The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 17, 1889, Page 2

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BUTLER t—IN— | wWeu Bank Building BUTLER, MO. %66,000, $7,000,00. Capital, - SURPLUS DIRECTORS Booker Powell, Green W. Walton, ighn Deerwester, ir. N. L. Whipple Wu, E, Walton, J- Rue Jenkins. Dr, T. C. Boulware, H. C. Wyatt Pe ilies” Frank Vorts, C. H. Dutcher Receives deposits, loans money, and transacts a general banking business. We extend to our customers every ac- commodation consistent with sate bank- ing. CORRESPONDENTS. First Nat’] Bank - Kansas City. Fourth National Bank - St. Louis. Hanover National Bank - New York. | JOHN H.SULLENS.......- President 1 BOOKER POWELL,... Vice President. { 4j f i i i i i i } Wn. E. WALTON,..+-+---0+++ Cashier. » RUE JENKINS, ......Ast. Caashier, ON KINNEY....- Clerk and Collector BATES COUNTY National Bank. (Organized in 1871.) a OF BUTLER, MC. Capital paid in, - - $75,000. } Surplus - - - - $>1.000 Wi F.1.TYGARD, - - - President. HON. J. B. MEWBEKR Vice-Pres. J. C.CLARK - - Cashier. AARON HART, —THE PIONEER— Dry Goods MERCHANT -—OF BUTLER— Is Now Located on the South West Corner of the Square, With a Full and Complete Line or DRY GOODs, —NOTIONS— CLOTING, HATS, CAPS, Adn Gents Underwear In short he carries one ot the Largest Stocks of Goods in the City, and is not Undersold by Any body in the city. 2 Uncle Aaron is one ot the oldest Setlers in Butler, and has justly won the name of being the Pio- neer Merchant of this City. When in the city call and see Him_and investigate his Goods and Prices. DR. E.'L. RICE DRUGGIST, Carries 2 Full Line of BOOKS AND STATIONERY DRUGS, PAINTS, OILS, - WINDOW GLASS &e Also All the Leading PATENT MEDICINES Special and personal attention given FINALLY SET FREE. ! A Man Sent to Prison for a Mere Mis- j ‘ ag Frankfort, Ky., July 9.—The case of John Corneilson, for assault on Judge Tichard Reid of the superior court, in the fall of 1884, is at an end. Governor Bulkner yesterday grant- ed him an unconditional pardon. Cor- neilson’s assault with 2 cowhide was such a source of mortification to Judge Reid that he took his own life. A wave of indignation swept over the state and resulted in a ver- dict of three years confinement in jail for what in law is known as a mis- demeanor, for which there is no statutory punishment by confinment in either jail or penitentiary. Appeals were taken against this verdict time and again but without ayail, and Corneilson went to jail. He tried to get out thirteen times on write of habeas corpus and succeeded once, but was soon back again. Last fall the governor granted him a parole of nine months, which ended Satur- day. Yesterday the governor grant- ed him an unconditional pardon. His reason was the reported ill health of Corneilson. Balard’s Snow Linament. This wonderful remedy is guaranteed to cure Neuralgia. It is a positive cure. It will cure Rheumstism no matter how long standing It will cure that dull aching pain ift the small of the back. It will cure all sprains and bruises It will instantly take out the fire trom at scald or burn, and stop all pain. It is the most penetrating Liniment in the world. It is good tor all inflamation. It is guaranteed to do all claimed tor it or money refunded. Dr. E. Pyle, Agent’ About the most enervating thing that comes to people at this season of the year is the debilitating sum- mer novel. There is not enough mental force in one of them to stim- ulate the brain of a chicken. Marvelous Success. Ballards Horehound Syrup has been a marvelous success from its inception. There is no cough it will not relieve. It is guranteed to relieve all throat and lung ailments and for Croup, sore throat whooping cough and all cough its action is very remarkable. Ask tor BALLARDS. HOREHOUND SYRUP and take no other kiad, and you will not ve disapont- ed. Dr. E. Pyle, Agent. BATTLING WITH A SNAKE. A Missouri Farmer has a Terrmble Ex- perience With a Snake. ' Marshall, Mo., July 9.—P. S. San- didge and James H. Craddock were looking for bean poles, this after- noon in a bushy ravine on Craddocks farm, five miles south of this city when hearing Craddock making a strange noise Sandidge look around to behold a snake as thick as his arm with its head almost in Craddock’s face, and thelatter standing as if in a terrible nightmare making a hoarse gurglin noise in his fright. The low- er part of the infuriated reptile was coiled around Craddock’s right leg, and he stoodas if paralysed with terror. Finally nerved to desperation by the snake’s hot breath Craddock seized the reptile, which was of the dark blue figthing species common- ly known as “blue racers,” around the neck just below the head. Then the contest between man and snake began. The now frenzied reptile lashed Craddock cruelly with its tail and the lower part of its body, skin- ning his face and cutting his clothes into ribbons. _Dispairing of killing his squirming and slippery antago- nist Craddock released his hold on the sknake’s neck, when it gave a great spmng and hurled itself through the air for about ten feet, alighting in some bushes and gliding away swift as a flash. Craddock was so relaxed after the terrible strain that he could hardly speak. Sandidge stood spell-bound as if mesmerized by the fearful sight and could neither more hard or foot during the singular combat. When delivering the account in this city he turned very pale and it was feared he would faint. The snake was about twelve feet long and was probably aroused by Convicts Appointed to Office. In its Washington specials yes- terday the Republic showed how James Hill. defeated Republican can- didate for Congress and negro dep- uty president in the Third Mississip- pi District, had secured a place in the treasury department for one M. J. Little, a white floater, who, on oath had admitted to stuffing the ballot box. The evidence in the case leaves no doubt that the ap- pointment was deliberately and knowingly made under the system of deputizing Republican congress- men and defeated candidates for of- fices to use the executive power in filling the offices. Under the same system Gilbert H. Stevens was ap- pointed postmaster at Sharon, N. Y. though he had been indicted for burglary in 1882 and had compro- mised with the prosecuting witness. The Mississippi deputy was a ne- gao, the New York deputy wasa white man, but the results are simi- lar in both cases. Henry F. Sharp, lately appointed postmaster at Lead Hill, Arkansas, was convicted in the U. S. district court at Springfield, Sept. 24, 1887, on the charge of sending obscene letters through the mails. After his conviction in 1887, this Henry Sharp served his term in the Neosho jail. He had come to Missouri in connec- tion with “the New York Society of Integral Co-operators,” and he gain- ed in the same connection a very unsavory notoriety at the village of Eglinton in Tany county. It was re- ported in Springfield that after serv- ing his term he went to Arkansas and engaged in the publication of a paper at Lead Hill. Now it was the President’s duty to know, or to have a sworn head of department who would know, before Henry E. Sharp was appointed post- master at Lead Hill whether he was Henry E. Sharp, the Missouri con- vict. The fact that he nas appoint- ed unsworn and unconstitutional deputies in Arkansas to whom he has delegated his executive authority does not relieve Mr. Harrison of the responsibility for the proper per- formance of his duty as a sworn of- ficer. It is certainly a part of this duty to keep convicts out of office under him, whether the bosses whom he has deputized to use his execu- tive authority want them in or not. His deputies are not sworn officers; they are under no responsibility to the people over whom he sets them as bosses, and when he con- firms their nominations of convicts he alone is responsible.—St. Louis Republic. A Scrap of PaperSaves Her Life It was just an ordinary scrap of wrap- ping paper, but it saved her lite. She was in the last stages ot consumption, told by phvsicians that she was incura- ble and could live ouly a short time; she weighed less than seventy pounds. On a scrap of paper she read ot Dr. King’s New Discovery, and got a sample bottle; it helped her, she bonghl a large bottle, it helped more, bought another and grew better tast, sontinued its use and is now strong, healthy, rosy, plump, weighing 140 pounds, For fuller partic- ulars send stamp to W. HI. Cole, arug- gist, Ft. Smith. Trial Bottles of this wonderful Discovery free at Walls & Holt, Druggists. He Won't Wear It. New Orleans, July 9.—Sullivan re- tired early last night. quarters are at No. 29 Rampart st, where he is a guest. It is expected he will remain in his present quar- To- ters for the next several days. night he will be givena reception by tremendous ovation is anticipated. With regard to the Richard K. Fox pionship of the world.” An Absolute Cure. He was in a hilarious mood over his victory. His the Young Men's Athletic club. A belt Sullivan told a United Press re- | porter that he would not touch it. “I would not put it on the neck of a good bull-dog,” he added, “and it is | ted Workmen in Ohio that threatens not atall necessary after my _per- | formance of yesterday, to retain itas | throughout the United States. Some an evidence of my title to the cham- | of its members go so far as to say | Bad for Butler if True. The St. Louis Republic after com- menting on the present condition of the Mo. Kans. & Texas Railroad, has the following to say of the Mo. Pac. extension: “Losing the Missouri, Kansas & | Texas leaves the Ft. Scott, Wichita Western (a Gould road) without connection with the Missouri Pacific system. Ft. Scott, being the termin- us of the road, the business has to be turned over largely to the M. K. &T. To avoid this and to connect the Wichita line with the Mo. Pae. system and shorten the route for the Colorado and Kansas business, En- gineer J. H. Collins has recently completed a survey and located a line of road from the eastern termi- nus of the Wichita at Ft. Scott, to Rich Hill, a distance of 28 miles. Mr. Collins is now surveying an east- ern line from Rich Hill by way of Appleton City, St. Clair county; Deepwater, Henry county, and Var- sailles, Morgan county, to Jefferson City. This will make a saving of some 60 miles on all through busi- ness from Colerado, Southern Kan- sas and southwest Missouri to St. Louis. The Emporia road, another Gould line, running from Leroy, Kan., to Foster, Mo., and to a connection with the Lexington and Southern a few miles north of Rich Hill, will undergo a change. About 8 miles { of this line, between Foster and the Lexington and Southern connection, will be taken up, and a connection made from Rich Hill with the Em- poria line at Foster by extending the main coal switch now existing to within about five miles of Foster. With these changes the Gould sys- tem would be completed so far as Southwest Missouri and Southern Kansas are concerned. These changes will make Rich Hill the principal division point of the Gould system in the southwest. The location of extensive coal chutes at that point, determined on at the conference between the officers and directors of the Rich Hill Coal and Mining Co. and the Missouri Pa- cific Railroad Company in St. Louis, settles the question of concentrating the several lines at Rich Hill and building as practicable an air line east from here to connect with the main line of the Missouri Pacific at Jefferson City. In this connection it might be proper to add that the Chetopa and Denver line is to be extended some 30 miles east to Baxter Springs and Joplin, the survey having recently been completed by Engineer Collins. ‘*Mystic Cur’? tor Rheumatism and Neuralgia radically curesin 1 to 3 days by immediately counteracting the poison in the system. Tt will not tail, 75 cents. Sold by W. J. Lansdown, druggist, Butler, Mo. 8-6m Some fellow has been at it, and finds that if allthe telegraph wires of this country were stretched out in one continuous line they would reach around the world seven times. Drunkenness or the Liquer Habi | Positively Cured by administering Dr. Haines’ Golden Specific. It can be given in a cup of coffee or tea withovt the knowledge ot the person tak- ingit; is absolutely harmless and will ettect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderate drink- er or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Golden Specific in their coffee without their knowledge, and to-day believe they quit drinking ot their own free will. It never fails. The sys tem once impregnated with the Specific it becomes an utter impossibility tor the liquor appetite to exist. For tull partic ulars, address GOLDEN SPECIFIC CoO., 185 Race st. Cincinnati, . Society Insurance. Cinncinnati, July 11.—There is trouble in the Ancient Order of Uni- to disrupt it, not only in Ohio, but | that it will destroy confidence in all | similar beneficiary organizations in ; the United States if the action of Every CHOPPED HER TP. aS Enterprising Thresherman The Bloody End of a Much Married and knows that Very Fascinating Woman. the threshing machine that will work the most rapidly, clean perfectly, and save all the grain will bring him the best jobs and best prices, and so he will Write now to at once investigate our claim that VIBRATOR beats anything heretofore Shelbyville, Ind., July 11.—The much married Mollie Corven, who was lately divorced from her eighth husband, is evidently a very facinat- ing woman. Only Tuesday she was bound over tothe Court {for shoot» ing Gid Parmer and his son for try- ing to force their company on her. To-day she lies at the point of death from wounds inflicted onher late Tuesday night by Charles Suttler, a rejected suitor whom she refused to make her ninth husband, though she had divorced number eight for no other purpose than to make Sut- ler number nine. A few days ago they had a quarrel and he wasdis-| . made in missed. Late Tuesday night she| all these and other points, awoke to find him standing by her The bedside, to which he had felt his way He asked hor if she would marry him. and on her refusal, produced a hatchet and proceeded to chop her up. Her right hand was cut to pieces, one ear was cut off, three ter- rible gashes were cut on her head and the blade was driven into her shoulder. Leaving her for dead, Suttler made his escape. wide-awake Farmer will also get our circulars and satisfy himself whether he can afford to have his grain wasted by other threshers when he can make money by having his grain threshed with the New Vibrator. Our pamphlet giving full information Sunk With Her Load. St. Louis, July 11.--The -Anchor lne steamer Crystal City, isreported to have sunk in the Mississippi river near St. Marys, 69 miles below this city, this morning. She had a large Threshi _— hi number of passengers aboard. No reshing 4 achinery an particulars have been received up to this hour (10:30 a. m.) Traction Engines sent on application. NICHOLS & SHEPAF[ BATTLE REEK. MICHi°AN Some one has pointed out that the one curious thing about fire- works is that the roman candles are made in Kong Kong and the Chi- nese lanterns are made in New York state. ARBUCKLES’ reckage of COFFEL is 4 © Oi cxcellence. A&IOSA CALIFORNIA. °° LAND OF DISCOVERIES Re NSTEMA-Coucts, Hie DONCNTA Sc 4ESe a “DISEASES THRON PTE UNGS Seid on Guntel Ss 1 bee. bttle3 pr Qe EMULSION OF PURE COD LIVER OIL 452 HYPOPHOSPHITES Almost as Palatable as Milk. So disguised that it can be lated ‘Send or circular, Tt CO. OROVILLE 2 | digested, and assimi! by the sensitive stomach, when the oh camnot be tolerated; and by com bination of the ofl with the hypephes phites £2 much more efficacious. Remarkable 2s a fiesh producer. Persens gain rapidly while taking it, SCOTT'S EMULSION is acknowledged by Physicians to be the Finest and Best preps ration in the world for the relief and cure of CONSUMPTION, SCROFULA, CENERAL DEBILITY, WASTING DISEASES, EMACIATION, COLDS Se ee The great for Wasting in Children.” Sold dy all Druggisie SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY Dr. E.-L. RICE. | ge=Try Santa Asie CHEWING Gum. A natural Calitornia Gum. By swallow- ing the saliva produced in chewing {will materially aid digestion. WOODWARD, FAXON &CO., DISTRIBUTING AGENFS, Kansas City, Mo, 2 consumer It has permanently cured THOUSANDS ee ar ee hans precacntiary ayiey. ‘ou have premon oe ane as ~ Diticulty of to filling Prescriptiens. | Craddock stepping on it. The blue Store one door south of Bates Coun- | Ter: to which variety the snake be- ty Nat'l Bank. Give me wai ‘longed, is very resentful and yindic- j tive anda desperate fighter when DR. E. L. RICE. | exasperated. Silos a —— OINT- | the grand lodge of Ohio, as directed ME? is only put up in large two ounce * tin boxes, and Pa an ahealate ae tor old | by the Buprenie lodge of the order, ares wounds, chapped hands. |is persisted in. The proposition is IGINAL ABIETINE OINTMENT. Sold | county is concerned and tax all of its e Seen 2 lodges, which include one-third of all the membership of the state, out Buffalo Bill has been engaged by ; of existence. Ifsucha thing is le- the French government to teach | gally possible, those who join such 100 cavalry officers to ride in the orders have no security and can have American style. no confidence in them in future. by F M. Crumley & Co, at 2 box—by mail 30 cants. SMS SNNLUND- 21 *PAICHLESS « FOR ‘ SHAMPOOING + &c., don’t Seley, but use- PISO’S POR. CONSUMPTION immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents 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 Castoris, | When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. E3 | iE | SNITOOM aNd owe” ie . he

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