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a The Butler Weekly YY mes. yoL. X1. —— ° ° ° o we OE -: HATS, BUTLER, MISSOURI, ITHE -:- PLACE --10 GO FOR-- LOTHING oO oO 100 READY WITH THE PEN. Uncle Sam’s Displeasure Incurred by Abnse ot the Mails. | K. C. Times, Saturday, Jane 8th. The time of the United States | district court was largely occupied | Yesterday with the cases of Isaac |B. Rickson and Robt. Moore, the jfiret the principal and the second ithe accessory In mailing an obscene | _this afternoon over the attempt of oO CAPS :- ——AND—~ ° ° 3} CENTS FURNISHING GOODS!!- x ° | : —-—IS——- ° a _ ~||/A. Kk. BLACHERT’S |. eathe|PALACE HOTEL BUILDING.|| | the fl ing o} Why? Because he sells for less prfit than any other house ion in the city. : om- ice. oO o) ) () o oO oO ) () 0) (0) 5 ET I TSI nat. ES ers =a30 2 a SWEPT BY A TORNADO. CAVE DWELLERS FOUND. athe A Missouri Village Suffers Greatly | : ; | pet From a Storm. Very Interesting Results of Lieut. Wun aa Schwatka’s Explorations. Sedalia, Mo., June 8.—A tornado tins ocx. SiHughesville this afternoon wreck- | a ; withe church, Berry’s drug store, | . Deming, N. M., June | te nes’ elevator and several other Seleatin arrived here to-day. et “For ai dings. A boy named Smith was | P* ty has been successful beyond be cut, Friously injured by falling timber. popes in their caged hair fie other occupants of the build: |2n- “sbecae yn Southern Chil all suat= log escaped unburt. Not | bua. Here living cliff and cave; __- |fwilding in the little hamlet escap- hdinjury. The loss is estimated at 0,000. Hughesville is twelve les north of Sedalia on the Lex- on branch of the Missouri Pa- c. Warrensburg, Mo., June 8.—At 30o'clock this ufternoona severe orm passed over this county, and Ti Valley City, several miles north- Aust of here, it took the nature of RY #4 tornado. A Dunkard church, a mvick structure, was blown down nd Isoac Gadberry was very severe- LS} injured. &eo. Aheavy gale raged at Green Ridge ‘Bod buildings, fences and growing ops were laid low, inflicting con- iderable damage, but no one was jured. The wires are down in ES | 2 gives 0 ed. Her Hair Was False. Detroit, Mich., June 10.—One of most remarkable divorce suits of century has been begun here. is. James Phyling recently began m against her husband, chare- g desertion and praying a decree Pihalimony. Late Saturday night byling filed an answer, in which he fcrth that he fell in love with woman who is now his wife be- e of her luxuriant hair, and fre- tly told her so. After the mar- ge, which occurred a year ago, found that every reference to her ircaused her to become angry, - WORE" he noticed that she would never chagamee her toilet in his presence. e's worried him and one day he ‘call. ® transom of his wife's boudoir @ discovered that her ringlets re hanging on the back of a chair. '@ woman herself was bald as the ofher hand. Phyling shrieked his wife fainted ered she explained that she had ife in the pos: n te, taking up quarters himself in pwer part of the city. Cannot live with her. NSUMPTION SURELY CURED, ate Eprror—Please inform your read. he Thave a positive remedy for the above "ase, By its timely use thousands of ees — have been permanently cured. Slad to send two bottles of my reme- fe to any of yourreaders who have con- Onif they Will send me their express ce address. Respectfully, Pe LOCUM. M.C.. ist Pearl st. New Yor‘. | eral places and washouts are re- | mbed upon 2 chair, looked over | When she re-| ther hair in a fire, bat no expla- | Would satisfy him, and he left | of their) He says | dwellers were found in great abund- ance, wild as any of the Mexican tribes from Cortez’ conquest. The abodes they live in are exactly simi- lar to old, abandoned cliff dwellings of Arizona and New Mexico, about which there has been so much spec- ulation and so much money spent in investigation. It was almost im- possible to get very near them, so wild and timid were they. Upon the approach of white people they jfly to their caves or cliffs, by notched sticks placed against the face of the cliffs, if too steep, although they can ascend ver- tical stone faces if there are the slightest crevices for their fingers and toes. These cliff-dwellers are sun wor shipers, throwing their new-born! children out in the full rays of the! sun the first days of their lives, and showing many other forms of devo- tion to the great luminary. They are usually tall, lean and well form- ed, their skin being very blackish- red, much nearer the color of the negro than the copper colored Indian of the United States. Buying a State. Some idea of the enormous profits of the Louisiana lottery may be de- rived from the fact that its mana- agers have offered to assume the en- tire debt of the state, amounting to some twelve million dollars, if the legislature will renew the charter of | | i | Doubtless there will be a fierce con- test over the proposition for even in Louisiana there are many people op- posed to the idea of thestate lending its name and its sanction to a colos- | was indicted by the grand jury yes-| i y 8 ee, | “National University” in this coun- | \ed great damage from the water. the lottery company for fifty years. | letter to L girl at War te Robinson, a country Mo. The defend- ants reside in the country near Brownington, and Miss Robinson visited in the vicinity over a year ago. After she returned to Warsaw Isaac Rickson wrote to her asking her to correspond. She refused several letters, when finally he and his brother, William E. Rickson, to- gether with Moore, concocted and sent the letter that got them into| trouble. It was of such a nature that it could not be read in court and was silently passed to the jury. Isaac Rickson was found guilty, and the case of Robt. Moore is in the hands of the jury. William Rickson | LW, terday as an accessory to the crime. Sentence was not passed upon Rick- | son. William A. Hubble, of Butler, | pleaded guilty to writing an obscene | letter and mailing it to his wife after having deserted her. He was sen-/} tenced to four months imprisonment | in the Henry county jail. An enormous water spout burst! on the M., K. & T. railroad between | Fayette and Burton, yesterday, and a thousand feet of track was sub- | merged. A trainman who witnessed the approach of the cluud and was near at hand when it burst, says: | “The cloud resembled a huge in- | verted mountain. It reeled along! through the air with tie point al- most touching the earth, then it bounded upward several hundred feet and again falling, the point struck against the railroad embank- ; ment and in an instant the whole cloud dropped on the ground an | enormous deluge of water. Several farms as well as the railroad |suffer- A herd of cattle happened to be near the point where the cloud burst and were all drowned. Superintendent | Lyon and Genera! Roadmaster Rock- | well left at once for the scene of the disaster to learn the extent of the damage.—Sedalia Bazoo. Crazed By Grief- Louisville, Ky., June 10.—Wm. Showers, whose young wife came to |a mysterious death about a week ago at Elizabethtown, has become raying mad. He was found in the cemetery wandering around among the graves, and said he has become so violent that he has had to be put in a straight jacket. Mrs. Showers was found dead in her room,shot through the head, and by many it was be- lieved she wss murdered. Thursday night two negro desper- adoes went te a cabin near the Tur- key Run coal mines, in McDowell | approve is his refusal to act as ex | open to the suspicion of being hum- Point Pleasant’ W- Va., June 10-| WEDNESDAY JUNE 12. The People of Gotden City Punish aj Wild Westerner. Carthage, Mo., June 10.—There was great excitement at Golden City a strange desperado to take the town. He rode in and began firing right and left. made people dance un- der pain of death and poured volley after volley into sal = cake of Cu ap, and am cured of a ter- ley Teo BeseOne. Tible skin Ip disease known as Psoria- / @fAfter terrorizing everybody for 20 | sis, [had it tors years. It would get better minutes the man rode away. The citizens had by this time secured arms and gave pursuit and a run- ning fighi was kept up for five miles and the killed. The man captured another horse fromafarmer and this was killed tooand the ruffian was wounded three times. He was nearly dead | desperadoe’s horse was when he surrendered. in jail. He was put « One act of President Harrison's administration we can unreservedly offico president of the alleged “Na- | tional University,” when it presented its diplomas to him for his signature. It was well done. There is no real try. The constitution provides for none, and no alleged institution of that kind has the right to demand the president's signature to give a} fictitious value to diplomas, which if they are not shams, are, with the great majority of American diplomas, bugs A terrible casualty occurred last Monday at Leasburg, this state. Wm. S. Lea, the Frisco agent at that place, and Dr. W. H. Parker were joking and scufiling with each other when Lea pointed a gun that he was sure was not loaded at the doctor's head and pulled the trigger. | To his horror the gun was discharg- ed and his friend fell to the floor dead. The bullet crashed through | Parker's brain and he died instantly. He was 35 years old and left a wife and children.—Springfield Express. | Colorado Mountain Resorts ana the Springs of Missour. | Missouri Pacitic Ry., “The Color- ; ado Short Line,” has now on sale | its summer tourist tickets to the re- sorts of Colorada, Utah and other Rocky Mountain points, at very low rates for the round trip, good to re- | turn until October 31st. Solid trains are run daily, equipped with Pull- man Buffett Sleeping Cars from St. Louis and Kansas City through, without change, to Pueblo and Den- ver. Special tickets to Sweet Springs | or Pertle Springs, at one fare for the round trip, are onsale at all points on the lines of the Missouri Pacific Railway in Missouri. For illustrated pamphlet of 140 pages, descriptive of the resorts, reached via Mo. Pacific Ry., and further particulars, address H. C. Townsend, Gen’l Pass. and Ticket Agent, St. Louis, Mo. 26-4t 1 i | i | Couuty, and covering the inmates, | sal gambling scheme. But the in- fluence and wealth of the company combined with the liberality of its offer will probably carry the day. An Lmperative Necessity. What pure air is to an unhealthy locality, what spring cleaning is to | the neat housekeeper, so is Hood's Sarsaparilla to everybody, at this The body needs to be thoroughly renovated, the blood pu- ? season. 1a v the germs of Scrofula, Titled i ed, dis destroyed. ; Rheum, and all other are cured by Ho se Ys Sarsapa- Salt | blood disor- | rand success- | about a dozen Hungarian miners’ | With revolvers, demanded their wa- jges. One of the Hungarians drew ‘a revolver from beneath his pillow and was shot three times, dying in 'ashort time. The others fled, and the honse was looted by the negroes, escaped. Two arrests ; been made en suspicion. who Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. ‘When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. | When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, ‘When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, | When she had Children, she gave them Castoria have | | | POWDER Absolutely Pure. i wrest 2 XN SEyTM | | of SOQ umaMOg ONINVG TVAOY “Sued UT ATO | Plog ‘Siapmodezeqdsoyd 10 ara[e 243104 0qs *3383 moy Jo aphjynmnal 34} W3La UoNRMedumI0D UT plos aq Jouues pus ‘sPUly AIBVUTPIO Oy. UBTI | BormIouoos slo, “SsaTPTIOS[OUM PUB YysTeI;s | Sgumndjoyearem Y “seuvaisaed sapmod sab | j } A Positive Resolvent, and worse at times would be a solid scat began the use of the arms were covered w to shoulders, my bre scab, and my back covered with sores varying | Soap, 25c.: Resolvent, $1. ire RF 1889. PIMPLES TO) SCROFULA, Cure for Scalp and Blood Di cept Ichthyosis. Head, » and covered rs and medicine sof the ¢ xes of Cuticura, and .o: Sometimes my head and was at the time I eS Remedies. Was almost one solid n size from apenny to a dollar, 1 doctored with all the best doctors with no relief, and | used many diflerent med My case Was hereditary, and, I began think, incurable but it began to heal fro application of Cuticura nes without effect m the first ARCHER RUSSELL. Delsher, Ohio Skin Disease 6 Years Cured. y that I have used the for about eight months » and consider myself en- »tsaltrheum, fromwhich I have ix years. I tried a number of sand two ofthe best doctors in the ure until | used your remedies Mrs. A. McCLAFL Morette, Mo The Worst Case of Scrofula. One of the worst TAYLOR & TAYLOR, Druggi , Frankfort, Cuticura Remedies Cure every species of agonizing, humiliating, itching, burning, scaly, and the skin, scalp and blood, from pimples to scrofula, except possibly Iteh- thyosis piaply disease of with loss of hair, Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, Sle.; Porter Dava Boston. Z$Send for ‘‘How to Cure Skin Disease,’’ AND CHEMICAL CORPORATION, 64 pages, 50 illustrations. and 100 testimonials. | PLES, black-heads, red, rough, chapped, | and oily skin prevented by Cuticura Soap Kidney and Uterino Pains and Weaknesses, relieved in one minute | by the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster. New, instantaneous, infallible, 25cts. Notice of Final Settlement. Noticeis hereby given, that the undersigned C. F. Pharis, administrator of the estate of John Irvin deceased, will make final settle- ment of his accounts with said estate as such administrator, at the next term of the probate court of Bates county, Missouri, to be holden at Butler, in said county, on the 12th day of August, 1889. Cc. F. PHARIS, Administrator. Skin, | ura Remedies at medies with the | My | »sfrom my elbows | ut found nothing that would effect a | Prepared by the | WEAK, PAINFUL BACKS. | i THE POPULAR ROUTE —TO— | TEXAS, MEXICO & CALIFORNIA | SEDALIA, HANNIBAL, ST. LOUIS AND THE NORTH AND EAST. | DOUBLE DAILY TRAIN SERVICE OF 1 yHanxpvsome Day Coacurs We have been selling vour Cntieura Reme- | dies for years, and have the first complaint yet to receive from a purchaser , cases of Scrofula | ever saw was cured by the | | use of five bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, Cuti- | | cura, and Cuticura Soap. —And— PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPING CARS, ST. LOUIS, SEDALIA, AND KANSAS CITY TO TEXAS POINTS, | With direct connection for Califor- nia and Mexico /ELEGANT FREE RECLIN- ING CHAIR CARS ON ALL TRAINS —Between— |SEDALIA A N D HANNIBAL —Andon Night Trains— | FORT SCOTT TO SAINT LOUIS, Making Direct Connection in Union Depot’s with Express Trains In All Directions. | For Tickets and Further Informa- |tion, Call on or Address, Nearest (MO. KAN. TEXAS), Ticket Agent. Geo. A. Eddy and H.C. Cross, Receivers J. WALDO, GASTON MESLER, Gen, Trat. Man. Gen. Pas. & T’k Agt Sedalia, Missouri. FARMERS BANK | OF BATES COUNTY, Southeast Corner of Square, (In room formerly occupied by Grange Store.) CashCapital. D. N. THOMPSON, President, - $20,000.00 J. K. ROSIER. Vice President E. D. KIPP, Cashier. DIREC'CTORS. J. K. Roster, - T. W. Srrvers, - J. J. McKee J. Everrncnam, - Jxo. STEELE, - A. S. Roster, D. N. Tuosprson, - M. R. Lyte, - E. D. Kier. Does a Geueral Banking Business. Special attention given to time d leposits and interest paid on [same. Haneeres Y = ov. R. DEACON-:- ——DEALER IN—— HARDWARE AND IMPLEM ATS CUTLERY AND CU's, Wm, DETsRING STEEL BINDEP MINNEAPC E SS AND MOWERS. JES STREL BINDERS, Eagle Steel W' 72.4 Hay Rakes, Buckeve Force ‘Pumps, BUGGIES, WAS JONS. AND CARRIAGES, BINDER BARS VIRE Ete. ' | <4 DEACOR, cn "ee: TWINE. Butler, Mo =