The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 6, 1891, Page 3

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and VOL. XIII. BATES COUNTY National Bank BUTLER, MO. TH LARGEST AND THE ONLY NATIONAL IN BATES COUNTY. CAPITAL, - - SURPLUS. - - TYGARD, - - - ¥25.000 OF F. J. Pension Aga Oyer Dr Eyeringham’s store rooms West Side - Butler, DR. DENTIST, BUTLER, Office, Southwest Corner Square, Tucker's old stand. Lawyers. | ye ARMOND EOL » ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Will practice in Bates counties. Bey Office over Bates Co Nat'l Bank. CaALvIN F. Boxtey, PROSECUTING ATTORNEY, CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS Ai LAW. “4 Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORN«YS AT LAW. down's Drug Store. JAGE & DENTON, ATToR)D EYS AT LAW, McBride's Store, Butler, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOBUPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. answered at Office day or night. eases. Butler, Mo. en aspecialtv. J.T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, Southwest Corner Square, ove Aaron Hart's Store. Residence on vannah street norrh ot Pine. Potter Bros. BRICK LIVERY STABLE. An ample supply Buegies, Oa rri Phaetons, Drummer Wagons, &c.° s one of the best equippe: tate. This } bles in this section of tl ' ¥rmst Ries I At any hour, day or 1 most reasonable ter: y desiring to put up their hor when in the city will find this} barn the most convenient in town. POTTER BROS. CLAss renee ea ee oe es em THE OLDEST BANK BANK'* the early train President. -| flowing with HON. J. 0. NEWBERRY Vice-Pres J. C. CLARK - - Cashier John Atkison’s F. M. FULKERSON, | MISSOURI. Dr. and adjoining Office West Side Square, over Lans- Office North Side Square, over A. L. All calls Specialattention given to temale dis- T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Diseases of women and chil- Ha- ages,| “é BITTLER, MISSOURI. WEDNESDAY ROYAL HAD A RECEPTION Delighted Nevada With tite The elebrat Nevada 3 a fail Oo: Ot hel enter setae t night \ few who were more t with main ate to Warrensburg to attend sit ilar celebration Lay. All are loud in r praises of the open hearted he i f the poud ) people of Butler. The eee was | decorated for the occasion, flags tye ing everywhere At y hour; yesterday morning ai tie ‘ ial | trains arrived there packed to ovei laud their fam that fully five were on the stre }noon hour The a uw ade an ten ie eb Ol Fellows is liz which headed by G M soso |. Allen; fc ut lene i | marche: lto city. Eight bands made music for | | the barbecue dinner was spread in the] vast assembly A bounteous | grove at which three thousand per- sous were fed. Everything passed off in the pleas | both at | ithe tables and on the grounds. Ne | vandans are especially coupliment- ; ary in speaking of the good. order antest manner imaginable, of the vast multitudes when the dinner hour was announced. There | was no scrambling for places, no] boisterous or unseemly demoustra- tions of ary kind whatever. PROBABLY A FAI PALE. A Rome Paper Makes a Sensational Statement If It Be ‘True. Rome, April 29.—L'Opinione to- day published a dispatch which it recieved from Palermo stating that an American journalist named En- gelman, who had arrived in that city had been delegated by the gov ernment of the United States to ren- der assistance to the families of the Italian subjects lynched in New Or- leans. The correspondent of L.Opinione asserts that he had seen Engelmann and it is stated that has paid a visit to the village ef Caccalo for the pur- pose of giving help to the family of Monasterio. one of the lynched men. | Couldn't Bear The Suspence. Baton Rouge,La.. April 29.— While undergoing his third trial for embezzling $40,000 from the state! while its Gen. Will A./ Strong, in November, 1888, walked! out of the court unobserved, and es. | | caped. secretary, Notwithstanding his — found hin General Strong 3 jsence the jury esterday surrender- | and} thorities r trial. r and fin: Chattano | There Was a - | $1. }in Campbell 000, ry on King yond control and rapidly the near ue i tames were under of destruction cov ows where he is. is reported to be a heavy loser ‘and the general uupression is that he is demented. | | . i ‘TOP Bu ring. A few days jlady began to disc | the bank. R.R.DEACON _ Xr Avh AY 6, I8gl. Carries the Largest Stock of HARDWRAE and IMPLEMENTS IN SPHE COUNTY. Z0CK ISLAND PLOWS AND CULTIVATORS, EAGLE PLOWS A SULKY PLOWS, BROWN, UNION AND U.S. CORN PLANTERS, TARR IWS. HAWORTH AND BROWN CHECK ROWERS, F i: righ BU BUCKEYE IRON nas E WARE. ALSO, R. R. DEACON 4 W cumin “6 nest. Me mp yhis. ie nn., April 20.—The Shomas I ey last eslashel himself with 1 an hal- ner under bireel jtion Delz befor he oy er $1,090 in b Some time be fore her mother’s death Mrs. Dela }ney's aces: sed a diamond jring and other things with a friend. if the the money in |The twe began to wonder | mother had placed all While they were talking a ghostly hand passed window and seemed to point to the across the bed. They agreed to make a search and a mattress used by the mother was ripped open. Seven hundred dollars in $10 bills were found with | the diamend rin; “Uncle Tom's Cabin had as much to do with producing the rebellion as any other single influence,” said a famous Southerner to a New York veperter. “It was read by body in the south, and we all said, ‘Well, if they believe that up north there is nothing for them to do, as honorable people, but to fight’ The best thing in the book was the fact every- that the cruel overseer was a north-! It was always so. North- ern mab. ern men who hired out as slave driv- ers had to be low down in the first place, and then, again, they sould not reconcile themselves to the dar- ky’s free-and easy ways of working after the way they had seen white men work in the north. In truth, cruelty toward the slave was little | practiced, and any plantation-owner who was known to be brutal was out of the society of his neigubors. No one was punished for it by the law, however. The only thing we pun- ished slave-holders for was denying sufficient food for his hands. We ‘never allowed anyone to go hungry in eld slavery days in the south. An Adventuress Shot. Lincoln. Neb., April 29.—Mrs. Jeanie Green of this city lies dying froma l ind inflicted by E. W. Hutct 1 Ithy farmer near Ast Mrs. Greenis a Hu ed over to her caused a ru family eame to L ol the n Lasse Widow, and Hutchinson her, of the eit up. times at five one taking fatal bullets weeks h > of 100 veudetta between the Campbellites and Meth- | odists. PUMPS, A LARGE TRON. STEEL, VARIETY OF ROAD CARTS, A MISSING STUDENT Alarm Felt Over the Mysterious Disap- pearance of Elmer Mosher. Burlii I April 29.—Mr Mosher. of Linneus. Mo, sin rl i ne ] ing they were going to} row down the river to New Orleans | and from there go to Flerida to ndthe su r with Taylor's un- | > Adayortwo later Taylor re- turned to Quincey. saying Mosher had taken sickand had gone to his home at Liuueus. Mo. He gave a letter to u young Jady friend of Mo- sher’s in Quincey supposed to have been written in Linneus, saying he was ill and woul! write to her soon, and for her to uot write till she heard from him After a long wait the girl grew une: and wrote to the boy's parents, hee about his health. She was quickly that the boy had not heen seen at | Mr. Mosher says this was | the first intimation he had that the | | boy was not at school. informed | \ { home. An investi- | started. Taylor jou being questioned, told a variety | of stories, and contradicted himself | several tunes. He said heand young Mosher had gone to Keokuk and | thence to Donnelson, where Mosher was taken sick and wrote the letter to the young lady, which Taylor de- | livered. Taylor saw Mosher board a Rock Island for Linneus, { Mo. So conflicting were Taylor's | statements that little reliance is plac | jed in his stories It is believed that | he left Mosher in Keokuk in a drug- | ged condition. The boy’s father to- day :eceived word that the young | man Was seen in Burlington, bound | for cedar rapids, last Friday night. That gentleman arrived here to day Cedar The | depot policeman saysa young man | answering Mosher’s description, and | giving his name as Elmer Mosher. asked about trains going to Minne- d left eu one of them Fri- Taylor i gation was at once on his way te Rapids. uw apolis day eve is said to have young Mosher, | Rapids A Hero cf Four Wars. Galena. l., April ne nto E. D. Kittoe Post, G. A. of this city.is Sergt. Daniel Web- | Ot cess Re fruitless atte to join but was } rejected « at old age. | In 2 was 70 vears sa % ~ > in his coal-black hair = AGON WOOD WORK, 1/5. L. RICE ND CULTIVATORS. J. I. CASE CASADAY & EVANS, STEEL REEMANS BARB WIRE, GGIES, SPRING WAGONS, BAIN & FISH BRO. WAGONS BUILDERS ALWAYS ON HAND. BUTLER, MO. HARD- Jerrenson Ciry, Apri Ata meeting of the state 257TH, Isl board of equahzation to day, the 1 ther prox ved, that the 1 i ed yard mest on days to anies. in the state, sub for the year TSO], Toe as follows: May 16th, 1891: The Chicago, Santa Fe & California; St Louis & San Francisco System; St. Jose ph, | St. Louis & Santa Fe, and the Kan sas City. Topeka & Western May 18th, 1891: The Chie: ZO, Burlington & Quincy, including the | Hannibal & St. Joseph aud branches: The St. Louis, & North- western, and the Chicago, Burling ton & Kansas City. May 20th, 1891: The Missouri Pa- citic System, including the St. Louis, Keokuk and could not \Iron Mountain & Southern and Bel-! mont branch. May 22nd, 1891: | Railway and branches. May 25th, 1891: The Kansas City The Wabash Fort Scott & Memphis System, and , the Kansas City, Clinton & Spring- field Railway. May 27th, 1891: The Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway. May 29th, 1891, The Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific System, and the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul. | June 2nd, 1891: The Chicago. St. | Paul & Kansas City; the Quincy, + Omaha & Kansas City, and the Omaha & St. Louis ituwesterh Isl: The St Louis & Athe Keokuk & Wes June Sth sot » loth and lith, . the officers of railreads and : eitizens who mien interested in the assessment of the railroad, bridge and telegraph he state, and desire to * board with refer ence thersto, are requested to take nud in order to expedite the work of the board, «so far cable. notice, ag practi- to conform to these dates. Be it further , that the secretary of this board, be and he is resolved hereby directed, in addition to giv- ing this resolution to the corresp¢ dents of the daily newspapers, to forward a copy thereof to one coun- ty newspayer and to the clerk of the unty court of cac in the stute in or through w any rail- road is located, to the end that the fullest potice ma u toallwho> may be intere and assessment of suc Charles Kingsley was a dreamer, but he also believed in present time meeting the He was always enfor- cing this lessen: Do to-day’s duty Do net weaken and distract yourself looking forward to things you fight to day’s temptations cannot see understand if you saw.” ail flew straight ass window in the Hannibal postoffice the other day. It was velocity that it made a hole in the glass very little through a moving with such larger than its body. The bird was found lying dead on the floor inside the reom. BRADFIELDS FEMALE- ie: sre GEOULATOR FsSED Fain oa SCAN uoreea MENSTRUATION MONTHLY SIC KN: Ghchy Uncen Be iertiina) i BooKk WOMAN Auceo seer June 4th, 1891: The St. Louis. = REGUATOR CD ATLANTA GA SHIRLEY CHILDS. DEALER IN THE CELEBRATED Flying Dutchman Riding Plows, BARLOW AND TATE Com Planters, Little Joker Cultivators, MOLINE And a I | Cultivators, PLOWS, Harrows ‘ BUGGIES and SPRING WAGONS “resh Grass Seeds Shirley Childs Ur ere Tt. L. HARPER. RICE & HARPER, * DRUGGISTS AND PHARMACISTS, ———DEALER IN——— Pu ure and E Reliable Drugs, Medicines, ARTICLES, PAINTS, OILS, ETc PRESCRIPTIONS AND RECEIPTS A SPECALTY. ‘| FIRST DOOR SOUTH OF THE BATES COUNTY NATIONAL BANK

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