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lubricated by using Sloan’s Sold by all Dealers d-the Muscles-and-Joints— Liniment Price 25¢ 50c & $1.00 ‘Sloaris Treatise On The Horse” Sent Free Address Dr. Earl S.Sloan,Boston,Mass. YOUNG SUITOR KILLED BY HIS GIRL’S FATHER. Shoots Man He Had Warned. A D ~years—old-and unmarried, was shot and instantly killed late Sunday night at Southwest City, Mo. Onthe charge of having killed Oyler, A. A. McGhee was arrested and tak- en to the Pineville jail. Oyler, who is @ son of a merchant at Southwest City, had been atten- tive to McGhee’s daughter, against the wishes of her father. McGhee had repeatedly warned the young man to refrain from calling on his daughter. Discovering that she had made an engagement to meet Oyler, the fath- erfollowed her througb the townand outinto the suburbs, At the rall- ‘ THE JAPANESE BLUEJACKET.| oid Rubbers for His Ration Would Not Hold an American Boy in the Navy a Day. From the Few York Times. The uniform of the Japanese blue- jacket is almost identical with that, of the English mar-of-war’s men, Their pay, Lowever, is very small, and ranges from about $4 @ month to $16 amonth. Their highest paid petty officer receives a lower wage than does the apprentice tn the American navy, and the ration which fs served to the Japanese bluejacket would not bold an American boy fn io the form of money. suggested that the i yal service overnight. The | ae Ds ee ee } to be sold for what it would bring. American navy ration {s the envy of ‘ihe venilh ae f Yet every other dian-of War's man fo the _— = aOmae rere’ etait ing, evento the principal himself. world, sud is ia every respect equal er Apparently the collection was made to the fuod which one finds on the table of the average New Yorker. at the psychological moment, before Pe i: _, | housecleaning had set in, for the ag- The Japanese ration consists almost \ Sold frbt b h wholly of rice, with an allowance of gregavion Of ord rubbers: brougus to bread twice a week The rout'ne of shipboard lifs is very much the sume, but one notices striking livtle differences here and there, For example, the captain of an American man-of-war would promptly bring to court-martialany deck officer wao was found smoking whileon duty. The Japanese officers plactdly smoke their cigarette atany time they wish. Unlike the American ships, the Jap- @nese carry no marines, Then, too, their small bofts are entirely differ ent, their steam launches being lorg- walsted, speedy craft, and which seem to have been built originally for torpedo boat work. 'lheirsmall- er boats are most peculiar, the type of crafts which corresponds with the dinghy of the American service, being propelled by a set of quadruplesculls, worked from cleats rigged overside, for the lot. Arch Falor and ing: old home, Arch fo early last Thursday cross. The people of To Eliminate Consumption. Omaha, May 27.—‘‘In twenty-five years tuberculosis will be eliminated from the human race, sald Dr. Nicholas Senn, surgeon general of Illinois, hera. ‘The methods for the over anyhow. After Graduation Exercises. From the Boston Transcript, Through united action and a 'ittle foresight the pupils of the Harvard school, fa Charleston, have a school tund all ready to meet their gradua- tion expenses, and nota cent of tt was coutributed by puptls or parents Knowing that the class needed money to buy a class picture, indi- vidual photographs, and perhaps to ; pay something towards costumes that might be needed Principal Henry C. Parker some time in April bring in such old rubber shoes as they could collect, the accumulation the school welghed 289 pounds, A sympathetle junk dealer pald $22.72 The Metz Times relates the follow- Five head of mules that Arch Fa- lor recently purchased near Mound- ville, got away from him the first of last week and started back for their Fred Brown went {in search of them mules were located on an island in the Marmaton bottoms, about 12 miles south of Metz, where they had been for three days. After swim- ming his horse a distance of about three quarters of a mile Arch came to Two Mile creek which he had to hood warned him ofthe danger of missing the bridge while the water was high, but Arch decided to cross stream a few feet the horse and Arch went clear out of sight. Coming to the top barely long enough to get road station she is said to have met Oyler, and the two strolled arm in arm down the railroad track in the darkness. McGhee, it is charged, armed him- self with a shotgun and, when a fa vorable opportunity offered iteelf, shot Oyler. As the young man tot- tered and fell, McGhee is sald to have pulled the trigger of the second bar- rei. The first charge of shot evidently lodged in Oyler’s skull, tearing a great hole at the base of the brain, while wounds in the face show where some of the shot penetrated. The second charge of shot lodged in Oyler’s legs. News of the shooting spread rapid- ly, a coroner’s jury was empaneled and an inquest held. The verdict was that Oyler had come to hisdeath from the effects of gunshot wounds {nfiteted by a weapon {n the hands of A. A. McGhee. My Best Friend, Alexander Benton who lives on Ru- ral Route 1,Fort Edward,N. Y.,says; “Dr. King’s New Discovery is my best earthly friend. Itcured meof asthma six years ago. It has also perform- ed a wonderful cure of inciplené con- sumption for my son’s wife. The first bottle ended the terrible cough, and this accomplished, the other symptoms left one by one, until she was perfectly well. Dr. King’s New Discovery’s power over coughs and colds {s simply marvelous.” No oth- er remedy has ever equaled tt. Fully guaranteed by F. T. Clay, druggist. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. pupils should His Mules. company with Young Breeders’ Opportunity. Missouri’s young cattle breeders have agreat futurein storefor them. Many magnificent herds of pure bred cattle are being built up but the de- mand for really good cattle is far in excess of the supply. Publicity at this time is necessary to give the de- sired impetus to cattle improvement and the young breeders can do their business and theindustry great good by exhibiting at the State Fair. Of course some of the old established breaders will have their herds on ex- hibit there and the beginners may have e hard fight to land anywhere within the prize Ine, But the ol morning. The that nelghbor- going into the prevention of diseases, which have wonderfully developed in the last few years,” sald the surgeon, “lead meto believe that the outlook fcr the elimination of the ‘white plague’ is very good Thoze affected will be {solated, and ‘f thigds done preventa- tives way be used until cousumptioa will beau thing of the past. “The grest work to be done isin medicine, for surgery has reached al- most its limit of perfection, Simpll- fication in surgery will develop, but I believe that no great discovery in that branch of the profession remains to be made. As the medical profes sound. only bea question of time when pic The outlook then is that the human | perpetratora of race will be better physically thanit}and the victim’s ever has been.” tinusd to live in the TWICE-A-WEEK BEPUBLIC | 4°°Ompanied always Three Years For One Dollars, The Twice-A-Week Republic, of St Louie, Mo., the oldest and best known sem!-weekly newspaper in the United Stutes, is makiog theremark- he flew at them with he offer is good until May 31, 1907, only. Tell your friends of this op portunity to get a semt-weekly three whole years for $1. If you areal- ready 8 subscriber, your order will|gendarmes in the gin J when your present subscription : — a dollar before all orders to Tine Republte, St. i if Mo. their breath they went down again. This was repeated the third time when Arch left his horse and pulled for the bridge. This he finally reach- ed, and then after considerable trouble be mansyed to get the horse’s reln and led him outsafe and Arch says they may call that stream Two Mile creek, but he {s sat- isfied 1 {s not over forty feet deep at the point where he went down. Tho mules were all brought back. A Dog Detective. In 1829 @ peasant was found mur- sion io late years bas discovered the | dered {n a wood in the Department causes of the worst disease, ft will|of the Lotre, France, with his dog ritting near the body. ventuiives will be generally used.|could at first be gained as to the dog. Io February, 1837, two men, apparently travelers, stopped at the house, requesting sheiter from the storm, which was granted; but no sooner had she dog seen them than would not be pacified. As they were able subscription offer of turee full | quitting the house one of them said for $1—312 eight page papers |to the other: ‘‘That rascally dog has not forgotten us!” This raleed the suspicion of the widow who over- heard it, and she applied to the be accepted now for 4 renewal to be- | who followed and arrested the men. After a long examination one of the criminals contessed —From “A Few! Dog Stories,” by Ralph Neville in| The Outing Magasine for June. fellows had the same experience at the start, they persevered and climb- ed tothe top. Makes start by ex hibiting at least one animal—your best—at the nextexhibitlon, October 511, and it will be worth more to you than the cost even though you do do not win any ribbons. This, of course, on assumption that you are a stayer, that you intend to remain in-the breeding business —Ruraliss. A little Kodol taken occasionally, especially after eating will relieve sour stomach, belching and heart- burn. J.B. Jones, of Newport, Tenn., says three bottles of Kodol cured him of dyspepsia. I ts sold here by Clay’s drug store. vi a . Boe An Intrepid Soul the crime, | Pépublic. widow con-| Never wasa manoso unfortunate same cottage, by the faithfal | personal controversies as our esteem- ed Preaident, Theodore Roosevelt. ment over one incident died down great fury, and neighborhood, | President onthe one hand, indig 10 the controve Southwest Missouri Merchant Goods Box and Talked to 'g Joplin, Mo., May 27—George| Mounted on a dry goods box so iu the frequency and nature of his No sooner has the national cxcite- than he {s embrotled in another similar one, Always, or nearly al- ways, the question of veracity is raieed, and by himeelf. Now itis a captain of industry; ogain, an oppo- nent on a rival ticket; another time an ex-Senator, a former associate in the world of finance, letters or sport- But always the lesue ie the same, the nantly and vehemently aseerting the accuracy of his own views, the virtue of his own position, the falsity and|cars may not bé ran, as it will take|had put poison in the wells, by order} violinist. Miss Nora Is wickedness of thoee of bis opponent controversy. ng EVA BOOTH’S FIRST SPEECH The Plucky Girl Stood on a Dry Outcasts. From the World. thatshe could reach the level of her audience. Eva Booth made her first speech to men and women of thegut- ter, with red-bloated faces and sneer- ing eyes. “It is worth your life to venture into that neighborhood!” the police argued, when she planned an excur- sion into the worst section of Lon- don. * She said nothing, but the next day @ ragged young woman eelling matches made her way into thedeep- est of those scowling baunte of vice. Barred from the neighborhood in her real character, she hid her identity under the rags of the slums and min- gled with the people of the under- world as one of themeelves. For months she lived the life of the alleys and the attics, selling packets of matches and crumpled flowers to maintain her disguise—the while ministering to the sick and the dying, filling exhausted larders, giving a helping hand to the fallen, averting angry blows of drunken husbands and fathers. When she announced her 1eal character, so great was the impression she had made that the Salvation army meeting, in the heart of the most notorlous district in London, was packed. Her reward came in the title that followed her back to her home, “the angel of the slums,” and a siege of brain fever that brought her daily to death’s door, A resolute young woman one day appeared at the superintendent’s of- fice of one of the most dangerous of the Cornish mines with a request that brought him to his feet tn amazement, “I would ifke to go down Into the shaft to talk to the men,” she sald quietly. The epeaker was Eva Booth. “Why, even a strong man would hesitate to make the descent,” the superlatendent cried. “My dear young lady—” “I know the risk, and am willing to takeit,” Interrupted his visitor, with asmile, “You will not actually for- bid me, surely?” The superintendent stared—and surrendered, At the mouth of the mine he made arrangements to accompany her. During the descent a hitch was ex- perienced in thelowering of the bask- et. The two occupants were hung, swaying in pitch darkness between the top of theshafs and the firm ground, hundreds of feet below. For & moment a frightful death hovered before them. Ota sudden the girl’s volce came clear and sweet in the words of the old, old hymn, “Nearer, My God, to Thee, Nearer to Thee!” There was not a tremor in the tones. When the rope ran smoothly again and the basket reached the first convert. And in the shadowy mine corridors, deep in the bowels of the earth, she gained a score of others. Kodol for indigestion and dyspep- sia not only digests what you eat, it tones the stomach and adds strength to the whole body. Makes rich, pure blood. Kodol is made in conformity to the National Pure Food and Drug Law. ‘Sold by Clay’s drug store. Divert Current and Stop Frisco Cars. San Francisco, May 27.—A!l of the United Ratflroads trolley lines north of Market streot were put out ofcom- mission by miscreants who managed by means cfa wire or chain to con- nect a high-power transmission wiro with the trolley wire on Church street betweon Fifteenth and Sixt cath strests, The instant effect of divert ing the 13,200 volts of electric cur- rent to the trolley wire was a fright- fal explosion in the Turk and Fill- moreéubstation, The switchboard, which is connect- ed with all of the trolley lines, oper- ated by the company north of Mark- et street, burned out and the attend- ing electrical display struck conster- nation and fear to the hearts of hundreds of the people {n the neigh- borhood. It is remarkable that the trouble was not attended by lose of life.- The eome time to get the | The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of Cit atnren nate sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this, All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare< goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend, cenuinE CASTORIA Atways Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought In:‘Use For Over 30 Years. ‘THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TY MURRAY STREET, NEW YORE CITY. Trustee’s Sale, CHURCH IS LOOTED BY ARMY OF 1,500. Followed by Deposed Ohio Priest Strip Building of All Port- able Property. Youngstown, O, May 27,—Set in motion by the ringing of the church bell, an army of men, women and chiiren marched on St. Anthony’s Catholic Church, invaded the build- ing and looted it. Except a cabinet organ and the bell, everything portable was remov- ed before the arrival of a wagon load of police, pending an attempt to solve the church fight by legal ac- tion. The police fear a clash cf the contending factions, Fifteen hun- dred persons were in the raiding force, members and adherents of the faction of the church at West Federal and Calvin streets, which followed Rev. Louls Lops when he was ex- communicated by Bishop Horstmann following a protest of 4 part of the parishioners, nearly all of whom are Italians, against the priest selected by the Bishop. The members of this faction have purchased property and will erect a church building in which the followers of Father Lops will worship as an independent Catholic organization. The looters of the church insist they acted on the advice of attor- ; —Phey—declared that they are! entitled to the property removed, contending that thelr money pur- chased {t originally and that they will have it to equip the new church. The church fight has waged for months. A short time ago three priests from Cleveland, representing Bishop Hortsman, came here to per- suade Father Lops to step out peace- ably, but when they were sighted, two men who had been perched in the belfry of the church building rang the bell and in a few minutes acrowd of nearly 1,000 people, mostly parish- foners, had gathered. Men in the steel mills nearby quit work and rushed to the scene. They thought the visiting priests were bent on re- moving Father Lops by force A squad of police rescued the priests. Services were conducted for weeks uoder an armed guard, @ score of parishioners with guns surrounded the church, fearing an attempt to re- move their pastor. Agitator Goes to Prison. Whereas, W. E, Minton and Minnie R, Min- ton, his wite, by their deed of trust dated Aug. let, 1906, and filed for record Aug. 16, 1906, the office of the recorder of deeds of Bates coun- iy Missouri, and duly recorded therein in ook No, 163 ge 545 conveying to John Russell, trustee, the following described land in Bates County, Missouri. to-wit: All of the south half of the southeast quarter of section (24) twenty-four and the north half of the northeast quarter of section (25) twenty- Bye. township (38) thirty-eight, range (29) twen- nine, » ada bruce rams ef ae jain promissory note da ugnet lei Tayable to Christina Hibbs for the sum of $600.0 due on or before May Ist, 1907, with interest from date at the rate of 6 per cent per annum. all as described in eaid deed of trust, And whereas said John Russell, trustee, as afore-, said has removed from the State of Missouri ‘and has refused to act aa trustee, now there- fore I, C, F. nalified, and a successer of said John Russell as trustee under the terms of aaid deed of trust. And whereas default has been made in payment 0 said principal note and interest thereon, ay the same together with interest thereon I due and unpaid. Now, thei at of the legal owner and holder of sai note and in lance with as sheriff of Bates county, Missouri, and 61 cessor of the sald John Kussell, trustee, und the terms of said deed of trust I will sell the | above described land at public vendue to the highest bidder at the court house door in But- ler, Bates County, Missouri, for cash on the: 8th day of June, 1907, between the hours of 9:00 o’elock in the forenoon and 6:00 o’clock ia the afternoon of said day to satisfy the said in debtedness and the costs of executing thi trust. Cc, F. BEARD, 2-4 Sheriff and Trustee. SMART SET FAVORS THE VIOLIN. |Young Women Recognize lis Possibilities for Decora- tive Purposes. From the New York Press. What could be @ more attrdctive picture than a truly pretty woman with a violin under her chin? It!s amazing that so few artists use so | beautiful a pose for portrait work. Not only does it show forth real beauty, but it makes a woman of merely ordinary comeliness appear to have loveliness above the aver- age. Society girls are beginning to realize the possibilities of the violin for decorative as well as musical pur- poses, and the number of them en- gaged in study of the instrument in- creases yearly. One cf the newest recruits to the¥ ranks of bow and string is Miss Au- gust Warner Miller, daughter of, Warner Miller. She is a busy young woman these days, most of her time being occupied by the thousand and one preliminaries incidental to- th coveted position of bride-elect, fori on the first of the mbfith she fs to, give her hand to Loring Townsend Hildreth in her father’s home in | Herkimer. Yet she makes time \ day for several hours of practice, and already she has attained a degree o Lahore, India, May27.—The Hindu| ability as a maker of music that fe} agitator who recently attempted to| as agreeable to ber friends as It: ‘ stir the natives of the Punjab to|be gratifying to herself. Miss Mi revolution by circulating stories that} inclines toward the technique the stories of death by plague were| Ysaye, and those who haveh untrue and that the real cause of the| play oftenest of late assert deaths of more than 10,000 natives|carve outs high place for h wae due to driaking water from wells} the musical world, if she polsoned by order of the govern-|vote herself to d op b ment, was seatenced to two yearaim- | professional lines. The etarésl prisoninent at hard labor. daughter {s not the only girt An accomplice, who said that he| has made as progre to aX of the government, was sentonced to|er, and Mise Thtodora 3 Be