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Our popular dentist, Dr. J.T. Hull] _GIRPS“ASSAULTED BY MOB. POKIOOIIIIS SSS SSS S SS 2 j TURNIP SEED } favored us with his subscription. NY ° } | Mrs. Gertrude McClelland’s paper \is changed from Joplin to Oklahoma From PLant Seep Co., fresh 1903 Crowd Repulses Rescuing Officers With § | crop. Purple Top strap leaf and pur- | City. Gaun-Oee Viclies Malivealed: WHEAT CORN ple top white Globe. Miss Rosa Garner returned home| (maha, Neb., July 28 —Twoprom- 5 j 3 DEACON BROS. & CO. |from Oklahoma, where she had been|inent Omaha girls, Alice Gard and| OATS, FLAX, | teaching. > Dora Osborne, aged 16 years old Col. James N. Sharp, democratic each, were taken from escorts near : ite for Mound, said the| Benson about 11 o’clock lastevening TIMOTHY SEED i - URLLLLLLRALLLLSLLSLS SSS e Gemocrata are largely tor Folk. {04 terribly maltreated by a crowd : . : born girl $ @ | J. W. Ennis, of Summit, called on iar akan ghaueat aad = : Hi Cattaraugus ” Tuesday. He said the sentiment, so aod eurvive the shock. L ' 4 far as he could learn, was for Folk. a & ” The girls, with Guy Buckles and t | M. M. Carroll, a prominent and} Louis Valien, spent the evening at ¥ % == POCKET KNIVES. _¥t |intortstte ot unt won xg pr n'a me aot Any time you have any to P ship, was a pleasant on Tues- | 10:30. cars in front o' ni * , day. He said the sentiment of the | were crowded, and the four walkedin offer give us a chance. t . ; people, so faras he had heard ex-/the direction of Benson, to catch a N u No matter what om "ra = -_ ip , preseed, is for Folk for governor. car. When a considerable distance WILL G. REE D : ® = same grade of steel. ts what makes them Jas. S. Franklin, the notorious|*om the park, they were accosted by $ k ¥ T Iimade %@ t h said é H so popular with the boys. They are all ma : 1G _|‘‘Jim,”who is enjoying the seclusion sl iu! ia Se eal AMORETT, MO. x of Wardlows best English cutlery steel. It | 0! 8 popular institution, to parties in asec y fe ; : the ith them. Si: i % follows that our two blade Cattaraugus 25¢ 9g hie clase, at Lansing, Kan., sends us} cee ep afey Nand ovet.| SSSSSSSSS SS SS SSS SSS SSS & ‘entia bolas fast A d a B0c, Te remittance for Tue Times. Jim likes |/¥mped from hadi X nife ho ag : on an edge asa oUc, : x to keep posted on the doings of But. eves m o/ in m Ww &% or $1.00 knife, the difference being in style, ler people. girl was tightly gagmed Ballard Items. REAL ESTATS TRANSFERS. & finish and number of blades. We warrant 4 handkerchief, Miss Gard succeeded rt us 4 Charles Ward, aged 23 years, of/in breaking from her captors, aftera] A protracted meeting ia in progress bias tos Peer — | every Cattaraugus knife no matter what the ” agra oe, bso a desperate fight, and in the confusion | at Oak Hill, conducted by Rev. Mor: | "Sn mavens 9 4 eet, How. 3 price. shot himee urday evening 4NC) she managed to escape. She ran to| gan. ard, #125, DEACON BROS. & CO. g om vl He fey aa & pistol in| 4 wire fence, and there lay down in| Miss Addie Keirsey visited her ae ee ee 8 pantspocket, when In some man- the grass, where the men failed to find her. Officers from Benson arrived about 2 o’clock and attempted to rescue the Osborne girl, but were repulsed with a shotgun in the hands of the assaulters. Reinforced by armed citizens, the girl was finally rescued. Wesley Wiseman and August Barrett have been held on a charge of criminal as- brother, Lon, and family last week. | Geo Fitzgeralds to A & Bearce 40 A seo6, Mise Louie Mount, formerly of this | Hudson, 8500, neighborhvod, now of Warrensburg, Lehre nny + eae is visiting her uncle, Robt, Hill, and| BF Richards to Ann R Vaughan lote 6, 7 and family. 8 Scott's Ad, Butler, 6450, Mrs. Day and children attended the ‘i See dact aa eens lng Chautauqua at Clinton and are now 2 B Woods to Tobitha Ford 120 A see 12, . Shawnee, 8300, ge ypc phony heal 47,8 Ruel o Hayden Ray pt bik 6, Bate, tended the Chautauqua Sunday and Aprretnient tfateeeiemes report a delightful time. Mound Items, Miss Maude Robinson Is visiting in ements De Ne heswae wees SSSESSSSESSSESSSESSESSESSSESSS | per it was discharged and the bullet ————— sed through his bowels. Boys will read of this accident, but it will not deter them, and they will still carry the deadly gun in their pockets so as to be a brave man, R.N, Wright, better known to his many friends as “Uncle Bobbie” de parted this life at his homein Mound township on last Wednesday, July 22nd, at the ripe old age of 84 years, LL LL LLL LLP PPL LPP POLL OPP? D. M. Sechler Top Buggies, Road Wagons, Carriages and Spring Wagons. Our Buggies out run and outwear others. We sell a reliable make, built The weather past week very hot. i : He wasa native Virginian, served een Independence. We are needi i t for service as well as looks. with distinction in the confederate Watched Them Burn. George Keirsey sports a newbuggy| RJ. Willane Co. are baling hay That reminds us of Buggy Paints, we sell the army. Was married to Miss Lucy} London, July 28.—The St. Petere-| 40d Chris Greer a new carriage. for R. M. Wilcox. Roller, Oct. 22, 1863, and came to Missouri in 1865. Seven children burg correspondent of the Daily Mail] F. 1. Teeter came home from Wash- sends a report to the effect that near Detroit White Lead Co’s Rogers Varnish J. W. Packer is shipping hay to ington, D. C, to be with his father, | the kK, (, market. : finish, and were born to this marriage, five of] the village of Schalajifa, in the dis-|C. N Teeter, who is very sick. The hog market is improving. R, ) HARNESS whom survive. Uncle Bobbie Wright) trict of the Don, thirty-three female] Zeddy Barker will teach the Bryan| Mf, Wilcox eays he will pay five cents , was a good man, beloved by his} field laborers were burned to death | school the coming year. provided he can get a car load. F Buford & George, Oak Tanned. neighbors, and his was @ useful life.Jin a barn where they had locked} Miss Lukie Bradley, of Sheridan,|” Geo, Walls, who was cotta ' He left a widow and five grown chil-| themselves to escape molestation by| Wyoming, is visiting home folks. | shot in the hand by a toy pistol in FARM WAGONS, dren. Funeral services were conduct-| male laborers, who in revenge fired| ‘Theicecream supper atSam Budd’s i hy the hands of a emall boy on the 4th of July, is improving slowly. ed from the Christian church in Adrian by Elder West and interment was made in Adrian cemetery. Saturday night given for the benefit of Antioch church was well attended. Hay harvest is in full blast. With George Garten and sisters visited | soagonable weather the farmere will Miss Mayme Kenney Sunday. be through in about ten days. Hay On account of conflicting dates, is quite light in some places, the Ballard ball boys called in their} 4, Smizer and Judge long will supper last Saturday night. The | .ommence threshing next week. supper will be given Thursday night, | sfiss Anna Radcliff, of Passaic, who July 30. Everybody invited. ,, | has been quite sick for the past two “PANBY.” (weeks, is improving slowly. Uncle John McCann was stricken with a severe pain over his left exe, and Dr. Boulware has been treating it. Itissome better, but the sight is almost gone. Mrs. M. A. Harlow has been con- fined to her home the past two weeks. Jim Chambers and family Sundayed at Ike Walls’. We went over to visit our nicce, ! Mra. J. E. Crowder, while there we | the barn and watched the burning without heeding the shrieks of the victims. Studebaker, Kentucky, Mandt. Deacon Bros. & Co. Hardware and Grocery House. : DBGBSHSGBSSAS SSSSSEKSAGS BY For Sale or Trade. { Mrs. W. H. Morris went to Har- Five room house and four lots in risonville yesterday to visit her Fast Butler, for sale or trade. A mother and sister. good bargain. Enquire of Mrs. M. | VY. Carroll, Butler. The funeral of Mrs. Kinney, wife of Lon Kinney, now residing in Day county, Oklahoma, took place from the residence of her parents, Mr. and Mra. 8. R. Tyler, this city, Monday afternoon. Deceased had been afflict- ed with consumption for the past two or three years, and a short time ago came home to visit. She was 25 years of age and leaves one child. Mr. Kinney came up from Oklahoma and was with his wife when the end came, She was conscious almost within a minute of her death She was reconciled to the fact that she had but a short time to live and left direction as to the distribution of presents she had received when mar- ried, and also as to the care of her child. Mr. Kinney returned to his Oklahoma home yesterday, taking with him the sympathy of many 300 Typhoid Cases in Kansas City. Kansas City, Mo., July 25.—The typhoid situation in Kansas City is becoming serious, principally asa result of the flood. There are sixty- nine cases in the five leading hospi- tals, and it is estimated that the ag- gregate number of cases in town is 302. More than twenty have occurred within a few days and a dozen of the hospital patients cannot live. In almost every case the doctors are of the opinion that the typhoid fever is due to drinking infected water. BEEBE ES SbbRBEEBSRRSBEED LLLLLE LLLP PPP PL LLLP LPL PPP??? veer Night Was Her Terror. “I would cough nearly all night long,” writes Mrs. Charles Applegate of Alexandria, Ind., i could hardly get any sleep I bad con sumptcon so bad that if I walked a block I would cough frightfully and spit blood, but, when all other med- cine faited, three $1.00 bottles of King’s New Discovery wholly cured me andI gained 58 pounds.” Its absolutely guaranteed to curecoughs / 4 “ colds, Lauer, bronchitis and all | ‘0k @ look at Richard Harper’s ele- throat and lung troubles. Price 50c' 8@0t new home, and $1. Trial bottles free at H. L. J. B. Rice has all his hay in stack Tucker’s drug store. and in his barn. He is a rustler from Dan Embree came in Wednesday | from Ballard. just as we go to press | for a casket for Chas. N, Teeter who | died at his home early Wednesday morning. A suitable obituary later. Farmers, Insure your property with the) Prairie Farmers Mutual Fire Insur- | ance Co. C. Hirst, See'y, | 27-3m Papinville, Mo. hee Riley Gilbert, wife andlittle daugh- = tor Elsie, of northeast Bates, spent — Batea County —Farsers:=Whert the last of thea week with Mrs. G.’s you sell your farm, re invest the parents, Mr. and Mra, DL. Edring- money in the cheaper and better | ton. Mr. Gilbert favored us_pleas- } jones in a sony hela Gas Belt. | antly on Saturday and renewed. ‘or particulars address, Missouri Merchants Fleeced. Columbia, Mo., July 27.-A strang- er known as George Shafer is badly wanted by the authorities of Colum- bia, Mexico and other towns. He visited Columbia and bought merch- Tur Ow Bett Lanp Co., Burt Davis, arrested on a warrant | friends in the loss of his wife. andise from the merchants, giving away back in the Kentucky hills, | 36-4 Coffeyville, Kan. | sworn out by Fleetwood Thomas,! ‘The soldier boys returned home them checks larger than the amount This Man Refused a Pension. Bro, Stewart will not fill his regu- nt = weeenneeminenaninnniaietions charging Davis with associating and we a da ‘ tate Gon- of the purchases, which he ordered — lar appointment at Mt. Vernon next | An all steel HAY PRESS forsale. | keeping company with a lewd wo-| teary, meur St, "hes Soaks shipped to Centralia, He is said to] Washington, July 27.—Walter| sunday week, as he goes to Buckner, i New last year. Geo. I. Lyxcu. | man, is serving a six months’ term iat. The boys report having have worked thesamegamein Mexico | Vail, a citizen of Indiana, has won) Jackson county, to assist Bro. the fame in civil life which was denied him on the battlefield. Mr. Vail was a soldier who served his country in the Civil war. He read about the millions who had applied and receiv- ed pensions and concluded that he was entitled to the perquisite along with the others. He made formal application and the papers shortly would have been made out. Mr. Vail evidently thought it all over with the result that the following letter ad- dressed to Eugene F. Ware, pension commissioner, was posted on the bulletin board of the bureau this af- ternoon: “Kindly withdraw and cancel all| Poseata, had badly casket papers in relation to my claims for Born, to the wife of J. W. Packer, \- penrion. I do not need it and the! . pany girl. All parties doing well. 38 services rendered do not, in my judg-| Mire. Wm, Kennedy came in from, P ment, entitle me to it—WaLTER southwest Texas last week to visit | Van, Company B, Thirty-cighth In- | por daughter, Mrs. J. W. Packer. She diana Infantry. says they raise lote of cattle and and Centralia. The man is about 45 years old and weighs about 150 pounds. He has sandy mustache and hair sprinkled with gray. When fleecing the mer- chants he talks with a German accent but at other times speats perfect English. He left Columbia on the west bound Wabash. 38-1m in jail for his conduct. Davis, who Secicigemmneninatiniceneoneene has a police record and is not a stranger to jail life, assaulted Thomas on North Main street for having him arrested and in turn Thomas stabbed him in the side. Physically Thomas is no match’for Davis. Campbell in a protracted meeting. Elder Ishmael will commence protracted meeting this week and will continue a week, Everybody come and hear some good sermons. We want everybody who is inter- ested in caring for thegraves of their relatives and friends to meet at the Ike Concklin cemetery on Monday, August 10th, toconfer with J. D. Woody as to the best means of beautifying their graves, We are having some very valuable work done on some of our bridges. . The north approach of the had a most pleasant time and enjoyed their outing. Craw- ford’s band 26 pieces was mustered in during the encampment. The sol- diers will not receive their pay for about ten days. It was the original intention to have the men paid in the field, but the treasury department at Washington was slow in issuing a check, and the money did not arrive in time. The troops will get pay for ten days service. It will take in the neighborhood of $24,000 to meet the payroll. The total expense of the encampment to the government will be somewhere near $35,000. Gen. Clark and the four regimental colonels held a conference Saturday afternoon and arranged for the for- mation of a provisional regiment to’ ‘attend the Fort Riley manepvers in October. The regiment,will be made Wall street was badly shaken up Friday by the suspension of the two big financial firms of Talbot J. Tay- lor & Co. and W. L. Stow & Co. and a big slump in stocks was the result. Jno. F. Herrell, clerk of the county court, was in Adrian last Friday looking after business matters and shaking hands with his many friends. John is performing the duties of the office in a satisfactory manner. He isalwayea welcome visitor in Adrian, where he resided for more than fifteen years.—Adrian Journal. A Jasper county farmer paid a tribute to the literary talent of a Newton real estate man. Hedecided to sell his place and got an agent to write a notice. When the agent read the notice to him, he said: The editor ofan exchange being asked if he eversaw a bald headed women, replied in the following vein; “No we never did; nor did we ever see & woman waltzing sround town in her shirt sleeves witha cigar in her mouth, and running in to every saloon she saw. We have never seen & woman go fishing with a bot- tle in her pocket, sit on the damp ground all day and come home yet night drauk. Nor did we ever see 8 woman yauk off her coat end say she conld whipany man in town!) Overflow Land in Osage. Rich Hill Review, 22. The various township assessors of Bates county are now at work com- pleting their liste for the annual re- turn for taxation purposes. Mr. A. C. Sampson, of this township, has just completed bis list of overflow lands. The number of acres in Osage township is 6,840, and ite assessed value is $27,000, or a little more than $4 per acre for taxation pur- poses, yet if our County Drainage “Read that again”. After a second | God bless her, she’s not built. that {UP of three companies from each of —_—__—_—— horses in Texas. reading he sald, “believe I'll not | way.” the First, Second and Third regi- oo ia paca oc work the Killed 827, Injured u,46, ~ | Johnnie Eichler and Dayton Rice sell, I’ve been looking for a place of ments, two companies from the) ext few years, the chances are most were out on their new whee The township board of Mt. Pleas- of this land will actually be worth aut township has purchased. @ rock from $50 to $100 per acre. Washington, July 27.—The report of the interstate commerce commis- sion on railroad accidents in the Fourth regiment and one from the Sixth battalion, all under command Col. Sharp says he intends to sow % that kind all my life and didn’t a big crop of wheat this fall, t know Ihad it until you described making extensive preparations for their reunion to be held at Lake Park Springs commencing August 10th, and contiuing until the 16th. It ie believed this will be the largeet meeting of the kind ever -held in Southwest Missourl. A number of killed and 11,481 injured. There noted speakers will be present from were 1,650 ¢ ent 1.10) de different parte of Missouri and Kan- sues cag prema ene.—Nevada Post. : pomp pong pont A rock crusher for every township in the county would be a valuableaddi- tion to the machinery now on hand and would, if the citizens were inclin- ed to work a little, insure the much needed good roads. We see no rea- Poor man! He can’t help it, ts bilious. He pn liver pill—Ayer’s Pills, re bls directly on the lve, killed and 2,834 injured in train ac- ecidents. Other kinds of accident, including those sustained by em- ployees while at work, and by pas sengersin getting on and off cars, the aggregate casualties 827 it to me.” a a ‘tn taeeet Dates ae . United States for the three months u ‘ The officers of the Inter-State Clark . the full 16 ending March 381 last shows thatdur- ? Grand Army eodation have ng Car are toe ol erage—5161 8 Mother's Ear flintser suse 800 prvose rev Cross. 0 man Pittsburg, Kan., July 28.— Flor. ence Weatlall, aged 14, committed suicide at her home by shooting herself in the head. He