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The New Home Sew- KNOCK FOR TAFT. ing Machine. Is a household need in Bates county. Has been sold here for the past 25 years. ing an unwilling Congress to comply Has made good. on closer inspection is seen to be only Almost noiseless~-ball-bearing—light running—-will _}/# Spectacular finish to one of the most last almost a lifetime--sold on a positive guarantee. ||‘lever tricks of legislative jugglery | PRICE: « Take one home on TRIAL, mills its raw material at much reduc- A H CU LVER FURNITURE C0 been enshrined in the hearts of the . . \ r) poor, as his praises are now sung in Headquarters for Good Furniture. the counting houses of protected A DEMOCRATIC Adrian Journal Notes. George Argenbright sold one wag-| on load of hogs Saturday that brought | P him $177.40. He has sold $5,000) The Pennsyl State Conven- worth of hogs this year. That isa tion Made Capital of the | good showing for one man. Tariff. Harrisburg, Pa., Aug.—The Demo- cratic state convention was held here and unlike previous gatherings of the Democrats here, perfect harmony prevailed. The following ticket to be voted for in November was nomi- nated: Associate justice of the su- preme court, C. Larue Munson, of Williamsport; state treasurer, Former Congressman George W. Kipp, Towanda; auditor general, J. Wood Clark, Indiana. > Chairman A. Mitchell Palmer, of Stroudsburg, discussing national is- sues asserted that the Republican par- ty had failed to carry out its promises, adding: “The much heralded accomplish- ments of President Taft in compell- Ira E. Timmons, of Shawnee town- | ship, and Miss Myrtle Dunham of Elk- hart township, were united in mar- riage last Sunday. They are well| known young people in their respec- | tive communities. Harry Bridges and Essie Faedly two prominent young people of the} east country, were united in marriage | 4 Saturday evening. The Journal joins their many friends in wishing them al happy and prosperous journey through life. Kash Vansant and Bert Pulliam, W! who live in Cass county a few. miles machines we have recently east of Archie, were in the train r ian wreck that occured at Spokane, grade job and news press combined. Wash., last Saturday. Both are re- one-revolution cylinder press made, ported seriously injured but we have | not been able to learn wheather their injuries are likely to prove fatal or not. They are worthy gentlemen r with his demands for tariff reduction, and their many Missouri friends wish them a speedy recovery. Nick Wetherhold’s 14 year old son received injuries last Thursday which resulted in almost instant death. The boy had a team hitched to a drag, the horses became frightened and ran away dragging the boy to his death, The Weatherhold family is one of the most prominent in the Everett neigh- borhood and this sudden taking away of the only child at home was a great blow to the parents. | This week W. F. Wolfe a farmer of this neighborhood, brought a stalk of corn to this office, which grew on ever recorded in the annals of parlia- $18.00 mentary government. “Tf he had been but half as anxious $25.00 to save the pennies of the working man by giving them cheaper cotton $35.00 goods as he was to save the dollars of the steel trust by dumping into its ed expense, his name would have wealth.”” ELEVEN GOULD LINES UNIFIED. Greater Missouri Pacific Com- pany to Issue: $150,000,000 in Bonds. STOCKHOLDERS MEET IN ST. | LOUIS. | St. Louls Times, | The reorganization of the Missouri Pacific Railway and the other Gould! lines was effected at a meeting of the stockholders Friday at the company’s headquarters in St. Louis. | The new company will be known as the Missouri Pacific Railway Com- | pany. It will be incorporated under’) the laws of Missouri, Kansas and Ne- | braska, George J. Gould will remain | president of the whole system, and no change is anticipated in the per-) sonnel of the other officers and the | directorate. The change involves the consolida- | tion of the Gould lines under Missouri | Pacific control, a bond issue of at} least $150,000,000 and a capitalization of $240,000,000. A blanket mortgage | to cover all the properties will secure | the bond issue. | About $90,000,000, railroad officials | say, will be used to fund outstanding | indebtedness, while the remaining | $60,000,000 will be available for | working capital. Ready to Handle Bonds. The adoption of the plan of unifica- | tion paves the way for the early an-| nouncement of the scheme for gener- | al financial rehabilitation of the prop- | | ——— — . The platform adopted declares refund its outstanding bonds and pro-]against rebates, condemns the state vide for extensions and betterments| legislature for extravagance, recog- his farm, that beats the most exager-| ated Kansas corn record. Well form-| THE above is an illustration of ed kernels of corn growing on the| a tariff commission, advocates a state pension for Civil War veterans and favors the income tax and the adop- tion of a constitutional amendment. The Gould lines affected by the re- grain is compelled to seek a growing| have no difficuly in making the mails organization are: The Missouri Pacific Railway Com- pany, a consolidated corporation of the States of Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska. praene awe ep The Kansas & Colorado Pacific| , There's rejoicing in Fedora, Tenn. to ‘Show the world.”” | ’Twas a Glorious Victory. Railway Company, a consolidated cor-| Dr, King’s New Discovery is the talk poration of the State of Kansas. of the town for curing C. V. Pepper The Central Branch Railway Com-|of deadly lung hemorrhages. “I pany, a consolidated corporation of Could not work nor get about,” he the State of Kansas, writes, ‘‘and the doctors did me no ¥ ood, but, after using Dr. King’s The Rooks County Railroad Com-| New Discovery three weeks, I feel pany, a corporation of the State of|like a new man, and can do good 4 : Karteas, work again.” For weak, sore or dis-|at all times and under all circum-|=——=——===== 5 a _ [eased lungs, coughs and colds, hem-| stances tell the whole truth about his | pian : npn Sache gage nc aa orrhages, hay fever, lagrippe, asthma | members, alive or dead, will not oc- Die’ Kaew Mesh Ahenk b , or any bronchial affection it stands} .445y his pulpit more than one Sun-| Congressman Victor Murdock re- State of Kansas. unrivaled. Price 50c and $1.00, |CUPY D's pulp aha: eae fused to vote for th fe Kansas City & Southwestern Rail-|Trial bottle free. Sold and guar- day, and then he ps ea ects gil estesbob yr T Ra te gt hae way Company of Missouti, a corpor- | Mteed by F. T. Clay. sary to leave town in ahurry, The |port on the tariff bifl in the house ation of the State of Missouri. Without Honor in His Own|?"°® and the pulpit gothand in hand |along with some 19 other Republi- Kansas City & Southwestern Rail- with the white wash brushes and |cans. He states that the membership way Company, a corporation: of the Country. pleasant words, magnifying little vir- | of the house generally had nothing to Stateiot ianeas., From Judge’s Library, tues into big ones. The pulpit, the | do with the framing of the bill in the The Fort Scott Central Railway| ‘Do you know,” said the famous] Pen and the grave stone are the great first place and nothing to do with the Company, a consolidated corporation]™an with a reminiseent chuckle, saint-making triumvirate. And the ~ ete cee abe y Rwsadhe of the State of Kansas. “that it used to be the height of my}great minister went away looking| was simply an arrangement between Kanopolis & Kansas Central Rail-|ambition to get my name in the coun-] very thoughtful while the editor | Aldrich and one or two others in the way Company, a corporation of the|tY paper so old Tommy Jones would|turned to his work and told about senate and Joe Cannon anda couple Stata io’ Kineak: see it. But, alas!’’—and the great|the unsurpassing beauty of the bride, |of others in the house. = The Kansas Southwestern Railway |™an sighed—‘‘now that I suppose old while in fact she was as homely asa We have no doubt that Vic is cor- Company, a corporation of the State Tommy has the fence rail I used to| mud fence. rect in his statement. Under the rule of Kansas. whittle in the parlor as a relic, I do A preacher came at a newspaper success, not live; your newspapers would be y pape! We invite an inspection of our afailure. The editor replied: You , Times Office Improvement! wish to modestly call attention to the two modern, labor-saving added to our office equipment. The Babcock “Standard” Press is fairly represented in this cut. It is a high springs, tapeless delivery, patent back-up motion, in fact as near a perfect mechanism for printing as the ingenuity of man can give. which we have just installed in our office. It handles 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 necessitated by rapidly increasing} nizes the rights of workingmen to} tassel, Any soil that will grow corn| pages of any size newspaper sheet, trimming and pasting where necsssary business. form unions, condemns the new] ., polific that there is not room on| and delivering at the third or fourth fold, It handles the work neatly and Change Effects Eleven Lines. tariff, demands the establishment of] the stalk to contain it and the golden! satisfactorily and folds the sheets as fast as the press prints them, so that we place on the tassel is worth owning. | Besides the above expensive machinery we have added 500 pounds of Bates county has that quality of soil) new body type, several series of body and job type, a new electro and her people are ready at all times| head, with new headline type and large quantities of labor-saving slugs and brass rules, etc. In fact The Times, in its new quarters on the ground | floor, has a new and modern equipment throughout and is prepared to han- A man’s life has been saved, and now They Go Hand in Hand. dle any work that can possibly come to town, Withal, we have a man at the head of that department who is the equal of any ad or job printer in the man in this way: You editors do not state, and a corps of sober, industrious, painstaking workmen, courteous to tell the truth. Ifyou did you could all patrons and devoted to The Times’ interests and ambitious for her are right and the minister who will On the ground floor, south side square, two doors east of old }odation. It has the most perfect register of any with noiseless gripper motion and air | the No. 2 Eclipse Newspaper Folder, plant and the patronage of the public. of Cannon the ordinary congressman amounts to about as much as a glass of fresh water thrown into the At- lantic ocean. He might as well come home and fet Joe run the whole busi- ness to suit himself. He does that anyway.—Mail and Breeze. The Richards Progres says a large hog ran amuck on A. J. Tompkins’ farm Saturday night, and on Sunday morning he found seven of the ten cows in the barn lot injured by the big brute. One cow was partially disemboweled, but all were saved by the timely arrival of Dr. McGraw. The Leroy & Caney Valley Air Line | Pot care at all for his praise"” Railroad Company, a corporation of Do you know,”’ said old Tommy the State of Kansas. Jones in a philosophical mood, as he leaned on his plow handles talking to LOOKING BACKWARD. Bill Dodd, ‘that I used to think them erties. It is understood a banking | syndicate in New York, headed by | Kuhn, Loeb &Co., as syndicate.man- agers, have arranged with the rail-| way company to handle the $150,000,- 000 general mortgage 5 per cent bonds, which, from present indica- tions, will be introduced to the in- vesting public in the fall. Not less than $10,000,000 will be offered in this first allotment. The vote cast represented about 85 per cent of the outstanding stock, and there was no dissent from the propo- sition. : Vice President C. S. Clarke pre- — nm ~———Hellers we read-about in the papers ‘ was great men. But they ain’t. ~~. be ge a There’s that Billings boy that used to juarte n- hoe corn for me. Now ‘he’s gittin’ tury Ago-Aug. 13th, 1884. — [his name in the paper as often as any R. J. Starke, Judge Parkinson, of ’em. And shucks! He ain’t nothin’ John Willis, Sim Francisco, J. R. but a common, ordinary runt.” Simpson and Henry Livingston took The Crime of Idleness. in the big picnic at Monegaw Springs] idleness means trouble for any one. Saturday. Its the same with a liver. It We see from the Osceola Sun that|Causes constipation, headache, jaun- ; Col. Pace has been over there talk- ja hey bape pomee = imples “< Florsheim $5.00 Oxfords ing St. Louis, Emporia & Western ing’s New I pa ta ing fuis,_Empol Dr. King’s New Life. Pills soon ban- for men railroad. According to the Sun the|ish liver troubles and build up your Colonel thinks it only ‘a question of|health. 25c at F. T. Clay’s. $2.25 Misses’ and Children’s Ankle Strap Pumps AT COST sided, A. H. Calef, secretary and treasurer of the Missouri Pacific, came on from New York for the meeting, at which more than 30 stock- among Iron tir id short ti men ; eg rt time when the R led the Old “Blue Laws.” A fire Tuesday night of last week] Hartford, Conn., Aug. 9%—Both at Papinville destroyed the drug houses of the Connecticut Legislature store of J. W. Anderson. raga Br im, a so-called I At the political picnic at Lone Oak| | Dive Jaws” relating ‘to Sunday ob- a joint discussion was had by A.|S¢Tvance, which forbid almost ever | H demotrat Marti form of recreation and secular activ- 3 sapere Wir ity. The laws, which have been sel-} i 4 dom enforced, are relics-of enact- |] ments by the lawgiving body of 1722. : * Ladies’ Oxfords worth up | Crossett Oxfords for Men and George One of the laws specifically repeal- T. Leabo, t6 break jail. It was claim- person attend ed he hada: pistol, a gun barrel saw Scum t ome ok th A notin ot the death ot Miss Id | pronnite spore and secs nti i Our prices on Oxfords are lower now than at any previous time. The styles are good and Your Size is here. NOTE THE PRICES. Women’s sample oxfords worth $3.50 and $4.00 $1.60 Queen Quality Oxtords ' for Women BELOW COST.