The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 21, 1889, Page 8

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i ti } t j | 1 j } } MONEY sBATES COUNTY LOAN andLAND CO,, IAS. K. BRUGLER & SON, MANAGERS, Butler Mo. This Company invests money in real estate, buys notes and School Bonds, and deals in all kinds ot good seuuriteis. FINE IMPROVED FARMS U 40 to 640 acres each, and good grazing lands from 400, to 1,500 acres in a body for sale or ex- change | visit to his parents. | the latter part of the week. { Now is the time to get Hagedorn’s | finest work at reduced prices. Call on him when in the city. North side. T. P. Rixey, general agent of the Odd Fellows Mutual Aid Association, | il of Mexico, Mo., spent Monday in the city and visited the I. 0.0. F. lodge at night. Our good friend, W. S. Chandler, living northwest of Butler, in Mound township, brought to this office last week a sample of most excellent ci- der, for whieh he will aecept the thanks of the T1ues crew. The art of photography is still ad vancing. The latest is pictures on silk, satin or linen. Our enterpris- ing photographer is up with the times in such work. Call and see him, north side. We would eall attention to a very interesting and well-written communication from the pen of Wm. E. Walton, descriptive of his trip to his bed by sickness. residence of her daughter, Mrs. G. West. proving. ting upon his place, just east town, 300 tans of hay. Springfield to attend the meeting the Alliance and Wheel. Eat a Welch, of Kansas City, formerly Butler, is quite sick. LUMBER!! H.C. WYATT & SON. Save money by calling on us for prices on. LUMBER, LATH, _ SHINGLES, PAINTS, ———And all 1 Building Materia ——Our motto is—— HIGH GRADES wr And LOW PpRICEs LOCAL ITEMS. Photographs at reduced a short time only at Hagedorn’s a ee Urless DeArman and Miss Mabel rates for a billiard hall in Butler. Colorado, found on another page of this issue. John Starr and Lee Culver have leased the Star blacksmith shop of J. N. Gipson, and will take charge of the same about the first of Sep- tember. Mr. Starr is now employed in the shop, and is a first-class smith. returned home Monday evening. crat that sneak thieves are gettin Clinton merchants. A party of gay youngsters had a pienic and a jolly time Friday. The names of the participants were Daisy Shannon, Nettie and Susie Steele, Rouge Frizell, Ruby Pyle, Maud Smith, Mabel McKibben, Samuel Canterbury, Dan Walker, Albion Norton, Claude and Harvey Clark. Crume Sunday. Crowder, all of Burdette, were mar Nyhart, in New Home township. R. J. Starke was in the city Tues- day and gave us a call. He was here for the purpose of buying seed wheat. He expects to put in a crop of 120 acres this fall, and has at present three teams running pre- paring the ground. iting friends. Saturday, accompanied by Ruth Walker. <a the boys that his large stock of cloth The Times deeply regrets to learn | °° 2°98 pits 5 of the death Sunday of Charles H. Durrett, which took place at his home near Virginia. in Charlotte township In his death the county loses one of its best citi- izens. Mr. Durrett was a single man 45 years old, and his death was caused by a complication of diseases. ment. Harry Roberts, who young man, in Buite City, Montana, several months ago and was senten ed. The other day two boys (colored,) of this city, madea wager as to which one could eat the most Sibe- rian crab apples. They measur- Charley Eldridge is home ona | E. S. Carrithers is expected home } LW Badger is again confined to | Freight Agent Davis of the Mis-! Mrs. Dr. Winsett, ‘of Blue Mound, | we are sorry to learn, is dangerously Mrs. Campbell is very sick at the Nearly all of the oats between Neva- Mrs. Heinline, who has been quite j and Cleveland. i The wheat between sick for the past two weeks, is im-|tHi8 Place and Nevada is being ship- | eee D. A. Colyer bas just finished put- G. C Miller left Monday for We are sorry to learn that Grant am ae | The city council at its last meet- | ing refused to grant a license to run Misses Zoe and Lucy Blatchert | who have been visiting in Rich Hill We see from the Clinton Demo- in their work on the stores of the Ter Chubbuek, secretary ites | violent Struggles of the horses. All State Board of Agriculture, of Co- lumbia, was the guest of Miss Ida Jas. Buchanan and Miss Fannie | to be thickly covered with bees, of ried Sunday at the residence of Noah | near by. Mrs. M. A. Maynard, of Kansas City, spent last week in the city vis-| She left for home| .. é -., | tically away and were afterward Miss 3 A. E. Blatchert, the the clothing man under the Palace hotel, notifies ing is now opened and ready for their inspection. Read his advertise- murdered | John W. Crawford, a former Butler ced to die Aug. 16th, has been respit- Rev. Summy left on the Gulf to- dayas a delegate from the Bates County Agricultural Wheel to the Crops in Missouri. Sedalia, Mo., Aug. 19.—Traveling souri, Kansas & Texas railroad, re-! turned to this city Saturday after ; spending the greater part of the | week looking after the movement of i ; the crops on the line of the road. ——-N# WE ARE GOING To MAKE =|BICCER RACKET THAN} :—EVER-: We are now receiving a large invoice, direct Factory of FOOT-WEAR, such as Ladies’, Men’s 2 Children’s Shoes, § : FROM THE COARSEST TO FINEST :—__ Our Best Goods we Guarantee the stock and work, Everybody come and examine and be happy. We are alurays receiving Goods, & SPECIALTIES NEXT WEEK, i H, B. HIGH & CO, SCisueneass SSE REEL E Board and lodging. Residence on | Pine street, convenient to Acadmy and Public school. Board reasona- ble. Apply at residence or address Mrs. R. W. Jamns, Box 226, Butler, Mo. 38-tf Married a Chicago Man. Pahnyra, N. ¥., Aug. 15.—In June Mrs.‘Mary E. Kingworth, a widow 57 years old, who lived in Marion, a small town near here, published the following advertisement: A widow just over the line of hap- py girlhood, of medium height, and the possessor of the necessary quali- fications of beauty, a gentle and loy- ing disposition, a little home and $100 in bold American dollars, yearns for a protector who will shield her through the severe months of the year, the winter of a northern climate, as well as from a cruel world’s cold frown. R. A. Haggard of Chicago, aged 68 years, read the advertisement and wrote to the widow. After receiving a reply he sent his picture and a cor- respondence ensued. Last Friday Haggard arrived in Marion and calle ed on Mrs. Kingworth. The result was that they drove to Palmyra and were married. Haggard is said to be quite wealthy. He and his bride have gone to California on awedding journey. B@S~ WINE OF CARDUI, a Tonic for Women, R. | da and Hannibal are being shipped to Texas and the flaxseed to Chicago | ped mostly to Chicago. The Kan- | | sas wheat raisers and those between | | Boonville and Hannibal are holding their crop in sacks for better prices. | A miller at Moberly has 18,000 sacks out and filled with wheat, but the | of | holders refused to sell at present | | prices. Mr. Davis says that 95 out | | of every 100 bushels along his road in Missouri will grade as No. 2. | McElree’s WINE OF CARDUI for female diseasee from thd : of of Mr. Doyle, of Grinnell, Iowa, who | jis traveling through this country selling buggies, drove up to the res- idence of Mr. John Hunter near this city on last Saturday morning and hitched his team to the fence, leay- ing it there while he went into an adjoining field to see Mr. Hunter. g | In a short time the attention of Tom Wellins, a colored man in the employ of Mr. Hunter, was attracted. by the Money to Loan. On good security. We have ey to loan at 6 per cent interest ang 5 per cent commission for five No other charges. Borrower ay pay all or part at any interest ing time. This makes your Ag cost about 7 per cent. ; 48-ti Jas. K. Beveren, - the parties immediately ran to their j Fescue, Claude Smith, also working | for Hunter, being the first to reach the scene. The horses were found —— eee R. Talbott, the tailor, is located at his residence first door west. of | the Laclede hotel. 28-0. '-| which Mr. Hunter had 38 stands The enraged insects thick- | ly filled the air and it was only with great danger and difficulty that the {men finally succeeded in cutting the Both horses ran fran- Parties wanting to borrow mopm on long or short time, at low with privilege of paying e all before due and Stop interes should call on Walton & Tuckey t- Investment Co. a T. W. LEG + —THE—: BUGGY Ma KEEPS EVERYTHING *-THE-> | horses loose. found down on the creek in terrible agony. One of the horses died from its injuries and the other was con- siderably damaged. All of the men - | were severely stung, but all are now HEEGCE from their painful injur- ies.—Windsor Review. —— | Try BLACK-DRAUGHT tca for Dyspepsia. a awake Tarred and Feathered to Death. Muskegon, Mich., Aug. 18.—Con- siderable excitement is developing over the recent finding of a man’s skeleton in Fruitland township. A coroner’s jury yesterday returned a verdict that the bones were those of Frank Stoner, who was tarred and feathered in North Muskegon in the wainter four years ago, for fequent- 7 McKibben, Dan Walker and Miss Ruby Pyle, all of Butler, attended the festival here on last Thursday evening.—Adrian Journal. ‘Happy daddy John Haris was in the city Saturday, receiving the con- gratulations of his many friends over the arrival of his fine boy. He said he had named him John Fran- cisco Harris. Jas. K. Hulse brought to our of- fice a jug of very fine cider last Thursday. Mr. Hulse and J.T. Graves are running a cider mill at Mr. Graves’s place in the east part of the city. They charge two cents ed out their piles and went to work, each determined to win. After eating awhile, they stopped to take a rest, and went tothe well to geta drink. ‘Ore of the boys, Jim Williams, about, 16 years of age, didn’t eat any more apples; for he died in a short time after drinking the water. Next time the foolkiller comes along he will doubtless find more victims.—Pleas- ant Hill Local. , Call on Walton & Tucker Invest- ment Co., for money, at low rates, with privilege of paying before due and stop interest. tf —— McELREE’S WINE OF CARDUI for Weak Nerves _— State Wheel convention which meets at Springfield to-morrow. The prin- isthe union of the Alliance and Wheel parties, of which we will give our farmer readers further particu- lars in the future.—Rich Hill Re- view. in Deepwater Democrat 15:—Rev. Walker, of Butler, visited Browning, | at Deepwater and Osceola this week, in the interest of Home Missions to the Presbyterian chureh.—Tom Malloy skipped over to Butler, Bates county, with the intention of trading his farm for Butler property. ing school outhouses and frighten- ing girls. the shoes and parts of clothing found cipal object of the state convention | on the skeleton as those they had given to Stoner to keep him warm after he had escaped from the mob. The indignant farmers demand an tarring are uneasy. feet has been reached by the drillers bountiful supply of good, pure water has already been secured. The drill. ing will continue for several days yet. M. Edmond de Pressense, French Senator for life, the eminent Protest- ant divine and pulpit orator has pre- pared for the September number of Harper's Magazine a faithful outline of the religious movement in France at the present time. While “it would be absurd,” he says, “to imagine that French Protestantism is on the point of again taking possession of France,” he regards it as a salutary element for the present and an important one for the future. Of French Cath- Olicism he says that it ‘Temains a great force in spite of the noisy man- ifestations of contemporary atheism.” Some farmers recognized BUGGY LINE Tops, Cushions ——WHEELS, DASHES, § East room {ron blog vestigation. Those who did the ed A depth of nearly six hundred Clinton's new artesian well, anda Special Notice. All persons knowing themselves per ‘gallon for making cider or 23 cents when they filter it. You should not miss seeing Hag- edorn’s display of pictures while in the city. It will do you good. Quite a pleasant social took place Tuesday evening at the residence of A. 8S. Badgiey three mile southwest of town, in honor of his daughter, Miss Melissa, and Miss Susie Hep- ner, of St. Tiouis. Those present from Butler were Don Kiney and wife, C. B. McFarland and wife, Misses Lillie Smith, Sadie Garden. er, Minnie Peach Rosa Speece and Allie Cooper, Messrs L. H. Moore, Will Keasling, C. F. Pharis and G. Vebb. For Sare.—House and lot in But- ler for sale. For Particulars address Box 150, Butler, Mo. 34-2m* Se ey MULES WANTED. We want to buy 2 car loads of mules, from 4 to 7 years old, and from 144 to 16 hands high, sound and in good flesh. Farmers when you are through haying, and have no farther use for your mules, bring them to us and get the highest mark. et price—in Cash. Hanurs & Lister, Butler, Mo. | Monday evening. neither would live, consequently the body of the deceased baby was em- balmed and kept until Monday, but as the living twin seemed to be do- ing very well and the father and mother retaining hopes that they might raise it, it was decided to lay the remains of the deceased child away. The Tives extends its sym- pathies. Se Se Rich Hill, Mo., Aug. 15th, 1889. Ep. Tres: I see in your last 1s- sue in making mention of probable candidates for different county of- fices, you mentioned the name of | Hon. Thos. Gault, of Osage town- ship, as probable candidate for sher- iff Being closely connected with }some of Mr. Gault’s most intimate | friends Ihave ascertained the fact | that he will not be a candidate for | Sheriff, but at the earnest solicita- | tion of his many friends, will likely [at the proper time present himself | a8 a candidate for county treasurer’ A Vorer. eee One of Marshal Morgan’s twin boys born last week, was buried The children were prematurely born though they were perfectly formed and apparent- ly all right it was the opinion that There will be a grand re-union of native North Carolinians, now resi- dent in other states, at Raleigh, N. C., October 14 to 19 at the annual state fair. Railways will furnish the lowest possible rates. A grand op- portunity will be afforded to the for- mer residents of that state to revisit the scenes of their childhood and eet old time friends and accquaint- when it set a day on which to receive propositions for water-works. The board recognized the importance of getting all the competition possible in order to get the best and cheap- est system. Butler can not afford to lose the present opportunity of | securing water works, and an error | of the board might be the cause of defeating the Proposition before the | people or invalidating it after it has been voted upon. Let the pre- liminary steps be so well taken that no ground will have to be gone over | twice, and so there will be no cause for complaint of any one. While we are all anxious about this matter a ances at the re-union. | — _ ___ i The city council did a wise thing You Good Cents —G{@Then you can and willggg— TRADE WITH Jewett & Hickma Good cents should never be wasted on bargains, so we offer a strong Incentive to im | duce you to | Put Good Money In GoodG 00d! ——In the shape of cheap, choice— He points out the attention paid to social questions by the Protestant as well as the Catholic church. ea ee BG BLACK-DRAUGHT tea cures Constipation, TT _. to be indnbted to the late T. W. Childs must come in and settle at once, as this is no idle threat. I must have the money. Suiriezy Cups, Executor. eee ea SOMETHING NEW. We cure all rough skinon the face— smooth shaves, latest style hair cuts shampoo’s—and Spanish luster cures the scalp of dandruff. Shop on North Maiu FRED DORN. Strayed or Stolen! From my premises in Mound town- ship, about the middle of July, 1889, one Jersey calf, about one year old, color, light red or yellow. A liberal 39-2 If you want to buy an organ or a piano go to see E. T. Steele & Co. They sell the Estey Organs and Es- tey & Decker Bros., Pianos. They can save you big money onan instru- ment and would like to figure with you whether you buy or not. Also have all kinds of Sewing machines for sale. Eb. T. Steere & Co. New Scales, Lots ot Harness, R. L. Graves the popular harness and saddle dealer on the west side has just put in a new pair of platform scales in front of his shop. ll per- sons having weighing to doand want correct weights are invited to give him a call. He also keeps a large stock of harness, saddles &c., for few weeks more can make but little | | done accurately or a new set of har- sale cheap. So if you want weighing reward will be paid for information of its whereabouts or return of calf. ee a Seed Wheat! I have samples of seed wheat from a ne and other varieties. The Mediterra- | os nean is said to be the best yielding | R and milling wheat grown. Will or- i der in any quantities. Get your or-/ der in early if you want wheat. Sam- | ples can be found at the following | IN. B. - liams & Co., W. G. Womack, Rich-| CHEAP” furniture. Our furnitare ardson & Son, Phillips & Son, Sacket | is choice first, and cheap afterward. Bros., Badgley Bros., E. T. Steele & | No one will Co.. A. F. Hickman and R. A. Atkin- * = Cheap Furniture S. and Jumbo brands of flour, mada at Marshall, Mo., by! shipped to the city. The above mer- | Choice Furniture Ch f : chants are handling this flour and | Our goods are all choice, hower buy from them. Rates — on ‘and low prices is our best. | wholesale lots. R. W. James, JEWETT & HICKMAN Parrick Rezp. Saline county, of the Mediterranean | places: McBride & Co., J.E. Wil-| We do not offer you “CHOICE son. Iamalso agent for the Maud | Choose ~——But everyone will—— Ray & Page, equal to any ever you will find it to fyour interest to _ cheap we sell them. High quality Agent.

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