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$100 Réward $100. The readers ot this paper will be pleas- ed to learn that there is at least one | $360 at Fort Worth, Tex., Wednes- dreaded disease that science has been! day night able to cure in all its stages, and that is a ibs ti 87 Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical ee fraternity. Catarrh being a constitution- | Bears the The Kind You Have Always Sought disease, requires, a constitutional ; Sigzatare atment. Hall’s Co“ arrh Cure is taken of ifternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surtaces or the sys- | Alb > . tem, thereby destroying the foundation! vert Foster, of Strasburg, Ill, of the disease, and giving the patient | was fatally burned Wednesday night strength by building up the constitution | py , ing i and assisting care ta dates its work. | by an exploding gasoline lamp. The proprietors haye so much tatth in| ; . ne ‘ its curative powers, that they offer One | The fragile babe and the growing Hundred Dollais tor any ‘case that it| child are strenghtened by White's tails to cure. Send tor list of testimon- , Cream Vermifuge. it destroys worms fals. Address F. J. Cueney & Co., | gets digestion at work, and so re- Toledo, 0. s@Frold bvdruggis —75¢ | builds the body. Price 25 cents. | For sale by H. L. Tucker. REDUCED RATES TO CHICAGO, -- FOR THE A Most Liberal Offer. INTERNATIONAL LIVE STOCK | All our farmer readers should take AY POS : . EXPOSITION, advantage of the unprecedented club- From December 2d to 4th, inclusive | bing offer we this year make, which the Great Rock Island Route will sell | jncudes with this nansé"Pie_Lic eursion-tickets to Chicago from |." iP — nih points east of Missouri river and west | Stock Indicator, its special PF rmers “of Muscatine and Wilton at rate of| Institute Editions and The i'oultry ‘one fare plus $2 for round trip, with | Farmer, These three pul fipal return limit leaving Chicago | : ‘ , are the best of their class ane 4 | Yeo. 8,1901. These reduced rates bic th ee é . 3 ‘ : if : monk ive a splendid opportunity for aj °° every farm home. “To tiem we cheap trip to Chicago to attend this | dd, for local, county and yeneral great exposition which in interest | news, our own paper, and make the and in the number and excellence of price of the four one year ouly $1.25, exhibits will surpass any of its kind ever held. For full information con- ‘ rr : sult nearest Rock Island ticket agent | reading matter offered for so small or address JOUN SEBASTIAN, jan amount of money, The three pa- G. PLA, Chicago. pers named, which we elub with our own, are well known throughout the West and commend CABTORIA. ations | Never before was so much superior 60 YEARS’ themselves to EXPERIENCE —_— the reader's favorable attention up- The Live Stock | Indicator is the great agricultural ) dnd live stock paper of the West and Fon mere mention, Trave Marks Desicn' Copyricuts &c. Anyone sending a sketch and Reser jon may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica. tions strictly contidential. Handbook on Patents sent free, Oldest age: for securing pat Patents taken through Munn & Co, receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir. ear: four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers, UNN & C0, 3818roadway, New York Moo, 25 F St. Washington, D. | the farmer, while The Special Farm- jers’ Institute Editions are the most | Practical publications for the promo- | tion of good farming ever published ! ake advantage of this wreat offer, as it will hold good fora short time | only. Samples of these papers may be examined by calling at-this oftice; \ 5.6m Tender Feet Omega Oil People with tender, sore, itch- ing, tired, swollen feet ought to know that there is no excuse for them at all. They can rub the feet each night fora Southwest; The Poultry Farmer is | * . } | the most practical poultry paper for | Charles L. Dickerson, a real estate | man, was sandbagged;and robbed of | 1 week }ard County Democratic Contry Fsalt rheum and every form of blood with o, foots nes Would Follow Judge Peden. Heart Was on Wrong Side. Osceola, Mo., January 21.—The} Bloomington, Ill., Jan. 9.—A man Democratic county committee met) with his heart on the right side has to-day to indorse a candidate tosuc-| applied for a pension ceed Judge Peden in the county|George W. Hurst, of Lexington, this court. F.M. Birdwell was selected,|county. When he appeared before and, ina speech, he pledged himself|the pension board here to undergo tofurther resist the orders of Federal | the physical examination necessary dudge Philips to make a levy for] before an application for a pension the payment of the railroad bonds. |could be secured, the surprising dis- A petition is being circulated, pray-|covery was made that his cardiac ing Gov. Dockery to appoint Geo. | organ was misplaced. Theinvestig Vannice, a business man of Visita, | tion conducted by the board showed and a conservative. that Hurst experiences no discomfort or inconvenience as a result of the odd location. The discovery did not invalidate his possible pension Squire Milton Ewing, one of the land marks of Vernon county, died at his home near Walker, Vernon county, Monday. The deceased was the father of G. G. Ewing, recorder of the county and was 73 years of age. He was born near Lexington, Mo. CA BSTORIEA. Toure tho Wiad You Wave Always Rowgnt Signature Oflicer to Start After Fife. St. Joseph, Mo,,Jan, 19.—Sheriff Holcomb, of Savannah, will start to- morrow for North Yakimi to bring back Stewart Fife to answer to the charge of murdering Frank W. Rich- MTL teu ardson, Dec, 24, 1900, - “ = Requisition papers were received Edward Morrison, « ground boss} to-day. Although Prosecuting At- atthe Marion mine, on the Conti-| torney Booher refuses to make known nental tract in the west part of Jop-[his plans, it is believed that he will lin, Mo., was killed Thursday morn: | dismiss the charge of murder in the ing by falling down a shaft 185 feet] first degree against Mrs, Richardson, deep. and arrest her as an accessory with File. G Ya Whosoever has suffered from piles ( UV TU ha knows how troublesome and painful they are, Tabler’s | Buckeye Pile Ointment is guaranteed tocure piles Price, 50cin bottles, Tubes, 75 cents For sale by H. LL. Tueker. Upon the requisition of Gov. Dock ~ ——---~-+- The Snake Season. ris signature is « axative Cesc remedy ¢ of the genuine TUNE Tablets » one day ery, of Missouri, Gov, Davis, of Ar- Warrant of ar- alias J, W wed with g kansas, has issued a rest for John Bigger, Smith, whogis cha larceny. John Ss. Bowen. who lives 9 iniles, a little west of south of Nevada, kill- 1d Jed or rather disabled. the first snake of the season, “It wasa bull suake, about feet said Mr. Bowen. “It passing across Raffety’s line just Many of the blotches, pimples and was other a by the failure of the liverand kidneys 5 to cast off impurities, which remain |South of town when my wagon wheels long,” Mr. Bradley's Wagon. It was still alive when we lett it lying in the road Post late the liver and) kidneys, and cleanse the system of all impurities, Price S00 at H. L. Tucker’s drug atore. to-day.” Chairman ROS. Boggs, of the How-] George Hiteheock was instantly leom-] killed Thursday in’ the Penwell coal mittee, has called a 2 of the} mine, Mlinois, by over fifteen tons of committee in Payette, Mo., on Sat-] slate falling upon him, urday, January 18, for the purpose of filling vacancies that exist on the board. Acall fora primary willlike ly be made. mieetit Mills Are Idle. Wichita, Kan., Jan. 18.—With 40,- 000,000 bushels of wheat inthe twen- shine eiuwidibe used) taunninlt ty counties surrounding Wichiti ithe and purify the blood; it) cures. all mills of this city are now idle. The forms of blood disorders, is especial. | farmers will not sell a pound of their ly useful in fevers, skin eruptions, | wheat at any price and aredetermin boils, pimples, blackheads, serofula. log to keep it for six weeks longer, or itisa safe and effectual] Util the prospects of the growing vents. For sale by |¢rep are determined, Practically all the mills in) Southern idle, vain here to-day. impuritie eure. Price 50 H. L. Tucker. The Vieksburg express on the Mis sissippi Valley collided ‘thurs tay Kansas are Offers of 77 cents were made in This man is} A Girl's Kidnapping Story AN ENGINEER'S DREAM. Santa Fe, N. M., Jan. 18.—Mayme ee | Yoast, the 13-year-old girl, who dis- appeared mysteriously in broad day- light from the agricultural college at | Mesilla park, has returned hon She asserts that she was kidnapp and drugged. When she awoke shi found herself in the country by ar Thought the Switch Was Turned and jumped for His Life Peru, Il., 15.—As the restilt of ination, J. E Jan halluc Sible, an old igineerof the Wabash railroad, was ‘) dangerousty injured last sible irrigation ditch. Her kidnapper, 2) was at the throttle of thel otive strange man, was fixing herearriage. | of the “limited,” which was ne It was dark and she allowed herself} a+ the pate oi forty miles an hour. to slide into the ditch, thuseseapin When the lizhts ef the town of Attica She returned home foot-sore and sti Jappeared the old) engineer suffering from the effects of the drug. I start und shouted to Burt Frick. his | tireman gave a . 4 A ‘Jump for your life, Burt A 7-Year-Old Saved Two Lives. , : itheswiteh is turned. We'll eras —To Palmer | to—" Indianapolis, Jan, 18 Nobles, the 7-year-old son of Colonel | C,H. Nobles of the reernitingstation The sentence was not finished, fo inan instant Sible had applied the is due the credit of saving the lives of! safery brake, reversed the lever and Theresa Webber and Mattie MeCarty, jump dL Loese nye the sport two-little-girts-who~ broke throug] passed nerves had eoninured t the ice on the pond in Military park. | fipomen followed, but) was not it The little fellow heard the girls serenin | ed when they went through the ic« The train came to a stop and Frick went back to tind his engineer Without hesitation he went to their! Phe \ assistance, latter lay His skull t but he managed to hold himseli aud tand on Ipon the rond bed, The ice broke with him, erushed, one sume vw broken, his ribs fr ul the two girls above water untilaid}ed and his spine injured, He arrived | train. Means carried abonrd ‘ While an investigation showed i The Ninth is Coming Home, t id ‘ there had been no danger t ‘ Washington, Jan, 17.—Orders have} train Thesignal lights of been prepared at the War depart-{ showed sn unobst ruc edpath. sible ment for the States of the Niuth infantry, whieh | where played a part in the siege of Pekin} story and has seen so much fighting in ‘uot According to Fireman Frick Philippines. The troops will return to the United} was brought to San Francisco as soonas| he was inca wreek at lative the necessary arrangements ean be jm nthe age effected, but it is hardly likely the} The passengers were shake movement will begin for several] the sudde istopping of the tra | . weeks Jnone of them was injured | Return of the Twenty-Ninth, | A Child’s Essay on King Solomo HM } 7 " ty 1 | \ } Guthrie, Ok. dan 17 My Wet}? An exehange sans the ty-ninth battery of United States fessay or TITS Ted al Port sll, Ok, [written bye ditt! rhin from Cuba, where it has niortwoling town King Se years, This was formerly known as} man who lived ever so | Grimes’s battery xt It has only s the countey in whit ' \ three men, but will be re: ruited up to he was the whol push, fle w one hundred awful wis han, One day t Captain Gayle has sneceedéd Capt, finen came to him, each one Sayre as commander at che post onto the leg ofa kid and nearly; One Family's 1 Luck. EME SM DOU an ane ss ’ and King Solomon wasu't th Mexico, Mo., dan. 16.—Frank Mille] very wood and said: * Why cor era young min, wha resides near] the brat been twins and stopped alt Benton City. had his arm torn off|this bother?” And thea he ealledfor while feeding a corm shredder on the| his sword and was ewoing to el the farm of James Henderson, near Con-| brat in two and give eael one ay cord, Callaway county, He maynotfol it, when the one who was recover, Mr. Miller is a brother of finother, said: ost yp do 1 v the little girl who was killed in th thy dined: let the old how lis i Audraineyclone, northeast of Mexico, feat have role baby, Pdor where the family former jan Then Solomon told | to His brother, Calvin Miller, was injur-| take baby and ge home ed for life in a railroad wreck while] was! shipping stock to Chicago told the and he Tit Water Wing: Solu i pe fy ee eg aon a = New Orleans, Henry Poster, now they won’t suffer any more. Omega Oil is now used by the very best foot doctors in New York, and they say it is just wonderful how the Oil takes the pain out of the feet. dry, and then rub on the Oil. This treatment is partic- ularly recommended to men and women who have to stand up. or walk a good deal. Farmers, clerks, mechan- the Isest foot cure they ever tried. Omega Oil is good for everything a liniment ought to be good for. 1% Bathe the feet in warm water, wipe | ics or women who do housework will find Omega Oil | or so, and then fireman, was killed, amd Engineers | oq | P—Mirtttetorrr: Campbell and Baldwin and Firerm — Joseph Wasson brakemen were injured. BAD BREA in and three’ negro Fatal Fight at Versailles. Sedalia, Mo. Jan 18.—James Law- rence, av farmer aged 60 years, living near Gravois Mills, Morgan county, had his jugular vein severed witha knife in the hands of Henry Owens, a neighbor, aged 25 years. at Versailles “T have been using CASCARFE ndas : donol. say aug i Sotheted with | this afternoon. ‘ Maptvea | Lawrence and Owen had quarreled wonderfully. are a great help in the family.” Handing a knife to Owens, Lawrence told him to defend himself and he proposed to whip him, and started WILHELMINA NAGEL, 1137 Rittenhouse St., Cincinnati, Obio. CANDY “eoidlececnsce ea to do so. Owensstabbed him twice in the neck and he fell dead without utter- ing a word. Owens was arrested. Lawrence leaves a widow and sev- d children eral marr Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. ‘Taste God Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe Me. We, 5 .. CURE CONSTIPATION. Bterii Chi Montreal, New ¥ WO-TO-BAG fins’ Harness and Saddlery, Buoctes _ and surries; | Roa? Wagons and Spring Wagons A Salary for Ex-Presidents. Washington, Jan, 20.—Representa- tive Lovering, Massachusetts, intro- duced to-day a bill providing a sal- ary for ex-Presidents of the United States at the rate of $25,000 annu- ally, from the date of retirement irom the Presidency. The_bill is to apply to any ex-President living at the time the law is enacted. To Ask for Single Statehood. Ardmore, I. T., Jan. 16.—The sin- glestatehood delegates elected at the Muskogee convention left to day for Washington to urge Congress to en- actlegislationin behalf of autonomy. The delegation goes united for single statehood with Oklahoma and will makeastrong fight in that direction. The Senate committee on Indian af- fairs will give the delegation a hear- {Fee ary ittnors tithe Ari | Wateineetest hint _ ae —pdeprrtentints ts Tele and 200 lady ft i; jl ing attention of 1 tlice throughout the ee ry to thene sity for tlie exercise of the utinost 1 curein the exam ipplicants} ik for enlisiment ction was tak en by the department becrus numerous applications for ed " ‘ soldiers on the wround V The county court ol Henry coun has let the contract for iimprovir \ and enlarging the county jail at Clit Nes adhe 4 ton to the Pawly Jail Co. Ti jSUHering . largement will double the capacity oi Phe physicians, not the jail, The improvenient Ch dates friends of Miss Pe made will cost $4,000 and is to be| te offer the 5 4 ' completed in 90 days, j whieh to se voski for grafting, advertise: Ten Cents for Ten Weeks. Jand this morning men, women aud The St. Louis Mirror is a tw oven ghidven evi £6 the hospital to eight page paper, in magazine forn, A ie ss edited by William Marion Reedy, as- ibs. sat sisted by a staff of contributorseom- ie P tis < eh prising the best writers and literdiry ee “gies ema * authorities on all current: subjects, | 2° 8RU ae wor 2 . ne aE é the result of burns received in social, religious, scientific, financial Hine eebloalon ne han atl literary or artistic. lee : ie cae The Mirror is a weekly reviesy bile Recreoty LOS appt tt men and affairs: a treasury of short | pays iL A Og eae stories and good poetry; a paper in ts cbihiag, Mike eat - the hospital operating-room which the best books, best plays and ncsuaseites est elites surgeor nm’ best music are ably reviewed, and att | * cms £%) any topics of contemporary interest are | 7. ‘ be : o given careful attention, It is theup-| Just Escaped Cremation : to-date paper for the merchant, the; Fayette, Mo., Jan. 16.—James } teacher, the professional man, the, ) i prominent’ farmer. living student, the politician, as well as for) nearSugar Grove Schoolhouse, LLow- woman and the home, ane near being eremiat Ifyou will send us 10¢, in silver or ing a disturb stamps, we will mail the Mirror to, Anee in his barn, le took a lighted your address for ten weeks. lantern and proceeded to investigate , 0 pe As he opened the barn door the mS fie Mirror, horses rushed out, knocking Mr. Mill- im St. Louis, Mo. | er down and rendering him uneon- + reistiieeaiineaenssintomeei doce ud scious. The lantern either exploded D On I T bic yy Ara} or was broken by the horses, and set Your Lifeaway! fire to the straw strewn on the floor, You can be cured of any form of tobacco usin: Not until his clothes were ignited i well, strong, magnetic, fullof and his hand severely burned did Mr. Wagon Harness $10 to $30; ang Harness $7 to $25; Second-hand Harness $3 to $15; Saddles, all styles | "8 January 23. ns, rices. Bugry «pnd Pi and see us; get our prices and ron will surely trade with Cushio: ‘agon Sheets and Bows. Our Vehicles are the latest in design and _McFARLAND BROS., Butler, Mo. Dy, Hobpe Sparagus Pls cure ln How Are Your Kidneys? Add. orN. ¥. ey tite and vigor by taking Phy , Millerregain consciousness and make ton penne in to days, Over BOG, 000 hiis esca from the fiercely burning gin om STERLING barn, which, with its contents, was REMEDY CO., Chicago or New York, 437 totally destroyed.