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ETT ud i flex eratic primary election @pril 19th, offices, March 14 city offices {nays Men, Boys an TRUNKS, GRIPS AND SUIT CASE KUTLER WEEKLY TIMES © AleisheN, Bier » Ati“s & Co. Proprietor RAE OF SUBSCRIPTION ve Weeki, Times, publishes wi! sent to any yostage naid, for Sto, ANNOUNCEMENTS, We are authori every addrors Ss under the class- eads, subject to the result of the demo- for county REPRESENTATIVE YL, HARPER, of Lone Oak, FOR COL NTY CLERK, R. L. BRADEN, of Homer, J, E, WILLIAMS, of Mt, Pleasant, J.T, GAILEY, of Mt, Pleasant, JOHN PF. HERRELL, of Deer Creek, s. T. BROADDUS, C. C. DUKE, of Mt, Pleasant FOR CIRCUIT CLERK, J, H, GROVES, of West Boone, G. G, HENRY, of Pleasant Gap. J. A, PATTERSON, of New Home JAMES 5, COMBS, of Shawnee. FOR RECORDER, J. W. DUNCAN, of Osage. JAMES M. SPROUL, of Howard. L, 8, PADDOCK, of Mt. Pleasant.’ D, D, PEELER, of Hudson, T. K, LISLE, of Mt. Pleasant, H. H. HAVELY, of Walnut. ; JAS, M. CHAMBERS, of Elkhart P. K. WILSON, G. W. WALTON, of Mt. Pleasant, JG, CANTRELL, of Shawnee, 1, M. SMITH, of Deep Water. J. W. BEAMAN, of Summit. COUNTY TREASURER. W. I. JOHNSON, of Osage. FOR SHERIFF, D. A. COLYER, of Mt. Pleasant, JOE T, SMITH, of Mt. Pleasant, CLIFF SE 2, of Mound, FOR PRO UTING ATTORNEY. M. 8. HORN, of Mt, Pleagant, A. B, LUDWICK, of Mt. Pleasant. FOR PROBATE JUDGE, L, D, WIMSATT, of Mound. JOHN A, SILVERS, of Osage. C. F, BOXLEY, of Mt, Pleasant, PRESIDING JUDGE, J. W, MeFADDEN, of Charlotte, A. G. WILSON, of New Home. G. W. sTIrh, 4UDGE NORTH DISTRICT, P. A. BRUCE, of West Point. L, C, EICHLER, of Mound, JUDGE OF SOUTH DISTRICT. O. M, BURKHART, of Pleasant Gap, JOHN J, MARCH, of New Home. means ¥OR CORONER. DR. O. F. RENICK, Gov. Dockery sent his private secre- tary to Lathrop Friday to investi- gate the horse market and learn if possible whether or not Lathrop is a British post. Mr. Gentry reported that it had the appearance of a Brit- ish Post. C IN d Childrens wear. your purse. DENIES AND ADMITS. The following two notices appear- ed in the Republican-Press last week, in the same editorial column: “That isa funny yarn THe Times puts up about us using his type last week. We presume it thinks because the Record borrowed the article on the Rice interview: thet we borrowed it from the Record, And yet the Record credits it to Tue Times and we did not. How could this be true if we both used THe Times type. Pett * wT tetter tell a better story next time. We loan a good deal more than we borrow and are always glad to aid a brother,” “We accidentally neglected to give Tue Times credit for what we used of its report of the Rice-Butler matter, | We_regret.this. ~ is anything in Tue Times creditable and hence this ought to have been credited. To make amends THe TMes can “fileh’ our editorial’ on Stone's speech without credit; or it can reproduce our article of last week headed, ‘Will be off Soon.” We try to be fair.” We can not account for an editor deliberately falsifying, and then ad- mitting he lied in the same column of the same issue. If he had such a thing as a conscience, we would be- lieve it had begun ‘to burt him after writing the first notice. The withdrawal of Judge Given from the race for Supreme Judge, leaves a clear field for Judge Graves in the southwest and thus simplifies matters for him. There is no ques- | tian about Judge Graves’ strength in the southwest and with this section back of him his chances for nomina- | tion seems very bright indeed. When | they come to figureing abSpringfield, | they will find that Judge Graves is something of an organizer himself. We honestly believe, and that belief | is based on conditions which we know | to exist. that he will get one of the | three Supreme | Judge, nominations — for | Mrs. McKinley, wife of the late | President, has heen granted-a pen- sion by Congress of $5,000 annually. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. All the blood in your body passes through your kidneys once every three minutes. a ¢ kidneys are your ® blood purifiers, they fil- ter out the waste or impurities in the blood. If they are sick or out of order, they fail to do their work. Pains, achesandrheu- matism come from ex- cess of uric acid in the blood, due to neglected kidney trouble. Kidney trouble causes quick or unstead; heart beats, and makes one feel as thougl they had heart trouble, because the heart is over-working in pumping thick, kidney- poisoned blood through veins and arteries, It used to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin- ning in kidney trouble. If you are sick you can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is soon realized, It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases and is sold on its merits by all druggists in fifty- cent and one-dollar siz- es, You may have a — sample bottle by mail “tomo of swamp-Root. free, also pamphlet telling you how to find orrect STYLE, QUALITY AND PRICE. xOErUTe Sell the Best Crade ofsOex Popular Priced Clothing in Bates County for Our second shipment in of those Boys all wool long pants suits for $3.50 worth $5. TEN STYLES «: som» vow soo" $5.00, $6.00 & $7.00 Mens all wool Clay Worsted Suits at $7.00 a$l0 value. Never has such a variety of stylish suits for $10, $12, $13.50 and $15; been shown as we display this season, ALL TRE LATEST BEST CLOTHES FOR THE LEAST MONEY. . JOHEMEYER Novelties in Childrens knee suits, prices to please Don’t forget that we are headquarters Li-innot-often-there- THE CLOTHIER. BEEF COMBINE. The Beef Trust has gone to the jlimit of extreme when it becomes | necessary for a republican president |tocall a halt, Meat is going sky- ward by leaps and bounds, It has become a luxury even for the table of the rich, and is fast passing out of the reach of the poor altogether. So desperate has the situation becoming that national administration was OmMpeined to take cognizance of it. President Roosevelt: instructed At- tornes’ General Knox to proceed against the Beef Combine and he in turn notified Distriet Attorney War- ner, of Kansas City, to bring the mat- pter-to-the-attention” cf the Federal ) grand jury and have the members of | the combine indicted and prosecuted | under the anti-trust Atatutes. This | from a republican president is grant- | ing a good deal, when that party is | the friend and apologist for Trusts. | Further, Attorney General Knox sent | a letter to the House Committee on Judiciary in which he announced that he had taken steps for a full inquiry | into the monopoly’s methods. Rep- resentative McDermott, of New Jer- sey, the home and breeding place of trusts, presented a resolution to the House instructing the committee on Ways and Means to report a bill to repeal all duties on imported beef. Will wonders nevercease. Are Trusts good things? In the hands of these benevolent gentlemen will the prices be reduced when trusts have a full swing, after freezing out all opposi- tion? This action of the Beef Combine has brought to the attention of every citizen the great danger of Trust control. If President Roosevelt is sincere and will use all the machinery of the government to protect ‘the people against this great iniquity, he will deserve the thanks of every American citizen outside the rascals, who ought to be made wear stripes the belance of their days. But it is the opinion of many well informed people that this interference on the part of the President is but a bluff and will soon be called off, or fthe managers of the republican party will protect the source from which they get their campaign slush, and if necessury for them to act they will call the President down hard. As one distinguished Republican states- | man, the illustrious Jas. G. Blaine, said, ‘These are private affairs with which the public has no concern.” | Let the human hienas grow fat off | the distress and necessities of the peo- ' ple and then- beef will be reduced to | something like its natural value, but vit will not be reduced by republican | efforta. | —— ; Congressman McDermott, of New | Jersey, introduced a resolution in the | Honse Monday directing the ways | and means committee to report a bill | removing the duty on beef shipped ‘into this country. Another bill was jintroduced by Representative New- | lands, of Nevada, to removeall duties | on beef imported from foreign coun- | tries. Two great men, Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage and Gen. Wade have passed away in the past week. : —_—_—__SEae In the river and harbor bill the Missouri river is given $320,000. " | 1 Judge N. M of Harrison- ville, has witharawn from the race Given, \for supreme judge. As a reason for so doing he makes the following statement in the Harrisonville pa- pers: “I.find that I cannot make the canvass for supreme judge before the | coming judicial convention without neglecting important trusts confided in me. I must, therefore, decline to be a candidate. i sincerely thank my friends throughout the state who favor my nomination and who thought me worthy of the exalted position.” ————— The New York Chamber of Com- merce adopted » resolution urging the senate and house. of representa- tives to concede a reduction of not less than 50 per cent of the tariff du- ties on sugar and tobacco imported from Cuba. For the splendid vietory achieved in Kansas City by the democrats, great credit is due the World of that city for the splendid fight it put up for Mayor Reed. The World deserves the support of every democrat in Kansas City and certainly will get it. If the Nesbit law is responsible for the fraudulent voting in St. Louis, will the Gl .be-Democrat please in- form us what party is responsible for the indicted boodlers who have been robbing that city for years out of hundreds of thousands of dollars, re ee Neither Champ Clark vor D, A. De- Armond have opposition for re-nomi- nation in their districts. Nomina- tion in either case means election. This is as it should be. Both men are needed in congress.—Lexington Intelligencer. Gen, Wade Hampton Wied at Tis home in Columbia, South Carolina, Friday. He was 84 years of age. His death resulted not from any dis- ease, but was the result of a general Eugene F. Ware, of the law tirm of Glead, Ware & Gilead, Topeka, Kan., has been selected by the president to succeed H, Clay Evans, as commis- sioner of pensions. _ ET With Judge Given out of the race for Supreme Judge, Cass county will be certain to give her suppurt to Judge W. W. Graves. Two men, fraudulent lightning rod venders, were arrested at Lamar last week, One of the fakirs yave the ofticers the slip and made for tall timber, but aftera long chase was recaptured, The twoscoundrels had been fleecing the farmers. Talmage Dead. Washington, April 12.—The Rev. T. De Witt Talmage, the noted Pres- byterian divine, died at 9 o’clock to- night at his residence in this city. It had been evident for some days that there was no hope of recovery, and the attending physicians so in- formed the family. The patient gradually grew weaker until life pass- ed away so quietly that. even the members of the family, all of whom were watching at the bedside, hardly knew that he had gone. The imme- diate cause of his death was inflam- mation of the brain. The body will be conveyed to Brooklyn where inter- ment will be made ina family plot in Greenwood cemetery, probably on Wednesday. It is very con- venient to attribute the disasters which overtake us to fate. But for the most part man is the arbiter of his own fortunes. Business men are struck down suddenly as by lightning. The verdict is generally “heart failure.” “His heart was weak. It was fate’ for him to meet this end.” But if we went behind the “ weak ” heart we should find a “weak” stomach, prob- ably, and back of the weak stomach is careless eating at i lar hours. When the stomach is diseased the organs depending on the stomach for nutrition are starved. Starvation means weakness of the body and its organs. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. When these organs are cured, diseases of heart, liver, lungs and kidneys, caused by the diseased stomach, are cured also. "Tn the fall of 1897 I was taken with emother- ing spells, palpitation of the heart, and a dis- tressed feeling im-my stomach,” writes Mr. H. W. Kinney, of Knight, Doddridge C6., West Va. "I consulted a doctor and he said I had organic heart trouble. He gave me some medi- cine, but it did me no good. I then tried differ- ent kinds of rest medicines, but they only helped me a little. I then sent and five bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discoy- ery. Before the first bottle was gone I felt a change. When the five bottles were-gone-T began to work. I had not worked any for a year before. “I am well and can eat anything now with the exception of pork and greasy food.” Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure biliousness, ANOTHER BIG SALE LACE CURTAIN HILL'S CASH STORE. On account of the bad weather a great many have put off their eouse cleaning until late. For the benefit of those who were not ready to buy their Curtains at the time we had our first sale, we have decided to have another sale at WHOLESALE PRICES, Prices Good Until May Ist. 48c curtains go in this sale at $ 38 58e curtains go in this sale at 48 ce curtains go in this sale at 65 98e curtains go in this sale at 75 $1.45 curtains go in this sale at 1 00 $1.75 curtains go in this sale at 1 25 $1.98 curtains go in this sale at 1 50 $2.65 curtains go in this sale at 1 90 $3.25 curtains go in this sale at 2 20 $4.25 curtains go in this sale at 3 00 Remember These Prices Are Good Only Until May Ist We still haue some of those Lace Curtain Sample that we are almost giving wits? HILL’S CASH STORE. Ballard (tems, The farmers “plowed while the sun | shone” last week. Mr. Gibbs, Ballard’s blacksmith, transacted business in Clinton the first part of the week. Prof. Knight, of Altona, was in Ballard Monday, looking afterschool interest. Mort Anderson hauled hay from north of Grand River Monday and Tuesday. The Fairview dramatic club organ- ized Monday night. They will pres- ent “Hearts and Diamonds.” Scett Inman, who has been visit- ing relatives and friends for the past two weeks, returned to Kansas City Monday. M. L. Embree came in from Okla- homa Sunday. L. 8S. Keirsey made a business trip to Butler Wednesday. The boys have begun to talk about the coming primary. Arthur Asbury, who has made his home in Oklahoma for the past few years, returned Sunday. He will run his mother’s farm the coming season. Mr. Dillon, of North Missouri, pur- chased the Knorp farm last week. Fd. Kuntz negotiated the trade. M. Colson, Maysburg’s druggist, | was in Ballard Saturday. Mrs. M. Anderson and Mabel As- bury Went to Urich Saturday. Ballard merchants did a big busi- ness Saturday. Henry Knorp will leave for Kansas Friday or Saturday to take charge of his farm. R. Belisle transacted business in Urich Saturday. An invitation to the Fourth An- nual Alumni Address and Banquet of of the Appleton City High School reached our sanctum to-day. Itcar- ried ourmemory back to the spring time of life, those irrevocable s-hool days, when .we were free from cure and didn’t have to “farm.”’ Tre OLD May. Trustee’s Sale, Whereas, J. M. Wise and Hi wife, and H G. Wise gg iy . G, Wise, his wife, by their certain deed of March 20, 1901, and recorded in a er’s office within and for Bates county, Mis- oper te book No. 173 at page 5:, conveyed to D B Henderson, trustee, the follewing describ- ed real estate lying and bein; situate in the county of Bates and state of ‘i, to-wit: The east half of lot eight (8) and the’ west half of lot nine (9) all in block fifty-three (53), city of Rich aa 48 the same areshown on the record- ed plat of said city, which conveyance was mate in trust to secure the payment of & prom- neeey note in said deed of trust described, exe- cuted by J. M. Wise and Hattie E, Wise, and H G ‘laren 4 Hy ae ~ Wheteas default en | in the conditions of sald” deed et" tee tad whereas, the said D, B. Henderson, trus: is absent from KaneasCity, and is unable to exe- cute said trust; Now therefore, I, Joe T. Smith sheriff of Bates County, Mo., in aecotancs with the provisions of said deed of trust, and’ at ine juest of the legalowner and note and by virtue of the power gr ee ooea ta nall taco os of trust. will roe rt at public vendne to ergladetore deserted der for cash at the east front house, bei at the opere house building at the southwest ne Saturday, May, 10 11902, between the hours of nine o’ aay ee tha parent whe “Aiea fore: 6 terest and cost Tongue det In- Sheriff of Bates Bett and Substitute Teusmee, “Regulators” Must Pay. Springfield, Mo., April 11.—In the United States circuit court yesterday, a jury awarded a judgment for $6,- 500 against fourteen of the most prominent citizens of Bolivar, Mo., in favor of James Malock. Malock ran a hotel in Bolivar and was sus- pected of burning some of his prop- erty to get insurance, He was gen- erally unpopular, anda mass meeting of citizens was held. A_ vigilance committee of fourteen was appointed to call on Malock, It resulted in his leaving the town and filing a suit against the committee for $30,000 damages. : That Cough Hangs On You have used all sorts of cough reme- dies but it does not yield; it is too deep seated. It may wear ‘itself out in time, but j is more liable to produce la grippe, pneumonia or a seri- ous throat affection. ome oes =~ You need something that will give you j strength and build mm 9 14) HH oY Sm Hh RH 49 ON HG] RN 4H) HY mY 4) HY RE HY mm OOP SCOTT'S EMULSION will do this when everythin else fails. There is no Youkt about it. ‘It nourishes, strengthens, builds up and —_ the body strong and ealthy, not to Ww off this hard coke but to fortify the against - _If you are run down or emaciated you z Should nourishing SCOTT'S BOWNE, Chemists New York. Fa OF) ae Ot) men O49 mm 999 ce 049 ee ee er eee ry