Scott City, ought to be sent to MeKinley with the suggestion that he try the Tem Reed echeme and saw some. Marvelous Results. oe From a letter written by Rav. J. Cun- derman, ot Dimondole, Mich,, we are permitted to make this extract: ‘‘I have no hesitation 1n recommeding Dr. Kings New Discovery, as the results were al- most mavelous in the case ot my wite ‘While I was pastor of the Baptist Church at Rives Junction she was brought down with Pneumonia succeeding La Grippe. Terrible parorysms ot coughing would last for heurs with little interuption and seemed as if she could not survive them A triend recommended Dr. King’s New Discovery, it was quick in its work work and highly satisfactory in results.”’ Trial bottles tree at your drug store. Regular size 50c and $1. strength and physical capacity. Be- fore the Tanner regime he was on the pension list, if we remember aright for $32 per month. Tanner raised his pension to $72 per month and in addition gave him several thousand dollars as back pay. He did this under the law which grants this highest rate of pay to those “who shall haye been so permanent- ly or utterly disabled as to require the extracting duties of his office, he| Deacon Bros. & Co. if Hardwar , Cutlery and Gans es, Field and Garden Wagous, and Farm ,wood-work, Ir Barb Wi Paints, M Groceries and Farm Produce e tO. | A Good Thing to Tackle. at this particular time, is anice cream freezer that—that freezes before you melt. Wehavethem. And we have apple pearers that pare; and apple pearers that pare, core and sliee, the regular, personal aid and attend. ance of another person, by the loss of the sight of both eyes, or by the loss of both hands, or by the loss of both feet, or by any other injury re- sulting in total and permanent help lessness.” The title of the act shows that it was intended for the benefit of those who were utterly helpless.” As it was ridiculous under the circumstances of Justice Long’s work and pay as a Michigan judge to grade him as utterly helpless,” the present Commissioner of Pen- sioners who had also been a judge in Michigan, reopened the case and reduced the pension to $50 per month. Justice Long denied the authority of the Pension Commis sioner to make this reduction, and took the case into the courts, de- manding a restoration of his pension to $72 per month. The Court of Appeals decided that the Pension Commissioner has the power to make such a change as he made in this case. Justice Long hopes that the U. S. Supreme Court will decide that al- though he is able to earn $7,000 par annum as a Supreme Court Judge in Michigan, he is so “utterly helpless” as to be entitled to the highest pen- sion rate of $72 per month. It will surprise no one if the Unit- ed States Supreme Court decides in his favor. Srare or Onto, Crry oF ToLepo } re Lucas County. s Frank J Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner ot the firm ot F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, county and state afore- paid, and that said firm will pay the sum ot ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS tor each and every case of catarrh that can not be cured by the use of Hall's Ca- tarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Swarn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th dav ot December D. 1886 — A W GLEAsoN, AL | Notary Public. —— Hall’s Catarth Cure ts taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mu- cous surfaces of the system, Send for testimonials tree. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O be Sold by Druggists, 75c. Remarkable Operation. New York, July 2.—A remarkable surgical operation was performed on William Green at the Charity Hospital on Blackwell's Island last week. Green, a former theater usher, was afllicted with a tumor that grew in a wound over his shoul der blade, the result of a fall. The physicians decided to remove his shoulder blade, left arm and cellar bone. The entire operation was performed in one hour and forty- five minutes, with the loss of less than a tablespoonful of blood. The patient has been gaining strength ever since. This operation is only recorded three times before, once in France, once in England and once in America. ° Father—“ What do you mean, sir, by hugging my daughter?” Jack Ford—“I was merely obeying the Biblical injunction to ‘hold fast that | which is good.” "—Harlem Life. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castorla. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Working utensils of all kinds that last, and in fact, hardware that does what hardware is meant to do. e Weare keeping for use in the kitck house that we cor hd to your at- tention: cold-hadfled sad irons, 3 in aset; washing machines at ruinous Pf speciaities (daround the prices, also clothes wringers. We are selling granite stew kettles very low They are cheaper than ever before. SEE OUR DOLLAR BUGGY with leather Quarters. It beats any thing you ever saw for the money. DEACON BROS. & CO. Low Price Hardware and G:ocery House. A Short Hay Crop. The farmer who has hay to sell this year will find it a paying crop, and generally through the States east of the Alleghanies there has been enough rainfall to bring the yield to the average. But in the valleys of the Ohio, the upper Mis sissippi and the Missouri a deficiency of from six to eleven inches in the rainfall during the spring months has made the grass crop unusually short,a large portion of the meadows being scarcely worth cutting. nearly eleven million tons less than the crop of 1893, and the prospect of another and much greater defi- ciency in the marketable surplus has put a fancy price upon the available supply out West. erally provide for home use a substi- tute in the form of corn fodder, or eke outa deficiency of clover and timothy by turning under winter wheat stubble and sowing millet. But a shortage in the hay crop is a big loss to the country. The farm value of this crop of 1893,according to the statistician of the Agricultur- al Department, $570,882,872 or more than twice the farm value o! last year’s wheat crop and $16,900,000 more than the value of last year's corn crop.—New York World. Gov: Brown in Luck. Baltimore, Md, July 2.—-Under ithe will of the wife of Gov. Frank Brown the governor and the two children are left the entire estate j valued at from $1,200,000 to 1,300,- 000. By the death of a cousin two weeks ago the governor also inherit- ed $250,000 There had been rumors afloat that Mrs Brown had left a large sum of money to the Catholic church. The governor was indignant over a story published in the Catholic weekly here that he had barred a Catholic from his home. If you would move mountains jgrab a spade and go to work.—Gal- | veston News. Is Your Tongue Coated, your throat dry, your eyes dull and inflamed and do you teel mean generally when you get up in the morn- ing. Your liver and Kidney are not doing their work. Why don’t you take Parks Sure cure. If it does mot make you feel better it costs you nothing— Seld by H. L Tucker jlection called for the appearance at} The hay crop of last year was! Farmers can gen | Tax War. Ashland, Ky., July 2.—In Carter County there is prospect of a season of extreme liveliness, the result of} an expected attempt by Railroad} Tax Collector Peck to collect the} $100,000 or more due on the old| the bond issue to the} Elizabethtown, Lexington, and Big | Sandy Railroad made | more than 40 years ago. 1 Former attempts to collect the| and at tended with danger, and an attempt but a few weeks ago to make a col- account of Company, tax have been unsuccessful, i i the home of the deputy of 500 masked armed men, who announced an intention of lynching the deputy on sight. | Fortunately be had gotten wind of the intended visit and was not to} be found. A score or more of depu- ties are said to have lately been secured to take part in the coming attempt. Both sides are saying nothing and there is promise of no little trouble if the matter is per- sisted in. J. R. Garfiled in Pohties, Columbus, O., July 1.—James R. Garfield, second son of the murder- ed President, will be nominated this week for State Senator in the same district which elected his father in 1859. He will thus, if elected, enter political life in the same district and in the same office that his father did. Later on the young man expects to be a member of Congress. It is further a coincidence that his politi- cal honors came almost on the four- teenth anniversary of his father’s murder. Young Gartield 1s a lawyer, stalwart and vigorous, and resembles his father more than does either of the other sons. He is now about twen- | | ty-eight years old the age at which his father was first elected State Senator. His wife is the daughter of the late John Newell, president of the Lake Shore Railroad, and they live at the Garfield homestead in Men- tor. He pratices law in Cleyeland. Fortunate is the man whose errors are sufficiently ludicrous to pass cur- rent as jokes.—Milwaukee Journal. De Auber (the artist)—“What ob- jection have you to becoming an artist's bride?’ De Rurale—“O, everybody would be pointing me out as a model wife.’—Truth. “My daughter is too democratic in her ideas,” sighed Mrs. Hawkins. “1 wish there was some way to make her.an aristocrat.” “Send her toa cooking school said Mrs. Barlow. “There is nobody mere haughty in this world than a good cook.”—Har- per’s Bazar. Auburn, N, Y., July 4.—William J. Moses, owner and editor of the “Bulletin,” died suddenly at his home in this city to day of apoplexy. He was 73 years old. He was Post master under Cleveland in 1884 and held a high place in the councils of the Democratic party, both State and National. Tse recent annual report of the interstate commerce commission showed that in 1894 the number of railway employes killed was 1,823, while 23,422 were injured in the discharge of their duties. This was a decrease of over 9,000 from the previous year. Miss Remie Londonderry, of Bos-| ton, the round-the-world bicyclist, arrived at El Paso, Tex., recently. She was to remain there a few days and then ride north to Denver, Col., en route home. Miss Londonderry jhas declined over 150 offers of marriage. | Twenty Years Proof. Tutt's Liver Pills keep the bow- elsin natural motionand cleanse the system of all impurities An absolute cure for sick headache, dyspepsia, sour stomach, con- stipation and kindred diseases. | | | “Can’t do without them” | |R. P. Smith, Chilesburg, Va. | | writes I don’t know how I could do without them. I have had Liver disease for over twenty years. Am now entirely cured. Tutt’s Liver Pills ; marked ‘‘unknown.” jing over the cage. Reader, did you ever take Liv i L t imps € ation, When th rried off remains in »isons the whole system. t dull, heavy feeling is due to a RoEpia live Biliou a and Indige: a Keep the liver ac occasional dose of Simmons ulator and you'll get rid of these bles, and give tone to the whole tem. Fora ative Simmons Liver Regulator is BETTER THAN Pints. It does not gripe, nor weaken, but great’y refreshes and strengthens. Every package has the Red 7 stamp on the wrapper. J. i. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia. Toughest Town in the Country. Chicago, July 1.—-The toughest town in the United States today is Lemont, only twent-five miles from Chicago. It had 5,000 population before work on the drainage canal began; now it has 9,000 of whom 4,000 are gamblers, theives, murder- ers or disorderly women. There are 100 saloons, forty gambling houses twenty dance houses and three theaters, all supported by the 5,000 men working on the drainage canal. Everything is running wide open and licensed. Mayor McCarthy says the money is used in street improve- ments. Within three months {thirty dead bodies have been found in and about Lemont, and no one has been pun- ished. Ten bodies have been found in the rocky channel of the canal, and five men were shot in aftrays. Of the thirty dead eighteen are “Smoky Row” is the toughest street in Lemont. The saloons and dance houses bear such names as these: “King of Hearts,” “Sweet Allice,” “Little Casino” Bolt.; Every Sunday excursions of the worst classes go to Lemont) from this city. and “Ben A Valuable Chest. Tacoma, Wash.—~I have used your Simmons Liver Regulator and can conscientiously say it is the King of all Liver Medicines. I con- sider it a medicine chest in itself.” —Geo. W. Jackon. Your druggist sells it in powder or liquid; the powder to be taken dry, or made in- to a tea. Bad Chimmie Fadden. New York World: A small boy carrying a big cage with a parrot in it, got abroad a Third avenue L train at Fourteenth street last Thursday and took a seat next to a benevoleni- looking man wearing a white tie. The boy set the cage down in front of him, and as the train start- ed, the parrot began to mutter in most unitelligible fashion. The be- nevolent-looking man glanced up from his paper und said: “Nice parrot. isn’t he?” “Yep.” | “Is he yours?” “Nop; m’ uncle's.” “What's his name?” “Chimmie Fadden.” “Can he talk?” | “O° course; bello,Chimmie!” bend- “What tell! what t’ell’ what t’ell!” screamed the bird with out an in stant’s hesitation. The benevolent-looking man got | red in the face, and a girl across the car giggled. Other passengers | laughed, also. The owner of the | white tie got behind his newspaper | while the small boy looked innocent- | ly out of the window. j Are you Billious, consztpated or trou- | bled with Jaundice, Sick Headache, bad / taste in the mouth, foul breath, coated} tongue, dyspepsia, Indigestion, hot dry | skin, pain in the back and between the | shoulders, chills and tever, &c. If you} have any of these symptoms, your liver| fs out of order and your blood is slowly! being poisoned because your liver does | not act properly. Herbine will cure ali disorder of the liver, Stomach or bowels Ithas no equal as a liver medicine. Price FA] cents. Free trial betties at H. L. ‘uckers re. @iy Bal County Bank, BUTLER, MO. Eates Co. National®Bank, Established in 1870 Paid up capital $125,000 A general banking business trans. acted. F.J. TYGARD, - - - President. HON. J. B. NEWBERRY Vice-Pres. J.C. CLARK - - Cashier T. J. Swim. A.W. Tremtan SMITH THURMAN. LAWYERS, Office over Bates County > But RAVES & CLARK, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office over the Missouri State Bank North side square. Silvers & Denton ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW BUTLER, MO. Office over the Farmers Bank. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil en a specialty DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, front store. night. Specialattention given to temale dis eases. room over McKibbens All callanswered at office day or REAL ESTA'TE. Tam now located in my new office over John Catterlin’s, westside square. If you want to -- BUY, SELL OR EXCHANGE -:- you should see me at once, as my facilities for handling real estate is better than any fsentin Bates Co. Goodrig always adly— no trouble to show property. —_Resp’y, A. S. MILLHORN. The$Old Reliable PHOTOCRAPHER North Side Square, Hasyzthe best Soni Dbes gallery 2in Southwest Missouri. All Styles of Photogrphing executed intthe highest style of the art, and at reasonable prices. Crayon Work A Specialty. All work in my line is guaranteed to give satisfaction. Call and see samples of work. C. HACEDORN. In Poor | @ means so much more than you imagine—serious and fatal diseases result from trifling ailments neglected. Don't play with Nature’s greatest gift—health. If you are feelin; Get only the genuine—it has crossed red lines.on the wrapper. All others are sub- = paspiege mind two 2c. pee we send ‘en Beautiful World's Fair Views and beok—{r-e. BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MD.