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CHALLENGE SALE OF A CENTURY With our prices unfurled we defy competition WE CHALLENGE THE EARTH TO MATCH THESE PRICES Childrens extra cape overcoats : length $110 Men's heavy, extra length double sticthed overcoats in all colors - - - $2.75 Just received 75 mens sand youths suits,all colors black blue, grey of brown $410 A 1 Beaver overcoats in black, blue, brown or tan for + - $5 00 Childrens knee pants io all grades from 50cts up to the finest at reduced prices. Youths cheviot ulsters well made and trimmed in all sizes $2.90 Dur Challenge Shoe Sale, Men good boots all soiid, counter inner and outer sole leather in all sizes.........2...0.-e eee ee eee $1.25 $1 00 A 1 golid plow shoe, either buckle or congress The celebrated Bessemer calf shoe at We can give you all styles widths and sizes. WE DO NOT WAIT UNTIL THE ———SEASON IS OVER TO. MakeReductions when you do not need the goods but we make it right now when you can be ‘-BENEFITED BY IT.- WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY WE WILL MAKE YOU MONEY. Come and you will get the biggest bargains of your life. : | MODEL CLOTHING CO. North Side Square. ~s E. A. Hardin, ove of the Ties’ best and most punctual subscribers, will accept thanks for a renewal of his subscription for '97. Frank P Arbuckle, of Denver, chairman of the democratie state | committee, was robbed and murder- ed in New York the 19th inst. For rext—A good barn, one block from square. Enquire at this office. Buy wusical instruments and strings from Skaggs, west side equare Buy sewiog machine needles of Skagge. west side square 1-tf Cost cuts no figure. Come buy millinery at prices never dreamed of. Mrs. Wheldon. 21t Harpwoop Lumser.—Orders left at Bennett-Wheeler Merc. Co.’s for all kinds of hardwood lumber will have prompt attention. 1-tf Cuartes Simons. It is said a number of head of eattle and horses have died near Schell City from feeding on fodder in the fields and eating smuttivg | corn. | The St. Louis Republic says a | contract has been made with J. M Perry and John Sherman, nephew of | Senator Snerman, to build a railroad from Walker Station on the M. K. & | T. railroad to Eldorado Springs. | Work is to be commenced at once Gus Leftwich, of the Richmond to give} Conservator, one of the oldest and | beat known country newspaper men | of the state, 1s a candidate for En A batch of prisoners was sent | | rolling Clerk of the Missouri House from Sedalia to the penitentiary | of Repreeentatives. If long party Monday. | service and fitness for the position | counts for anything, then Mr. Left | wich will be in the race to a finish. U. A. McBride, of Warrensburg, j will be a candidate for Folder of the | State Senate. He served as assistant door keeper of that body during the Ihaye a choice lot of winter ap ples for sale vy the barrel or bushel. Call at my apple house on North | Main street, Butler, Mo. 52 4 W. H. Hotroway. This is the day set apart by the President and Governor thanks. The English are agitating the ad- visability of putting a protective | tariff on the importation of American | corn and Germany is kickiag on the | American apple. There will be an oyster supper at the Pleasant Gap school house, | Wednesday evening, Nov. 25. Every- body invited. Come early and hear good music. holdover senators. and his chances for success are no doubt good. Ar- thur is a reliable, trustworthy boy. He learned his trade in the Ties office and we are proud of the pro- | gress he is making in the world. Frank Oldaker, a good friend and } subscriber of the booming Tantes and one of Butler's leading shoe | makers, renews for 97. Frank has been a subsriber since the first issue of the Tixes. A ppreciated . The ladies of the First Presbyterian church desire to thank all who so kindly assisted in the program at the “Chrysanthemum Show” and alsothe following merchants who contributed ee prizes: McKibben Mere. Co., Lane The Rockville Reflex reports the : & Adair, Williams Bros., B = burning of the dwelling house on | Wheeler Mere. Co., Deaaon jonnett- the G. B. Valentine farm west of Co., and H. L. Tucker. Prizes were | awarded as follows: For best coillec- | tion of erysanthemuns, aes prize, | John Speer: 2nd, Mrs. L. B. Allison; 3rd, Miss Carrie Fay. For best erysanthemum, ist prize, Mi | Rosser; 2nd, Mrs. W. W. Grave Mrs. Jesse Trimble. The Midland Magazine, Richly Mlustrated.) that town. The house was occupied by Mr. Harry and family who suc } ceeded in saving most of their house | | hold effects. Jobn E Kidd, of St. Joseph, 43 years old, threw a brick through a plate glass window in Kansas City i Monday and then waited arrest. He ; was out of work and hungry = said ke broke the glass to get in jail where he would be eheltered and fed. Up to date Western stories scription $1.00 a year. terms to agents. Address, Tue Mipravy Maca? 2819 Olive Street, St Louis. Liberal |sent to jail for sixty days. | for trial yesterday. last legislature and knows all the| Criminal Cases. ‘The case against Wm. Orr, one of the brothers implicated in the rob- bery and shooting of Thos. Vaughu at Cornland several months ago,was ‘called in court and continued until | [next term | Chas. Castor, charged with for gery in the fourth degree, plead | | guilty and was given six months in| jail. | Joe White, an all round bad man, } horse thief, who stole a team from| Bud Small, north of town, was} brought into court Monday and by | the consent of the prosecuting attor ney plead guilty to petit larceny and) The trial of Weist and his wife, the movers who had the shooting} scrape in Spruce township, was set Wm. Speers and Ira Silvers, two young fellows, charged with bur- glarizing the London Clothing store at Rich Hill, were arraigned in court Monday and entered pleas of not guilty. Their trials will come up| later. Geo. Bureb, the youog man who stole a team from Joe Graves.livery man of Rich Hill, and who was ar rested at his home in Illinois and brought back for trial, was in the| court room Monday. The prisoner | isnota bad looking young man The other night he went crazy and danced all night andin the morning the boys took him in hand and made him dance nearly all day. This treatment had the desired effect in suring him of the dance racket | Frank Carson walked upto the bar with the balance of the birds and plead not guilty to breaking in to barber shop at Rockville. to trade at The curfew ordinance adopted by the city council of Nevada, is work- ing like a charm All boys under 16 years of age. are required to be at home by 8 o’clock. So far the boys bave cbeyed the ordinance and there have been no arrests [or the protection of the rising generation this city ought to ring the curfew bell Bob Waddell, a liveryman at Ne vada hired a team to a couple of young fellows Friday. They were to return in the afternoon and failing to do so, Mr. Waddell surmised his team had been stolen and had cards printed and sent out Sunday morn ing he received a card from one of the rascals at Kansas City telling him that his team was in a stable at Harrisonville, and as they had no further use for it he could call end get it. We call your of stery One hour after baving his wiil = GARPETS,CURTAINS AN Reasons why it is to your interesj Better Assortment Better Quality Lowest Prices. Carpets, Curtains, Goods. the best line of the above goods in the city our place of busines 24 and speciall attention to our line Rugs and Uphol- We have beyond question drawn up, Jesse C. Wall, oue of the best known young men of Jndepend ence, Mo., committed suicide Mon- day night. He committed the deed in the rear yard of the home of his uncle, Jackson Corder. The suicide was 28 years old ard unmarred. His parent died about eight years ago, leaving the young man about $50. 000. Since their death he has made his home, the greater part of the time, with Mr. Corder, and has been somewhat dissipated in his habits. He was afflicted with consumption and it is thought ill health caused him to commit the deed. operators have determined to import miners who are willing 55 centsatou. It cause trouble to work for will probably Secretary Barlow, of the ex con- federate home association, is prepar- ing 2 circular submitting the propo- sition agreed upon to bond the home property for 20 years for the sum of $200,000. Sbares are to be issued in the sum of Sl each. It is estimat ed that that there will be no further need of the home after twenty years, and at the end of that time the prop erty will be so ualuable as to r the money invested to holders —Nevada Mai! ct Fisk Married. Warrensburg Star, | A newly born babe was found at the Boone school house a short dis- tance southwert of Wheatland last Monday morning. Miss Maggie Young was teaehing at that place and went over to the school house very early ahd built a fire. After she built the fire and swept out she discovered a beer box and on open- ing it found a baby wrapped up very | comfortably and nursing a bottle of | frech milk. The baby bad been! Butter a of # recent date born but a short time and it certain jtell of the elopement cf Chas. Fisk \ly had been left in the house buta|a young man who Las few minutes before it was found.—| friends in Warrensburg | Mabel Jenkins, daughte lier of the Missouri state | eturn share the on bUmers us Hermitage Index. Liberty, Mo., Nov. ner’s jury investigating the murder| ‘Twut the same cld story | parents were hard hear: jnet relent; so Char au ‘The girl’s ed gud would re, Wise ¥ the pame into of Mrs. Foley and her daugiter, ex-| amined ten witnesses yesterday. The} nan that he is. took examination is held behind closed} ; bis own bao doors. Conviction is spreading that | jmy ch is now in or Wm Foley. son and brother of the | Fisk is one of the best musi murdered womer. is guilty of the the state, and has been in Warrens- 'burg on numerous oeee crime. His stories are contradictory | t . cossone yt he band association and his best friends give caine, against him. | ug tren, ie Missouri Mound Bartders. Mansfield, Mo., Nov- 23 —To day | while exploring an onyx cave near! this place, a party of hunters un earthed four human skulls | It was supposed at first that they; were she skulls of Indians but the | peptic fri me nstipation i of the sickness ot men, and of a large proportion of the sickness of women. It can be cured easily, naturally and quick- ly. Nature is conti ually ing as hard Dr. | ant Pel s ments of w war, Which it is known | Were not the handiwork of Iodians, {leaves no doubt that they were the) i | bones of some prehistoric race: prob | fi jably the mound biuil skulls were sent to the Smithsonian | jinstitute at Washingtoa fora further Sample copies for a 2 cent stamp. ‘ i examination. { 21.—The coro. | young lady of wealth and:etvem: nt. | Toot of nine-tenths | subsequent -discovery of several! 8$ She can to throw off impurities, and to | Z : force out poisonous refuse ‘matter. Wken | Pr Pieces ox pottery and crude instru | there is an impedimen Pierce’s Pleas- 1 { we and at prices that sell them. re gi hi M T hi —= = —— = - M Terre Haute, iad Nov. 23 —No Farmers’ Institute. | To Cure a Cold in One Day al tice will be served today on about To be convened under the auspices | Take Laxative Bromo Quinine K 1,000 stnking mivers in this and of the State Board of Agriculture at | nae fae Grad Sle refund these A Harke county to vacate the com- Foster, Bates county, on Monday | pavy’s houses. This meaus that the the 7th day of December, and to | Why suffer with ‘Coughs, 0 C and LaGrippe when Laxative Bro There will be | Quinine will cure — pr pe day three cessions each day, except at | Does not produce the ringing in such points aa can not be reached in | head like Sulphate of Quinine. the forenoon of the first day Morn | Up in tablets convenient for taki ing sessions opens at 10 o'clock, af Guaranteed to cure, or moneyr continue two days. |funded. Price, 25 Cente. For . | ternoon at 1:30 and evening at 7:30 iby W. H. -McClement. 33-6m t These meetings are for the discus | --~ H ‘Programme siou of agricultural topics, a free a Fourth District Institute to be hel j iptereb 7 Fo opint it i i . . “2 : 7 j interchange of opinion #8 to existing |" 5, West School Building, Butler, conditions, the best asd most | Saturday Nov. 25, 1:30 p. a 3 profitable way of handling our ist ae board on duty, T.8 herds, growing our stock, conserv- | 2d—Needed apparatus in district school, W.S. Steele. The Mo. course of study, effect and defects, A. P. Hill. Di cussion by members. 4th—What should be the work of dit trict institutes, O. T. Beeso discussion by inembers, Prof. Thurman will be present. l there be a full attendance. A cordi invitation is extended to all interes ed in school work. ips cur soils, and considering such | other action as will contisue Mis | pasdey fe | 3d souri in the front ranks among the) Live Stock Breeders and Agricultur- | al Producers of the world. ' The speakers are practical men, well verred in the eubj-ets they will present, but are not employed with | W.E T HORN BRUGH, Pres a view of dictating to farmers, but) ANNA LYLE, Sec’y. ratuer to meet them for mutual con- —— _ ference, a consideration of subjects they bave a common interest, and a} g together for the full devel ( of Missouri Every farmer who can da so, Tease Gver Thirty Years Without Sickness. H. Werrsrern, a well-known, « citizen of Byron, i, e I paid mach att ting the bowels, I Ww a well day; but since 1 learned the evil 1 sults of constipation, and the efficacy of AYER’S Pills, I have not bal one day's sickness” for over thirty ee —not one @ hat did not readily yield to this | i wife had been, Pi rriage, an invalid fo6 Opement Agriculture conveniently should attend this Institute. | Mexico, Mo., Nov Nora Robiason and leinsorg, Judge Edwards offi- Both young people are of Martinsburg, Mo., and we congratu- late Mr. Kieinsorg on the fair prize jhe has won. Miss Nora is the your est daughter of Rey. W.G. Robin z formerly of Johnstown, Bates Co. Their many friends join usin wishing them a happy journey through life. “* * Marr ED. i 1 Mi An Important Difference. To make it apparent to thoueands, | ho think themseives il), that they es not sfflicted with avy disease, ut that the system simply needs leansing, is to bring comfort ome to their hearts.as a costive condition jis easily cured by using Syrup of Figs Manufactured by the Califor- nia Fig Syrup Company only, and oy all druggiste. as FOR Bane st ce in Deouaee per bushel. Barcuetoz Bros.