The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 3, 1890, Page 3

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6 WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 3.1890. " gHE CHOCTAW'S “GREAT UN.! § RNOWN. INational Bank. 4 R. R. DEACON, | BUTLER, MO, * | fe THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE | TH LARGEST AND BY USING THE GENUINE Men | AND IMPLEMENT HOUSE llinevrue NO. 41 ao ae | SAILIOUSNEss, SICK HEADA i SHEARTRURN, LIVER INDIGESTION DxXSP! COMPLAINT, & Slimy Bridge to Pass. Which M Etermty, to Pull, Perditio A son of the first imissio IN BATES COUNTY. a le it j ago, it work CAPITAL, - - $125,000 00 (" ‘ MEBLIVER PILLS! gos, asin wi IN BUTLER. | FLewa’ BROS, Phy, Pa aa \ the north, ond the pec | sai ae =a F.J.TYGARD, - -,- President. j until they found to ON. J. 8 NEWBERRY — Vice-Pres. 1st wae ar, dmmance CesN ey ade a ea eae = Rees a = Rint eaenR RET Sra oars PO GEARK - - Cashier (reais A 2 ae oN or About | THE NATION’S SHAME. ais Mason wanted to beat the|*A!) FOR HER HUSBAND IN CASH : ine oer 3 rmyville, Conn., Aug. 26.—Abou = i lard bill, the speaker — ae * pS m. 213 o'clock yesterday morning, at the | yy; f A the ER A arabe: — Sondre noses Sete 3 W. H, T UCKE R, but a few families, who, somehow or|home of David de Lore,a mill work- ( gee a2 pie ee | they pleased ead padres ose) other, had been warued cf it, and, A aoe r. Cannon Utterly Forgets | : a : , x ninie DENTIST, oo seein es om ’ = ree ra at “ee os in His Dignity and Position. The lard bill is now just where it} East St. Louis, Ill, Aug. 27—A BUTLER; a MISSOURI. |e. g seives a rat ap e back of the house. r. de Lore | waa when the house adjourned last|remarkable scene occurred in the Office, Southwest Corner Square, over From their earliest traditions, the Aaron Hart's Store. people have been taught t believe in a life after they leave this world. Lawyers. They believe that the spirit the mo- 7 mett it leaves the body, is com- : J. H. NORTON. pelled to travel a long distance to Attorney-at-Law. the west, until it arrives at an im mense chasm,at the bottcm of which flows a very rapid, rocky and dan- gervous stream. This terrible gorge which is surrounded ou every side by immense mountains, the soul has to cross on a long and slippery pine Jog with the bark peeled off, the only passage to the “happy hunting grounds which is beyond the dan gerous bridge. On the bank of the stream, just at the other end of the log, there always stand six persons, who have reached the “happy hunt- ing grounds,” and who throw sharp rocks at whoever attempts to cross the dangerous log, the moment thé middle is reached. Those who have over Lant-|)ived properly, according to the In- dian idea of morals, have no trouble TAGE & DENTON, in crossing the bridge; the stones ATTORNEYS AT LAW, falling harmlessly from them, and | Office North Side Square, over A.L.|they reach the “happy hunting McBride’s Store, Butler, Mo. grounds” where there is perpetual Office, North Side square, over F. Barnhardt’s Jewelry Store. Wro. TACKSON, * "ATTORNEY AT LAW, ~ Butler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, _ over Badgley, Bros., Store. : Cavin F. Boxter, Prosecuting Attorney. CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. i Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. AARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORN«YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, down’s Drug: Store. day, without difficulty. There the Ea trees are evergreen,thesky cloubless J. R. BOYD, M. D. and the breezes always gently blow- PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, ing; there, too, acontinuous feast and dance is going on; the people never grow old, but live forever in perpetual youth. The wicked when they attempt to cross the dangerous bridge, can see the stones thrownat them andin trying to avoid them they fall from the giddy height in- to the awful grorge thousands of Office, front room over P.O. All calls feet below the slipper y log, where a . answered at office day or night. rushing, boiling stream is tumbling povectalatention given to temale dis-} over the great sharp rocks, filled : with dried fish and animals which T C. BOULWARE, Physician and | are continually brought around to Fe Saplon, Oltice north ide square, |the same place. by the eddies and i ani appre ete whirlpools. There ali the trees are —_—— |dead, the water infested by poison AR T, WALLS, ous snakes, toads and other repul- PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. sive looking reptiles; the dead are Office, Southwest Corner Square, over ever hungry but have nothing to Aaron Hart’s Store. Residence on Ha-|eat, are always sick but never die; vannah street norrh of Pine. there is nosun and the wicked are Missouri Pacific By. ceihe sie on the sides of a high rock from Orricr—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s, 1g-1y Butier, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, ‘which they can:overlook the beauti- ful country of the good hunting gtounds; the abode the happy, but THE PUEBLO AND DENVER, PULLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS Kansas City to Denver without cnange nee SISNET Dy Generali Passenger and Ticket Ag’t 2 Daily Trains 2 can mever reach it. - Ismay. TU Future of Reed’s Rules. = : The next house will be democratic. KANSAS CITY and OMAHA, That may be set down as a fect. COLORADO SHORT LINE {Thea acry will be raised along the td republician lines for the abrogation a i of Reed's despotic rules. ‘That may 5 Daily Trains, be set down as another fact. And ; the democratic majority should not Kansas City to St, Louis, |let them survive a single day—even : for the punishment of their inven- tors—Cincinnati Inquirer. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castorla. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for ST Lous vo} Pitcher’s Castoria. } ers Drug hastened downstairs and beheld a/ large and rough looking negro rifling | atrunk. Mr. de Lore, being a crip- | ple, was greatly frightened, his first | thought being to return quietly to | bed and let the burglar have full sway in spite of the fact that about $600 was hid away in different parts of the house. But a plucky 18-year old daughter secured a shotgun that was standing in a shed near the house, returned to an open win- dow, pushed the gun through, shouting “Surrender or I will shoot.” The terrified burglar begged for mercy, unloaded his pockets of the booty already secured and begged so hard that he was allowed to de- part, being covered by the shot- gun in the hands of the little French miss until he was a safe distance. The Cattle Trouble. E. C. Weir, manager of the Stone- wall cattle company, arrived at Ne- vada yesterday from the company’s ranch in the Cherokee Strip. He says owing to the fact thatthe states have quarantined against territory cattle, cattlemen will have to run their stock npon the market at a fear- ful sacrifice unless President Harri- son extends the time set for vacating the Strip beyond October 1. A peti- tion was prepared when heleft which will be sent to President Harrison asking that the time be extended till December 1, when the quarantine will be raised and the cattle now on er sacrifice.—Nevada Mail. Lemon indorsed for Raum. sioner of pensions Raum testified before the investigating committee yesterday that Pension Attorney George E. Lemon had indorsed his notes for $12, 000, but that he had never granted Lemon any favors in the way of advancing his pension claims. Ai the request of the committee, Congressman Cooper returned and resumed his connection with the ine vestigation, and the committee ad- journed until to-day. Pi Democrats declare that the repub- lican majority in the committee is disposed to whitewash Raum. Andrew Carnegie has just given $50,000 of money taken from Ameri- can tax payers to found a library in a Scotch town. He had also written an article for the North American Review, in which he insists upon higher tariff .protection for our in- fant industries. In his iron infant industry the tariff has in twenty-nine years given him a fortune of $55,- 000,000. If an infant does so well, Mr. Carnegie, what will the industry do when it is an adult?—Sedalia Ba- ZOO. Miles’ Nerve & Liver Pilis. An important discoyery. They act on the liver, stomach and bowels through the nerves. A new principle. They speedily cure billiousness, bad taste, tor- pid liver, piles and eonstipation. Splen- did for men, women and _ children, Smallest, mildest, surest. 30 doses for the strip will be handled at a small- Words Used Such as No Statesman Would be Guilty Of. Washington, D. C., Aug. 27.-- Never in the annals of the country have the halls of congress been dice graced until to day by the utterance of language so low as to preclude its repetition or its reproduction in the public prints. What emphasizes the enormity of the offense is the fact that it emanated from Mr. Can- non, the chairman of the appropria- tion committee, the speaker’s lieu- tenant and the ~premier” of the house. This insult was offered pending the debate on the lard bill, and for which no provocation was given. It was so monstrous in its character as to call upon Mr. Cannon the denun ciations of his own party colleagues. Even Billy Mason of Chicago, who is not specially sensitive over small matters, rushed toward Cannon and shaking his fist in his face told him that he was a scoundrel to use lan- guage which he would not have dared to have employed had Mrs. Cannon been seated in its hearing, and that as Mrs. Mason was in the gallery he took it as a personal in- sult which he was ready to resent. To make matters worse Mr. Wil- son of Washington in his superser- viceable friendship for Mr. Can- non precipitated a personal recontre with Mr. Beckwith of New Jersey and for a few moments it seemed as if a dozen republicans were at each other's throats and pandemonium Washington, Aug. 22.—Commis- | reigned. While the democrats were disgus- ted they, nevertheless, enjoyed the wrangle of the republican “happy family” who are so wont to destant upon the “southern plantation man- ners.” : REPUBLICANS FULL OF BAD BLOOD. |. This is by no means the only row that has occurred among the repub- licans pending the debate upon the Conger lard bill. A few moments before the house adjourned yester- | day the venerable “gold bug” mem- ber from Massachusetts—Mr. Walk- er—hada misunderstanding with the redoubtable Billy Mason in front of the speaker’s desk, during which the Chicagoan told Mr. Walker that but for his advanced years he would knock his head from eff his shoul- ders. It was rumored all day that Mr. Walker intended to rise to a question of privilege and have Mr. Mason brought to the bar of the house. There is bad blood in all direc- tions among the republicans. Con- gressman Butterworth is out in an interview seriously reflecting on the speaker, charging practically that if | the speaker wanted pending meas- ures to pass he would long ago have put astop to filibustering. To-day he remarked at the capitol that Mr. | Reed found means of squelching the filibusterers when the tariff and elec- tion bills were before the house, 23 cents. Samples free at H- L. Tuck- Store- L6-1yr | but all ofa sudden, and when his | Saturday evening. The previous question has been ordered, but its friends can not pass the bill. The special order has been exhausted, but the speaker will probably allow the measure tocome up to morrow as unfinished business. Then the contest will be renewed. THE STORY OF THE ENCOUNTER. The story of the fracas is as fol- lows: The roll was being called upon a ruling by speaker Reed respecting the calling to order of representa- tive Cannon of Illinois by represen- tative Enloe of Tennessee. Repre- sentative Mason, separated from Mr. Cannon by the width of one of the sections of seats, was criticising the latier for the tone of his remark, to which Mr. Enloe objected. In the tow of seate between them sat rep- resentatives Beckwith and Wilson on either side of representative Lehl- bach. They all took part sotto voice in the controversy, when Mr. Wil- son and Mr. Beckwith were seen to rise and the former struck at the latter, lightly touching him on the breast. Lehlbach sprang between them and Mr. Wilson was unable to reach around him. Representative Williams of Ohio, anxious to stop the affray, seized Mr Beckwith and forced him into his seat with considerable vigor. At this Beckwith turned his attention to his supposed assailant in the rear and it required the efforts of two or three republicans to prevent a colli- sion. Mr. Williams succeeded in ac+ suring Mr. Beckwith that he had no hostile intentions and the latter re- sumed his seat. The eagle and mace of the ser. geant at arms were hurriedly borne to the scene of the conflict and atits appearance all was quiet. Representative Wilson said after- ward in explanation of the difficulty that Mr. Beckwith had applied a most offensive epithet to him and on the spur of the moment he had struck him. Representative Beckwith stated that Mr. Wilson had, in the course of their talk upon Mr. Cannon’s rete olution of yesterday, called him a liar, whereupon in the heat, of a quick temper he had applied the same epithet to Mr. Wilson. Rheumatism Is a blood poison and must be cured by altering the condition of the blood. Purify this and Rheumatism cannotexist. Hunnicutt’s Rheumat- ic Cure is s soyereign remedy for all blood, kidney and skin diseases. It is a fine tonic and cures diseases by purifying and enriching the plo thas removing the cause. For sale by dru; tle. Hunnicutt’s Medicine Co., A lanta, Ga, Proprietors. Try it and be convineed. 40 The rise in seme classes of hides at Boston is 100 per cent and the trust in hides has resolved to keep up the price as long as it may be possible. It is estimated that this advance will raise the price of shoes 15to 40 percent. The result will be that the trust wiil make money and the poor people will have the burden to carry.—K. C. Star. ists at $1 per bot- office of Justice Bencan yesterday. Two women one wealthy the other poor claimed the affections of the same man, and the wealthy one bought out her rival with hard cash. Last Saturday Miss Lena Kremer, 18 years of age, living at St. La- borious, Il]., caused the arrest of Theodore Bogmeyer for breach of promise. The prisoner was brought here, and when confronted by his victim promised to marry her Mon- day. .Meanwhile he would have to go to jail, and to this Miss Kremer objected. She signed a release bond and this morning Theodore and Le- na appeared at the justice’s office. As the justice was about to make them man and wife, Miss Mary Kramper. who is 28 years old aad wealthy, appeared and forbade the ceremony. : “This is my man,” said she to the justice. ‘We arej to be married in two weeks and I have bought a house and furnished it for house- keeping.” Theodore looked very sheepish as Miss Kramper went on detailing her claims. The justice finally asked Theo- dore which woman he would have, telling him that if he selected Mary he would haye to go to jail. “I'll take Mary,” he finally said. This. was asad blow to Jena and she of- fered to settle for $1,500. “I'll give $700; just what the law allows,” said the triumphant Mary. After some discussion Lena ac- cepted the $700, which was placed: in trust, and Mary walked off with: the wiley Theodore, whom she will marry in two weeks. Jesse James’ Daring. Jefferson City Tribune. Since the Otterville train robbery, all the old stories about Jesse James are being revived. Most of them are pure fabrication. To be in fashion. the Tribune bequeaths the follow- ing to such literature, and will state ~ here that the iuformation came from + a member of the James gang and is not second hand: Some time after Bill Ryan had< been sentenced to the penitentiary: for complicity in the Blue Cut train « robbery, Jesse James conceived the daring idea of coming: stright to:- Jefferson City and havings talk with: Ryan. Jim Cummings-and others - advised him not toattempt anything of the kind, but the bandit was de- termined, and straightway came to - Jefferson City and stopped at the Nichols house. The next day ho a talk with Ryan and left - that night. He represented . himself as a friend of Ryan's and conducted himself as any other visi- - tor. Of course Ryan was surprised { to see him, but understood his uusis- ness well enough to conceal his busi- ness. The visit was merely one of daring and friendship. Jesse had no thoughts of attempting Ryan's release. .He said that he wanted to see how Bill was getting along and also to take a look at the penitentia- ry from the inside.

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