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| RAV! AS BEEF FROM ECZEMA’ Mo Torture Equal t0 th arc sympcores ot Biczenta, bat if ts not long ss d Burning of before the little redness begins to itch an Itching an | This Fearful Disease. burn. This is but the beginning, and will lead to suffering and torture almost unen- durable. It is a common mistake to regard a roughness and redness of the skin es merely a local irritation ; it is but an indica- ~ tion of s humor in the bleod—of terrible Eezema—which is more than skin-deep, and can not be reached by local appli- cations of ointments, salves, ete., applied to the surface. The disease itself, the real cause of the trouble, is in the blood, although all suffering is produced through the skin; the only way to reach the disease, therefore, is through the blood. Mr, Phil T. Jones, of Mixersville, Ind., writes: “] had Eczema thirty years, and after a great deal of treatment my leg was so raw and sore that it gave me constant pain. It finally broke into a running sore, and began to spread and grow worse. For the past five or six years I have suffered untold agony and had given up all hope of ever being free from the disease. as I have been treated by some of the best physicians ar ave taken many blood medicines, all in vain. With little faith left I began to take S.'S.8., and it apparently made the Eczema worse, but I knew that this was the way the remedy got rid of the poison. Continuing 8.8.8., the sore healed up entirely, the skin became clear end smooth, and I was cured perfectly.” Eczema is an obstinate disease and can not be cured by a remedy which is only atonic. Swift’s Specific— S. S. S. FOR THE BLOOD —is superior to other blood remedies because it cures diseases which they oan not reach. It goes to the bottom—-to the cause of the disease—and will cure the worst case of Eczema, no matter what other treatment has d. Itis the only blood remedy guaranteed to be free from potash, mercury or any other mineral, and never iaiis to cure Eezema, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison, Cancer, Tetter, Rheumatism, Open Sores, Ulcers, Boils, ete. Insist 4 upons. 8. S.; nothing can take its place. e Books on thase diseases will be mailed free to any address by Swift Spee cific Company, Atlanta, Geergia “WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES.” GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF SAPO McFARLAND BROS. Harness and Saddelry, Fine’s Louther Treo Sak !o ae “ip South Side Square. raageeee Butler Mo. Read and see what we keep in stock. We keep everything that horse owners need. Double wagon harness from $10 to $30, sin- gle harness $7 50 to $25, second hand harness from $2 to $15. Saddles of all styles and prices, from the cheapest to the steel fork cow boy and sole leather spring seat saddles. Lap robes, horse blankets, dusters and fly nets Harness oil and soaps, full line machine oils and axel grease. Trim buggy tops new and repair old ones. Bring your old harness and saddles and trade fer new ones. We have the largest retail har- ness store in the southwest and our harness are all made at home. One hundred and thirty sets on hand. Come, inspect and get our 99 prices. We will surprise you. McFARLAND BROS. BUTLER, MO. Kansas City Times, THE GREAT PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN 7, OF 1900. The policies of the great political | parties are now being formed and | the candidates discussed. The voice } | f th »eople as recorded by ballo’ WESTERN IN LOATION AND | of the people as recorded by ballot at SENTIMENT. ; will probably decide the policy of the |mation for the next decade. Every | citizen must study the great ques tions that are to come before the people. This can only be done through the medium of a great news | paper. Now is the time, therefore, for every voter to subscribe for the | best and most reliable newspaper obtainable. The Semi-Weekly Re- public covers the whole field of polit- ical news. While 1t is Democratic, it {publishes the news in regard to all | political parties without prejudice. It telegraphic and cable news service is superior tothat of any other paper. Its special features are the best. In fact, it is the paper for that large class ot readers who cannot afford or do not have access to the daily | Papers. Attention is also called to The Re- publie’s Sunday Magazine. Its haif- tone illustrations are alone worth the subscription price. Itis made up of special articles by the best literary talent, embracing a variety of sub- jeets of current interest. News fea- A Daily Paper Devoted Entirely to Western Interests.—Read this Offer to Readers. Uncle Sam’s new culonies will prove 8 source of great interest to the American peo- ple generally, and particularly with the Fesidents of the great southwest—the chosen fleld of the Kansas City Times The war has impressed on nearly every reader the neces- ne sad having a live metropolitan daily news- @ second invasion of the Philippines, Porto Rico and Cubs by the commercial forces of the United States will be attended py many interesting events Yanbee enterprise with Som ay coir ofitmproved machinery and wide Swake business methods, will effect as start- ling a revolution as achieved by Yankee Sailors and soldiers in the recent a . The progress of this peacefal army of busi- Ress men will be chronicied in the columns of The Kansas City Times. In addition, there Will be congressional elections in all the | States of the u n this fall. As an indication of the prevailing sentiment ©fthe country, this contest will be fraught E Withan annsua! interrst, and in onder ®t mM che movement trated and enlarged upen. For the} bene of the ladies the latest illustrated - is joe-a- Week Address KANSAS CITY TIMES. | Kansas City, Mo. | tures of absorbing interest are illus-/. | FROM FIREMAN Railway Emplove Falls Heir to Title and Large English Estate. | | NEW MASTER OF CHEADLE HALL ' But Geerge Nathaniel James Is Barred | From His Native | nd. Efforts to Remove the Ban. | Mattoon, HL, Noy. 15.—From the ardu of a fireman on the Peori ecatur & Evansville railway toa tate of $2,500,000 and | one of t ronetcies in Eng- land is but exceedingly be 1 which George ] James of Mattoon, experi- ced Jn ling in his cab after h 1ard run. A mes- seng rced telegram in his grimy hand, which read: “Your unele is di He desired to see you before dying and has be- queathed you his entire estate.” The mother, who res Inessage s signed by his Cheadle Hall land. As James s at near Manchester descended from the cab of the engine he remarked to the train crew: “Well, boys, 1 won't have to work good for 1 informed them is life is replete with Uy he story of vivid changes »to his eighteenth year he tasted luxury from = child- titutic with sturdy deper sed aid from his own ex- 383 vears old, he z n finds himself the owner of a huge fortu one of the proud- est names in Great Britain to sus- tain. His family for generations have been s have won honor and fame serving country on Earl eutered her Majesty's naval service f upholding the While cruising in the the seas. his teens James with strong hopes o family name. © Medite ainean ten years ago he be- 1e involved ca in an affray which caused him to desert the service at Cadiz and flee to America. Ever he has been a wanderer. He em- barked in various enterprises whieh cured work fire- ral Railway labored en he quit wi as a which vocation | over three years, and wl entitled to his cred as an en- gineer. Allurir of ld ers determined } essay his for- tune as a min ith three others he located a claim which they operat- James invested his savings. only to find that 1eeded to make JOO, in the mine double that sum the Wi shaft payir venture. Too proud to ask r assistance from home and still retaining his right in the mine he came to Mattoon two months ago and resumed his former vocation. railroading. } whom dle Hall His uncle, 2e succeeds and other Norman officer at one as time Captain at ar. James's father, the heir | iptive, enda Knight, died five vears ago, leaving a wife and f ‘ en, of which the Mattoon fire iis the oldest. By itail he succeeds to the estate A youn a lieutenant British warship Terror, now in South African waters. The fortunate build and well educated on the young fellow is of slight stylist He is and intelligent.* The change in has in no wis address. his circumstances tered his bearing to h whom he toiled every ] 1] the mates wi day. Power their influence relatives are using to the ban. boyish indiscretion, which keeps him an alien irom home, remove the result of a en definite be decided Ball. TO A BARONETCY. : | Tuesday hight a meteor fell in Let Toiede, O. gex~Sold by druegis =i and itis very probable their efforts |Z§ (UT THIS ap. OCT and} = « 2 a send to us. state James isa naturalized weight > number and fib e Telnet Fes i or ree Cloak Cataleyse. adress, j K & CO., CHICACO | SSARRRSSEUCE A SPS Eee? METEOR FELL IN KENTUCKY. Two Fragments Found Imbedded in the Ground. London Depot, Ky., Nov 16.— ercounty onthe Pond Gap of t Cumberland Mountains. There but one witness of its descent, and he saysit came from the burst into many parts without any noise just above him, and but one piece burned out. The fragment struck on a ro little above him on ti side and broke into s the same time dislodvi as nort and that its force. | Only two of the sr been found. und a foot and are vet | x | will weigh about I seem to be iron showed a yellow t If vou are su ng from drowsy-} ness in the day temper. bility. h will get rel id finally a cure. 50 cents at H. Tt Price ker’, ker’s Will Face the Charge. St. Louis, Mo., Noy. 15.—Anth Joseph Dittmeir, a first Se the marine corps, who served cruiser Brooklyn when Cervera’s fleet Santi: gave himself upfor a murder c« ted in St. Louis in 1894. Dittmeir, who is 26 years old, killed witl blow of Fearing ¢ Dittmeir enlisted in the navy the name of Dittmayer and was destroyed at d his boss his fist, in self-defense, he says. arrest, under! ved sel with distinction untila He gave bond to y days ago, when discharged. appear and answer any cl may appear against him A Boon for Suffering Humanity For constipation indigestion, nervousness weakness. lose of sleep, lose Of appetite or weight, Dr. Thurmond’s Blood Syrup te guaranteed tocure you. Sold by H._L. Tecksr, Killed in His Bed. Dexter, Mo., Nov. 16.—Rev. Moore, living six miles south of here, Jesse was found in his bed to-day with the top of his head either blown off with An adult son who slept in the same room a gun or beaten in with a_ club. in another bed declared he had heard no noise. The minister known Methodist. tigating was a well Officers are inves- If you have sore tl across the back or side. or) feel sore or tenderor you are thre ened with diptheria or pneumonia, apply Ballard’s Snow Liniment exter- nally and use Ballard’s Horehound Syrup. For sale by H. L. Tucker. Judge Adams's Little Joke. Daniel Fuller. of Joplin, Mo., stood up before Jv Adams this aft and pleaded guilty to the charge of passing a confederate note of the denomination of “Where did asked the court. “I got it froma bank at replied Fuller. “I don’t know bank could have gotten it from, unless it was the Missouri National,”’ laughed Judge Adams. ~ Fuller was sentence at hard labor in the jail at W burg, Mo. $100 Reward $100. The readers ot this paper will be pleas- ed {to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is only positive cure known to the medica’ raternity. Catarrh being a cons 2 al disease, requires, a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surtaces of the sys- tem, therebv destroying the foundation ot the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors haye so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it tails tu cure. Send tor list of testimen- ials Address F. J. Cueney & Co., t75c. e noon you get this money?” Joplin.” wh you sie? MONEY and we Besatiful you by exi ©. D., sabi Cape to! press, €. amination. To b Maybe the grocer is “just out of Ivory Soap but has another, he thinks, is just just as good. A WORD OF WARNING.—The: as the ‘Ivory ";” they ARE NOT, but like ‘the genuine. "¢ many white Soaps, each represented to be * ounterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of Ask for “Ivory” Soap and insist upon getting it. as good.” No other soap is Insist that he get Ivory Soap for you. 8 ) i j 4 just as ¢ COPYRIGHT s808 BY THE PROCTEN & GAMBLE CO. CINCINNATI i ertised by Nuch an olfer wus mever ma. UEEN is one of the mont D ‘ever made. From the ill from a photograpl,you can f arance. de from ‘se!id quart ands. son, Prinelpal, ‘Coupler, Treble ‘Veiare Couplers, and every modern improvement. come organ sivv! and the best organ lastruction book pub! inked, GUARANTEED 25 YEARS. Sit. issue « written binding 25-year «um itions of which if an ee T DELAY. TABLISHED If, th us ask your neighbor ab md 1m trument catalogue. SEARS*ROERUCK & CO. © C. HAGEDORN The Old Reliable PHOTOCRAPHER North Side Square, Has the best equipped gallery ip Southwest Missouri. All Styles of Photogrphing executed in the 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, Cc. HACEDORN. ELY’S CREAM BALM isa positivecure. Apply into the nostrils. It is quickly absorbed. cents at Draggiste or by mail ; sampies loc. ELY BROPHERS, 56 Warren St. New York City 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trace Marks Desicns CoerricHTs &c. MUNN Brasca SEND.US ON OLLAR ws with 61.00, and =e wiilseud you this SEW ry $31.75 1S OUR SPECIAL $0 DAYS’ PRICE S=..?a2 nawed rhamented, nebes high, %: on Ice water will chill the stomach, but it muke you feel warmer. HIRES Rootbeer will cool the blood and make you really 7 drink for day® | F. 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