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ST. JACOBS OIL fr “HE THAT WORK Mieroun Pacific Railway Time Table NORTH BOUND. No. 6 aot No 4 ate No 10 . M. Local Freight -M, 6OUTIE BOL No. 9.... No. 5 M Gy Op nem No. 511 Local Freight.... INTERSTATE DIVL No, 349 Depart . A No. 350 arrive. . ......-- K C Pittsburg & Gulf Time Table. Arrival and departure of trains at Worland. NOKTH BOUND. No.7 Freight daily except Sunday No.5 Le = s* Sat. No 1 Express daily. sour No. 2 Express daily -m. No 6 Freight daily except = me Nos or ve 2 : Remember this is the popular short line be- tween Kansas City, Mo.. and Pitteburg, Kan., Joplin, Mo., Neosho, Mo., Sulphur Springs, Ark., Siloam Springs, Ark., and the direct route from the soutn to Louis, Chicago, and points north and northeast and to Denver, Ogden, San Francisco, Portland and points west and northwest. No expense has been spared to make the passenger equipment of this line second to none inthe west Travel via the new line H.C Orr. Gen’l Pass. Agt., Kansas City, Mo. ABDUCTION CHARGE. Representative Large of Illinois Sued for $5,000 by Mrs. Tillie Jones of Spring- field, on Her Daughrer’s Behalf. Springfield, Ill, May 21.—In the Circuit Court today Mrs. Jones in stituted suit against Representative Jas. M. Large of Athens for $5.000 for the abduction of her daughter for immoral purposes. Mrs. Jones relates that Large, who is a member of the House of Representatives from the Thirty-eecond District, re cently started to Chicago with her daughter, Edith, and Mianie Waters, each aged 15. They got as far as Gilman, when Mrs Jones had Edith arrested and brought back here Large, according t2 the petition, had registered himself and the girls uoder assumed names at the hotel. Large disclaims all knowledge of the alieged abduction, eaying the girls went of their own accord Large and the Waters girl continued on to Chicago. To Consumptives. As anhonest remedy, Foley’s Honey and Tar does not hold ous false hopes in advanced but truthfally claims to give comfort relief in the very worst cases, and in the “ stages to effect acure. At J A Trim- e's, A Leap for Life- Butte, Mont., May 21.—Mrs. Geo. Whitcomb, wife of a South Butte electrician, with an 18 monthe-old child in her arms, was walking over a long trestle on the Butte, Anacon- da and Pacific Railroad and when about half way across she saw a pas- senger train, which backed down onto the trestle at rapid speed, and left her no time to reach the other end. She made a leap over the side of trestle, and with her babe struck the rocks 25 feet below just as the train thundered past Several per sons witnessed the leap, and rushed to the spot. Both were found alive and practically uninjured. But the mother was so nervous from the shuck that she had to be carried to her home. Removal, We take pleasure in announcing that after this date Parks Sure cure will re- move all traces ot rheumatism, kidney rovbles and liver complaint from the user. It is the only medicino that is euingeae to cure these diseases or no lay. Pars sure cure is sold by H. L. Tncker Missouri ranked first in 1895 as a corn producing state, according to Government report, averaging one bushel more than Illinois, two more than Iowa, and eight more than Ne- braska. Facts! A Warm Friend. Foley’s Colic Cure is very hot. but when diluted it isa warm friend indeed 10 those suferingfrom bowel complaints. It never fails. 26c and 6c. AtJ A Trimble’s. Young man, put a part of your earnings in real estate. If you can not buy but a small piece, and that at a great sacrifice, by all means do it. 1 Electric Bitters. Electric Bitters is a medicind suited tor aay season, but perhaps more gener- ally needed when the languid, exhausted teeling prevails, when the liver is torpid and sluggish the need of a tonic pt use of this medicine long and perhaps tatal b No mod- cine will act more surely counteracting and freeing the system trom the malari- al poison. Headache, indigestion, con- stipation, dizziness yields to Electric Bitters. soc and $1 per bottle at HL Tucker's drugstore. THERE ARE NO EXCUSES NOT TO USE BRUISES SUCCESSFULLY.” CLEAN HOUSE WITH SAPOLIO | S EASILY, WORKS | Cleveland as a Counsel. New York, May 20.—Ex President Cleveland has been invited by Presi dent Crespo to act as senior counsel for Venezuela before the arbitration tribunal, which will determine the true divisional line between that country and British Guinea. Mr. Cleveland has taken the offer under advisement, but has not yet given his decision. The tender was made at Princeton last week by Wm. L. Scruggs, ex-minister to Venezuela, and the principal legal adviser of the Venezuelan government in the boundary dispute. Ballard’s Snow Liniment. 1 This liniment is different in compo- sition from any other liniment on the market. It is a scientific discovery which results in it being the most penetrating liniment eyer known. There are num- erous white imitation, which may be recommended because they pay the sel ler a greater profit. Beware ot these and demand Ballard Snow Liniment. It pos sitively cures rheumatism, Inflammatory rheumatism, burns, scalds, sore feet, contracted muscles, stiff jaints, old sores pain in back, barb wire cuts, sore chest or throat, and e<pecially beneficial in paralysis. Sold by H. L. Tucker. He's Gone. Boston, Mass., May 20.—Albert M. King, 19, meseeager of the Boyle- ton National Bank, is missing, and also between $45,000 and $50,000, which the bank will have to make good if the lad and the money are not recaptured King had been messenger for two years His fath er is a retired cashier. He started to the clearing house with $40,000 in cash and $10,000 in certificates, but has not been eecn since and the police are looking for him. Stand at the Head. 1 Aug. J. Bogel, the leading druggist ot Shreveport, La., says: ‘“‘Dr King’s New Discovery is the only thing that cures my cough, andit is the best seller I haye.’? J F Campbell, merchant of Saffoud, Ariz., writes: ‘Dr King’s New Discovery is all that is claimed for it; it never fuils, and is a sure cure tor con- sumption, coughs and colds. I cannot say enough tor its merits.” Dr King’s New Discovery for consumption, coughs and colds is not an experiment. It has been tried fora quarter of a century, and to-day stand at the head. It never disappoints. Free trial bottles at H L Tucker’s Drugstore, President of Uruguay in Danger. Montevideo, Uruguay, May 21.— Another attempt has been made to assasinate President Borda of Uru- guay. The first attempt was made by a boy, who tried to shoot the Presi dent; the last by means of a bomb. which was sent to the President from La Plata, Argentine. The bomb was in a box. arranged so that it would explode when open ed. Fortunately, suspicion was aroused and the box was tuined over to the police and destroyed A Sound Liver Makesa Well Man Are you Billious, constipated 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 {s out of order and your blood is slowly being poisoned because your liver does not act properly. Herbine will cure all disorder of the liver, Stomach or bowels Ithas no equal as aliver medicine. Price 75 cents. Free trial oottles at H. L. fuckers drugstore. 4ely Brown and Sexton. Bedford, Ind, May 21.—John Brown and John Sexton were ac quitted of murder this moroing They are Louisville officers who killed George Rippey at Salem last December, believing that he was a fugitive for whom they were hunt ing. The prisoners narrowly eecaped lynching. No other trial in Southern Indiana bas attracted so much attention in recent years. ¢ Have You Kidney Trouble? A S0c trial bottle of Foley’s Kidney Cure will prevent serious results from this usnally fatal disease. At JA Trimble’s, Madrid, May 20.—A semi-official declaration is issued to the effect that Spain will never agree to the sale of Cuba, nor to foreign medi tation in the question which she regards as exclusively concerning 4 FATAL FIRE. Two Persons Killed and Three In- jured at New York. AN EXPLOSION AND 4 CAVE-IN. A Furnace Blows Up—A Mass of Sand and Gravel Buries a Firemen Caught Under a Wall Five Boys Drowned. York, May were killed and three seri ¥ B in a fire which started shortly after four o'clock yesterday morning in the four-story and basement brown stone building at 149 West Twenty-Third street. The bru ing was occupied for both business and dwelling purposes. Before the firemen reached the scene the building was filled with fla The hallways from the first floor to the roof were in flames, and escape by the front was cut off., Pz the inmates of the house. tenant named Lamont was crawling along the narrow sill to reach the ad- joining house, the body of a woman struck a large sign which hung on the outside of the building, and to which he clung for support. The sign was torn from its fastenings and fell with acrash to the street. precipitated herself from floor to the street below when she found that egress from the house by way of the stai checked by the flames. She was picked up aid taken to the hospital. AN EXPLOSION AND A CAVE-IN. NEWCASTLE, , May 24.—Yesterday morning the big Rosena furnace in this city, owned by Senator Mark Hanna and ex-Senator Cameron, let go and the next instant a heavy volume of coke, iron ore and coal came crash- ing through the roof of the casting house, burying in the neighborhood of 30 men under the debris, many of them being seriously injured. The second accident of the day occurred about 20 minutes after the one at the Rosena furnace. It was a cave-in at the big 70-foot cut of the Neweastle Traction Co., that is making a track to the New Caseade park. Michael Kurdy was { Jones, a white r " ithe law take its course. ie seized |. public square, with elaborate cere- While a The woman had | buye the third | ; buggy when the horse started to run. d under at least feet of sand, gravel, clay and rocks and was dead when taken out. Peter Herinsky was terribly crushed about the shoulders s. He will likely live. FIREMEN CAUGHT UNDER A WALL. LovulmsvILLe, Ky., May 24.—The old power house of the Railway Co. at Seventeenth and Walnut, which of late has been used for storing the com- pan machinery, was burned, with its contents, yesterday morning. Half a dozen firemen were caught under a falling wall while fighting the fire, and two of them, Capt. Frank Raggie and Jack Jacob, were seriously hurt. The former had both legs broken and the latter is internally injured. Sev- eral others were more or less seriously burned. The loss is $120,000, partly in- sured. FIVE SMALL BOYS DROWNED. CuHIcAGo, May 24.—A rude raft of boards on which six little boys were navigating in the Chicago river just west of Ashland avenue was overturned during a panic caused by one of the boys who alone escaped by jumping off before the frail craft drifted with the other boys into deep water. Those drowned were: Frank Quinn, aged 10; Charles Coates, aged 11; James Coate: aged 8; Charles and Albert Svic, twins, aged 9. The bodi of Coates and the two Svie boys were found. MYSTERY NEAR TOPEKA. William Maddox, Thought to Be Murdered, Goes Home a Maniac. ToreKa, Maddo: Kan., May William who had been missing over a week, has returned home insane. Mad- lox li near Valencia, west of here, and had gone to Silverlake to lodge. He started to cross the river in a skiff alone and disappeared. The skiff was found later upside down. Tramps seen in the vicinity led to the belief that he had been murdered for $100, which was om his person. He wandered into his home Saturday evening and sat down on a chair without saying a word. It is believed that he was assaulted or irugged, and that the insanity re- sulted. The money is gone. Southwest Missouri Press Officers. Lockwoop, Mo., May the South- west Missouri Press association closed its annual session here Saturday by alecting the following officers: Presi- Jent, James T. Barbee, Ash Grove Commonwealth: vice presidents. C. M. McCrea, Rolla Herald: P. S. Griffith, Greenfield Vidette and Ben F. Wood, Laredo Tribune; corresponding secre- tary, R. J. Marchouse, Appleton City Herald: recording secretary, W. A. Martin, Liberal Enterprise; treasurer, Miss Fidelia Mise, Newtonia News. The editors leftfor a trip to Port Ar- thur and other southern points. Houses Were Torn to Pieces. TERRALL, I. T., May 24.—A hard blow, amounting almost to a tornado Satur- day night, tore down two houses and moved eight or ten off their founda- tions in Terrall. In the country, four houses were torn to pieces. The occu- pants had taken refuge in their tor- nado caves, and escaped injury. Many small buildings were wrecked or badly damaged. Kansas City Banks Consolidate. Kansas City, Mo., May 24.—On Fri- day evening the papers were signed for a transfer of the deposits and good will of the Metropolitan national | bank to the National Bank of Com- |merce. This morning the National herself. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. | Bank of Commerce opened for business in the rooms occupied by the Metro- | politan in the New York Life bui | In Honor of the Gray. | New York, May 24.—The monument | given by Charles Broadway Rouss, the |millionaire New York merchant, to jthe Confederate Veterans’ camp, was | dedicated Saturday afternoon in Mount Hope cemetary in Westchester county. joaee were several thousand people present at the exercises. SPARED THE NEGRO. Cnusual Discrimination Exercised by a Meb Near Houston, Tex. R. W. Stevw- ent merchant of Lindale, enticed from his home murdered. ie Jone was arrested and in a confe | negro, the | 1 communit county refus: of in the Land shot He inno- told them they were | cent man, but the that they refus who k di the influc : to escape punishment, they would let Tyler is the rs ago, a negro at the stake, in town where, a few y eriminal was burned mony. Victims of a Runaway. Kansas Crry, Mo., May 24.—In a runa- which occurred almost in front of home, 2517 Michigan avenue, Sun- y afternoon, the wife and 1S-months- old son of Charles E. Wainscott, a stock were perhaps fatally injured. Mr. Wainscott was getting into the He was slightly injured by having the horse plunge one of the corks of his shoe into his foot. Mrs. Wainscott was unable to alight from the buggy with her baby after the horse got started, and was toppled over into an old rock quarry 50 feet deep. Arrested for Smuggling. New Yor May beau 25 Seruggs, the St. Louis merchant prince charity and church worker and ph thropist, and E. J. Langhorne, manager of the American Arithmometer Co., of St. Louis, were Saturday formally placed under arrest by customs in- spectors charged with an attempt to smuggle in jewelry to the value of $1,100. = Calve’s Voice Deserts Her. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., M alvi sang to 3,000 people at th losing per- formance of the Indianapolis May mu- sie festival, and in her last number her voice broke repeatedly and she was little more than able to finish the mad seene from Ambroise Thomas’ ‘“Ham- let.” Mme. Calve’s bad notes were not the result of a cold apparently, but seemed to be from weakness.” } a Mrs. Gougar Defeated. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 24.—The su- preme court has finally @erruled Mrs. Helen Gougar’s famous effort to secure for women the right to vote in Indiana. NEWS NOTES. In an election riot at Bosnyaczi, Aus- tria, the troops killed 14 and wounded 50 persons. The annual meeting of the Kansas Reform Press association will be held at Emporia July 19 and 20. Dr. Ceborne, a Canadian hypnotist, hypnotized and buried Miss Annabelle Moray, six feet under ground at Lester- shire, a suburb of Binghamton, N. Y., before a large assemblege of people. Newspaper men were placed on guard and should the young woman awake from her trance she will be quickly rescued. The annual session of the Missouri grand council, United Commercial Travelers, in session at Joplin, elected Frank L. Tracey, of Chillicothe, grand counselor; J. W. Mellor, of Sedalia, grand secretary and C. H. Bucher, of Kansas City, grand treasurer. Han- nibal was selected for the next meet- ing place. n steers, from the Panhandl Grain and Provisions. ANSAS CITY, May 24.—Receipts of wheat, 28 a@ year ago, 20cars Sales by car lots: 0. 3 hard, 78@80e: No. soft, 9349 ; @ year ago, 9 cars; No.2 No. 3 mixed, 19¢; No.4 mixed, No. 3 white, Receipts of hay, 60 cars; timoth 210.00; No. 1, #9.00@9.59; choice prairie, $7.02 Eggs, 7c per Goz Poultry, hens, 5¢ per Ib.; spring. Se; broilers, 13@17c per Ib.; turkeys, 6B Te; ducks, 6c: gees: A FOND DAUGHTER WAS NIGH TO DEX _ Alife Saved, Frank B. Trout Tells a Reporter of How Ris Dausi Life Was Saved. All Parents Should be Inter. ested in This Narrative. Using as a nu the rum t Frank Bb. ery one two more i taken two boxes shew y leave her beds andes hs was something Hike s entirely cured, Spat hter. Ey 1 1 bought few to in the = Ae my : ter, Had not De, liams’ Pink s saved my day hters IT would ne emmend them mye know they do all and more than is | for them, and 1 a ad to recommend Dr. Williams’ aved my d , and that is enough for me.” rl who seems to be fall down in a f walk unsupported. attended her, but ker end The best of phy she continued to seemed to be gradually en she was fifteen she weighed only ninety pounds, and the doctors dit was emia. Several physicians said she might | Subscribed fourth day of ow it, but that it would no doubt ter- Wa “ounty, Mit minate in consumption: No doctor we had Dr. Williams’ Pink’ Pills for Pale could help her, and we coneluded ourselves, | contain, cond form, all the ry to give new life and rig od and restore shattered ne for troubles p we must lose our child, as she was growin weaker every day. “We had tried all the well-known reme: dies, and rago I bought pressions, i a box of Pills for Pale ess. In ment People hem home. v cure in all cases arising had read of a case about the mental worry, overwork or excesses of daughter’s, and decided to give them a ever nature.” Pink Pills are sold in } trial, though I must confess I did not (never in loose bulk) a have much faith. Before she had taken all) boxes for of the first box we noticed a change for the gists, or d better. She, however, zained strength daily | Me 5) cents a box or y be had of all di y from Dr. Will npany, Schenectady, N.Y. South Side Square Butler Mo. Read and See What we Keep in'§ Wejkeep everything that horse owners Double wagon harness from $10 to Single harness, $7.50 to $25; second harness from $3 to $15. Saddles of d¥ styles and prices, from the cheapeet toths steel fork cow boy and cle leather ep seat saddles. Lap robes, horse blankels dusters and fly nets. Harness oil and soap fullline of mens and boys gloves. Trim’ buggy tops new and repair old ones. Brig your old harness and saddles and tradé new ones. We have the largest retail bs ness store in the Southwest and our ht ness are all made at home. McFARLAND BROS BUTLER, M PAPC ‘ Low Rate Interest Money} eSeaenecrcerccs Scene We have money to loan on good | 1 farms at Six per cent interest with | small commission, time five years, | interest payable()NCE a year. Will | write the note payable on or before so borrower can pay amount at any | time desired and stop interest. | | i Everyone wishing to borrow or change old loans are requested to call and see us,money ready.no delay wy THE WALTON TRUST COMPA ae BUTLER, - MISSOURI. News Service Extended. The St. Louis Republic Special Commissioner's Sale of Real | Estate. By authority of a decree in partition made by the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, in Apples. eat stock, winter varieties, 8.00@ #1.00220) per ns. Beets. 0@ per bbL: | the 5 X | tion thirty-three (33) in township forty-one (41) |any other paper and coo f cour made arrangements with the em | lowing described real estate situated’ in Bates | from all sections of tl << | township forty (40) range thirty-three Gj; also | more authentic foreign news south half of the southeast quarter of sec- of range thirty-three (33); also the east half of i ishit lots number one (1) and two @) of the northwest | Ke€P Up ite record for publ , quarter of section four (4) and the west half of | y vk ; lots number one (1) and two (2) of the northeast \ the home news. The outloo | quarter of section four (4) in township forty (49) ; i i range thirty-three (33). 3 edt ao is one of big ner va The terms of sale will be cash, and said sale | i they. will be made subject to the approval of the cir | iSO! each other “ cuitcourt. 242 acres of the above deseri i i i e land is situated in Homer township, and eighty | be highly ee lie d acres adjoinining it in West, Point townstip. | The price of The Republic daa e whole 322 acres will be soldin a body, or} c it ae be divided into smaller tracts te suit | pba or — - — » purchaser. 1 ao P JOHN C. HAYES, Gprsiieshely oicre tdi P | main the same—one dollar \ é-tf Special Commis ioner. | 8 by mail, twice-a week.