The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 17, 1882, Page 6

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“0K AALI emke aa RR Rab Se ARG AMM UR iid SADA Re PR A The President has signed the Chinese bill. Tne whole ot the + sion of Parliament wi with Irish business. aes The dispatches announce taat the | leader of the Liberal party in Japan has been attacked by au assassin and dangerously wounded. A Kansas woman, learning that her husband was about to disinherit his son, took a revolver, killed the old man and then shot herself in or- der that the boy might enjoy the | property. The Land leagues of St. Louis unite with one voice in condemning the assassination of the secretary and Ireland. The an intensity of under secretary tor crime aroused feeling rarely equalled. has The Missouri redistricting bill was so good that the fair-minded Repub- licans could hardly vote against it, Bea Peat while the Hlinois bill so bad was that the -mmded Republicans could hardly yote for hat is the case in a nut-shell. ————_—————— The first result of Lord Frederick tion is the re- iy Cavendish’s assa appointment of Forste gary forIreland. The London 7imes says it is now thought bota Caved- dish and Burke deliberately selegted for slaughter. as chief secr were Minneapolis is now boasting of the completion of the largest flour- | ing mill inthe world at a cost of $800,000 and with a daily capacity of 5,000 barrels. For the last year the receipts ot wheat in Minneapolis exceeded those of Chicago or any other city except New York. The English government will offer a reward to any American furnishing a clew to the murderers ot Cavendish and Burke. The Manchester Guar- dian says the crime is traceable di- rectly to the Fenians, recruited large- ly from America. It was impossible that America should escape being charged with part of the responsi- bility of the crime. While the Missouri legislature ap- propriated $34.000, to pay the ex- penses of the extra se the ac- tual expense was only $26,000. This ion, x will be observed is jus* about one- | third what the Radical press confi- aently predicted. It is even than Democrats supposed it would require. The work of redistricting could not have been done at lar session at less cost, and coming as a disturbing etement in the way of regular legislation would have been likely to have cost the state much more than it has at this time when the whole attention of mem- bers could be given to the subject till disposed of. Besides being proper the extra session was un- questionably a measure of econ- omy. less The vousmess of cultivating oys- ters and restocking the exhaustable beds is an extensive one and re- quires to be well followed in order to meet the rapidly growing demand for the bivalves. Every morning regu- | Six business buildings burne at | Cairo yesterday morning. 1 John Holms, junior lord of the treasury, willsucceed Cavendish as secretary of the Treasury. The Soanish government is pre- bill | paring to institute trial by jury. Argument on the Guiteau of exceptions is getting long well as could be expected. as! The Brewers’ national conyention met in Washington yesterd Hamilton, permanent secretary to The husband of Mrs. Jennie E. t suit for a divorce. | the admiralty, has gone to Ireland to | Dixon has brough | take Burke’s place for six months. | ye Gen. Weaver denies that he has | have nominated e- | governor. The Illinois state board of under- president J. Republicans Penns. 2s thi Gen. been negotiating for a coalition b tween the Democrats and Green- writers has elected tor M. Hastord of Genesco. i backers., The London Zimes holds the | Land leaguers responsible for the | murders notwithstanding their dis- tornado at Mc.Allister in the Indian i territory 1s now reported at twenty- | | claimers. one. evtiz, Ex-Gov. Woodson has been ap- pointed judge of the Twelfth judic- Judge Sherman, de- A Boston woman yesterday cut the throats of her four children and attempted to kill herself. One of the children died. nih = ceased. _ ee A new election will be ordered tor The freight rates ‘a member to succeed Geo. Otto | brought their labors to a close yes- ial circuit, vic: commission Trevelyan, who has accepted the ap- | terday, sofar as St. Louis is con- | of chi secretary for | cerned. pointinent Ireland. ere Ettorts have been made to blow | up buildings in Northfield, Minn., | and nervous people connect the acts | with the raids of the James-Younger Chickasaw Guards of Memphis entered for the July competition Indianapolis. > are at A troop of the Third cavalry, en- route tothe Indian disturbances, is — = snowed in near Fort Fetterman, and A Columbus saloon-keeper kep | port of rations. | open Sunday, in defiance of the law, and sold 200 kegs of beer. He was fined $10 and imprisoned for six hours. { gung |e ing i A meeting, held at the city hall in Sedalia,adopted resolutions indorsing the Governor’s action in the removal 23 of Jesse James. | The Dublin police hope to catch The Democratic State Conven- | the assassins of Cavendish and Burke. | tion to nominate a candidate for | have been made. |Governor ot Texns will meet in | Several i = s | If the assassins are not discov ered it | Dallas, July 18th. arrests | must ainly indicate that they aay a eae a dd bane, = oy The Land leaguers will ask the y ed i government to proceed with the ar- ——— : It Howgate has gone on a coloni- | rears of rent bill simultaneously with | zing expedition to the North pole to | the new coercion measures. carry out his well-known theory the | eed FROM ALL AROUND. i news we have recently had of those who have gone in that direction im There is a large movement of em- ' that ships, would indicate the way of | igrants of a high class from Scotland to Manitoba. According to the late statistics Russian manufacturing industries rae 2 have doubled in twenty years. | The greatest excitement prevails Darwin, like Silurian Murchison, {in England and Ireland ever the bru- | W4S an ardent fox-hunter in his youth, ey ination nORIOMEL Seccetic and his keen observation of nature is poe ei ahs - Z us thought to have been aroused in the | Cavendishand Mr. Burke. The | chase. i Irish Land Leagues all over the Fora block of land comprising | United States are also denouncing | 4,917 square miles in the north of the transgressor will be as hard in | this case as proverbial accuracy re | quires it to be. j the affair in the bitterest language South Australia only $4.75 a mile | rewards tor er ofa = another of ¢ 58 square miles y $2.75, | the capture of the perpetrators of 5» ened miles only $3.75 fitietoul deed The total number of persons lately } is evicted by Lord Concurry was 400. ————$—$—$———— oe aes ren His grandfather was almost the last [llinois seems to have been place 1 political prisoner confined in the | along-side of Missouri by a dispen- | Tower of London—as an Irish pa- sation of Providence intended to ex- | triot. | hibit the blessings of Democracy by Dr. Euston Buckner of Greenville, | sharp contrast. The people of this | Miss., was a slave to opium. While State are moved to tervent prayers ot —— ctype ape ze ae 3 he eis gene AGE 3 = _| wandered into a neighbor’s house —— whenever they look | ang was killed in ihe 3 | across the river, and remark to what glar. | a multitude of evils a state is driven | when the Republican party makes Tuscaloosa, Ala., had an, eating | and administers its laws. match, in which the victor afé thirty- ' —_— seven biscuits in sixteen minutes. Yesterday afternoon the testof the | But biscuits are probably smail down | alee and force of the engine and there. = : |machinery at the Southwest Lead — peigeny pra aS ee BRE R E eee closely connected with journalism | and Zinc Smelting Works proved tol thanin any other country. Thiers } be satisfactory m every particular. i Was essentially a newspaper man | The engine was started and at once : : and have offered large i and ex-Premier Simon is to-day edi | the whole of the powerful machinery | tor of the Gaulois. Beaver for! BOOKER POWELL | c.C. DUKE, The number of deaths trom. the | = Ny bey PP | A. L, McBride, | al. L, Wolte, | Judge Booker Powell, Wm, E, Walton, The students of the University at| F.1. TYGARD - - - - a fleet of schooners leaves Hamp-! moved off in good shape. This en- ton Roads laden with the young | gine was manufactured by Messrs. ‘plants’? which grow in the mouth | Smith, Beggs & Rankins, of St. Louis, of the James river. The beds are | and is an So-horse power, but is ca- Accompanied by her children and a numerous suite, Princess Dolgor- ouki, the morganatic wite of the} county has removed his splendid late Czar, has arrived in Paris, and BUTLER NATIONAL “BANK, BUTLER. MO. Authorized Capital, $200,000 Capital Paid up 50,6000 T.W. CHILDS. Wn. E. WALTO DIRECTORS Dr. T. C. Boulware, W.. H. Irwin, | Judge J. H.S | Dr. N, L. C, H, Dutche. | John B. Ellis, A, H, Humphrey, Green W. Walton, T, W, Childs,4 R, D. Williams- sight, Loans money, buys and sells ex- | } | Receives Deposits subject to check at | iness. Correspondents. _ Merchants’ National Bank,.- Kansas City Valley National Bank,... i Donell, Lawson & Simpson--} OTHER STOCK HOLDERS: change, and does a general banking bus- | G, B, Hickman, S, Q. Dutcher, R, D, Williams, Frank Vonis, John Pharis, Henry Donovan, J, J, McKee, J, R, Estill, C, C. Duke. M, A, Maynard, Your business is 1espectfully solicited. BATES COUNTY National Bank. BUTLER, MO ORGANIZED IN 1871, Capitol paid in, - - $75,000. | $ 20.000 Surplus - -- - Large Vault, B urglar-Proof | Safe with Time Lock. We are prepared to doa general bank- | Ging business. Good-paper always in demand. Buy and sell exchange, receive depusits &c., &c. DIRECTORS. j Lewis Cheney, J.C. Clark, | Dr. Elliot Pyle Hon. J. B. Newberry | E. P. Henry, I. N. Mains, | Dr. J. Everingham, J. P. Edwards, | ‘ J. Ryan, W. J. Bard, | r.D. D. Wood, Jj. M. Patty, Geo. W. Miers, F. Coleman Smith. F. J. Tygard. OFFICERS. 3 burg] LEwIs CHENEY - - President. J.C.CLARK - - - - Vice President. Cashier. GB.LEW |} . Po ae | The boss livery man cf Bates | very prolific, and a man with tongs tan take out 100 bushels a day of the young oysters. They are abvut the size of half of an English walnut, | and the oysterman gets sixty cents a | bushel for them, making from $3 t $3 5 Sao does not differ greatly | ligence on the part of the com- $6aday. The sloops coast aw: with their loads to the of the Chesapeake bay, planting takes place. Each oyster-/ man has his water staked off and | the planting consists merely in scat- tering them in the bay about close enough to touch each other as they lie on the bottom. The planter has to wait two years before his crop is ready, and the planting must there- where the | * fore result in very sure growth or it would not pay to go to such expense. When grown the oysters are worth 5e cents a bushel at the water’s edge er $1 at the Baltimore market. The ease with which the mollusks are cultivated will probably prevent them trom becoming scarce at any time. upper waters). é E j might have saved Congress a good ideal of trouble by approving that pable | only fifteen pounds of steam.—[Rich | Hill Gazette. An Alabama man let a locomo- tive run over his hand for the pur- pose of suing the railroad company | for damages; but his scheme failed | through his inability to show neg- i en | The new anti-Chinese bill which the President has approved and is President | P@?Y- A French paper having intimated } rata fe marnage ot Mme. Damelas | . : . : : nee Bernhardt) is no marriage in ne: At suspends the tamigradon | France, it is retorted that gl a of Chinese laborers to this country | Hollander and her husband a Greek, | for a period ot ten years. It prohib- | and that the marriage is valid both its the courts to naturalize Chinese. |" Greece and Holland. The law does not go into effect till | a pees ofdinner at the late A g es : | Dean o y’s, a guests happened to! ninety =o sts passage; after | remark mua eminent ages had | that any Chinese laborer coming in- | died in six months. At that minute} to the country is to be removed by | the Dean, very deaf, rose and said direction of the President. All| «For these aoa all oe rcs j Chinamen now in the country, or | God’s holy name be praised.”’ et who may come within nmety days eas 2 S 4 ; are permitted to remain. The bil] |, Cimcinnatti has its first four-in-; seems acceptable to the people of hand drag, and describes it, of | California, in whose interest it was course, as the finest in the world. passed, and we may take it for grant- from the first oe; the Even the whip cost $50, the harness ed that the Chinese question will | OPC took a prize at a fair, and the | now disappear from our politics, for |™O™Mogram of the owner— a! ten vears at least. { theatre manager—is most i | ly multiplied. Saddle EXorses, | first-class livery stables. ‘Mules and Horses. ; cepted. gorgeous- | customers and never fails to meet | j therm- z { t up at the Hotel de Londres, i . ;s§ ofrunning the maci.nery with the Stic Cadtighoc. pees Livery w tock if GR into the | BRICK STABLE formerly oecupied by Nave & Wa scott, on North Main street, where | he will be always ready to meet the | demands of the pubiic for Carriages, and all equipments that are kept at every day in the week Sundays ex- ; Mr. Lewis is the prince of | clever fellows and is perfectly at | home in the hvery business.” He | always anticipates the wants ot his | Fieadache > Hestiessne>:, colored Uri: ed CONST!PATICN. eens TUTT'S PILLS are expecially adaptedtc | such cases, one dose effects sucha change of feeling as to astonish the sufferer. They Inere«s~ the Appetite, and cause the 3 the system is y to Fake on Stent. body io Fate ov Xtest... tem ts nourished. 2! Bi eee Digesti; are pro- duced. Price 5 ceuts. > Murray St., N. ¥. aan m TUTT’S HAIR DYE. Gray Hara or Wiitskrns chanced to 2 Goss’ ¥ icnofthis Dye. Itim- MUREAY ST.. NEW YORK. S SAMUAL of Valaahi id ere COm- elfectivi Ginger, Buchu, Mandrake, Stil! many of the best medicines known a: bined intoa medicine of such varied powers, asto makethe Greatest Blood and Strength fzstorer © FR Vapor Goox Stove. Adt-ess, BH. BUTTS 12 5. Ath Bt, BL Lowle, Be, ESTALLISHED OVER THIRTY YEARS. Literary Weekly Journal, NEITHER POLITICAL NOR SECTARIAN; Conducted by AL ION W. TOURGEE, author of **A_ Fool’s and,” ete., etc., assisted by Dan’l. G. Brin- ton and Robt. C. Davis. First NUMBEK IssuED FEBRUARY I 1583, The most distinguished authors and skillful artists, both American und En. glish, have been engaged by “Our Con. tinen The February numbers contain novels and stories by Helen Campbell, | Mrs. Alexander, E. P. Roe, Julian Haw- thorne, John Gibberton, R. H. Davis, etc; poems by Oscar Wilde, Louise Chandler Moulton, G. H. Boker, Sidney Lanier, G. P. Lathrop, Celia_Thaxter, etc; ente ing sketches by C. Le. Land, (Hans Breitman) D.C. (Ike Marvel), Felix Oswald, papers by President Porter of Y of Harvard, Provost Pepper, University f Pensylvania, etc; fashion notess by Kate Field; art illustrations by Louil | Tiffany; science bv Profs. Rothrock, Bar- | ber, etc; social etiquette by Mrs. Moul } ton; rural improvement by Hon. . G. | Northrop; tun and humor by C. H. Clark, (Max Adler) **Uncle Remus” and a host ot others. eautiful Mlustrations are a_leading {feature of ‘Our Continent.’? They are | the finest that art can produce and equal to the most perfect in the monthlies, Price 10 cents a number; $4.00 a year; $2.00 six months. Mailed free of pos- tage to any address. Specimen copy free, ewsdealers will find it to their inter est to present *‘Our Continent’’ to their | customers. Postmasters are imvited to take sub- scriptions- Liberal commissions. Book canvassers can add largely to theirincomes* without interfering with their regular business, by acting for ‘Our Continent.”’ Write for particulars to “OUK CONTINENT”. Philadel phia aw THE BOLD ROBBERY —OF— JESSIE JAMES, AT MM el ARCHIE Does not attect the price ot turniture in that place, where you can get a good -ralnut Bureau for $10; a breaktast table for $3.50; 6 chairs for $3.95; a good bed- stead for $2.40: a good rocking chair for 75 Cts; a safe tor $4.25; a cradle for $1.50, Also keep in stock meal and flour chests, and all kinds of furniture keptina first class store and the best sewing machine in the market. Oil cloth, carpets, curtains, wagons, trunks, valices, glass, chroquet sets and bird cages. My stock of under- taking goods is complete. Will repair all kinds of furniture and saw brackets for carpenters and builders. Now is the 'ime to get your pictures framed. the highest price tor walnut lumber — Bring your chickens to me and take pic- ture trames in return. Come ose and all and see my mammoth stock betore buying at other places.. W. E. Leonarp, - 1«-tf Archie, Mo. Order of Publication. State of Missouri, ss. County ef Bates, | In the Probate Court for the county of Bates, February term, 1882. ~ a (, Lusk and Wm. Kenney Adminis- ators of J. b. Lusk deceased, LE: aC. Lusk and Wm. Kenney Ad- ministrators of 1. B. Lusk deceased, pre- sent: to the court his petition, praying for an order for the sale of so much of the real estate of said deceased as will pay | and satisfy the remaining debts due by said estate, and yet unpaid tor want of sufficient assets, accompanied by the ac- counts, list and inventories required by law in such cases; on examination where- of it is ordered, that all persons inter- ested in the estate of said deceased be no- tified that application as aforesaid has been made, and unless the contrary be shown on or betore the first day of the next term of this court, to be held on the znd Monday ot May next, an order will be made tor the sale ot the whole, or so much of the real estate of said deceased as willbe sufficient for the payment of said debts; and it is further ordered, that this notice be published in some news- paper in this State, for four weeks before he next term of this court. | State of Missouri, ) BS. Countvr of Bates, j I,D.V- Brown judge and ex-offidio lerk of the Probate Court, held in and | for said county, hereby certify that the | toregoing is a true copy ot the original | order of publication therein referred to, | as the same appears of record in my of- | fice. Te : Witness my hand and «eal of |. . said court. Done at office in j Butler, this 11th day of April, A.D. 1882. D. V. Brown i Judge ot Probate, | st j Notice of Final settiement, | Notice is hereby given that [have filed my final settlement between myselt and ward Wm. M, \i hite, a minor and that f «‘alob Richardson guardian of said estate, intend to make final settiement thereof, at the next term of the Bates County Probate court, in Bates County, State ot Missouri, to be held at Eutler on the Sth, dav of May, 1882. (1g-4t-) Caos RICHARDSON, Guardian. | HARRIS OME TREATMEN? ' A certain core for © iS H ness, etc. | Zhe Recipes im my practice for 25 ant an Mlustraied beck of nt enee fall directwons | for selftreatment, SEN WE. Sddrese DR. T. WILLIAMS, $35 £ thaiez %4, Milwaabee, Tis. I will pay’

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