The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 8, 1891, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

LOCAL ITEMS Peter Lane Sundayed in the city. County court met Monday as a board of equalization. Chris Herni has taken charge of the treasurer's office. ‘ Kansas City will be down in force on the 27th. Go to Steele, Walton & Co, for for cheap eash groceries 4 Oscar Reeder sold his residence ‘ in the north pait of the city toS. A Douglass. a Thos. Gault. assessor of O-xage township, was in the city Monday and gave us a call » Cash! Cash'! Cash!) for ex Pharis & Son *Miss Agnes McCracken, of the Democrat, is visiting her sister, Mrs C. FE. Dimmitt, in Beatrice, Neb. Fletcher Warnock, who has been quite sick for the past two or three weeks, is reported to be improvin g- The biggest thing ever held in BUT'ER WEEKLY TIMES. There is a great subject for study io Philadelphia A surgecn there bas dissected and mounted the complete | nervous system of a human being, ow never before accomplish- | jed. | ODD FELLOW'S DAY. The Grandest Celebration and Bar- becue Ever Held in the Connty. tes 5 Bee Over Sixty Lodges tebe Represented At the city council Jast Thursday 2.000 Odd Fellows i evening the following aldermen were placed on a committee to act with | the Odd Fellows’ celebration com- mittee, T. K. Lisle, T. W. Legg, J. R. Boyd and R L. Graves Line. April 27th, 1591, promises tu be an epoch long to be remembered in ; the history Butler and Bates riaudest Odd Fellows | of at 4 o'clock county as the Tuesday afternoon, the indications point to the election of every dem- As we go tu press celebration cver held in this section of the state ocrat on the city ticket, and Tnur- The city » leeorated as it ever was before, over 1.000 yards of man leading for school commission- | bunting aud balftuat number of Odd Fell er 1 } ws emble tive been ordered Prank Oldaker has moved his slice : Ce and will be hands of a shop to the southerst corner, in the 7 : : : i petent to wate. rear of Pettys’ grocery store, where. feo ct ve been em he invites all of bis old customers —, : ; Li 1 \ i ployed, besides a promis aN And the publie, peeding anything =}- : cies 2 ; SUR bauds from abroal S150 be his line, to call. : spent for u a The road to wealth is like a tight-' Programe of the day's proceed- jrope. With your eyes in the far in ahead, your feet will take care of |themselves, but you cannot stop ing the initiatury degier |halfways. If your eyes wander the splitting comedy. The following | feet will step on space and it is! lodges will be present im foree, be |lucky if the rope is suspended low. !<iles many more have promised ge willbe publisbed in due ti The entertainment atuight.* “as aside} OUR NEw Spring Stock. \ \ Be ought to Bates county. Experience has taught us that it pays l made, perfeet fitting clothing and this spring's purchases previous efforts. We have secured the exclusive ayerey ty for the justly celebrated clothing made by The very best ready made cloth ws the world produces. This clothing is made by experienced tailors, and is better sewed, better made in every way, 18 and fits better than the work of the average tailor. We cannot recommend this clothing too highly. Wear it once and you'll buy no other. In addi more stylish tion, we show Butler will be the celebration on the ; ax handsome line of our old reliable B42 T)LUMORE 27th | Mrs. D. V. Brown left for Shelby | ville, IN, Friday afternoon to see her mother who is dangerously ill. | Thos. Buck and W. I. Yeates, prominent and influential democrats of Mingo township, favored ux Mon- $ day. They are coming from the four} quarters to attend the Odd Fellows celebration on the 27th. The citizeus cominittee are mak- ing elaborate preparations for deco- rating the city on the 27th. | Capt. Walley caine down from Kansas City last week to visit his daughter, Mrs. Walter Arnold. W.L. Kash avd Sam Coleman, prominent farmers and democrats of Deepwater township, favored us Mon- day. Verona Indepen lent:——Mr. Geo. M. Canterbury, of the Butler Min ing Co., is with ua again viewing the prospects W. M. Crawford, the newly elect- ed collector of West Point towuship, was in the city Monday and favored us with a call. Pierce Hackett, the boss and king bee of the union labor party, was re- pudiated for justice of the peace in his own township. P. H. Holeomb and Jno. B. Hill left yesterday for Osceola, as delegates to presbytery and will be absent a couple of days. Miss Sleter Cowley, w ho has been | visiting her sister and friends at Sedalia, for the past two wecks, re- + The Rich Hill Waterworks was as- urned home Monday evening. Frank LaFollett, of Spruce town- ship, favored us Monday. Frank is nowa full fledged justice of the peace having been elected and quaiis| | town, will plant this season 250 acres Thos. Gault, assessor for Osage township was before the county; board of equalization on Monday. | Tom says that every man on thedem-, ocratic ticket in his township tact | Tuesday was elected, including road | overseers | Dr. E. N. Chastine, of Hume, one! of the foremost physicians in the | county, gave us a pleasant call while in the city the last of the week. Dr. | C. says the citizens cf home have! raised the guarantee money asked by the Kansas City, Nevada & Ft Smith road and they feel certain of securing that road. Jobn Classen, better known as the “Wild Dutchman,” living west of in flux, he has the ground ieady and will plantas soon as he can get in the fields. He also has 150 acres of | wheat which he says is looking is} tine as he ever saw. That Mingo justice, referred to in last week's Ballard items, gave us a call Monday. We found him to be a very clever und agreeable gent!e- man. He says that the Mingo voters in re-electing bim. indicate tnat they don't think it necessary for him to read in order to beat the Ballard boys. ord, who has been preaching the McKinley doctrine to the people of the county for years can now sweet- en his coffee with free sugar at 18 pounds for the dollar. Wonder if he will kick and demand that the grocer continue to sell him at the) old price. He ought to practice what he preaches. The Swedish Ladies National Con- cert company appeared at the opera! house Friday night last, and was | greetcd with a good and apprecia- | jave expected to be pres Trippk | “THILOR MADE | Foster, W Link, Gate City, Park Lodge, Kan-| sas City and Canton No. 20, all of} Kansas City; Lodge and Canton of | Joplin, Adrian, Lowery City, Shel: | dou, Lee's Summit, Moundville, La | Nevada, tuar, Oscedia j Deepwater. ensburg, Windsor, Ap- pleton City, Pleasauton, Mound City and LeRoy. Over 400 Odd Fellows are expect- ed to come from Kansas. | Rineaid, | i} | Last Sunday morning aud ev ening | two or three boys occupying a buck at the Southern Methodist chureb, were rude and greatly an- seat noyed the mivister and congrega- tion. At the morning service andj. large stock of “long slinv during the administration of the} made particularly obnoxious. At night, at | ! the conclusion of the services Rev. Gil took oeeasion to inform the cul-; H i prits that a repetition of such cone | duct would not be overlooked and i that the severest punishment of the law would be invoked. Young men should behave themselves in church or stay away, if not then let them sacrament they themselves } A i aT CLOTHING. This line needs no word of praiss from us. We have sold it for years and hundreds of our customers testify to its merits of style, fit and make. DO YOU If S need a Spring Suit? Do you want that Suit to FIT? Do you want the buttons to stay out buy a suit of the above makes. . They'll not disappoint you. They are guaranteed to us and we guarantee them to.you. suits. for very tall menand “short stouts” forshort men. LTING WU | RETAILERS OF RELIABLE CLOTHING. —— take the co Sequences The sheriff of Lafayette county arested at Higginsviile, Mo., one day last week, W. T Johnson and R. A. Nesbit, two drummers, representing the McCune Grocery Company, of Chicago, for selling groceries to the farmers of that county. witbout first having taken out a peddlers license. The arrest was made on information | filed in the criminal court of Layfa- ette county by the prosecuting at- torney. They are the prties who | have been working and swindling the farmers in various state, but no effort was rest them until above county. A FREE STOCK SALE AT THE LAKE AND PARK GROUNDS SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1891. Bring Your Stock to Exhibit and Sell, Free of Cost. The Biggist Stock Sale Ever Held in the County. Under the ruspices of the Lake & Park Company, arrangements have been perfected to give a grand free exhibition and stock sale on the company’s grounds, parts of the made to ar they entered the on Saturday, | Kausas : City received on the Ist day of April oe represented to be, first-class | $150,000 worth of sugar. It took in every particular and gave general satisfection. Manager Wernock is the right man in the right place. 5 ; } One wholesale house in tive audience. The troupe was what | more than 100 cars to deliver the }same. Several other wholesale | houses received a little less than 100 The amount ear loads each. saved April 18th, 1591. | be free, the auctioneere, four or five | in numb r, vo unteering their ser-| Entries will b> open to any | jand everybody wishing to sell stock. | | A cordial invitation 1s extended the | Everything will | Viexs. | Thos. Gault has had his hands! | pleased to say, is better, and as for An Even $100,000. \ John Brown, living just uoitu of Savannah, Ga.. April 4.—Thomas | the city,aid John Fry j~., living in 'Gadsden the cashier of the Mer-| Summit township, received Suiday | chants national bank who committed ' a herd of nineteen head of Pole An- |su'cide here yesterday morning, ' gus cattle. There were two bulls in | proves to have been an embezzler to i the herd and Brown gets one of the extent of $100,000. All of this | them. The herd was the finest lot of | money has been taken since January | cattle the reporter has ever sven pass \1. His dealings have been at the | through our streets, they were reg- | vate $1,000 a day, aud it was all lost | ular beauties and the above gentle- | in speculating in grain and cotton | men will keep them for breeding ‘ future. purposes. | There ave mauy muasqueraders. | Nevada is to have « new depot :“Jerome K. Jerome” is a nom de | which will be built by the M. K. & plume. The real name of the success- | T. at a cost of $20,000 We clip the \ ful young dramatist and humorist is , following from the Democrat's write | J. W. Arrowsmith, and his home is! us of the building and surroundings: in Excatel | _A& portion of the grounds that will pe traversed by the traveling public carriages, busses and yehicles are to full the past week, with a sick wife | be paved, and immediately west of | the structure ground will be laid off hovering between life and death and | f ou eos ie : é k| ‘or a handsome park, in w hich will the campaign for assessor to loo | be placed a flowing fountain. The after, Mrs. G, however, we are | purpose of the railroad management 'is to make the building commodious Owing to the tariff being taken off jpubke to come andl see the stock | ‘for—well. Tom is feeling pretty | ang the grounds pleasi g and at- fied. John D. Moor him with a fine little daughter the 29th day of March, and John can hardly contain himself over the event. Harry McCants has taken charge of the express line, formerly cou- sugar has taken a tumble in Butler, | to the people of this district, by the whether you want to purchase or | well himself to. day.—Review. tractive and you can now get 18 pounds of | the best granulated for $1. By this) reduction in cost of this ove item, from $8 to $12 will be saved to the; head of each family in Bates county. | By and by the people of this county | will begin to appreciate the position | ducted by Thos Kelly. Harry is a steady, reliable young man. | Mrs. J. K. Brugler accompanied | by her daughter and sou, Miss Sal-! lie and Master Jamie, left Wedues- of Mr. Cleveland that the tariff is a tax and ought to be reduced. Jas. K. Brugler, formerly Presi- dent of the Bates Co. Loan & Land Co., of this city, is now secretary | taking offof the tariff, according to/not. A splendid the Kansas City Star's figures/ given parties owning tine stock to amounts to $1.720,000. It is said, | exhibit the same that day. A num- that to have attempted to move all| ber of parties have already entered the sugar at one time released from finer stock for sale bond on the first day of April, would | place, on the Lake & Park grounils, have stalled every freight train in | southeast of the city limits | alien ccc a | Frank Fockele. editor of the Le The following is the result of the |Toy, Kas., Reporter, and a active township elections held last Tues- | Odd Fellow writes A. H. Culver that day: Under the d cratic head about four hundred people. mostly w iil come Mingo. Spruce, Dee; water, | Odd Fellows and Rebeceas, will ar- Hudson, Rockville, Pranie, Pleasant |Tive on a special train on the morn- temember ihe opportunity is! Lone Oak Items. A fine refreshing showers on April the first....C J Requa purchased a | fine bunch of calves frosa Sam Starr | to-day ...Mrs. Maggie Kisner is ona visit and Charley is on the Hood’s Sarsaparilla road He will get some cattle to ieee concentrated extract of Sarsaparilla, take back to his ranch to pasture | cele) ea Se dake sel ai (this summer....Wonder how the) eo capa ce hs boys got along with the charivari, of strictly pure, and the best of its kind {t is course Mon treated....Mr. Walter | possible to buy. Williams was visiting last Saturday: tis eat ea cee corsetett pear and Sunday.....It looks like they ee ee ee ond ESE = os a peculiar Combination, Proportion and would have got bamws instead of Ue aS bse i Process, giving to it curative powes ' shoulder wheu they took F M Steeles | sessed at $24,000. Col. Ivish ap- | peared before the board of equaliza- day evening for Rochester, New ;#24 treasurer of the Keller Mining meat the other night....The ladies York, to visit her son, Rev. C. E.| Ce. of Webb City, Mo. Mr. Bru-| seem to have get stuck on carpet rag tackings....Wonder what the Peculiar Gap, Grand River. Osage. Howard, | ing of the 27th, over the St. L. & E. east Boone. Union Jabor: Summit, | road. ‘ He also asks for advertising ed to $21,000. tion on Monday and got this reduc- | Brugler. | gler is an honorable, upright, clever D..W. Drummond is home from | Kansas City much improved in| —— the hospital the last of this week. We trust he will be permanently | gured. Go to Steele, Walton & Co., ueonsware and tinware cheaper Ben the cheapest. A Georgia editor has done more ban talk about population. He has enty-seven children. He positively efuses to insert an advertisment an- puncing that a boy or girl is want- for | gentleman and the Tives will al- ways be glad to learn of his success. ; ; Mr. Brugler labored hard for the health, He will returv, however, to| upbuilding Of Bullen sand Bates |county, while a citizen among us. | J.S. Pierce and Miss Laura Wood | were united in the holy bends cf matrimony on Thursday evening. | |The ceremony was performed by Rev. J. W. Stockton. at the resi- jdence of Frank Allen, brother-in- | law of the bride. The Times extends the usual congratulations and best | Wishes for the prosperity and hap-’ | piness of the contracting parties. Shawnee, Mound, Lone Ouk, New Home. Charlotte. Eikbart. West Boone, Walnut. Repui Deei Creek. Mixed: Mt Pi Homer. West Point. By * that the effices were divided between the three parties By the above it will be seen that the democrats have made a big gain nixed” we meau over last fall's vote, carrying several townships which fell in the U. L. ranks then. Dy spepsia’s victims are numbered by the thousands. So are the'peo- ple who have been restored to health | his one great book. ~The man with- | beeswax, and grease North Main St., | by Hood's Sarsaparillo. matier to distribute in bis neighbor- jing towns, and Yates ‘Center. He tLiuks be can swell the ;bumber to at least Ove hundred. | May his efforts be crowned with suc- Burlington | cess. | Saeed a ; Mrs. Phillips, mother of J.T. | Phillips, died at the residence of the latter on Friday evening and was buried on Sunday afternoon. Edward Everett Hale is out in Cal- ifornia reading from lis own writings There are some dramatic passages in | jout a country”. To Itself Tt will cure, when in the power of medicine. Serofula, Salt Eheum, Blood Poisoning, Cancerous and all other Humors, Malaria, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Sick Headache, Catarrh, Rheumatism, and all difficulties with the Liver and Kidneys. It overcomes That Tired Feeling, Creates an Appetite, and gives great mental, nerve, and digestive strength. arilla is sold by all druggists. . Prepared only by C. I. Hood ., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. NB. If you decide to take Hood's Sarsapa union labor party in Pleasant Gap township? They never got a single mmzn....Mrs. Bently is worse and Mr. Bryant is not any better... 2. | Mrs. C. J. Requa’s brother was here visiting last week avd sold his farm of 160 acres the price being $2,000 ....Some of our farmers have sown some oats...... Wonder if Lige has killed any more four legged ducks ....Mr. Editor we don’t intend to wake auy one mad but if they get mat meome tome. I willbe Tilla do not be induced to buy any other. respon for anything Rexter writes Rexter. 100 Doses | One Dollar Wanted!—Hides, pelts, feathere, | opposite post office. J. Fisuer. }

Other pages from this issue: