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“ealbgg | : Fae | ¥ r > ’ ; ; ‘ ‘ | ssepeattnteeatieneiietes ime emetaieeenee NIPS LONDON MONEY-LENDERS Some New Facts in Regard to the Hambert Swind ng Case Ln- earthed at Paris, While the newspap Paris have publish exhaustiy Is of the extrac y ystificat of the Humls which a woman se- cured advances $12 ) with practically ne secur- ity, very little attention has been given to the faet that a large sum was secured in London, says a Herald dispat mm Londo One loan of $200,000 Is did te have been ob- taine 1 stitutions and individ The woman in the case alse is said te have ised $400,000 on a portion of ber jewe and a wel wwn firm ef pawn by ers ad wel S125 me jewels, large sum froma p of underwrit- ers | vl ovinced that her Was true that they ade vaneed money to pay a nimaber of debts, receiving notes bearing a high rate of interest in return, She told the now familiar story of mysterious millions, and wished to borrow the money on three months’ notes, t n September lL. She sais ision as to the es- tate, by whieh she was certain to re- ceive al targe fortune, no matter Which way it went, would be given in October or November, Phe finaneiers to whom the soliei- tors went te ra the loans were dazzled by the prospect of earning 20 per cent, for three months, They sentan English solicitor to Paris to in gate, He was entertained at a mansion in the Avenue de la Grande Armer he masterpieces hangs ingeon the walls and was shown the mysterious ite, He even saw the Safe opened and pack s of French rentes carefully tied up and marked with wi is said to he the stamp of the L exoininer.” rinto the best circles on his return to i the loan was fell due on December 1, not paid, and th woman's | that the} nd} ition was proce three oths \ of distrust entered the minds © lenders and the interest wa paid. Under promises of r cent re for the next three mnths a oa bonus of HoOO000 -twiee the total amount of the loan when the estate was set- tled, the note were renewed, When they fin became dae on March 1 and pay t was not fortheoming the London lene heeame alarmed, and were strumental in pricking the bubble. SANKEY NOW PRESBYTERIAN. The Voted Singing Evangelist with Wis Wife Unites with a Brook- about | present ti ELUDES GOOD FORTUNE. s th, of Arizena, Has Delegate HMarrewing Experiences ag Wealth, i Many | in Just Mi |} Prob ever tha y ho member of congress was madly pursued by fortune tte Smith, of Arizona, who it up to the d nur rich, but has succ berless } oppertunities of J missed each » by a mere hair's } breadth, Even good fortune awaits him if only a missing paper would }turn up. This is 200 shares of the stock of the Great Verde copper mine, | controlled by tor Clarke, and upon which Delegate Smith loaned a hardup few yea s the st | shareholde i nd it is veri- smith tel | fled by Senator Chirk, ‘Five or six | years before the Verde mine was de- les, it is allowed. & | veloped the he Ider of the 200 shares at ohard up and tried to sell them to some friend for almost anything he could get. At last Dele Smith teok pity on him and leaned on the 200 shares and filed the stock away with a lot of old pape lle thought no more of the matter until the value of the mine became known, Then he tried to find the owner of the stock, but the most diligent elforts failed. | The United Verde company adver- te im $100 tised for the 200 shares repeatedly, but | neither Smith nor anyone else has ever been able to find the certificates, ator Clark has offered $1,500 a ¢ for all the Verde stock that ean be} hbonght., and if Dele e Smith could find his 200 shares now he would,} within a few hours, be the better off} by S800.000, Senator Clark is oceasion=/ ally inclined to twit Mr. Smith upen what he is missing in the werld, and] Smith is in hopes it may some day turn | up: WARMER ATMOSPHERE. Parisian Acro spherle Co nt Discovers Atmo- tions Above 10,000 Meters’ Mark, 1 Teteserrence de 1D, nitted the has su Its obtain from the ascents of 258 balloons, when altitudes of 11,000 meters or more were at ad, to the Interna ad al the: pres= etrieal apparatus empl iseents ence of a warmer atmosphere above 10,000 meters ha well detined boundaries, Privy Councillor Ass- mann, of Rerlin, has contirmed this statement made by M. De Bort. The former sent np rubber balloons to an altitude of 19,500 meters which trav- ersed a warmer atmospheric belt between the heights of 11,000) and 13,000 meters, Count zo, of Rome, of the Italian Civision of the commission, an- nounced that Italy will join in the on's investigations of at- mospheric conditions, and* said the Italian governmert is erecting an observatory for this purpc comm on top lyn Chureh, It wis \ t the Presbyteri- an gen assembly session at New t Ira D. Sankey, the singing York t t. who formerly was a Meth- e had joined the Lafayette Avenue sbyter which R tor. Dr. San- key had been a worshiper in’ that ehurch for a dozen years, but he and Mrs, Sankey had members of the church last Sunday, Formerly, he id, they 1 members of the thed seopal church of “While T was giving all my time to evange! » work T did not want to be considered as a member of any de- nomination.” Sanke iid the other ever, Thave tte Avenue Pres- Presby- . Lawrence of he » in New i= adele hey re enivention, he sight L. Moody. They stie association ntil Mr, Moody's death. TUNNELS FOR NEW YORKERS. System of Underzround Passages to Be Ruilt to Link the Five Roroughs Together, um Tarelay Parsons. chief en- t rapid transit hoard, of srdered ta ' for thnnel system ‘tion of the ubination of underground lines the fix ughs welll be iit gether by as of tunn f 1 the subway system now beit loped will be onlya small part. If it 1 he decided to extend the new + it is seid private eapital is alre mised for the work, so con- moters of the thor- the subway. They the extensions, op- ough suecess « propose to build erate the iven length of time, and then turn m over to the city. World Taught Lesson in Charity, _ France is naturally grateful over the prompt and generous action taken by the United States to afford relief to the affiieted inhabitants of Martinique, says the Chicago Inter Ocean, but that is not the best of it. All the world has been taught a les- son in charity, and the lesson will not be forgotten. His Deadly Enemy, Somebody shot at the emperor of China the other day, and the Chicago of Monte Re (in the Pennino Alps, altitude 15.215 feet), Count Palazzo also said that this ebservatory will be used for experiments in the mat- ter of curing tubereutosis by high al- titudes. AFTER NEW AUTO RECORDS. W. K. Vanderbilt. Jr, Orders a Spe- cially Built Machine Without Regard to Cost, Ww. Vanderbilt, Jr. is now recog- nized France as the equal of the best Freich automobile ¢ ths. The newspapers at| Paris publish biographs of him and the illustrated papers show him in a hundred ways. He holds the kilometer record for petroleum machines, but the Ser- polette vehicle retains the best ree- ord for speed, which fact, Mr. Van derbilt s¢ Hs him night and day, as he favors petrolemn fuel. There- » hectares juste chine to be speciai gardless of expense, embodying several of his own imy With the new automebie he intends to smash att dered a new mia- y built. r OVEMOTITS, reeords from one to ten kilometers, ‘grets that the break- wverybody ing of a driving sprecket threw Van- derbilt ont of the two days’ race or- ganized by the minister of agricul- ture to demonstrate the superiority of aleohol as a fuel, because his run- ning in the first few hours indicated that he the most likely to win. Another American — automobilist making his mark here is David Wolfe Bishop, a New York millionaire. TWO LIVES FOR EVERY TON Workmen in Amazon Country Ex- posed to Fearful Perils in Tak- ing Out the Rubber, William Page Bryan, United States minister to Irazil, has reported to the department of state that while rubber is abundant in the upper Am- azon country, with great chances of ample return for its exploitation, the climate and topography of this re- mote country are such as to imperil life even during the briefest sojourn for those unaccustomed to uninter- rupted equatorial heat. The moftal- ity-is conservatively reckoned at two lives for each tom of rubber ex- ported. Morgan Always Ready to Help, If King Alfonso of Spain is as bright a boy as they say he is, says the Chicago Inter Ocean, Mr. Morgan, of New York, will be glad to give him a lift when he begins the work of re- building his kingdom. An Epidemic, It is not much of an old voleano, says Record-Herald suggests that the em-| the Pittsburg Times, that is not “agi- peror might learn something to his advantage by searching the’ empress ated” under the stimulus of the tid- i from the center of the volcanic activity. Lonal Lerunan tied copitieiott he baat iy HOL SE INNOVATION. When You Go Into a Drug Store to get a bottle of Painkiller, examine it carefully to see if it is made by Lower Branch of Congress to Try a| Perry Davis, and don’t be persuaded ‘ , totake something ‘just as good” be- Voting Machine. eause it is a few cents cheaper. There — is only one Painkiller, “Perry Davis’.” Its Use Will Greatly Facilitate the| Large bottle S and 50 cents. Rasiness of the Be bers uch the Button and Electricity Does Rest, Shannon Holds the Balance. Kansas City, Mo., June 28.—The resnit of the Democratic primaries, It is proposed to install an electrical |held yesterday, shows that W. T. voting machine in the house of repres| Keniper and Joseph Shannon will t within }Control the County Convention Sat- juires 45] Urday, Shannon holds the balance y—The Mem- sentatives, by the aid of which the roll could be called or register five minutes, while now it r minutes, The adoption of the scheme Loaf power, wonld rob the filibuster ofall his ter) ‘The principal point of contention rors, and would enable members et ve {to-day is whether Frank P, Walsh ister th vd | Shall be allowed to return as a mem- return in five minutes, inst ber of the State Committee, The in- ing for their names to be reached In} dications this morning were very the regular order. ae much against Mr. Walsh's chances. Speaker Henderson has received from pars = . A Architect Woods a report in whieh the} “Frank Walsh is my personal latter deser device | friend,” said Shannon this morning. which, it is believed, will meet allthe/“T am wavering between love and sapoheee mn duty. [know my friends can re-eleet nthe member's desk, which is wv 1 ti hit iow The trically with a single] Walsh or turn him down, The ques- printing receiver for printing in three | thon that confronts me is whether to columns alphabetical lists of names of! favor friendship or polities. As far ave inayne ren pres-!as the political side of the question is ent.” and thr so] a sie ae ns to be teailldy clinerved by the menis| Concer 4d, there is only one thing to bere-for riving the totals of the th do, that isto turn down Walsh, be- classes of votes, Each) transmitter}eause he has formed an alliance with comprises a small ornamental easing | Mayor Reed, abo our inches square with a Ye ~ : abe ut four inches square with a ¥ “The Mayor is my personal and lock in its front fac alse two push ¢ : hukinne nee mat y | political enemy, He is also George the other “mistak M. Shelley's enemy. This fight isnot above the lock disclosing the letters against Walsh, from my point of 1 ge their rooms, re dd in committee work to san electrical It consists of a trans. comnected ¢ ed) “present” rnd an openin “O.8 view, but is against Reed. Therefore, When a member desires to vote he : : - inserts the key into the lock and turns Lam allied with Kemper to oppose it to the rivht, if he wishes te vete inf Reed, The Mayor is a candidate for the affirmative, or to the left if in the| Governor, The place to crush himis negative Au ON OS Jin Jackson county, and we who have . “OOK” from the onening: . is : lett aoe "heen unfairly treated by the Mayor 1) and brings te view the wo . : be . es athannae mn he stand to defeat him, To turn down Aft ing his vote hy the elee-{the Mayor means to turn down my trical device the member then with-/fpieng Walsh, and I believe that per- draws the kevo and the vote is rer ‘ R rawe the keys and the vote In rengyy nay friendship must be asecondary to he counted, 1f hefore the vote ts 3 eaunt: consideration, That is thesituation MALARIA ,,jstvt6 Means bad air, and whether it E'ypemmy fo Health comes from the low lands and oh marshes of the country, or the filthy sewers and drain pipes of the citig and towns, its effect upon the human system is the same. These atmospheric poisons are breathed into the lungs and taken at by the blood, and the foundation of some long, debilitating illness is 1 Chills and fever, chronic dyspepsia, torpid and enlarged liver, kidney troubles, jaundice and biliousness are frequently due to that invisible foe, Malaria. Noxious gases and unhealthy matter collect in the system because the liver and kidneys fail to act, and are poured into the blood current until it becomes so polluted and sluggish that the poisons literally break through the skin, and carbuncles, boils, abscesses, ulcers and various eruptions of an indolent character appear, depleting the system, and threatening life itself, The germs and poisons that so oppress and weaken the body and destroy the life-giving properties of the blood, rendering it thin and watery, must be overcome and carried out of the system before the patient can hope to get rid of Malaria and its effects. change in the b! SS increases almost from the first dose. or other mineral in S. S. S. lating them to vigorous, healthy action. possesses not only purifying but tonic properties, and the general health improves, and the appetite S. S. S, does this and quickly produces an entire lood, reaching every organ and stimu- Ss. S. Ss. There is no Mercury, Potash, Arsenic It is strictly and entirely a vegetable remedy. Write us about your case, and our physicians will gladly help you by , their advice to regain your health. Book on blood and skin diseases sent THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. Special Rates. Carthage, Mo, and return. Specia excursion leaving Butler about 8 o'clock ou June 25; special excursion returning leaves Carthage evening of same date, Rate $1.25 for round trip. E. C. ‘DERVOORT, , ; | On account of 4th of July, tickets on sale July 3 and July 4, good re- turning to and including July 7, 1902, at rate of one fare for round trip with minimum selling rate of 50¢ Mo.,, and return July ve good to return to July 18, $2.15 for round trip. Nevada Mo., and return, Inter- stute Soldiers Reunion Aug. 11 to | 16, Tickets on sale Aug. 12 to 16! BULuAMO. Will stand the present season of 1902 at my barns miles due east of butler, and 3-4 mile south of Montrose and Butler road and 31-3 miles west of Spruce, Description ard Pedigree:—Elamo is coal Diack, mealy nose and ts the rise of 15 nands high and he weighed 1200 pounds, was sired by the fine imported Jack direct trom Spain, brought to Cooper Co,, by Charles Leopard, The dam of Elamo was aso out of an imported Jack | and Black Knight dam owned by A. Felger, Clarksburg, Mo, A saddle stallion will be kept at the same stables, ‘Lerms:—$s to insure the money is due when Will stand good tor the Season, Aller service bas been ren Q@ any one selling, Wreding or about to remove mare forfeits insurance and money must be paid, ‘There isno better bred Jack in the state of Missouri, except his tather Who Was imported from spain, ihe peopie who patronized this jaca are Well pleased Wilh his costs and most of twem are coming back, Lhe value of umported stock is demonstrated by the fact, that breeders of thoroughbred cattle import stock to keep up the breea of their herds, Breeders should come early iu the morning or date iu the even- colt to stand and suck, tis foated, The colt ing. inclusive, Rate 90 cents for round | DEWITT McDANIEL, trip. “ ‘ mires Kansas City, Mo, and return.— | A Most Liberal Offer. June Lithand 16th, wood to return + Te welisthniowit. “mistake” returns t position Children often ery, not from pain, tovere ean bet but from hunger, although fed “Jabundantly, The trouble — arises inanition; their food is notassimilat- ed, but devoured, by worms, A few dose® of White’s Cream Vermifuge made twill destroy the worms, when the children will begin to thrive at once. Prive, 25 cents. —H, L. Tucker, te) the corres \ cor rection ike butter of the si hy pres The transmitter is possible construetion, tt —— nee ninvelving ! Fi ja Fi A Reed ectnaiedin Ruin Left in Storm's Trail, carried hy its and Indianapolis, June 26.—The tor- magnet for permitting the parts tore-|nado which swept across the state turn to their normal position when the | from northeast to southwest yester- Pichon thie apnnentin tor aallactin day was the most destructive storm the votes registered at the member's| that has visited the state since 1877, desk and for printing them in three |The path of destruction extended for Akad Mae ready for the Con-labout 15 miles and varied in width gressiona cord, comprises a steneil- Soe aa rm carrying triplicate alphabetion! list ot |{7OM three to six miles. Iu this path all the names of the members, Tf [factories were wrecked, houses un- member votes in the affirmative his|roofed and blown from their founda- Hal is printed arom Wile first an if | tions, windows and doors crushed by in the negative, from the second list , ; ° . yree > wind, Thy Hida: Wisthe- Voth ih crnatat a? the force of the wind, thousands of three lists rendy for the Record, acres Of growing Crops were torn to The totalizer is no more thana large | pieces or cut into shreds by the hail “fare” revister, except that the figures |and barns were demolished. Cattle are thrown on a dereen like a magic were killed and injured, machinery lantern, so as to be large enough to be] ROR ay . a = on from all parts of the house and | "88 Wrecked, forests were twisted and at the same time enable the disks to] bent and broken by fhe fury of the he made small enongh to turn at high|gale, and telegraph and telephone speed. After the totalizers have been poles were snapped off and the wires operated to give the total votes east 1 si i they ean be restated to earn team the scattered in confusion along the high- desk of the operator, ready for the] W4ys and the lines of railway. next vote. Great as the damage was and in- WOMAN TO EXPLORE AFRICA. tense the fury of the storm, it is re- saat markable that only two persons were Mra. Ruma 8, Cobleigh. Clubwoman,| killed—James Van Hoy, a young Will Pe » ‘ . Bes Rewetrate thy Wita man of 22, crushed in a falling barn Jungles Alone, », * at Pendleton, and James Bailey, a Mrs. Emma Shaw Cobleigh, a-elh-| farmer, caught inthe wreck at Me- woman of Boston who has attaimed | Cordsville, some fame as a writer, will start A conservative estimate of the alone on an exploring tour into the : wilds ationttval kitiea. whe silltalea total damage in the path of the two large trunks containing a ward-|Storm places it in the neighborhood robe composed largely of pongee. | of $1,000,000, From Zanzibar she will go to Mam- - a= baza, and inland by the lately com- The Thrust of a Lance pleted Neganda railway to Victoria]. se Nyanza. She will go from this lake | iS S¢areely more agonizing than the by caravan to the interior,’ recurrent pains in theabdomen which “Mrs. Cobleigh has been to the {follow the eating of improper food or south seas, Cuba, Australia and the | 0° free indulgence in ice-water. The Klondike, She is a member of the Na- | mmMediate cause of cramps and colic tional Geographical society. is often the distention of the bowels ae 4 ca by gas. Quick relief follows the use Nathan Hale’s Schoolhouse. of Perry Davis’ Painkiller. Careful The Connectient chapters of the | housekeepers give it the place of hon: Daughters of the American Revolu-| OT in the family medigine chest tion have succeeded, in cooperation with the sons, in their efforts to sécure The Cherokees Are Enrolled. the schoolhouse at New London in which the patriot, Nathan Hale, Muskogi .1.T., June 26.—All the taught after being graduated from |¢0rolling forces of the Dawes commis- Yale. The schoolhouse was in danger |sion whieh have been in the field for of being torn down, and the Lucretia | the past tro months are in to-day, Shaw chapter, of New London, started y ss a-ribecription, ilkt seilioh. tk heated and the enrollment of the Cherokees with $300, The house was removed to |i8 practically complete. Philip Rue- a site at the entrance of “The ancient- | ter, at the head of the enrolling de- est burying ground” last year, end the partment, stated to-day that there work of furnisting it for its various | were fewer than 200 Indians unac- uses has recently been completed. f h The upper story has been made a de-|counted for ass ied lee: the rolls. pository for colonial and revolution-| The date for final closing is July 1, ary relies, and the lower will be used | and it is believed that all will beinby oy ied room of the Lucretia |that time. Enrollment completed pirate Sons shows 38,500 Cherokees, who areeach entitled to 100 acres of land and the annuities of the tribe. C4 we fi signatare is on of the genuine _ Population of gen ‘The final census show that “Laxative Bromo-Quinine soma. 20 EER t DPS I ee a rele is received, The printing receiver Poor Show for Officehomiers. Cuba has less than $1,000,000 in its treasury, and the Chicago Record-Her- ald says that is, for awhile at least, go- Ing to be a poor country for profes- sional officeholders. to June 2ist in parties of ten or | more on one solid: ticket —$1.50 per capita, B.C, Vaxpervoort, Agent. | Adjourned After a Year. Richmond, Va.,. dune 26.—After singing “Auld Lang Syne,” the Vir- ginia Constitutional Convention this afternoon adjourned sine die, after | having been in session a year and | fourteen days. The body adopted a constitution which is expected to dis- franchise nearly all of the negroes of the State. It has cost the State of Virginia $176,000, The instrument goes into efiect July 10 next, and all the officials of the State must swear allegiance to it July 20, under penalty of having their office declared vacant. Stops the Cold and Works off the Cold. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No cure, no pay. Price 25 cents. Aged Couple Sought Altar. Pilot Grove, Mo., June 26.—Ernest Walje, aged 74 years, a wealthy farmer, returned home to-day with a wife, formerly Mrs. Augusta Ploge, aged 60, of South Omaha, whom he met through an advertisement ina matrimonial paper. “A tape worm eighteen feet long at least came on the scene after my taking two CASCARETS. This 1am sure has caused m: bad health for the past three years. Iam stiil taking Cascarets, the only cathartic worthy of notice by sensible people." GEO. W. BowLss, Baird, Miss. — » ATT our jammer raiders should tak advantage of the unprecedented club- bing otier we this year make, which | includes with this paper The Li | Stock Indicator, its special Farmers’ lustitute Editions and The Poultry Farmer, These three publications are the best of their class and should be in every farm home. ‘To them we add, tor local, county and general hews, our Own paper, aud make the price of the four one year only $1.25, Never before was so much superior reading matter offered fur so small an amount of money, ‘The three pa- pers named, which we club with our own, are well kuown throughout the West and commend themselves to the reader’s favorable attention up- on mere mention, ‘The Live stock Indicator is the great agriculvural and live stock paper of the West and Southwest; The Poultry Farmer is the most practical poultry paper for the farmer, while ‘he Special farm- ers’ Institute Editions ure the most practical publications for the promo- tion of good farming ever published, fake advantage o1 this preat offer, as it will hold good for a short time only. Samples of these papers may be examinea by caliing at tuis ottice, 5-6m A Most Liberal Offer. The St, Louis Mirror is a twenty- eight page paper, in magazine form, edited by William Marion Reedy, as- sisted by a staff of coutributorscom- prising the best_writers and literary authorities on all current subjects, social, religious, scientitic, financial, literary or artistic. ~The Mirror is a weekly review of CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant, Pal Taste Good. Good, Never Sicken, Weaken-of Gripe: lun Sor, e » CURE CONSTIPATION. .., Sterling Remedy Company, Chieago, Montreal, New York. 313 tin arnt pry nae ei NO-TO-BAC iecirteuBeaE. wate Notice of Final Settlement. Notice ie hereby given to all creditors, and Sil others interested in the estate of William Minnick, deceased, that i, KB Campbell, ad- ministrator of said estate, intend to make Ayal settlement thereof, at the next term of the Bates County Probate court, in Ba county, state of Missouri, to be held at Butler, Missouri, on the llth day of August, A. D.; 1, B CAMPBELL. Si-at Administrator. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all credit others interested in the estate of ree Boswell, deceased, thatI, $ A McDaniel ad- ministrator, of said estate, iniend to make inal settlement of said estate atthe next term of tire Bates county court, in ae wet —_ of erie to be held at 18801 on the Lit! ADAIR 8. A. Mebane Executor’s Notice, Notice is hereby given that letters mentary —— the estate of Roselar Jane pnoted a , have been granted to the undersign: ed, by the Bates county probate court, in Bates county, pen » bearing date the 1th day of from the date of ‘said letters, uded from any benefit of claims be not exhibited from the date of the publica- ‘on of this notice, they will be forever barred, : HENRY MUDD, St Executor, meu and affairs; 4 weasury of short stories and good p e i which the ra Sale bas an aee best music are ubly reviewed, and all topics of contemporary interest aref given careful attention. 1t is the ups to-date paper for the merchant, the teacher, the professional man, the student, the politician, us well as for woman and the home, If you will send us 10e, in silver or stamps, we will mail the Mirror to your address for ten weeks, THE Mirxor, St. Louis, Mo. _ Administrator's Notice. Notice is nereby given, thas levers of admin- istration wish Will an: William M, Urigga, deoouehe eens oe ithin one year Siter the date of said letters, or 4 precluded trum any beneut of pala eerirene vaumnisin aie aera exhibited within two ie bhey will be foreyer Darred. eee A. H BELL, 26-4¢ With will annexed, AU minisirator. Notice. ters, or they may be precluded from At of such estate; ana if said claims be hot ex~ thin two years trom the date publication of thie notice, they will taken barred, Sv-4t required to exhibit them $ thin one year from the dat of sal et |