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- - AFTER SCHWEIXrmTH. Kocktnni ThUiuk Step t Drive Out the Falfe flirwt. Rockford, 111.. Aug. 12. A mass meeting was held here to-night to de vise ways and means to drive Scbweinf urth, the counterfeit Christ out of the community. The best citizens of the town were present and several red hot speeches made in which the Lord of Oxford's heaven was denounced as an imposter.fraud, blasphemer and a whole vocabulary of evil names was poured upon him. A defender of the faith was there, j however, in the person of Apostle Grndy, who spoke in favor of the Beekmanites and declared that all of their doctrines and practices were founded upon the Bible, and he brought that book along to prove it. It was without avail, however, and now that the movement has started Schweinfurth will be fortunate if he does not leave town on a rail between two days and accompanied by some fragrant tar and wild goose feathers. The meeting passed resolutions to the effect that Schweinfurth must be driven forth from "Paradise" and a committee of prominent citizens was appointed to see that Rockford and Schweinfurth parted company and parted, as a speaker at the meeting said, "p. d. q." Thought He Was Her Husband. New York, Aug. 13. Abraham Kuschner is suing for a divorce, in Brooklyn, from Esther Kuschner. The co-respondent's name ia Fag an, and it is alleged that Mrs. Kuschner lived with him for three months in the belief that he was her husband. The case is on trial before Justice Bartlett. Marx Allenich of 38 Essex street and his wife were the only witnesses examined to day. They were sworn according to orthodox Jewish cus tom on the Tefillim. Mr. Allenich testified that Esther believed that Fagan was her husband, whom aha had not seen for four years. At first she did not credit Fagan when he represented himself as her husband, : but when he told her of certain in cidents in their lives which she be lieved were known only to her hus band, she believed his story and cepted him as her husband. justice Harriett tnougnt it im possible that the woman did not know her husband after four years' separation. No additional testimo ny of importance was taken, but counsel for the wife broadly hinted that there was a conspiracy against her and that Fagan had been induc ed to pretend that he was Mr. Kuschner, and furnished with infor mation to enable him to carry out the deception. The trial was ad journed for a week. Bueklen's Arnica Salve, The Best Salve in the world for Cute Bruises,Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum Fever sores, Tetter.Chapped Hands, Chlblalns Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Files, or no pa required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts per box For sale bv all druggists. Dying ot Hydrophobia. Marion, Ind., Aug. 13. Miss Mary Beekman, the 18-year-old daughter Eli Beekman, residing near Bangno, is a victim of hydrophobia. Five years ago she was bitten by a dog, and although the wound healed it has pained her at intervals since. Yesterday the young lady showed symptoms of the rabies, attacked members of the family and bit her self until tied to the bed. She is be lieved to be beyond recovery. Another Pliladelphia girl is to buy a titled foreigner. Miss Eath arine Bailey is her name, and her iuiure property is tnefrencH Count de Sibourg. In the matter of Pro curing husbands the Philadelphia girls are very enterprisinjr. Thev never let a good matrimonial oppor tunity escape them. The New Discovery. 6 ou have heard jour trienda and nngnoors taming about it. You may yourself be one. ot the trom personal experience Just how good - i . it you nave ever tried it, vou are one at its stannH tr:A. v. - - ...... .i.v.., ic cause the wonderful thing about It is, wu.c given airui, ur. King' New Discovery ever after holds a nlaJ. in the house. It you have never used it and should be affiicted with a couzh cold or any Throat, Lnng or Chest trouble, secure a hntti -- itatalrtiial. It is guaranteed e?ery tint . . . ' -"'v, v. uiuncv reiunaea. Trial Bot. ai tcj drugstore. eOALTCOAL! GOAL? 4 1-2 cents per bushel at the bank. Having leased land on Squirre Beck's farm about one half mile north west of Shobe, will say that I now have a large quantity of coal mined and for sale. This Coal will be sold at the bank at 4 cents per bushel. W. Shobe, Bates county, TO MY FRIENDS. As I carry a full and complete line of leneral CONSISTING OF DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, QUEENS WARE, GLASSWARE &C. And as I sell as cheap as any store west of the Mississippi i iver, I extend a cordial invitation to the citizens of Spruce township aud surround ing country to call and 6ee me. I will sell goods as cheap as they can be bought in the county, and guarantee satisfaction. J. H. MELTON, : Spruce, Mo. THE BEST BARGAINS EVER OFFERED IX SfcWING MCAHINES. A $45 SEWING MACHINE FOR $ 1 5 Including One Year's Subscription to this We nave made inch arrangements as enable as to oner me wnicago Singer Sewing Machines t lower rates thsa ever before for a Rood m" chine, and we offer onr readers the advantage of the aapreoedeuted bargains. f the 81ngr machines, and la a perfect fae-sim-Uelat shape, ornamentation and appearance. U the parts are mad to guage exactly the same as the Singer, and are constructed of pre etsely the same materials. The Vtmoat am la hymmImjI In V .-l .1 tttiMtsli used, sad only the vary beet qual ity 1 purchased. Each machine ia tbolronghly wall aaade and is lttad with the utmost nicety pwiHWHmi. .ui hv juhxuuv ! permiiieo Dy the Inspector to ga oat of the shop an til it has baas folly testedsnd proved to do perfect work. aaa ran ugn ana witneat noli. The Canoaao Sawrxa Mackixb has a rery lm portaat mprovement la a Loot Balance Wheel, so eons tructed as to permit windina- bobbins Wltnoat remoTlnf the work from the machine. JiB,?5 JJhel tnated by a solid 10 IBS Shaft ontaide of the halanui akul bM.i wi "?liBh J6V.Hn !? WM J.iTwii r iVl j iVv i"v; ""UV7 ngni . JiV uc mnonine is uaoie to tk- i . TV n en P' " we, so that the machine can not be operated by the treadle. m2 J n edle damp are made Telf Threading, which is a very great con- Each Machine, of Whatever Following Foot Hemmer Foot Kuffler Tucker Package ot Needles Check Spring 6 Hemmers, all different i widths i i Wrench i I Thread Cutter i I Binder i A. Bnhhinfc Throat Plate . , " 1 P, ' " ib .uuuiKu Thft llHvlnff Vh.l An Itil. m..kl.. I. .J ator. la made or th. t.i rm.tS.i PerloT style. It has veneered eerer. drop-leaf SO tJ?$2S5S preminm xne manufacturers warrant term mhin r r fline12?n.7.e".'J5?Ption'ls- OlTe name of freight station If different from post Tons of Whisky Burned. Louisville, Ky., Aug. 14. Twen ty-five thousand barrels of whiskv and the Kentuckey distillery burned this morning. Total loss $800,000. A colored man assisting the watchman was moving some barrels in one of the two ware houses, to reach a barrel that was leaking. Placing the lamp on the floor so that he could better attend to his work, he climed on top of one of the piles. A mis-step started the leaking barrel down and when it struck the lamp the whisky and oil together started a frightful blaze. The Kentucky distillery was own ed by Julins Barkhouse & Co., and was located on Story avenue, be tween Adams and Ohio streets For almost a month it had been shut down and at the time of the fire no body was about but the watchman, his assistant and the office clerks. The distillery which contained much valuable machinery, extended from the street almost 250 feet The rear part was frame, while the front was brick, three stories high. All the buildings were destroyed. As not a single barrel of whisky was saved, the loss on whiskv alone giving to each barrel a value of $20 reaches to half a million. The loss was almost, if not entirely, covered by insurance. Julius Barkhouse, the president of the company, is now in Europe. He was notified of the fire. Louis Barkhouse, the secretary and treae- furer, is at Macinac. He was tele graphed the news. R JENKINS, Mo. Merchandise Paper. Premium No. 120. bolt passing through a collar secarely pinned ..uui.. i.. . . i f o"ough to release the or ten, where it is held Dy a stop-pin until the do meddled win Dy children, the bolt can be Style, is Furnished with the Attachments. Screw Driver Guage Guaire Screw Oil-can, filled with oil Instruction Book i . . . . . w uo ms Bunpiest, easieBt runmog ana most "u".,.u'?u H?f table. 4 end drawer, and center awfnr drawer for W'yeri "bscriber. to this paper, or for Sent by freight, receiver to pay charges office address. A naturalist who is someting of a philosopher says: The time may come when politics will mean all that is noble and good; when a small boy will break an apple in two and give his little sister the bigger half; when a tramp will work, and a stray dog won't bite; but the day will nev er dawn when a fly can tickle drowsy man's nose without making him jump. Kay Thank Her Start. 4 The narrow esrarw nr Mrs R V of Elkhart, Ind., from a premature death : 1 r t 1 . . . .... is wuuucnui. one stares tnat "tor raven' tv years my heart troubled1 me greatly, I became worse. Hail invih.ntuiuii. short breath, fluttering; could not sleep in, imi uwuu mucn pain in areasi. suouiucr anu sromacn. Ankles 6we lied Had much heaHarhe anj itinlnu. Treatment did me no good, until I tried Dr Miles' New Heart Cure and Restor ative Nervine... The first bottle helped me, ana i was soon virtually cured. Tor sale at H L Tucker's drug store. A fine nook on the heart and nerves free. The "Wheeling Intelligencer gets at the sue of the late South Ameri can war in this way. It says: "Im agine two wards of Wheeling al war and you can appreciate the frightful force of the rumpus be tween Guatemala and San Salvador Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Alexander Campbell, of Riverside, Cal., has purchased and shipped to California 40.000 Florida seedlings, which he intends budding with the Riverside navel orange. $3? J W HIS FIRST CASE. A Tale of the Bluegrass Country, a Bill and Other Things. There lives in one of the finest coun ties of Kentucky an aristocratic old gentleman, who, though brave at a time of physical trouble, has nevsr succeeded in summoning sufficient courage to shove him into the reck- essness of paying a debt. Once the colonel was in debt to a grocer that lived in a neighboring village. He must have been a new comer, for none of the "old timers" would trust the old gentleman. One morning, just after the colonel had sat down on the gallery to smoke, j grocer came to the gate and shoutte 'Halloa' "Get down and come right in suh," the colonel called, getting up and cordially advancing to meet the visitor. "I am delighted to see you this bright morning," said the host when he had shown the grocer into the house. "You don't know me, I recon," he grocer responded, giving the old man a peculiar look out of his keen eyes of trade. "Oh, most assuredly. You are the grocer." "You bet. Did you get that bill or rather, the twenty bills I sent you." "1 presume so, but 1 cannot say positively who sent them. I get so many favors of the kind that I hard ly know whence they come." "I am a man of business an' I want my money without any palar- verin . Do vou understand?" "Perfectly, suh, and I cannot blame you. Business cannot be operated without money." "But are you goin' to pay me?" "I can't pay you now." "When can you?" "Let's see; this is the 10th of the month, ain't it?" That's what it is." "Ah, ha! and tomorrow will be the 11th. "Thats the size of it', 'Well, you come round between the 11th and the first of next month." "Will you pay me then?" "No, I dont think I shall." "Then what's the use of my corn- in?" "None that I can see." "Not much. What I want is my money, and I am going to have it or know the reason why." "I don't mind giving you the reas on, ine reason appears to be tnat you'll not get the money. Now look here: I have always made it a point to look with favor on the methods of life established by other men. You have yonr rules and I have mine, but because our rules differ, is no reason that we should fall out. One of your rules is to collect every cent that is due you. All right. One of my rules is not tojpay a cent. All right" "No, it's not all right; you bet your life it ain't. You've simply got to pony up." "isy tne way, let me give you a piece of advice with regard to the bill "Shall I!" "Yes." "Well, then, sue me." "I'll do it; vou bet your life on that" The grocer brought suit. The colonel promptly appeared. The case went to trial and tne grocer got judgement for $7. "I want my money now," said the grocer. Ana jl want mine tne colonel re plied. "Yours! I don't owe you any. thing." "Oh, yes. You see,"the old man ad ded"the courts many years ago gave me license as a lawyer, and I'll be hanged if you haven't given me my first case. Here is the license." ""Why,Ihaven'tgivenyou a case." "un, yes. l advised you to sue me and you did so. My fee is $10." "Mr. Billings," said the judge (and he also owed the grocer), you will have to pay this amount." He did so closed his store, 6hot the judges cow and ran away. At kansaw Traveler. Uncle Sam finds journalism rath er expensive. The Congressional Record costs him about $250,000 a year. A Bounty on Gophers. Hartington, Neb., August 12. An affair that will materially retard the growth of the "woman suffrage" idea in Nebraska has just occurred in Dakota county. County clerk Two hig recently made a business trip east, and duding his absence the robe of official duties fell upon the shoulders of Miss Lou Hirsch, his charming deputy. A day or two after his departure James Teller, an odd character in the county, drove up to the clerk's office with a lot of ground squirrel scalps and ears, and represented to the innocent and confiding lady that they were the ears of wolves which he had slaughtered in the county. The unsuspecting lady official prompty paid into the honest ap pearing hunter's hands the legal bounty for wolf scrips S3 a head amounting in all to considerable over 100. Teller immediately im migrated to South Dakota. It was not until the return of Clerk Two hir that the trick was discovered and Sheriff Ryan was sent after the wiley hunter. Teller wos arrested at Elk Point, Dakota, and was brought back and lodcred in the county lail. As a re sult of this affair a voter's league is being organized tnat will require candidates to pledge themselves not to employ women deputies until they can tell the digerence between a go pher's hide and wolf's ear. It Don't Pay to use uncertain means when suffer ing from diseases of the liver, blood or lungs, such as billiousness or "liver complaint" skin diseases. scroiuious sores or swellings, or from lung scrofula (commonly known as consumption of the lungs) when Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is guaranteed to cure all these affections, if taken in time, or money paid for it will be promptly refunded. " $500 offered for an incurable case of catarrh in the head, by the pro prietors of Dr. Sage's Remedy. Fic Leaf iu Fall Dress With the Chins If no military success has been achieved by the Chin field force, much interesting information has been collected relative to the nu merous tribes inhabiting the Chin Mountains. Besides the Chins them selves, they comprise Tindus, Chin- boos, Welchungs and Chinboks. j Nearly every tribe speaks a different dialect. From notes made by Lieu tenant Rainey, commanding the Chin frontier levy, and published by the government, it appears that gome of these tribes are almost as barbarous and ignorant as the tribes of Central Africa. They wear scarce ly any clothes, and the historical fig leaf accurately represents the full dress of some of the villagers. Their dwellings have no furniture; they have no laws, no religion and no government,excpt an incomplete Tillage system. Medical science and surgery are absolutely unknown. Their habits are repulsively filth. Certain tribes are confirmed drunk ards, consuming great quantities of beer brewed by themselves. They, however, display remarkable mechan ical ingenuity, constructing wonder ful bridges on the cantilever princi ple. . In some tribes the sole arms are small knives and arrows. They are skillful archers, kilhiier ti&rers and bears at eighty yards. The wo men of all the tribes have their faces hideously tattooed to prevent their being carried off by the Burmans. People are frequently quite well satisfied when they have paid $2.50 to $5.00 for a few menu cards, but a full pocket book can do more. Mrs. Leland Stanford recently paid $85 for fifty cards for one of her swell dinner parties. HO CORE EYE-GLASSES HITCHELUO SORE, WEAK, & l-FLA'JED EYES; :tndudnp LongSigbtwdin. A Rtstof- utg the Sight of tb0 Old. Caret Tear Drops, ErainrttHon.$tyt - Tasrors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Usbtf, an rttorens fern mirnn mxinncm. Also, eqnaUy effiemrtooa whoa used la maladies, such as Cleera. Ferae 0 Tasaara. Salt atkeaaa, Saras, Pile. J Wbarerer Inflammation exists, MMTCMMMX9 ISr.rgmay baBaedtoadTanUfa. O 8U brail Dracsteta rntHS Ceats.: 3 ; Improved after the first r:.( JAMES C. DDNLAP, ATLANTA. . This Gentleman's wife was cured of a rlnwtl tuUbcU of sciatica by taking eM q HUNNICUTT'S Infallible for UHEl M ATIsM In all Ita torn. Kidney AfTectiuus. Kciema, Ovspepiia. Genu! ; ilis, Uuuuiug Sores, Clcers, Tetter, and all SSL : eases of Uie skin and blood. It is a strict! vimurator. and a line alt prat K-a iinMT it tones up mo system, t-rice sj per bottle h Hrnircrl.td S4.ni! fur htrnk nsv p.... . i. 4 -- OO - .lCWflVI HUNN1CUTT MEDICINE CO. ATLANTA. CI. MaKCFACTCBF.RII OT HrXNKTTT'l TBBOAt A Li LUAU LUluL 4 3 Potter IEros. BRICK LIVERY STABLE. An ample supply of Buggies. Carriages, Phaetons, Drummer Wagons, &c. This is one of the best equipped Sta bles in this section of the state. First Class Rigs Fcmrrrua. At any hour, day or night on tht most reasonable terms. Farmers desiring to put up their horses ' when in the city will find tins h barn the most convenient in . . town. POTTER BEOS. JfpFItLDS REGULATOIl W ' mviJL ION JiOOC 1 TO Notice of FinalSetUement AtiM li hmhT til all others interested in the estate John W. Abar nathy deceased, that I. h administrator C saidestatA. fntAnil In mlr 4tn.l thereof, at the next term of the Probst Cont ji oi Bisaonn, m be mm 4. W. EHXU, Administrator Trustee's Sale. Whereas Charles 8kinner, by his deed af trust dated May is lis7, and recorded ia tfes ao page ma eoaTerea w of Missouri, to-wit: Batler, together with the mill eoaaaoalT kaowa as toe Empire MlUs, with the koUat, mgtnf sad aU the machinery, scales sad tool and all the apportenancea thereto baiaaxtac, which coaTeyance was made ta trust to a. cure the psyment of one certaia ote fully e serlbed la said deed of toast, which Is aow ast due aad unpaid. Now therefore, at the xeqasst of the legal holder of said aote aad aarsavd ta the conditions of said deed of trust, I aid proceed to sell the above described premises at public rsndne, to the highest bidder tor cask at the east front door of the court bouse, la tb city of Butler, county of Bates and state af Missouri, on Saturday, September 6th,1890, between the hoars of nine o'clock la the fix boob and five o'clock In the afternoon of that day, for the purposes of satisfying said debt, Interest aad cost. . g. CATROX. K-4t Trustee. Ail or Dioek twenty-nine on in tha dtr af Time Table. L. &S DIVISION. TRAIXS RUNNING XORTH. No. 304, passenger 4:47 a. " 3", local 8:30 " 302,pas6enger 3:15 p.m. TRAIXS RUKXIKG SOUTH. No. 301, passenger 12 :3c p. ta. " 311, local 5:00 " " 33t passenger 9:40 Sr. L. & E. DIVISION. No. 343 mixed, leaves '6:45 a- - Jit i'3 Vm E. K. CARNES, Agent. John Atkison's R 1 k ream flpiiyy. Oyer Ir ETeringhsm's store rooms West Side - Butler, Mo. 1 1 CP M A I D . m w flklar