The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 25, 1888, Page 1

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ee (OL. X. HCH & SPRAGUE TITLE ABSTRACTORS, oMPLETE AND RELIABLE ABSTACTS ! of TITLE FURNISHED ON SHORT NOTICE. ONEY TO LOAN bn Real Estate security on long or short time. Office first door south ot Bates Co. National Bank. BUTLER, MO. It you want to save money get. [EE -:- CULVER to do your APERING, CALSOMINING, PLASTERING, AND CISTERN WORK. | w@-Satistaction given or no charges mde. Office at Jewett & furniture Store. . #. TUCKER, DENTIST, BUTLER, - MISSOURI. OFFICE OPERA HOUSE. MASONIC. Sturday in each month. month. meets the first ‘Tuesday in each month. 1.0. 0. FELLOWS. day night. Butler Encampment No. 6 meets the nd and 4th Wednesdays in each month Lawyers. W. BADGER LAWYER. ma reacsice in all courts wttetly attended to, tional Bank. Butler. Mo. ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORN«YS AT LAW. down’s Drug Store. |HOLcomB & SMITH, \ LAWYERS BUTLER, MO. ounty National Bank. IT W. SILVERS, r) son Ci aitf AL. McBrid Physicians. Hickman’s | Butler Lodge, No. 254, meets the first Miami Chapter Royal Arch Masons, No.6, meets second Thursday in each | Gouley Commandery Knights Templar Bates Lodge No. 180 meets every Mon- } All legal business Office over Bates Co. Na- Office West Side Square, over Lans- Office front room over Bates ATTORNEY : LAW } Will practice in Bates and adjoining ‘ounties, in the Appellate Court ut Kansas City, and in the Supreme Court at Jeffer- s@Orrice North Side Square, over BUTLER, | ABDUCTED FOR HER MONEY. A Helpless Old Lady of Wichit Carried off by Be Wichita, Kan., April 18.—This morning about S o'clock the resi- dence of Eliza Nixon, aged = d very feeble, was visited by | who asked to see her. Liei |Mary Osborn, thought he locke! | Suspicious and refused him entries } In about an hour he returned | hack accompanied by another | | }and forcibly gained entrance to the jhouse. He told Mrs. Nixon hi | from Chicago and a distant relative | of hers and wanted to take her out riding. She objected but was carri- |ed by the two men and putinah jand they drove rapidly away. The! house the suburbs, and the jalarm raised by the servant failed to ist the oid lady \in getting away from the but the news rapidly spread, and soon | } numbers were looki Wits is in bring anyone to a @ for the men, | 5 | but they have not been found. Mrs. Nixon was one of the first | settlers in the valley, and had taken up land, a part of which is now in | She is said to | the corporate limits. be worth over $100,000, and has | no heirs living. capture is that a distant relative, | who had been in the penitentiary | twice had hired the men to take her | to some point and get her to sign | | The theory of her | papers giving himthe property. This | theory was given force when the de- } seription of the man vgbo led in her } abduction was learned from the ser- | vant and neighbors, making it al- | most certain that he is one Williams, | atinhorn detective, who had been | operating for afew weeks in this city, and who, it is thought, could | be induced to act according to the | wishes of the relatives for slight re- | muneration. The ConvictContract Senator. | After many years of cruelly bur- | densome tariff taxes, the promise of | partial relief has come in sight, and we rejoice that President Cleveland and the wholesome majority of the | democratic party are striving to re- duce these taxes; when lo! in the crisis of our fate, Senator Brown | steps to the front to oppose this re- | lief, with his ill-timed republiean ad- | vice, to check reform, if possible, by | palming off a policy unspeakably mis- chievous to the country, to the south and to the farmers, though in the highest degree helpful to his own private and personal interests, as | opposed to the interest of the peo J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Orricse—East Side Square, over | Max Weiner’s, Ig-ty But.er, Mo. HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN, Office, tront room over P. O. Al answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to femae dis- tases, —_—__ calls ple. | His advice is bad, economically. } | morally, politically and socially, and | | is supported by the old stock : \ ments of the republican party, often exploded, but retailed still at the |north by Blaine, Sherma }and others, and reproduced now by | Senator Brown before a democratic | | audience, in the form ofa great lot | jof fallacies, historical, land selfish. Some of his own are added by way economical ar \ reinforcements | | of | good measure—more shallow and T C. BOULWARE, Physicim and e Surgeon. : north side quare, | within, and is made by Diseases of women ari chil- 5 Ofiice Butler, Mo. Ten a specialty. Secret Societies. —____ DORN & PIERCE—BARBRs. Shop on North Side Square We | Sve special attention to Ladie and | We keep | ildren’s hair cutting. the best of Barbers, also grin: s Sors and razors. class. US a call _———— bee /Cockle’s siiiis Bile, Indigestion, Liver, &c. All work guaranteed. Give Pils. | This old Engitsh Family Mediine in | Use tor 86 years all over the worl, tor | sophistical, whieh may surprise the | j unwary, asthe assault comes from ] | democrat, clad in the whole armor | of monopoly—crammed and armed , | to the teeth by the whole circle of |rings and trusts and combinations nom which afflict the country and pray on the earnings of honest industry. Thousands of Geor interested in the welfare of the coun- try and of the state, feel that they jare not simply unrepresented. but misrepresented; that one of our sen- ans. deeply atorial seats is far worse than mere- ly vacant, since a vacancy would | count but one, while tation counts as two & misrepresen- | and is in posi- tion to do more harm than many. | whisky; that is one of the peculia MISSOURI, ns the represents, or a te a ‘ and his sl e, and the manhood to Can euta- ens i ass its of no one els And what is the advice he gives? It is this in substance and in form: Repeal the whiskey tax, and make grog cheap. Fasten the tariff with nails, and keep necessaries dear. This monstrous advice. seli-con- demned in the very statement, he di- lutes and sugar-coats through twen ty mortal columns, and deliberately, wilfully and industriously advocates \it in the senate, and publishes it to his constituents. in naked deform- jity, it is too shocking, but he covers lit with much ink and paper. But our misrepresentation assures us that reducing the price of whisky will not add to the consumption of ties of whisky. This surpasses com- mon republicanism—it is a violent form of the disease. If any repub lican has gone this length I have it. N not secu Senator Brown goes the length of classing whiskey | among necessaries, and tobacco, too, | more necessary than blankets. Observe how two: y a laboring man buys a pair | woolen blankets and pays $1 50 tar- | iff on it; himself he buys as medicine for and family a gallon of whis- key and pays $1.50 tax on it to the registered distiller. Which hurts him worse? Senator Beck says, how- ever, he can do withont the whiskey; so he can do without the blankets. This is not a question of sentiment; it a question of dollars and eents.” is Senator Brown proposes to have $1.50 to buy more whiskey instead of more blankets, and let the de- bauch last three weeks instead of | one Such is the reasoning by which ne defends his shingles over with sophistry, laying a fallacy down wherever there is reom to put thick, 1eavy. oue fast and His own tribute derived tariff he defends by denying that he gets it, and by fortifying it all around, even its distant outposts. The hope of his gains, being threat- | and cries is Diana ened, he raises an upr out for two hours. ar “Great tion’ of the monopolis Awful will be the effect of touch- | ing one jot or tittle of the dear tar-! so dear to his personal and pecu ¥ interest. Our real enemy, he assures us, is the whiskey ring. and the true issue is the whiskey ring vs. the people. But the iron ring is dear to his soul.—Macon, (Ga.,) Telegraph. That Tired Feeling Afflicts nearly every one in the accustomed to the bracing air of winter, of the changing season, and readily yields to attacks of disease. and needed. It tones Of Pare, Vegetable Ingrecents. | And this, be itremembered, is our | every part of the body, and also ex- ' 2 | vote—our voice—our influence. This | pels all impurities from the blood. | Therefore. take it now. From §Mercury. WEDNE mitting to aggression from none. | | onerati he compares the | monstrous advice. | The whole republican wigwam he | ta | from the | system having become ; s weakened by warm days | Hood's Sarsaparilla is just the medicine} builds up SDAY APRIL 25. 1888. GIVEN BIG DAMAGES. David S. Awarded S20,000. Mo., April 19.—The of David S. Fother- ms express com- any for yr false impris- nstructed this morn- ontment were g and after being out three hours 2 half agreed on a verdict of 320,000 for the plaintiff. The Cummings express robbery on the | ‘Frisco road in 1886, when the rob- bers secured $53,000. A year ago the three robbers. Wittrock, Haight | and Weaver were captured in Chica- go and $41,000 of the stolen money recovered. case grew out of the Jim; The men confessed, ex- the messenger, David S. Fotheringham, who had been held and as it seemed to the jury hounded by W. H. Damsel, the | agent of the company, and Pinker- | ton’s detectives. The trial occupied | express | over two weeks and more witness: | were examined than in any case be- | fore in this city. The original sum claimed was | },000 and suit was originally in- | | stituted against Pinkerton, Damsel | jand the Adams express company, | but the detectives and the agent | ; were dropped out of the suit. { A Luxury and Necessity j | For rich and poor who wish to enjoy | ee | good health, and who do not wish to | | resort to bitter nauseous liver medi- | eines and eathartics, is the concen- | trated California liquid fruit remedy | Syrup of F in 50 cent and $1| | bottles, for sale by all leading drug- | a | gists. A Horrible Story Unverified. Wheeling, W. Va, April 18.—A special to the Intelligencer from | | Charleston says: “A report has just reached here that a man in Calhoun county who | was away selling cattle, on return- | ing home late Wednesday night in | | company with a peddler, discovered ; a light in the window, and when he looked in saw his wife and three children lying dead on the floor. He also saw four men in the room. The peddler drew his revolver and | was told to make a noise atthe back | of the house- The men inside rush- ed out and three of them were killed outright the fourth being badly wounded. It is impossible at pres- ent to verify the story, but the man who brought it is considered relia- | ble.” Mr. Geo. Kennan will tell in the | CHALLENGE, AND Hats! We buy our straw goods direct Straw from MANUFACTURERS and ean therefore save our customers the Jobbers profits. Never before have we shown such NOBBY HATS for young men, nor such handsome ones for older heads. ‘These straw goods are VERY CHEAP and will save you money. AMERICAN CLOTHING HOUSE. Bennett, Wheeler & Co., —DEALERS HARADWRE, GROCERIES, IMPLEMENTS, IN—— SEEDS AND BARB WIRE BRADLEY AND AND NEW DE- DEERE STIRRING = CUL- PLOWS, DEERE, TIVATORS, KEY— BRADLEY, BROWN STONE, DEERE PLANTERS, WITH CHECK ROWERS AND AUTO* MATIC RE » WOOD AND STEEL STALK CUTTERS, SULKY PLOWS, IRON, WOOD AND CHAIN PUMPS, SPRING WAGONS BUGGIES FRAME LEAER HARKOWS, AND FARM WAGONS, BENNETT, WHEELER & CO. Honest Ben. Harper, This noted stallion will make the | J. EVeRINGHAM, Geo Cue igen season of 1888 at P. K. Lisle’s sta- | Vice-Pres’t. Sec’y. ble in Butler. Mo. \ Honest Ben is a fine style and ac- THE BANKERS tion horse and a sure foal getter. He | took first premium in all purpose ; ring, four years old and over, andj first premium in sweep-stake ring, | a best horse, any breed and any age, | at Appleton City fair in the fall of} 1886. He took first primium at oe - = Holden in all purpose ring, 4 years VLAND TITLES EXAMINED & CERTIFIE: old and over, the same fall. larepck Aro eexe Oanse Mee Ba | It will be to the best interest ie ATA Te EM ile Ge et breeders to come and see this horse before breeding elsewhere. Incorporated under thé Jaws of Mo. and City Property. Loca Money} for Short Time Le May Century how he came to go to | Siberia on the Century expedition. | Mr. Kennan had spent some time in ‘the overland telegraph scheme. | preliminary excursion to St. Peters- | burg and Moscow for the purpose of collecting material, and ascertaining whether or not obstacles were likely | government. He returned in fully satisfied that his sae was a practical one. He therefore sailed from New York for | Liverpool in May, 1885. He ~All my prepossessions were favo ver, ‘ae | ble tothe Russian government and j ‘unfavorable to the Russian revolue) tionsts.” He adds that this “partly tins the friendly attiude toward which w as taken by the Russian government. the permission which was given me to inspect prisons and | mines, and the comparative immuni- ‘ty from arrest. detention, and im- sonment which I enjoyed, even jwaHen my movements and associa- s were such as justly to render an object of suspicion to the lo- ian authorities.” The body is more suscepti to \benefit from Hood's Sarsaparilla ‘now than at any other season. | Siberia already in connection with and | A a : > } in the summer of 1884 he made 2 s : to be thrown in his way by the Rus- of the Ephesians! Great is ‘Protec- | ... | says: | 21-3t. G. B. Hacearp. What Am I to Do? = Office west side square, BUULER, MO. The symptoms of billiovusness are un- Syrup of Fi Pegg Ase 1 ° . igs, pily too well known, hey diff- y mace 8 ee e er in different individuals to some exte ctured only b > California »Co., S Natu Own True pleasant California li eF . Cal., is Laxative, This id truit remedv | A billious man is seldom a breakfast eat- jer. Too frequently, alas, he has an ex- cellent appetite tor liquors but none tor solids ot a morning. His tongue will '™4s be had ot all leading druggists. It j hardly bear inspection atany time; if | '5 the most ——> Pp + and effect- it 15 not white and furred, it is rough, ar | ive remedy known to cl he systegn- and bowels dispel head- o cure consti- | to act on the liver, kidney yet thoroughly and fevers j all events. | | ‘The digressive system is wholly out of ° 8© | order and diarrhea or Constipation may ) ache Aue | bea symptom or the two may alternate, pation, in | There are otten Hemorrhoids o1 ever No. 7. loss of blood. There may be giddir otten headache and acidity or fi tendern To cor! The Walton & Tucker Investment Company | Have made s | accommodate farmers with money to \feed stock. They have a large amount of money on hand to be | loaned on real estate, on time any- ' where from 6 months to 5 years, at | low rates of interest. If you want to borrow call and see them. 33-tf A SPECIFIC FOR Woran's DISEASES 1 —stUcH ss—— ainfal uppressed ) Go rofuse canty and ae ENSTRUATION or ONTHLY SICKNESS. i hopeless cases have be | I shall be glad to send two bottles ¢ dy PREE to any of your readers who have con- | sumption if they will send me their express and post office address. Respectfully. j T. A. SLOCUM, M.C., 181 Pearl st., New York. rohan lh sillier Tdleaipalaceasaacas sm

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