The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 17, 1889, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

nes Jou are be- | ind jou hhas ound riday ment bea o the ed to could there tness well elves . Mc- Me- arn- Clift son ler- aad ohn Ses. art- Pa me a. Xi,- AND Making (HE Be FOR Mi. FEcKA EES I ERE LO PPR EB EBA EET CIES TJ HAV) » 73 K tt in i ir Se Al Oo he had been gro | ‘east of this at ‘and walked back to Re (LLER, MISSOURI, WEDNESDAY Walked Off a Train. Mo., April 11.—Consid- tement was created here morning by the aunouncement years old had in his a boy 3 cep walked off the Louis and ansas C ress train while it 30 mies an hour. ars were enter that dent hay miles ck in the ie cars, the her missed entsville took the east bound train id ran back to look for him. The stepped from the train uning that they had reach 1 their destination, and, after roll- uw over several times, picked him- ‘If up without a seratch or bru rick to await id son came 2 evelopments. Fathe n here by freight, and took the 0 express for Arkansas City, KE here they join the boomers tor Ok- | thoma. Bald Knobber Necks THE WALL PAPER POOL. Will most likely b the Pool existed w: Paper: and I woul hose expecting to while Prices of Wall to do soat onee. Thave been advised by reliable the Pool would surely form an: ve it to my custome now have in tock the Largest, Cheapest and Best 1 ever brought to Butler. New and Elegant designs, both in co WALL PAPER ¥ LOUSES that worth. I ne ot all Paper 1 Gilts, 1 my 4 WN e | Jefferson City. Mo., April 12.—It Ww le | comes pretty straight from the gov- | ernor’s office to-night that he has | decided tocommute to life imprison goods were bought direct from the Factory and many a tagas can be given which I have never been in a situation to offer. It will cost you nothing to come and see my line and get prices and you can save 25 per cent by buying from ine. sspectfully. WRes ise St de ; BILL RYAN IS F The Last of the Jaiies Boys’ Wild. riders Released Frem tie State Penitentiary at Jefferson Ciiy . Jeflerson City, April 14.—Bill Ry an, the last of the James boys’ wild riders, was released from the peni tentiary to night, and ict the midnight train for Kansas City. ile has been confined here since 1851, at which time he was tol twenty five years for alle plicity in the Blue Cut tran onthe Chicago & Alton Jackson county. Since his onment Ryan has been an exemplary prisoner, and obtained the contidence of the prison authorities to such sentenced LY com. robber an extent that for the t four years he has held a semi-cfiicial posi tion in the prison—that of keeper of one of the largest cell houses. — At the time of Ryans conviction public sentiment was wild for the punish- ment of some one connected with or thought to be connected with the James gang. At that time it was thought Ryan got no more than he deserved. But since then calmer judgement has prevailed, and it has been the opinion of those who are familiar with the facts incident to the Ryan trial and conviction that he was not guilty. Ex-Governor Crittenden, at that time governor, the chief prosecutor in the Ryan case and the one man most instru mental in obtainiug his conviction, who pardoned Tucker Basham that he might be used as witness against Ryan, early last fail wrote a letter to Governor Morehouse urging executive clemency in Ryan's behalf. asserting that he had been unjustly convicted and a grievous wrong dene him. Governor Morehouse commuted the sentence to April 15, and under this commutation | Ryan ' left tonight. He was accompanied by his brother, Andy Ryan, a mem- ber of the Kansas City fire depart ment. Ryan will spend a short time visiting relatives in Kansas City | and Jackson county before deciding | what to do further. Whipped a Writer. Jefferson City, April 13. has been a hot day at the ea the correspondents of ti Republic. One - Louis : them has been licked and the other is in hiding to- ol night, supposed by some to be iu the Moneau hills, five miles east of town, inhaling the fr country air. In the Jefferson Cit pondence of the Republic « date was an article callin Moran a drunkard and Se ton by innuendo a “boodler.” articles were written Senators Moran and She to be dictated to by th their vote on the hi meni in the senate y ator Moran whipped H. Ma liams at neon to-d . the Mad Shelton h day, an i¢, ) hangman’s noose in a short quarter- Took His Own Lite. Lexington, Mo.. city was) sho i the news that ©. comunitted suicide. started from At rooms ‘clock hie | his over his store and his family supposed he had lof F to the butcher shop for meat. | ¢ He did } not return by the time |; breakfast was read) La search NY ituted for 1] He was f in the loft of the stable back of his store and residence and 1 was extinct. He hadimade a regular inch cotton rope, gotten up oi lemon box, picked the box out, died trom strangulation. He been secretar ization thres yenrs elected to that posi He was f for cight ye deputy col lector of Lafayette county. He had | bridle and dragged her off the am aime business education, was ade. (mal Althougiv the young latly yout member of the Presbyterian | chureh, and stood very h in the} estimation of everybody in the j county. He was a captain ia the | federal army du the civil war. | Financial embary s supposed | to be the cause for his rash act. He | wasamember of the Knights of Honor and alsos member of the A. O.U. W. The Greatest Leap On Record. Cinci April 12.—Meredith Stanley of the city, a well-known | athlete and bridge-jumper, who has challenged Brodie of New York, yes | terday made the most remarkable | leap on record. It wes from the fa- mous High bridge on the Cincinnati Southern railroad over the Kentucky river. The height is 285 feet. He selected a place where the wa-| ter is twelve feet deep, and attired | in silk tights and slippers, leaped in- to the air. Doubling his body up | like a ball he fell into the water. Aj moment later he rose to surface and was quickly seized by attendants in a boat. He coughed blood a little while but scon recovered and took the | train for Cincinnati. He says the | feat is done by knowing how and by | perfect self-contidence. i He escaped without breaking the | skin and to-day says he feels as well as ever. The bridge is the hi _ world except one. i, Alleged ‘Fight Over ‘a Claim. St Louis, Mo., April 14.—It is re- | ported here that a few days ago in | the western part of Oklahoma two from Kiowa, Kan., and two mez pxas fought for r1ofa claim. Guns and one of the used men Texan mortally wa Ned a Tex r two ernor, it 1s © | bers’ neeks. | to-morrow. | little lame. good. healthy tone to the whole system. | witnessed a decline men&the sentence of the four Bald and T. ve been | with the | tative Prather | \ | i i Paney county y with a pe vers of the ented him yes- ned by 102 Th > ringtield ad ne way lemen this e led to save Raped by a Tramp. Mo, ns, from of al miles, horseback residence tWo : rl lhoine to nh distance o. tin the public road by a who seized her horse by the was YP, fought heroically for about tweuty minutes, she beeame exhausted and 1 succeeded in criminally She is now lying in Hundreds of the country for the tramp, 2adif caught no mercy will be shown him. The family is of the best in the section. He is 5 feet high, very ds smooth face, middle | aged and poorly dressed. | serious men are scou condition. Speaking of the uselessness of spasmodic and irregular adverti the Clothier and Furnisher, New York, says: “If you want to be healthy you must eat regularly, as meat to day will not serve you for To be well and hearty eat at every meal time. To be pros- perous in business advertise regu- larly. Stop one and you starve and die. Stop the other and your busi ness takes consumption and dies al- so. Spasmodic advertising is like having a ‘feast and a famine’— more famine than feast as a general rule— and is never satisfactory. To take out your card in dull times is like killing your horse because he is a In dull times advertis- ing is most effective. as more notice is taken of printers’ ink shan any other time.” Fact That the body is now more suscept- ible to benefit from medicine than at any other season. Hence the im- portance of taking Hood's Sarsapa- | rilla now, when it will do the most It is really wonderful for purifying and enriching the blood, creating an appetite, and giving a} It Isa Curio: re to Use. Hood's Sarsaparilla, | ij which is peculiar to itself. A sudden spring in the hve stock | market last week put new life in the i buvers and the Kansas (©: and | Chieago markets were soon over run | and the latter part of of @ week | Hogs still held | 12 udat the ¢ were a few cen their owt of business | higher. & and | Sarsaps take t rood it. | | | | | | FIRST { | 1 stren, than the ordinary kinds, andcannot be sold in competition with the multitude of low short weight alum or phosphate powders. ont incans. Royat Bakinc PowpER Co., 10€ alst.. N ner of the squareupstairs. The cut- , able. ; therefore | treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, man- | the blood 2 DOOR EAST OF TLER NAT’L BANK. Tn roc m formerly occa} ‘CashCapital. ; 2 | D. N. THOMPSON, President, { ives Ba POWDER Absolutely Pure. Thies J. BK. Rosizr, = T. J. Evexis D. N. Tuompsoyx, - W. powder never varies. A marvelofpurity and wholsomeness. More economica attention given to time dep test. Sold Ya 32-48t Cheap money tc oan on farms Jas. K. Brvarrr. ~~ HARDWARE er i +) BI ew ht bua Tonsorial Shop. For a nice hair cut, and a clean shave,call at my shop, southwest cor- ting of Ladies’ and children’s hair a furniture and everything clean and mod- ern. Special artist in Ladies hair work, Children kindly treated. All our old customers and many new ones invited tocall; will be courteously treated. My house is large Jand plenty of room for ally —— specialty. I keep good barbers, also . grind scissors and razors. All work = guaranteed. Give me a call. 2 W. A. Girsox, Barber. 4 oS s S a2 ae eee sails a (Aare n NEW BARBER SHOP. eee = FRED W. DORN has opened up a = 3 is new Barber Shop opposite the post | : office, North Main Street. He has new | 2 So [=<] Plows, There is more catarrh in this sec- tien of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be inctrable. Fora great mauy years; doctors pronounced it a local disease, | and prescribed local remedies. and | by constantly failing to cure with | local treatment, pronounced it incur- Science has proven catarrh to dis constitutional | For Sale be a constitutio Alot of thoroughbred and high requit will grade young bulls for -~ale ter M. Hoaciant Nyhart. Mo. sell on reasonable ufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., : Toledo. Ohio, is the only constitu-j tional eure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from ten drops to a teaspoonful It acts directly upon | surfaces of the 1S-tit Poaltry Waatd. I will pay more cash money than anybody in Butler, for Spr Toledo, O. EF Sold by Drv KIPP, ed by Cas ~ HP TOP BUGGIES, SPRING AND FARM WAGONS. Buckeye -:- Force -:- Pumps. A Large Assurticent of GEO. W. WEAVER. FARMERS OF BATES COUNTY, Southeast Corner of Square, ANK Grange Store.) $20,000.00 K. ROSIER,. Viee President. DIRE LVORS, SILVERS. Jxo. STEELE, M. R. Lyre, - J.J. McKee A. 5S. Roser, - E. D. Krer. Does a General Banking susiness.- m : \ ‘rest paid on same. —-«RLR. DEACON, as LEMENTS. MOLVAILINO ‘IHAOHS ONTUAS ai1ova Naaloo AMGEN SOL THE BEST MAKES OF ; Cultivators, Harrows, &c. Gas Pipe Fitting and Pump Repairing. PIECED aud STAMPED TINWARE. Barbe ery PIERCE & ESSEX. rs, north side square. None but t workmen employed, For e, shampoo, hair cut, d,or ansthing in our 1. Pompadour hair tisfaction guar- STICK 10 TEACHERS :—Public Ex- ¢3d Saturday of each ; house, 7, ak

Other pages from this issue: