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AND ORIGINAL fa. DOCTOR ig, Whittier, . a St., Kansas City, Mo. greduate-authorized by the state, wa tobe the leading aud most cialist In BLOOD, NERV~ WARY DISEASES. of de te ey pertectly cured. sTVITALITY 2: or troubles absolute LIS any stage. \ falling he ater ‘symptoms, RY DISEASE i EL orenls causing sp 8, UC, ured. without su S AE CURED 66 FISTULA, fission mcttious” °° on above diseases free for stamp.) ult DR. H. J. WHITTIER, the pce 00 cialist of the West, either in on oe by be tter, will receive the can- inion of & abe n Well known for ence, Skill tant ntegrity. og made that cannot be fulfilled. ydicies tarnished « ats costand shipped esecure from observation, treatment never sent C. O. D. free Consultation and Urinary Analysis. (fice hours, 9 to 4and7to8 Sunday, 10 to 12. of interest to men, young ant old, by mail sealed for 6 cents stamps. Qallor address in strict confidence pR. H. J. WHITTIER, 10 West Ninth Street, (Sear Junction) Kansas City, Nio. nsing sore throat, yiin in bones and cured permanently with- quic thorough! leved and cured. without the use of knife or truss. Kl ) JONBINED AGAIN feed and Allison Forces Join to Defeat the Ohioan. threaten to Show How the Major strove to Defeat Reciprocity—Illi- nois Republicans—Cullom Knocked OQutin his Home District.—Quay Boomers. Washington, D. VU, March 29.— fhe Reed and Allison men have de- tided to work together to stem the fide of McKinleyism. A conference nsheld yesterday and this decision mehed. The conference was held in Senator Aldrich’s committee room md those present were Speaker fed and Joseph M. Manley, Sena- for Gear and Congressman Hender- wn represented Allison. It was a friendly consultation thout the presidential canvass, and isaid to have resulted ia an agree- nent between the Allison and Reed forees to work together until Major McKinley is out of the race at St. louis, providing that time eyer comes, Neither Mr. Reed nor Alli- tn would take the nomination for tiee president, hence there can be weombination between them on this ground. Thereis no disguising the fact that the result of delegate elections this week, which have been so large- lyin favor of Major McKinley, has used much disquiet among the finds of other candidates. The tection of McKinley delegates in New York, Minnesota and Illinois, vhere there “favorite sons” in the field, as well as the overwhelming Yolecast at the primaries in New York county, Pa, in favor of Me- Kinley, making it certain that if the Majority ruled he would get two delegates in that congressional dis- tet to add to others in Pennsylva- ti,have cast a gloom over the friends of some of the other candi- dates. The rise of the great protectionist | i unqzestionably giving alarm to} Rany republicans who have no par-| ticular interest in the fandidat®. Some of them have been heard to ex press the opinion that if beis nominated the republican sue- tees will not be a foregone M00. The tariff, they tay, be the issue, and a choice of a} |except the three amendments, and & | }ife, and all they will be able to tell ifew laws preliminary and supple | th bildren aud grand children is mentary thereto, will have been! the once went to congress conclu u-} will then | former experi- ee, when that was the que ation | | | before the county. has not seen forgotten Bat while those who 4 adefert in the coming cam- | Paign are few, che number of repub- -Ticans who predict that four years of McKinley sun will result in the Mscitation of 3 ate numer While naturally t do not want to b yquoted as Bch stateueuts iu the manner the democratic vus making public prints in which they declare ir belief privately forbids doubt pM to their sincerity The Reed and Allison it is are derstood, are preparing to pune- some of the claims on which | Kinley’s claim to popularity rests. impression is general, and the men, | unwisely but vainly tried to strength. | {the country’s his \TUTT’S Liver PILLS McKinley managers are endeavoring to strengthen it in the popular mind, that McKinley in addition to being entitled to the principal credit for| the protective tariff bill which bears | its name, is also the originator of | Greeting to all A. L. McBRIDE & CO. ENGLAND COMES. TO ct BA’ Ss arp. | | ENDEDIN A FIST FIGHT. Great Britain Will Join Hands With the United States. Chicago, Ill., March Murder Almost Dons in Texas’ Repun- lican Convention. tin, Tex. Mar —Aspecial Ar Cash Buyers of | ch 26.—The Re the reciprocity agreements. Sena-| jae the Tribune from W. ashington, D. , publican State convention, whieh has tor Gear has stated that, far from | a tees ; ; been in session since Tuesday, broke McKinley being entitled to the cred-| sina Hana ; Oves, fa Aid for Cuba bas com cpithia sareurn acai area ean) it for these agreements, they were, | |anexpected source : It is sa Ub fist fi i revolvers in fact, the work of Senators Allison hat England will follow the United were nd mur- and Aldrich and that McKinley! | W e are here as we hay e been for many years, and expect to and will give | [Sintes in recognizing the Cuban pa- der dicks Reed- authoritative statement this | Ce: ity ‘and intend to keep nothing bat | this effec t has been received at the ae nd of the ae iegates selected ; H | State Departn i sofithe former secu question from the Allison managers at rtment aud the status of the former secured ee and the T he ar sti ge : } may be expected before long | LY RS LASS Coons jt Cuban question has changed at 1s Hardly a the ane It is also being boldly asserted pee Ne se — pba: ak pe tett the that McKinley never wrote a tariff| | oe with our e ips rie cr of twenty- op honey the grocery business and} | ment. While Spain bas been pre-/liy chairman wheu s burly Know that we know the best brands of goods, also know what they ar re| paring for an a aa] Sur 2 . ith j : 3 | > : | c appeal to Europes gro, with a shout fo Kit schedule, and threats of telling how| worth in the market and at the inside price, and the inside price is what . ti mo oh PE a para oa Se if with a shout for McKinley, idk Sine eeitiien aco hieine wade | we pay for them. It is not necessary to advertise prices for other parties to| Hations against the United States, | arose from the center of the ball and : Saati Some lively developments seem ty be in prospect before the St. Loui- convention assembles | CAS! Last of the War Leagistatioa. The passage by the House of Rep resentatives of the ex Confederites’ | military disability bills sends that measure to the President, who, course, will promptly sign it. or infact anything that you have for of | It re moves the barrier against the grant F Ie ; dried fruit were bought in Sanfrancis iug of commissions in the army or , Rana ly Our coffe navy to the military and uaval offi | will be convine ed, we tell the truth cers who resigued after the begining and you will be satisfied. of the war and entered the Confed erate service. The law, of course, will affect very few persons. Only an insignificant number of the men who threw up their commissions in 1861 and cast their fortuves with the Confederacy are still alive. Probablp not half a dozen of these are in the legal age of service for of- ficers on the active list in the army or navy. It is a surprising and discreditable fact that this law should have been alowed to remain on the statute book for almost a third of a century after the close of the war to which it was due. Even before the war ended a beginning was made in the work of removing the disabilities of Confederates. Congress passed an act in 1862 authorizing the Presi- dent to offer pardon to all Confeder- ates,except a few classes, who would | take the oath of allegiance, and an amnesty proclamation on those gen- Suffice it to say we will duplicate any whether we do a legitimate business 0 North side square, Butler Misso Then and Now- Lamar Democrat, THEN. congress by men who were repre- sentatives in the true sense of the word delighted to honor, but who by their ability and statesmanship gained a a national reputation. Look at them Morgan, Bland, DeArmond,Tarsney, Other states looked in admiration on the Missouri delegation. Taken as eral lines was issued December 3,{# whole, no state could present a, 1863, a year and four months before Appomattox. Proclamations and general and special acts of Congress in the next eight or ten years rehab iliated almost all the other persons connected in any capacity with the Confederacy except the ex-army and navy officers whose disabilities are abolished by the bill which has just passed Congress. galaxy of such men. They were the peers of the ablest men in congress, and no measure in congress but what received their earnest and un- divided attention, and all measures the state NOW. The supplementary work in this} ‘Alas! how have the mighty fall- line makes a long story. Whea|en” Georgia was finally readmitted to|main. The new members elected in representation in Congress in Jan-|1894 are searcely known out of their | uary, 1871, the practical work {of |respective districts. years and a quarter later, when President Hayes removed the troops from Louisiana and South Carolina, the eleven seceded States had fully resumed their old relations to the Union. President Arthur’s omission to mention the Seuth in his annual message of 1881 was an indication that time had arrived for both sec tions to drop war issues and prejud- ices. Extremists, however, on each their names. Unkown, unexperienc- ed, without influence, they are Mis souri’s misrepresentatives Mere | creatures of accident scarcely one of | them reflects the will of his constit. | uents. They vote the bidding of their | leaders, and help swell the republi- can majority in the house this and ncthing more. Burton had a chance to show his manhood by | voting in accordance with the views he expressed in his canvass, but the pressure was too great for kim to withstand, and he, with the others, bowed the knee to Baal, and went | back on his campaign recerd. But their reign will be briet. The con- en, were repealed by the act of Feb |trast is too great. Missourians will ruary 12, 1894. With the enactment | not stand such a mockery. side kept the fires or war’s passions burning for another decade and over. These were quenched when the Fed- eral election laws, which the Repub. licans on one cr two occasions had After | of the Confederate officers’ disability | jtheir present term expires they will removal bill all the war legislation | be retiredsto their former obscure | stricken from the “He book. Thej from Missouri series of stirring chapters begining | with the passage of South Carolina's ordinance of secession on December | 29, 1860, has ended. An he epoch been C.G8 tory ed —Globe-Democrat enclose “n ‘a registered letter; and s will be mailed to -ache are very often the same will remove the kidney troubie és ng back, and parity tne blood, i w discovery, Buker’ Ne | cK HE AD. ACH E, n sale at all drog et i CK re you get Buker’s er Pill Co., as above, and men- tion, torpid liver, constipation iand all bilious di h, malaria, indiges- | de supplied by 3 Mo. seases. | but we ask vouto come in with your tas the market will bear, in justice to ourselves as weil as yon, ‘OUR LINE OF HARDWARE | is complete in everything, from a sew are the best in the C ity, 66, We Guarantee everything we sell to be as Represented | blow our horn'but will leave the matter with our ¢ ustomers to determined Very respectfully yours, A. L. McBRIDE Missouri used to be represented in’ verely scored today when the bill Men that not only Missouri | Hall, Heard, Burns, Hatch, Dockery, | Mansur, Cobb, Arnold, F yan, O'Neill. | of a political nature that would inure | to the success of democracy,received | a hearty aud unanimous support of | A few of tie old guard only re | Ask those you | reconstruction was completed. Six|}meet and scarcely one in ten call | Caly | | Great Britain has quietly taken the made for the stage. A score of ad- ‘a other tack, and has decided to join! mirers of the high priest of the rob- CH | CK 5 EGGS B VT TER with the United States in helping) ber tariff. frenzied by disappoint. U | ' j Cuba. ment, followed. Cursing Cuney avd Such a communication was not, shouting McKinley, shay rushed up- sale and we will give you as much for conyeyed in an official letter, but it is said Secretary Olney was en to) understand by Sir Julian Pauncefote | that Great Britain would not only not object to any action the United | States might take in regard to Cuba, | | but even come and try them and you | on the stage For men and white n There they met resist- twenty black en struggled in an s, from which the police with ditticulty extricated them. Tne riot broke up the conve ance. minutes indiscriminate ing awl toa cook stove. Our line of co, shipped direct to us and are stri ion, welcome any reasonable | which adjourned without instructing so with all our lines.” Only try them interference which woull tend to/the delegates. The McKinley force : i | a : ’ stop the war now going on in the | remained in the hall and elected a island. of iset That such an intimation was giyen | | semi officially was learned positively last night, and the ffect of the infor- mation when it becomes generally known, will be to render almost cer-| tain speedy action by this country. Great Britain deplores the war fare on the island, and English com | mercial interests could not look on} unmoved while the price of sugar was moving upward as the result of the destruction of Cuba canefields. Britain would gladly stand aside and see the United States take the initiative in Cuba. No promises were made that could bind Great Britain in any way, and the Queen’s Government was not put on record, but Secretary Oiney has been given to understand that if the President decides to| recognize the patriots as belliger | ents, Great Britain will not be far behind in doing the same thing. British capitalists are large hold | ers of the Spanish bonds based on eustom revenues of the Cubans, and they might not relish the inde pendence of the island unless these delegates favorable to their candidate. The situation looked threatening from early this morning. |The McKinley men worked all night among the negroes and succeeded in bringing over quite a number of them, so that this morning when the |bour for convening arrived it found | the McKinley men with an organized force occupying the center of the hall, with a very determined look on their faces and an air of fight sur- rouuding them. legitimate price quoted. We do not} r not. Come in and be convinced. Co. uri. Butier asa Miiitary Officer. Boston, Mass, March 25.—Gen- : : Important Facts. 1 eral Butler's military career was se- Ii you have dull and heavy pain across torehead and about the eyes; if the nos- trils are frequently stopped up and tol- lowed by a disagreeable discharge; it soreness in the nose and bleeding trom the nostrils is often experienced; 1f you are sensitive to cold in the head acsom- panied with headache; then you may be sure you haye catarrh; and {should (am- mediately) resort to Ely’s Cream Balm foracure. ‘The remedy will giye in- stant reliet. providing for the erection of en equestrian or military statue of But ler came up before the committee on ways and means at the State house. The remonstrants were called upon today, and Coil. Thomas L. Liver | more spoke He declared Butler's exploits were drafted by thousands of acts performed by other Massa- \chusetts mex. Butler did not lead | the regiment through Baltimore, he was ia Philadelphia He did not {seize Aunapolis until so ordered. |From April, 1861, to May, 1864, General Butler neyer directed the movements of a man in the face of Are Failures as Highwayman. Montgomery, Ala, March 2 Two young white boys of this coun- ty named Lloyd, one 17 years of age and the other 19, blackened their faces last night and held up and robbed the station agent at Ramer, in this county, Mr. W.S. Hightower. Hightower was in the act of closing up the office, the 9 o'clock passen- |the enemy. After that he directed bonds were provided for. With the] ger train having just passed through the arm in but one battle—Drury’s| United States as an intervening when the young men entered. and stuck the muzzle of a pistol under his nose. On demand he delivered what money he bad and as the reb- bers were leaving with their plunder he snatched his pistol from a drawer and covering one of them made him surrender, locking him up. The agent set out after the other boy and finally overtook and captured him. The authorities here were telegraph- ed and officers were sent to Ramer to bring tbe young highwaymen here to jail. The boys say they have been reading dime noyels. New York, “March 92. —Thomas power,it might be possible to secure an arrapgement by which the Cubans themselves would assume the bonds with this country as a guarantor. Intervention by this country in any way, even if it did not result in the immediate independence of the is- land, would unquestionably force Spain to grant loca! self government, promote the commerce of Cuba and therefore increase the value of the bonds, whose only security is the Hiei - — srs = Edison has succeeded, with the aid Such a suggestion might De expect | of the X rays, in penetrating the hu- ed to come later, but for the presect iman body with the naked eye, the Great Britain is contented with is-| successful experiment having been forming the United States that all| made lest week. He looked into the fear of European interference with | lungs and heart and examined the our Cuban policy is at an end arteries, muscles and blood vessels It is also thought if the U.S.,| of one of his assistants. With the with the moral support of Great powerful cathode light behind the Britain, interfere in the Cuban war,|subject, he looked through the it will make the two countries allies | screen of prepared chemicals, and is and hasten rather than retard a/said to plainly seen the workings of friendly conclusion of the Venezu-|the various organs of the body. elan boundary dispute. ae Bluff—and then he was compelled to retire. The reason he never again j attempted to direct troops was be- | cause he saw he was not fit to do it. | Colonel Livermore also said his idea | of commemorating exploits of this | sort by equestrian statues borders on the ridiculous. A thousand of men in the army would have been just as good wilitary commanders at New Orleans, and as efficient a | provost marshal at New York. Among other remonstrants were J. | Malcolm Forbes, General Francis A. | Walker, Joan C. Ropes, Major Hen- ‘ry Higginson and Moorfield Storey. Elephant Loose in Chicago. Chicago, Ill., March 29 —The big elephant Gypsy, attached to a trav- | eling circus, caused a panic on the ‘west side yesterday afternoon. She first killed her keeper, Frauk Scott, whe had had charge of her for a number of years, then escaped from | her quarters and charged up and \ down the streets and alleys, and, | | ‘although she was closely follewed | Be sure to get Simmons Liver | bya aia army of policemen, she| Regutator for your spring me dicine was not captured unul last night. it’s the old reliable that did the ald! Don’t let { rainers from the city park. jone persuade you to take any when she was finally quieted by ‘the | folks sc mnuch good. elepbant ing with her from | else instead. You can ai 35 ‘aad had reached | Simmons Liver regulator by the a vor 2 barn, when he jam-,Z on the + ack Don’t ‘t 90k ~=with whica he| word Regulator oF ithe big beast into her| thing else, and sure to do yo the right eve and} ae ree ie ground He had scarcely | Ruth Stevenson Alfianced. ground en sbe grab- Oxford, @., March —-It is re bed him ath her trunk, and hurled ported here that Miss E ‘ him with great force inst the! gop. daughter of the Vice bern door. k of the United States. a ediately sent intO| Hardin, son of Ex Governor at 2nd | Hardin of Kentucky, are to be ie : ’ 1 to ried early this summer, pro The office nuch | June. Mr. Hardin and Mi ible. mauaged to get tt away,’ con visited the Misses Har at but be died in a short Oxford college here last The real name of the elephant is' Mr Hardin is a theolc said to be Empress, although shej|at Center college. Dany goes by the name of Gypsy, owing be graduated and then a minister thi to her reputati per. killed. igerous tem- Scott is the third man she has Chiidren Cry for | Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for -. Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for | |Pitcher’s Castoria. |