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BUTLER WEEKLY TIMES , J.D. ALLEN Eprtor. 7. D. Atten & Co., Proprietors, RIPTION: TERMS OF SU?S The WeeKkiy Wednesda: , will be yae vear, postage paid, tor $1.25. MISSOURI. BUTLER WEDNESDAY, JAN. 14, 1889 THE FARMER’S MEETING. clemency of the weather. ies and from the questions asked the speakers from time to time showed they were desirous of secur- ing all the information they could get. L. E. Clements, secretary of the State Trotters and Breeders asso- ciation read a very interesting paper on the trotting and draft horse. He showed a wonderful knowledge of the record and pedigrees of the noted horses. The association, of which Mr. Clements is secretary, is doing much to encourage the breed of draft horses in the state. State surgeon, gave a very instruc- tive talk on the diseases of stock. @ paper on the dairy business. He gave a practical, common sense tail and made his subject very plain to his hearers and gave valuable infor mation in reference to making but- ter and the feeding and care of the milch cow. Levi Chubbuck, Secretary Siate Board of Agriculture, A. J. Blake, Fepresentative Colman’s Raral World, and Albert Falcon, a promi- nent farmer of St. gave interesting talks on subjects the farmer. These meetings Clair county, each instructive of importancs to and held in different he productive of much good in en couraging the farmer in an inter- tions of vital importance {o his wel is doing good work and it sh wid be encouraged by the legislature with liberal appropriations and the Passage of such laws as will increase “andenlarge its sphere of useful- | mess. Judge William D. Kelley, member of congress from Pennsylvania, and the oldest member of the lower house, died in Washington City, at 6:20 o'clock Friday eyening last, of intestinal catarrh, brought on bya cold contracted Christmas week. He thas served in the lower house longer than any member, and for this rea- yson was called the “Father of the thouse,” and for many years has been etter known as “Pig Iron Kelley.” ‘He was.76 yearscld an ardent re- wublican. His death removes an sold land mark and one of the most @nfluential republicans of Pennsyl- ‘wania ——_—___. _Jobn P. Harmon of Holden, is M@nnounced by the Enterprise for Railrond Cammissioner. Mr. Har- Times, published every t to any édaress | change of ideas und a study of ques-| y The farmer's meeting held at the the city and swept on through to court house Monday, under the au- ey spices of the State Board of Agricul- | W@y uearly a quarter of a mi ovige ture, was not as well attended as it band leaving death and desolation in should have been. owing to the in | 1ts track. Those | : $ : farmers who did attend were wel] | the peetane storm, though the | entertained and took great interest fact that = Say in the discussion of the varivus top- | fF several! ers of fine horses and a better grade | T. E. White, deputy Veterinary | ** J. L. Erwin, of Fulton, Mo., read | Portions of the state will 10 doubt{ed | cant fare. The State Board of Agriculture | mon wasa member of the thirty- : and thirty-second general as. semblies, and as chairman of the mumittee of internal improvements railroads, in the senate, did to settle the differences then ting between the railroads and ppers, and was a most excellent id useful member. Mr. Harmon dorn in Montgomery county, in 1845. He served all through last war in Cockrell’s brigade, d is an extensive farmer and stock wer. Heis the most prominent adidate yet named for railroad Snator Blackburn reor by the Kentuck Goint session on Frotes of the repub!i aRumber were y leg January Tth an, twenty- | t- for A. H.| Vote was 105. in 1840; came to Johnson coun-| though no correct figures | Seley Bay = , ! { Opening of the Chero’ mmissoner.—St. Louis Post-Dis-j}¢ suddenly turned cold and & great) trating gum used in that pleasnt and} rrisntion for the ‘ch deal of suffering was caus: effective cur Black. ER th j Tenth and Mound streets and the {will y third street and ; The scramble going on in the re- Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 9—Dr. S. publican party over the St. Louis T Evans a leading physician of Un-| postmastership is adding a vast ton City, committed suicide to-day amount of harmony and good feel- by shooting himself through the ‘ing in the republican party in the head. He had been suffering with state. If party services is to be re- influenza. | warded then there is no question that Filley ought to receive the ap’ Scratched 28 Years'| |pointment. While we do not com- | Body covered with scales. Itching ter- | mend Mr. Filley’s political methods, rible. Sufferirg endless. No reliet. - . | Doctors and medicines tail. Speedily |Wecan but admire his party zeal, | cured by Uuticura at a cost of $5. ‘and there is no question but that he _ a: has been the republican party in’ Cured by Cuticura St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 12—About yfissouri for mauy years. If he does | 4:30 o'clock this afternoon a cyclone not reeeive the appointment there ‘struck the southwestern section of will be some tall kicking in the re- publican ranks in this state. CYCLONE SWEPT. St. LOUIS DISASTROUSLY VISITED. A Mad Midwinter Storm Plays_ Havoc in Eyery Way. Three Persons Killed Outright and Many More Hart. | Ifthad known of the Cuticura Remedies | twenty-eight years ago it would have saved me | $200.00 (two hundred dollars) and an immense ‘amount of suffering. My disease (psoriasis) commenced on my head in a spot not larger thanacent. It spread rapid all over my | body and got under my_ nail The scales | | would drop off of me ali the time, and my sut- fering was endiess and without relief. One thousand dollars would not tempt me to heve i | the northern limits, making a path. | The mantle of Judge Kelley, “The | | a the disease over again. Lama poor man, but | Father of the House,” falls on feel rich tobe relieved of what some of the | S doctors said was leprosy, some ringworm, | Samuel J. Randall, who in turn psoriasis ete” Itook ang’, Sarsapa- | | Tillas over one year and ahalf but no cure. I will wear it buta short time. Ran- dall, who ranks next to Kelley in years of service, is not expected to live to resume his old place in the ‘i re Was scarcely any warbine t | went to two or three doctors, and no cure, a eee cannot praise the Cuticura Remedies too much They have made my skin as clear and free from scales asababy’s. All I used of them were t boxes of Cuticura and three dottles of} cura Reso! ura If re and said you I | been overcast the full nd } ivent and two cakes of Cut u had been ours before ¢ Soa | 7 : Would have cured me for $200.00, you would | | foree of the ind was felt and it! house. have had the mon: Llook ke the picture | i nt = nick ind ar -- = in your book of riasis (pic ne ee | ; Was all over in a very brief period of hav clown denice 7 ‘* How to Cure Skin Disease’?), but now I am | : oe : ses The Iowa legislature convened aniclenvaninds Opersoniever twa anneenee time, those resic ang in and near the Monday. When the house attempt- force of bubit Trub my hands over my legs and | path of the mne scarcely realiz- ing what had happened mntil it was all over. to scratch once in aw eae to no pare © organize it was 3 ¢ BLY Tamallwell Iscratched twenty-eigh ed to organize it was found te be a Yeurs, and it got to be a kind of second nature lear lock, 5 emoerg yoting tome Ithank you athousand times. ‘ eee ds Ot democrats voting Dennis Downing, Waterbury, Vt against, 50 republicans for clerk. | Cuticura Resolven In addition to dozens of dwellings | jand stores in the southern, central There is no prospect of an organiza- re 1 3 be ef. The new blood and skin purifier and purest : ‘ Hon unless a compromise can be ef- ang best of Humor Remedies, internally, and jand northern sections of the city fcctoil | Cuticura. the great Skin Cure, and Cuticura 808 more or less wre | big buildi: ; Anchor mills, Geodwin’s candle an exquisite skin beantifier, externally, ares s is peeanen ie cure Svery. species: of ee e ? TAGS Sop ite burning, scaly, crusted, pimply, Grouped around a table ina well aeroruions hereditary diseases and hn BaN wae ae bees AH knee a mors of th alp and blood, with loss o! ‘uown iiith avenue restaurant yes- hal io ee ked, the following The | fac- Ss were damaged: } x. ee! hao. oa a , tts 7 Price, Caticura, 50e ; | j tery, the Pulman hops, Van Brock’s | terday morning, says the ittsburg Resolvent. $1. "Prepared by |furniture factor y, Kingsland & Fur- | Dispatch, were Samuel D. Robison BUG) ANDS CHESIGAL{CORFORATION, | | 3 | | gesou’s farm implement works, the of Titusville, who has or ‘How to Cure Skin Disease,’’ illustrations. and 100 testimonials. ; | Missouri Pacific hospital, the Ogden | oil devel pments 1869 from ischool, the Germaz Evang ] Butler to Riehburg; William C | }ehureh, the Second Pre sbyterian Robison, mayor of Monongahela | cine | church and others yet to be heard City: Charles W. Be » Assen FREE FROM RHEUMATISM | lfrom The losses on property are | blym.n from Alleghany, and the un- In one minute the Cuticura Anti- | Pain Plaster relieves theumatic, sciatic, hip, kidney, chest, and muscular pains and weaknesses. | rst and only pain-killing plaster. /roug ated at $1,000,050,but | cle of the th iy prove mo itlemen just nam- who by the way, are brothers— vy Robison. THE DEAS AND INJURED. 2 ; Sheriff’ le. A dwelling house was wrecke: Sheiiff’s Sa By virtue and authority of a transcript exe- cution issued from the office of the cireuitcourt of Bates county turnable at the Bepeuary ter: 13:10. an incident | court, to me directed in favor of D S'S an incident | aud against D. D. MeCann and W. F Heme may give | street, I have levied and seized upon all the S 2 Tight, title, interest and claim of the said de- Jat! As aaturally happens to friends who have not met for years, they were foliowit killed: Mrs. Maggie auors, aged 40; Bernard | Quincey Robison related M Connell, aged 40, Joa Weaver, lof the oil regions which us Were in eminiscent mood, and , 3 years. Wi 1g scuildren of the present genera-| tendants of, in and to the following deceribed aged 8 years, W ea 6| the ildren = th 3s ener ee ES es ate situated in Bates county, Missouri, Soro Uae red are: 1 Wea-/ Hon x vague idea of the imagnitude | to-wit: The north half of the northwert quar- years. The injured are: Wea- | 8« : Ss Th tools whiea | ttt of section five (5) township forty-one’ (41) ver, aged 8 years, both lees broke of the transactions which took piace | range twenty-nine (29) all in Bates county, : j ce a souri, Twill, on Wasi: oil was $8 and $9 a barrel srobably dic; : Thursday, February 13th, 1890, ler, | tia Oy “people” gained’ a -.competency | iewoen we noars orsine oalonk: in the fore- Anrie Cx ‘Maas Wee Shey papel | Hoon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that pe : Am - mnors, Mage scooping it off the surface of day, at the east front door of the court house onbors, ¥ os Connors. ae oe Ree , | in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, = t e ‘ss, or gathered if from pools sell the same, or so'mnch thereof ‘as may be ALMOST NO W. NING GIVEN. sed the tauks which had over. | Tequired at public vendue t: The story as told by Mr. ! n, Was as follows: the highest bid- ber for cash to satisfy said execution and costs. GEO. G.G BROOK, Sheriff of bates County. 1@ cyclone seemed to have enter-| 2 city in 1 fores at twenty d Chouteau ay northeast unti Seventeenth ved, tak S-$t vath after Col. Drake | st enue, Wit had stru pas Ve & Sale. reached where it and a y course to Fourteenth. auth troleum a ifromt of a special exeeu- eof the clerk of the county, ouri, return- term, isd), of said court, ever. nught to tho surface in Am | rea ; circuit court ot E | able at the and | Mitchell, Studebaker or Bai Cortland, Columbus, of Genuine Climay | TO THE FARMERS ——IF YOU WANT THE BEST—— Farm Wagon, Buy the Celebrated OF BENNETT, WHEELER & Co. ——IF YOU WANT THE BEST-—— Spring-Wagon, Phaeton, or Buggy, Road-Cart, ——GET THE WATERTOWN,—— —If You Want the Best— Hag-Rake, Iren Force Pump, Wind mill, Grain-Drill, —BARB-WiIRE, SAT CROCERIES OR HARDWARE, goto BENNETT, WHEELER & CO. vas nO LANE HAS MADE A CALL FOR : : To be delivered Jan.. 18, 14. = by means of drilling, my father and|to me directed inin or ot the state of Missour} aes alt > » | ans of drilling, my : then again turned to the northeast, | i fail A Ei } ; hat the rela ea and to fe use Of Oscar eee leaving the city and striking the | tie father of mj mocautyGn .uene Oe lee Coe ae ee Siciee Pe ay 16, 17, and 16. Let your poultry river just north of Tylers. The |chased a tract of land comprising | ny the stat of Missouri, and against ~ ——— Bet: Zi 5 Bo Si 3 nd seized upon all the right, only announcement of the approach |1 286 acres, adjoining the farm on| tue int est. and clai t the said defend- _ : ; ‘ - ; fonene GL Thera: pps | tee are ae | ata Cor, cin anti ten the tole eee area come torANEL) NG) Chickens ine unless branded LANE. Having — sai ciel Ag es oly 2 es |which the Drake well was Iceated || rent estate situated in Bates county. Mis- made arrangement to s : d of Poultry to New York, in the iC en roar, quickly followec an ee , Pasa pee aes ae = ae rilveecss vd $ a Ficcnana ie 2 BS jfor $150,000. Not long afterward 1] 0x quarter of section twenty-two |22] town- | Palace Chicken Car, Iwant all the Chickens, Geese and a@ torrent of rain, w Lin turn was | : : let ¢ XK | ship thirty ght {#8} range thirty-three [33], Duck I ret H and Puile 5e in cash Ce i aad i succeeded by s and before the! ¥® ting in their office—I remem-| Bates count ssouri, 1 will, on ucks i can get. ifensand Py oe In cash be in taade. 4 victims eould 1 what bad hap- | ber it as distinctly as though it hap-| Thursday. F ebruary 13th, 1890, Farmers, remember LANE is back pened the storm had swept by and pened yesterday—when an agent of on, leaving wreckage and mangled | between the hours of nine o’ciock in the Tfore- noon and five o’cleck in the afternoon of that jan eastern syndicate walked in and | day. at the east front door of the court hence humanity in its pathway ¥ Rane: in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, = y Wits ps ay- ! offered $500,000 for the 1,2 O acres. | sell th me, orso much thereof as may be fi Trees were torn up by the roots and required, at public vendue der for cash to Satisfy s: costs. TH4t to the highest bid- aid executions and GEO. G. GLAZEBROOK, Sheriff of Bates County. Sheriff's Sie. By virtue and authority of two general exe- cutions issued from the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, re- turnable at the February term. 1890. of said court tome directed one in favor of D H Smith Hardware Co., and against Daniel c, Trett, and one in favor of ‘Kimber L. Bar- ton, William Barton and George A Barton and against Daniel C. Barrett, I have levied and seized upon all right, title interest and claim of the said defendant of, in and to the follow- ing described real estate situated in Bates county, Missouri. to-wit: The southeast quarter of the southeast quar- ter of section four (4) and the northeast quar- ter of the northeast quarter of section nine (9) and the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section nine (9) and the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section nine (9) and the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section three (3) and the north half ofthe northwest quarter of section ten (16) allin township forty-one (41) range Shiaty-Shree (33) in Baves county, Missouri, I will, on Thursday, February 13th, 1890, The owners looked at him rather in- credulously fora moment. but be- | fore they could speak he had count- ed out on the table $500,000 in cash and drafts, which he offered for a! deed to the tract. I was appalled by the tight of the pile, but my father and the father of these gen- tlemen retired for consultation and : decided that if the property was fifty five houses, killing eleven peo-| worth $500,000 it was worth $1,000, oe bikes re enya is | 000, and it was refused. Their heir about 1,000 and at first it was feared | Still owns the land and now it is val- that hundreds had been killed, but|ued at about $20,000. Where they the list was found to be compara-|could have got dollars we could tively small, only bodies so far have searcely get nickles. Thus you can been found. Z = 2 Small houses were lif see what seemingly fairy stories could be told of those days. They broken ofi, telegraph poles swept down as though mere sticks, while the roofs of buildings were lifted from their moorings like feathers and landed in the streets. The Little Town ot Clinton Swept by an Awful Storm. ' Cairo, Til, Jan. 13.—A tornado last night struck the east side of the city of Clinton, Ky., demolishing ted bodily from the ground and whirled around = 4 - : . between the ho of ni ?el he fore- in the air, dropping to the ground | are almost incomprehensible to the| noon aninve orelock in the Kee Of that with a terrifying erash and. being | present generation. but they were | { the city of bation Metre ee Co noms literally smashed into kindling red hot facts.” And a sigh of regret that the offer had not been accepted went round the circle. sell the same, or co much thereof as may be required, at public vendue to the highest bid- der for cash to satiefy said execution and costa GEO. G. GLAZEBROOK, 8-4t Sheriff of Bates County. wood. Flying timbers filled the air and the crash of falling buildings mingled with the shrieks of the peo- ple fleeing from their ruined homes. THE DAMAGE VERY SERIOUS. The path of the tornado was about 300 yards wide as shown by The Leading Western Newspaper.’ The Kansas (ity Times has earned the above {itle by always being in the foremost rank of the metropolitan Western newspapers in ad- We received a tele; gram Saturda from Mrs. N. A. Wa 4 de stating that the debris and the loss to property | her mother, Mrs. Dimmitt, was dead sagcicin saa os pada: Pong sai is estimated at about $70,000, ai-jand would be buried Sumday.—| as the best refiector of the condition of the can yet | Democrat. West, and this puts it in the position of being be given. Many knew nothing of the storm until their roofs were falling about their heads. Before the storm the evening was warm and a heavy rain had fallen all day, but after thestorm the best advocate the West can have. It has Dot let its opportunities pass, but on every Occasion has done all in its power toward the upbuilding of this great Western country. Among the principal things it has advocated, some of which have been successful, are: Opening of Okiahom ot Natuna) Preduct of Calitornia. Itis only found in Butte county, California, and in no other place in the world. We refer to the tree that produces the healing and pene | S Tt | is e for consuaption, asth- iti % - SANTA! sonsumption. | esand sells} from th guar: it ior $1.00 a bottle or three for 3 | ard a charity!50 By the use of CALIFORNIA |CaT R-CURE all symptoms of ca- side | tarrh ate dispelled, and the disease: it | nasal passage is restored to lis ma ch | ural condition. $1.10 by mail. iy | in: 1 | Han: $1.00 a package or | tWo hundred m bye af three hours before the regular Circulars free. ‘xs City. . ad parily in a yall iy portion on the hillside whi e suffered o'clock a m., leaves Kan- ceived a car load of DR all my bills, I defy competitors or T always pay the highest Chickens, Ducks and Geese, dozen to be delivered Jan, 5e cash. 6ce in trade. MULES SPOT CASH PAID FOR MULES, Fat or Lear, but must be sound, have to wai’ week and cet the cash. from the cast and has just re- ig bought direct and discounting any body in the dry goods line paid for Poultry and eggs, and sell goods s Bates county. Y GCODs. Havi: or less money than any man in Here Farmers, LANE has made a call for two hundred thousasd ten car loads of Eggs at 12} cents per 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 2nd 18.” Hens and Pallets, A Ls. PETER L. Hold your Turkeys until Feb. 1, 1890 rade. NE, the Farmers Friend. : , and get 7e cash for hens or 8¢ in * WANTED. HARRIS & LISLE’S . tables and Feed Lots, South-wast corner of the Square, Butler, Mo We will pay the aighet in kei p established in the Mule by ifyouhava Muie to sei * for an Eastern bayer and low prices, but § Fe ur mule to us any day in the HARRIS & LISLE