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atiecesitantnemestin mae scataap aetna WITd THE USE OF WITH EVERY CHANCE OF WEATHER COMES A CHANCE FOR SORENSS AND STIFFNESS St. Jacobs O 600000000000 000000000000 000000000 _ COMES A CERTAINTY 53 OF A SURE CURE. =) eo “DIRi mi KiNG.” THEN SAPOLIO IS GREATER THAN ROYALTY ITSELF. Mireour: Pacific Railway Time Table NORTH FOUND. No 6......5 0. -M No 4 oonere M. No 10. wanes . M. No 312 Local Freight.......... P M. SOUTH BOUND. No. 9...... Vutnwiveteanwisce on No. 5 x No 311 Local Freight... MM. INTERS No, 349 Depart . No, 860 Arrive. ‘ATE DIVISION Buracs, Agent. K. C Pittsburg & Gulf Time Table. Arrival and departare of trains at Worland. NOMTH BOUND. joie eee daily except Sunday 12 ‘0. No 1 Bxpressdaily..... No. 2 Expres: ae s jo. a daily .-......... Mo 6 Freight daily except San Nos ‘ ve 2:25 p Remember this isthe popular short line tween Kansas City, Mo.. and Pitteburz, Kan., Mo, Neosho, Mo., Sulpour Springs, Ark., Siloam Springs, Ark., ani the direct Feute from the south to St. Louis, Chicago, aad points north and northeast and to Denver, Ogden, San Francisco, Portland and points west and northwest. No expense has been apared to make the passenger equipment of this line second to none inthe west Travel vie the new line. H. C. Orr. Gen’! Pass. Agt., Kansas City, Mo. BURIED ALIVE. Sick Prisoners Meet a Horrible Fate.--Cubans in Revenge Mutilate Their Captives. | A RICH PAUPER, | An lowa Farmer Buries $50,000, Loses His Memory and Depends on Charity. Eidora, Ia., May 31 —With $50,- 000 in cold, bard cash buried on his farm, James Webster, a Hardin county farmer, bids fair to end his days as a charity patient at the state insens asylum, or as an inmate of the county poor farm Webster was in business in 1893 - | and lost quite heavily in ssveral fail ures throughout Iowa. Lest the re mains of his fortune be also wiped out he sold everything he possees2d except a small farm, four miles north of Eldora, aud buried the proceeds of his sales in small caches about the place The total amount is estimated at not far from ory has totelly failed him of late, and, notwithstanding his efforts to locate his hiding places, he can find none of them. His mental cordition makes it impossible for him to care for himself, and being without rela tives he must depend or support upon charity or go to the county poor house CASTORIA. simile ‘The fac- signature, every Reflections of a Bachelor. Pacificos Are Deliberately Drowned in a Cave.—Water Course Turned Upon Them For Defending the Honor of Women. Havana, June 3.—In the hills of El Carna, near Siguaja, Matanzas Province, a Cuban hospital had four sick and wounded Spanieh soldiers ahd one officer. They were kept four weeks and the attention given them saved their lives. They came back the week after their release at the head of a guerilla band. The build- ing was fired at dead of night and the inmates shot as they attempted to escape. Eight of the stronger ones got out. They were caught and buried up to their necks in the sands, their heads being left exposed. The two physicians were captured and their arms were cut off at the shoulders and then they were buried alive. The four women nurses were tied to trees and subjected to the foulest abuse by all the soldiers, the details of their orgies being too filthy for allusions, even in print. A REVFENGE IN KIND. Cubans found the lifeless forms of the women atill tied to the treee, where they had been left to slowly die of starvation and exhaustion. To avenge this a Cuban band at tacked a near by town and captured seyen soldiers. They cut off their ears, slit their tongues, cut off their hands and sent them back to the Spanish camp with a letter explain- —"< they did it. Matanzas Province, a number of pacificos procured permits to go to the seashore and attempt to ob- tain food. There were 34 in all, 20 being women, girls and children. A band of Spanieh guerilas followed them. DROWNED IN A TRAP. All the Cubans fled to some caves near a waterfall on a creek west of Cardenas. The guerillas, ascertaining that the cave was too well defended for them to capture it, sent word in for the pacificos to surrender, prom- ising that it they would give up their women and girls they would allow the men to escape. Shots were fired at the spokesman as he made thvee terms, and the Spanish blocked up the cave and turned the water course, eo that the creek water would flow into the cave In five hours the cave was flooded. One young fellow managed to climb to the roof of the cave, and in some way obtained enough air to prolong his life until the guerillas left. \ There is Nothing so Good. 3 | There is nothing just as good as Dr. | King’s New Discovery tor Consumption | Coughs and Colds, se demand it and do | Not permit the dealer to sell you some} substitute. He will not claim there is | anything better, but in order to make | more prefit he will claim something else | to be just as good. You want Dr King’s | New Discovery because you knew it to! be safe and reliable.and guaranteed to} do good or money refunded. For | Coughs, colds, consumption and all oth- | er affections ot throat, chest and lungs, | there is nothing so good as Dr Kings’s New Discovery. Trial bottles free at H L Tucker's drugstere. New York Press. | ENOCH ARDEN FROM THE WAR. Old Soldier Returns to Find His Wife Married | Again. | Columbia, Mo., May 28.—A story resembling Enoch Arden bas just leome from Wilton, Boone county, |just southeast of here. In 1861 Rowland Grigge, a strapping young fellow of 25 years of age, left his j home near Wilton to join the Con \federate army. He bade good-by to his young wife and their six weeks- old daughter, Margaret, and promia- ¢d to retura 10 a few sbort montbs | But months passed, and then years, and all the neighbors and friends who bad been in the armies on either side returned, but Griggs came not After waiting nearly ten years for her husband, Mrs Griggs gave him up for dead, accepted he attentions of Riley Riffelo, a prosperous bache- lor farmer near Wilton, and married him. Of this union five chiidren were born. A stranger cime this week to the Wilton neighborhood. No one knew him, though be suid he was born and reared near by He asked for Mrs. Griggs, aud an old farmer told bim of her marriage to Riffelo. The stranger said he had known her when a girl, and would call on her He did so, but was not r.coguized. He was invited to dinuer and accept- ed. Then as the meal was concluded, he was Rowland Griggs and that Mrs. Riffelo was his wife. He told his story and proved it by documents and other evidence. He bad been wounded on the battlefield of Murfresboro, and captured by the Union army Remaining in bos- pital and prison until the close of the war, he bad heard bis wife and child were dead. He did not return, therefore, to Missouri, but went to {ses | Iowa where he has been engages in) the smallest berry grower. farming. A longing to look on the scenes of his earlier days seized him, and he came back to Boone county After mutual recognitions, followed | bee? phenomenal. A girl always talks about love in|, problem--would he claim his wife? the same tone a woman talks about|}She seemed happy her firet baby. Every woman bas an idea thatshe|band would not disturb her. her new relations, and the first bus- Ac- sn judge a man by looking straight | cordingly, after a yisit to his baby in his eyes. Sin is a littlo love colored Cupid | ond time, Gri that combs his hair pompadour to] in Iowa hide the horns. “Misery loves company” was writ- ten by an old bachelor whose mar ried friends had enticed him into it Margaret, now married for the sec Catarrh Cannot be Cured. With local applications, as they cannot] 1895 gasleft for his home}yg9; |" Namtag the Baby, It must have been three months, at least, Or aix, or seven, maybe, ‘Bhat wife and I the puzzle conned Of what to name the baby. We studied all the cognomens, E’er known to fame and fable. And all that ever won a place In genealogic table. And when at last we culled a word That seemed a fitting title, What, in the name of goodness, was Onr indastry’s requital? Just this: Her aunty called her “P: Her grandma called her‘ Cutesy, I fondled her with **Papa’s pet,’” Her mamma, ‘*Tootsy-wootsy.’* Her sisters named her ‘Tannin’ one,’’ Her brother her ** Lingo.’’ And when last night the parson came To christen her, by jingo! We had to over- go the list From Zeus to Abey, Before we could discover what We'd really name the baby — Boston Courier. BEATS THE WORLD FOR STRAWBERRIES Sarcoxie, a Southwest Missouri City, Claims This Proud Distinction. Sarcoxie, Mo, June 2.—The peo- ple of Sarcoxie claim that this littie city is the greatest strawberry town in the world and her berry men are the only pebbles cn the beach Monday 25 car loads were picked. Cost of picking alone was $5,400, $50,000 His mem | be announced his identity. Hesaid|and the value of tha berries approxi- mates $30,000. Th’s was one day's business, and 40 shipping clerks were required t» handle the terries at the sheds. The berry crop will bo worth close to a quarter of a mil- lion dollars, and pickers and other employes will earn upwards of $50,- 000. Itis everybody's harvest in Sarcoxie, frem the peanut vender to The rapid growth in the culture of strawberries in this vicinity has The followiag tabulated etate- gradual growt) of this industry: . No. cars ear. shipped. 1890 = 1892 ... 1893 ... 1894 ... reach the seat of the disease, Catarrh is| 1996 ie a blood or constitutional disease, and in A man wears love about as long order to cure it you must take ioternal as he does a suit of clothes; a wo man as long as she does her hair. remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces, Hall’s Catarrh When a woman compliments a] Cure is not a quack medicine. It was man he believes it till he gets angry | prescribed by one ot ths best physicians with her. When a woman gets an- ery with a man she stays so till he compliments her. Suffered 27 Years = = ot . * With Kidney] the two ingredients is what produces tera in the famous Hanna offices in such wonderful results in curing Catarrh.| the Perry Payne building. Senator Toledo, Hanna will not come to Cleveland E|Ohio. Sold by all druggists, price 75. Disease. Mr. G. A. Stillson, a merchant .of Tampico, Ill., writes August 10th, 1891: “Foley's Kids ney Cure is meeting witn wonderful success. I has cured some cases here that physicians pro- nounced incurable, I myself am able to testi- fy toitemerits My face to-day is a living pes of health, and Foley’s Kidney Cure jas made iteuch, Ihad suffered twenty-sev- in this country for rears, and is a regu-|national republicen eommittee, ar- lar prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers,acting on the mucous | mediately opened Hanna headquar- surfaces. The perfect combination Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Overrun by Rats. Milan, Mo, May 31.—Duriog the Washington. Major Dick denies the em years with the disease, and today I feel ten | past week great droves of rats have years younger than I did one yearago I ¢: obtain some wonder-al certifigates of its medi: cal qualities. Epidem:c ot Hog Cholera. Wichita, Kan., June 3.—An epi demic of hog cholera has broken out in the country eight miles west of this place. Nearly 300 hogs have made their appearance in this coun ty. ‘ The farmers say the timbar and fields are full of them, and that they are doing great damage to the corn, oats and wheat fields) The farmers “Dick on Deck. Cleveland, O., June 2.—Major Charles F. Dick, secretary of the rived in Cleveland Tuesday. He im- until after the Toledo convention, but will go directly to Toledo from report that Hanna is in any way dis- turbed over the situation. Grain Thieves. Sterling, Ill, June 2—George auffman, son of a prominent farm- er of Whiteside County, was killed by grain thieves near his father’s in the neighborhood of P. E Ryan,|home, five miles north of this city. died already in one township. The | four miles east of this city, gathered | The body was then placed on a straw heayiest losers are County Commis-|at the latter's farm last Saturday | Stack, wich was set on fire. sioner Wilson, Frank Bowman and Charles McClellon, stockmen who live along the Cowekin creek. Farmers have adopted rigid mea sures to atop the spread of the mala- dy. The hogs are kept in oat fields and during the day succeeded in killing over 900 rats. Bloodhounds followed a trail to a house a mle away, where the doge attacked a farm hand, but whether Modern productions of medical science asa} or not he is the guilty person has rule, are more effective and more pasteie than old time remedies hence rapidly super- sede them. Just so with chill cures. Dr. Arthur’ Febrimel isthe latest discovery, the or pastures and as soon 88 an animal | Perfection of tasteless chill remedies, and its shows signs of sickness it is killed and its carcass burned. The disease has spread over three townsbips in as many days. Huntington, W. Va., June 2.—One superier effectiveness, coupled with its deli- q@ous fig flavor, speedily found favor im public opinion. Cures quickly snd permanently. Dees not sicken the stomach and is guaranteed to cure. Price, An Important Hog Law. The new law regulating the burial sounding hundred skilled railroad men in this of hogs that die of disease went into section have signed an agreement operating a line in.China and will effect the first of June. Its provi- not yet been ascertained. THEINFLUENCE ~_Sold by McClement & Co. of the Mother shapes the course of unborn. generations—goes through all the ages and enters the confines of Eternity. With what care, there- fore, should the Expectant Moth- leave for that country. Native labor | #08 are very rigid, acd if as rigidly | er be guarded, and how great the has been tried unsuccessfully. En-| enforced the chances for an epidemic effort be to ward off danger and gineers will be paid $12 day in|of cholera to spread over the State| Make her life joyous and happy. American money. Jintiseptic Mixture acces the ideal remedy for th: tacth, Neuralgia, Ricumatism 2 : Try it ae be convinced. Fintiseptic Pharmacal Co., st. issis. : a { @ | E. vl g | pert were married by the Rey. | ©*0% information and volun: Seecececceceececesceecee” j Worth Tippy at his study. will be reduced to the minimum The new law requires the owner of a hog which has died from any disease whatsoever to immediately bury the same at least two feet under ground and such burial must not be in any slough orravine. It is made the duty of township constables to see that the law is enforced —Ex. Removal, We take pieasure in announcing that after this date Parks Sure cure will re- move all traces ot rheumatism, kidney roubles and liver complaint from the user. It is the only medicino that is day. Parvs sure cure is sold by H. L. Tneker ence Zimmerman would marry bin, started home with his bride to-day. They kad been in correspondence several months, the acquaintance being the result of a newspaper ad- vertisement. Tuesday afternoon guarantced to cure these diseases or no| than before confinement.” MOTHER FID Bhs Nervous- ness, re- lieves the Headache Cramps, and Nau- sea,andso fully pre- pares the that Childbirth is made easy em and the time of recovery short- ened—many say ‘“‘ stronger after It in- sures safety to life of both moth- erand child. All who have used Terre Haute, Ind., June 3.—Wm. |“ Mother's Friend ” say they will nev- Kristor, the California dairyman| ¢* be without it again. No other | who came here to see if Migs Flor-| '¢medy robsconfinement ofits pain | | lots number one (1) and two (2) of the northeast “A customer whose wife used ‘Mother's Friend,’ | Saysthat if she hadto go through the ordea) again, and there were but four bottles to be obtained, and the cost was $180.00 per bottle. he | would havethem.” Gzo.LartTos, Dayton, Ohio Sent by Mail,on receipt of price, $100 PER BOT- Book to “EXPECTANT MOTHERS” Bet free upon appli containing val tary testimonials, THE GRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, GA- SOLO SY ALL DRUGGISTS. and content injments very amply illustrate the| Fink’s Leather Tree Saddle A Builder’s Experience, |} ’ “A USEFUL LIFE RENEWED | IN A REMARKABLE MANNER, § % « Udney Y. Wilson Was Near Death's Door. Failed to Help Him—A Home Remedy Suc- ceeded in Saving His Life. a i | From the Evening News, Detroit, Mich. » to own up helped me, 2 When 1 cou } Udney ¥. W | living in Det a & inms’ Pink Tike | nfidenee in k hi tld - , es y on the imposition” | Wee ad Fee any farther, I told my wife that the pill _ ns were helping me. I took three boxes before. been out « I was entirely cured, and we now keep theme looking af y I have | j house all th worked day: nd cold to am not prepared to that Dr, complete some bu t two years Pink Pills for Pale ple will cure = ago I noticed I ci around as 1 everything, wes I a sts ous q are pain | roubles and general muscular weakne should, ere pai | they eured me. Be in pS WHA)“ T now recommend them to everyone in out getting any . : my neighborhood, where I formerly made 1 | sport of all proprietary rem a | U. Y. Wirsox, Subscribed and sworn to before me, ary Public, this fourth day of M Rose Y suffered inten: could, as I had that had to be “At night I cian said it was my kidney: I went out doors they would nearly all the following n getting better I became wo and worried & great deal about my work. The doctor said I must quit work and go to bed, or he would not be responsible for my life. tered ner ey are an unfailing spe “All the medicines I too! only helped | cifie for such ses as locomotor ataxia pan me temporarily. me days I would feel j tial paraly sciatica, neural better and go out a day only to be again con-4 gia, rheum: nervous headache, the after fined to my bed for weeks at a time. One effects of la grippe, palpitation of the —_ day my wife suggested that I try Dr. Wil-) pale and sallow complexions, all forms Instead of | Pale People shows that th densed form all the elements necessary to give new life and ness to the blood and reson & f r liams’ Pink P; for Pale People, and I kn pither in male or female, and all Jaugt t the idea. s m vitiated humors in the “Finally when I got into such a condition | blood. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or that I would take almost anything in the! be sent post paid on receipt of price, 5) jg certl! hope of relief, I tried the pills. They helped | cents a box, or six boxes for $ | origi me from the start, but I would not acknowl- | never sold in bulk or by the 1 to, 9 edge it and said it was the other medicines | ing Dr. Williams’ Medici {wr that had just commenced to work. I disliked , nectad: oe © Th ety thre McFARLAND BROS. at sible fw - cont tele City : the = duc mt bon ler os, s South Side Square ‘ Butler Mo. 3-43-44 Read and See What we Keep in'Stock — We keep everything that horse owners need 1 Double wagon harness from $10 to $30. : single harness, $7.50 to $25; second hand § harness from $8 to $15. Saddles of all § styles and prices, from the cheapest tothe steel fork cow boy and ole leather spring seat saddles. Lap robes, horse blankets, — dusters and fly nets. a=wpweeerece cesses Harness oil and soaps full line of mens and boys gloves. ‘Prim buggy tops new and repair old ones. Bring your old harness and saddles and trade for new ones. We have the largest retail har ness store in the Southwest and our har ness are‘all made at bome. a McFARLAND BROS. BUTLER, Mo. @ ti. “ | Low Rate Interest Money Ab i [& TO LOAN. We have money to loan on good farms at Six per cent interest with small commission, time five years, interest payable()NCE a year. Will \ write the note payable on or beforeso | borrower can pay amount at any time desired and stop interest. Everyone wishing to borrow or | change old loans are requested to call and see us,money ready.no delay 4 THE WALTON TRUST COMPAN 5 BUTLER, - MISSOURI. ese . es Special Commissioner's Sale of Real Ne 2 = ws Service Extended The St. Louis Republic recently Cee eee Sask teats county, Missouri, in} made arrangements with the cable Danielson, et al. I will sell at private sale, at | COmpanii i the best price to be obtained tater, the fol- panies, whereby direct news lowing described real estate situsted’in Bates! from all sections of the civilized county, Missouri, to-wit: & = are received. It now priote ‘The east half of lots number one (1) and two | world (2) of the northeast quarter of section four (4) in | = . 3); also More authentic foreign vews than preens forty (40) range thirty-three the south half of the southeast quarter Bec- | < tion thirty-three (23) in township forty-one 43)/@Dy Other paper and continues to of range thirty-three (33); also the east half of | . sobs lots number one (1) and two @) of the northwest | Keep up its reecrd for publishing all the home news. The outlook for the quarter of section four (4) and the west half of | year is one of big news evente, fast Will be made subject to the apyroval of the eiz- j succeeding each cther and they will euitecourt. 242 acres of the above described | i, i i land is situated in Homer township, and eighty | be highly interesting to egeneomas acres adjoinining it in West Point township. ; The price of The Republic daily is e Whole 322 acres will be sou is willbe aividel into emailer tracts tb’ewt | $6 & Year, or $1.50 for three months. OHM C. HATES, The Twice a Week-Republic will re- Special Commis ioner. |brm the same—one dollar a year, j } —< RRR PPP L RPP PR POPPE ERP RR PP PPP PR RPP PRPR RPE PPPPPEPPR By authority of a decree in partition made by quarter of section four (4) in township forty (40) range thirty-three (33). The terms of sale will be cash, and said sale etry | by mail, twice-a-week.