The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 20, 1887, Page 1

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ET ating uints of Xam se be pany The ° given gent, ’Gister AUrTing tice ty € com- if the Butler as fo —[_— — yoL. LX. iene Table Mo. Pacific R.R (Lexixaton & SouTHERN BRANCH.) roth, inday, Mz} Commencing 5 trai nti! turther notice tlews : GOING NORTil. —Texas Express- wp po aT apieae = “ 1y4-Accommodation . GOING SOUTH. ‘ —Teras Express % x. c. Express. sos “ 1ny—Accommodation e Ss. L. & Dis GOING WEST. will le , BUTLER. MISSOURI, WEDNESDAY JULY 20, 1887. om COLD STATISTICS Fius s Regarding the Presi en stow Course. | Mewe Favors Show: Veterans Than Washingten, July 14.—Yhe fol-| | ke wing article has been prepared to- dey by official authority i 3 inquiries made by prominent Giand Army men in the west, who are d are dis No. Miner tetion if BS eae * os | posed to treat the adiuinistration ie GOING EA: : fairly in the matter of peneicus, cou No, 146-—Pascenger. . 7:335eM {cerning which efforts are being | « 148—Accomodation . 7 tOF M) made to grossly misrepresent the All passenger trains make direct con ae . Copy of f section tor St. Louis and all points east | president: Texasand all points south, Colorado, “Cleveland and the soldiers. A 1 inal revoke, 8 from | ———- & ten lers go and at uM 6 Com ¢ ie court propery — ercharg at find tion cag] nm days) n carTy »ployed: ures velo . California and all points west and north- ‘idence. | gest, For rates and other intormation apply to E, K. Carnes. Agent. E. CATTERLIN DEPUTY GEO. CIVIL ENGINEER. ys left with prompt at e RA Atki County, Mo. Lawyers. K LAWYER Will practic all courte Ail iegal busines stretiy attended to, Office over Bates Co. Na doual Bank, Butler, Mo ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORN:YS AT LAW. Office West Side town’s Drug Store. ans Holcoms & SMITH County Surveyor East Side Butler Bates number of partisans and a few claim agents in Washington are leboring | te convince the country thai Pyresi- | dent Cleveland is an enemy to union | seldiers and opposed to Hberal pen- Let us see what the sion legislation re charee true often records President disclose ou this subject. IST7 | Grant from ISTO to inclusive, | a period of eight vears. approved , |; 484 private pension acts, President Hayes from 1 i i jx period of four you spproved 303 private pension acis; Presidents | = ———= | Garfield and Arthur from 1ss2 i W. Ea. TUC \ Ik Dy x. 1885 inclusive, a period of four years, © |approved 736 private pension acts: DENTIST, President Cleveland un TSS6 to — 1887 inclusive. 2 period of only two} BUTLER, MISSOURI. - i years, approved 863 private pen sion acts. This is 77 more than Presidents Grant and Hayes ap proved in 12. year: L 127 re than Presidents Gi dand Arthur approved in four years. These tig | ~} ures are taken from the statutes of | the United States and are correct i A FINE Ri MADE. | What else has President Cleve- land done for the unio: id their widows, orphans and depend First, he has apy L ent relatives’ int LAWYERS ed more ex-uniou soldiers to office BUTLER, MO. Oftice front room over Bates SEES Sk Bee ad ag Ssity Notionat Benx. than ee other eo *s He ap = am woved the act of March 1a, 1586, |.S. Francisco. S. P. Fraxcisco. |! hich j : f to aioe: RANCISCO BROS Attorneys at which ic re USEC os = per month Law, Butler, Mo., will practi in | the pension of 79,989 widows the courts of Bates and _ adjoining | minors and dependent — relatives tounties. F rompt attention given to col- . . " 1 iections. Office over Wright & Glorius’ | of union soldiers of the late war. tardware store. 79 | He approved the act of August 4, Will practice in Bates and adjoinin sounties, in the Appellate Court at Kansa’ Mity, and in the Supreme Court at Jeffer ‘on City. itt Physicians. ‘J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Orrick—E. Max We ast Side Square, ove iner’s, ButLer, Mo. ]. M. Curisty, w.'H. BaLiary DRS, CHRISTY & BALLARD, | HOMOBUPATHIC PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, Office, tront room over P.O. All. cal 1886, which increases the pension of cf the late from $37 to war from 324 to $30, Vto S36, and from x g the act of January 24, 1857, which placed upon the pension rolls over 25,000 survivors and widows of the war with Mexico. ‘This is the of President Cieveland o cial record the subject of pensions to j Soldiers, and has been made in the , | first two years of his administration. r a upon This record is unassailable, and no amount of reckless denunciation and abuse can break it down. i Against this the enemies of Presi- dent Cleveland can point to nothing which they disapprove except his ve- toes of 123 unjust private pension acts and the veto of the dependent at pension bill. That he was right in atewered at oflice day or night. Tele-|Vetoing every one of these private djone communicatio sity. Special attenti diseases, T £ BOULWARE, Physician an e Su) Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chi fen a specialty. LOSS DRS. FRIZELL & RICE. PHYSICIANS, SURG AND ACCOUCHEURS. Office over their drug store on Nort Main street, Butler, Mo. ei Secret Socteties. ——_ MASONIC. Butler Lodge turday in Miami C} ap No. 6, Month, Gouiey € Meets the first Meets secon n to all parts of the { pension bills a reading of the vetoes ion given to temale | and an examination of the records in the cases will show, and the veto of =| d eon. Office north side square, | the dependent pension bill was de- ! manded almost unanimously. by the | press of the country as well as by | thinking men of all parties. EONS {and out of the ranks of union sol- diers. ihe ad SOREL Diack: Butler Week | year before was in 1866, when there | | original certifi jsued in the history of the bureau. | President ; M. Phillips, daughter of Dr. D. C. \5 10,030 crippled and maimed soldiers | and | 5 per mouth. He approved | of republican KNIGHTS GROWING WEAKER. 4 Issz to June ss 2 ’ ne ’ there paisa a \ New York Paper Declares That burse: on ee ' ot pensions. * . $139.584.250.45 fn a 1883. the Labor Union is Losing, to June 3000 T8585 period of two, z iis ive =e Qlisiceedioniae New York, July 18.—The Com- | court of 967.243.46— | mercial Advertiser in a long article being ea inere *16.817.026.99 | Ou the Knights of Labor says: “From | Soe dik Seu dere dare figures given out lately by Mr. Pow- | . the last | detly, not to reporters, however, it \ iWe Heats « Jbllean admin- 25 88certained that the membership | Sean : 1. 1883. there \ of the order of the Knights of Labor | were 902.43 open the | bes fallen from 1,000,000 to less | sie on lv) 48Sh. dherolware | than 600.000 within the last fourteen | : | months. | i SS i5s1os) pensioners The loss has been steady nerease to the rolls dur- | 22d is on the increase, while acces- upon the vr being a net jing the last two years under repub- | S!0ns to the order grow fewer each | Plain, French lican rule of 41,467; on July 1, 1887, | ™onth. The cause of this is attrib- | | there were upon the rolls fully 402.- | uted to its failure to carry its vital | Toe—all Sizes at $2 75. These 000 pensioners—a net gain to the | point in strikes in two great strug- | igles—that on the Missouri pacific | rolls during the first two years un ; {and the coal handlers here. der demoers 15,408 more of rule of 56,875, or net gain tothe rolls The article continues as follows: | luring the first two years of Presi-| “The losses have been gr in | dent Cleveland's administration than | New York, distriet assembly No. 49 | having lost half of its members with- | tion. and this in the | in fourteen months. The first great defection was that of the internation ] igarmakers’ union which left the | the last two thur’s edmi President Ar- years of face of the he clerical foree } of the ottice has been reduced 124! the death | #8sembly in a body on account of rate among the soldiers is rapidly | tthat t 1 al within that time and that interference wi h its affairs during a The Knights of Labor lost | by | strike. increasing as years go by. j 28,000 FACTS FOR THE VETERANS. mien this move alone. During the fiscal yearending June | 30, ISS7, 112,360 certificates of all | : ; wore inoued be ihe bercaa of j almost every other class of arti ii | resulting in the retirement from the | Afterward there were similar troubles with the bakers, bricklayers and Aus, pensions of whieh 55,194 were origi wal order of various unions and individ | ual The highest number of origi members. Reports from all sections of the country show the nal certificates ever issued in one 1} | i | Nearly | every day there is a dispatch in the were 50.177; so that the number of | Saute ¢ mdition of things. ites issued during the year Just closed is 5.017 in excess of upers announcing the retirement of | the highest number ever before is |S0me “Assembly branch from — the | | Knights of Labor.” | ‘Lhe fruits of the administration of ae es | Lynching in Kentucky. Evausville, fnd., July 17.—A lyneb- | occurred at Union City, Ky.. | | | Cleveland show beyond ilthat the union soldiers of the}. country never hada better friend.” | pa Se yesterday. Early in the week a ne tin th | tted a brutal assault on a} Ls A girl. zed and after a long Car > com! v Louisville, Ky., July 15.—Miss J. posse little white : search he | ; was found at Hamboldtand brought Philips, of Hardin county, and a | back. member of an old aristocratic His preliminary trial was held fami ly, has been arrested and is under bonds to answer to acharge of theft Accompanied by a friend, Mrs. Me: | Elroy, who is socially prominent in | victim At this point someone in the ; Lebanon, Ky., Miss Phillips went | shopping and visited the jewelry | house of George Wolf & Co.. in this y She looked at of | Various sorts, and while the clerk was | some distance away, the latter say | he saw the young lady deftly slip a | $50 solitaire diamond into her glove. | As she passed out the clerk, whore name is W. J. Kriel, called an officer, aside as though a mere bundle of who found the ring within the glove chaff.and despite their desperate but jand took it out. The young lady futile efforts to save Thomas. the was mortified over her disgrace, but maddened throng seized ANS insisted that she had no thought of trembling and panic-stricken wretch. JGesRpa oar In an instant a good repe was pro- g clerk, however, is ve she tried to steal the jewel. duced and a noose prepared and ‘yesterday. A large, angry and de- ‘termined crowd filled the court-room. He was positively identitied by his | crowd shouted: “That's enough. Let's put him i where he will do no more of the dev- | il’s work.” Then the | 1 | ¢ diamonds entire court-room of ed citizens, rose to their feet and with an impulsive rush surged over the posse of officers, sweeping them She was examined by Chief of Police slipped about the prisoner's neck. | Whalen, who decided to hold her. | Willing hands threw an end of the | She is twenty-three years old and | Tope over a beam in the cupalo, and | then the crowd walked away, leaving | very pretty. pages j | the body swinging. A common looking stranger call- ing himself J. E. Green. registered at the Kerr kotel in Carthage, Mo., |last Sunday evening, and on Monday | began working the city on the horse _ baying racket and by Tuesday he | had in Wood's livery stable seven of |the finest horses in the town for | seer ea Dead in Less Than an Hour. Murphy of Washington, Mo., who was visiting her relative, Mrs. T. D. Ball of Lamar, attended the Congre- gational church to-day and took part | in the exercises. When the exercises thin | which he paid, giving checkso n the | were over and the people were leav-| Farmers & Drovers’ Bank, where he | ing the church she partially fainted |had deposited a draft of $2,500 for and was taken to the residence of buggy. Physicians | : collection on a St. Louis bank. The | Mr. Ball in ireft was returned unpaid and as | were called immediately,but in less g soon as it was discovered that the | than an hour she was a corpse. s will be shipped to Was crook had skipped there was 2 scram- |r ble toward Weod’s Stable by the | top to-morrow afternoon. an! a ers to get their stock back t oiclothes | Seve others i | Fleming a brother of Mrs. R-C. Wal |). which distance he has traveled on a | | nieht.—R. H. Herald. | tarmers to get short loans, or sell} men. numbering perhaps 200 enrag- | Lamar, Mo., July 17. Miss Allie | NO. 84 ATTENTION! I Can Offer you this Week as Men’s Calf Shoe SEAMLESS In But.on, Lace and. Congress. Toe, or Narrow Shoes Beat any $3 60 Shoes that have ever been offered in the City ry 2 %. ¥ CONGRESS, Please Call and Exe amine these Goods. MAX WEINER, EAST SIDE SQUAKE From Texas ona Bycicle. | Rhumatism ant Nuaralgia Card in Rey. Austin Gibony.who returned | Two Day . iana Chemical Co, have discov- ast evening from a day's visit to| Sheldon, reports haying seen Mr. | which vets with truly rapidity in the cure of Rheu- nd Neuralgia. Weguarantee it any and every of acute an is now on! Inflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralgte in 2 bays, and to give immediate reliet s and effect aspeedy cut 30 cents, in two cert willsendto any address the ulcom,oun iby your home drug: 2 take this means > public insteas ters, and well known to many Rich! to ¢ Hillians. The gentle: his return from Galveston, Texas, | ' | in chr a ease Jn receipt of tam Wwe bieyele. Mr. Fleming lives in Kan | eseriy which ¢ at sas City, and has been accompanied | | } | W bur discovery tot h less exe y refund money it satistaction is naw Puc INDIANA CitemicaL Co., 1 Crawtordsvitic, Ind Vare Bred Poultry. Piymoth Rock Chickens, Brouwze rkeys and Pekin Duck eggs, fous t Mis. RV. Wittiamg, th of Butler and 1-2 mi ate station, Post office zm the entire trip by his faithful dog small cost. He travels only late in the day anc will porbably reach Rich Hill J. K. Brugler wants 2 lot ot good | farm loans, running trom 6 to 15{ months, This 1s a good chance for) sale bY short real estate paper. 2 } . 15 miles me ij west of Pas i Butler, Mo. Give Them a Chance! hat istosay, your lun; Also your breathing machinery ry won-!} ery it is. Not only the | ges, but the thousands or | : i i | tord’s Sanitary Lotion. A sure cure nge and Itch, M wereng te in 30 minutes by Wook- kind cure 2 tubes and cavit cading from them. _ _| and perfectly harmless. Warranted | When these are clogged and choked lby W. 1, Lansdown, Druggist, { with matter which ought not to be there, | Butler, M J shies | your lungs cannot do halt their work, | Suller, -\20- oie tee Sr-ly | And what they do, they cannot do well, | Jian ; ; ; cou; ) 1. Mrnoter & Son have a large Call it cold, co ,croup pneumonia, catarrh, consumption or any of the tam- ily of tnroat and nose and head and lung obstructions, all are bad. All ought to be got ridot. ‘There is yust one sure i way to get ridofthem. Thatisto take | Boschee’s German Syrup, which any list aproved farms tor sale cheap and on easy terms. 1608 syrup of Figs, druggist will sell you at 75 cents a boi- | Manutactured only by the Cali- tle. Even tt everything clse has failed ; fornia Fig Syrup Co., San Francis- you, you may depend upen this tor cer- | co, Cal., is nature’s Own Truc Lax- ain oe | ative. Ehis pleasant California liquuh | fruits remedy may be had of Simp- WILLIAM JEWEL json & Co. It is the most pleasatt, | vet thoroughly; to dispel Headacheg, { COLLECE, 'Colds and Fevers; to cure Cons@- | eee | pation, Indigestion, and kindred als, prompt, and effective remedy known | to cl e the system; to act on the LIBERTY, MISSOURI. 23 6m. —_—_—+0«—_——— | Liver, Kidneys, and Bowels gently Under the auspics ot the Mo., Baptist} Gensra! Association. | | A First-class institution for the education | of Young Men. Three departments— j} Preparatory, College, Theology. { THOROUGH TRAINING| | For tes: iness, for Teaching or for Pro-| Llire, Thirty-eight vear begins | | Thursday, September Ist, ISS7. | E 8 : chs A ale IORTENS LAB 2 LESSEN

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