The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 20, 1891, Page 4

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i } J.D. Atten & Co., Proprietors, ERMS OF SUPSCRIPTION LheWe y [imes, pu Weduesda , will ane vear, postage paid, tor $1.25 be sent to ar It is now announced that speaker Tuttle will be a candidate ex for congress against Mr. Hurd COM Governor Francis has offered a Soper, reward reward of $390 for The ad for Bix months the tlie murderer 5 Secretary Blaine is afflieted with a bad case of the gout, which has con uring But THE CHILIAN WAR. # track and have a few the season to attract a crowd have th association estul Horrible Atrocities Committed Battle of Pezo Almonte. in the a subst i) basis; 5 yy th best trainers and hostlers that can be had fo. money, keep the stoek to be trained at the company's stables, sce very New York, May 14.—Mail advices from Chilireceived in this city to day vive the horrible details of the battle between the inusury that no jockeving is done, but treat gents and the gov- every man a! wid get everything ernment troops at Poze Almonte on = = = eae one ead out of his horse there is in him. March 7. On the w of that day the government forces under We already have the nucleus for Gan. Robles wore outed he Colonel such an enterprise in the Butler Canto. Both these leaders were men Lake {Park Co., which las an of experience, having seen 1 sel excellent track, convenient and com- | vice in the last war with Pe to wodious stables, etc. An Agsocia-| bles had > his ape} a ne t iscomputec somewhat less than on of thie 1 ha camital stock |. I tion if this k nd with a capital stock | 1 509 men opposition force, @- $25,000 or $30,000 could put on under Canto, nu~bered over 2,000 foot an enterprise that would not Soen insal only prove of inestimable value tu gents had uted the government slaughter Bates county but a pride and joy to 5 pa : = - was awful. The government troops all her citizens, and one which weuld were shot down in groups as they fined him to his bed for the past! prove of more direct benefit to But-| surrendered, aud Gen Robles. after week or ten days. Tom Reed, who made himself no- torious and infamous as speaker of the last house of represeatatives, is in Europe, where he is as little ne ticed as he will be in the next ler than any manufacturing enter | prise that could be established. | | K | TUCK GOVERNOR. Ex-Congressman Brown Secures The being badly wounded, was dragged jfrom his bed in the tsmporary hos- | pital and riddled with bullets. Col. Canto managed to Craw off the ma jority of his infuriated troops in | fair order, but some 200 or 300 got |loowe and plundered all the stores con-| Coveted Nomination. jand drink shops of Pozo. Those gress. | Bie Bd |who tried to defend their goods z & re were instantly shot down by the Wonder if Secretary Charles Fos-| Youisville, Ky., May 15.—The state} drunken and infuriated soldie y and ter would not like tohave that $100,-| deraocratic convention resumed its | civilians thet joined them. Colonel 000,000 which the democrats left in | 5e8sious this morning and after much | Holley, Lieuterant Robinson and the treasury. It would help him sharp maneuvering on the part of jsome others were heroic in their at ‘ s | the managers, ex Congressman John!tempts to keep order and several ting the ands | y- = 2 mpts Peo tnd s i prs in meeting the dem ands | Young Brown of Henderson was) officers were slain by their own men of the billion congress. 4 & | nomination for governor. ————_______. Green B. Raum, jr., son of the commissioner of pensions has been removed from the position of assis- tant chief clerk by Secretary Noble for irregularities in bis office In right and justice his father ought to have gone with him. —_—_. The Chicago & Northwestern rail road has “fired” all the switchmen on its line belonging to the union. It seems the trouble between the company and the union was brought about by the men interfering with the affairs of the road. ————_—_ The president and party on their return home made a ten minutes halt at Maryville, Mo., Thursday. A large crowd assembled at the Ce- pot and the president and postmas- ter General Wanamaker made short speeches. —_— FAIR AND TROTTING ASSOUVIATION ‘That there has been a longing desire for the establishment of such an Asso- tion herecan not be well doubted. In fine horses, cattle, mineral, tarm pro- ducts, etc., Montgomery and adjacent counties are rapidly rivaling the most noted. Our horses are well and highly bred, but undeveloped, and other mar- kets and other counties get the credit of both sales and breeding, and while a million dollar’s worth ot horses have been soid ir. Kentucky already this vear Montgomery county is credited with but few, and the Teavons are just these: We have sold our horses either green, or having them devel- oped aeey from home nd sold at other point hen our people have an individual 1,000 or more, they should not sell them 250 and let some one else make a profit of $750, but they should be in position to get the full value of their breeding and raising and this can only be done by having them develop- home and sold at their own stables. So much for our products. A trotting association with a track as proposed, as fast as can be made, will Tract the fast by beget # spirit of pride and which will promote this interest, and while we will not have all the lowest records we will produce some of them and attract them far and near. This is only one of the many argu- ments in favor of a Falr and Trotting Associa- tion. Other reaso: qual in fact might be urged. Would it p Lexington stock a few years ago worth $50, is good value at $3v0, with little if any on the narket. There are ape tracks completed and not y At Independence, Iowa, a track of this kind was qstablished two years ago when that town numbered sou people and to-day they claim a popatstion of 5,000 and such are divi 4gon the Fatr and Trotting Association stock at that plaee that not a share of the stock is on the market at any price. We think our people have displayed judgment in deciding in favor of the enterprise and have determined upon a mile kite-shaped track ‘The grounds to be used are the Jones and Woodford land and the cost of erecting track, duildings and buying lands will be about 335,- 000 and we believe this will be taken in a few days after the books have been opened. Those rein position to know, say a S50 ,0N) stock would pay at least 20 per cent. Such an sesociation has great benefits and will pay Let us be in earnest and Bave our first Fair in October. Without any solicitation persons have indicated that they would take $12,000. A good start.—Mt. Sterling (Ky.) Gazette. The above well written article states the truth in forcible language and can be made applicable to Bates county. We all recognize that the enterprise which tends to develop any of our resources is a benefit to the whole county. If ademand was created for fast horses it would be but a short time before it would be supplied by our thrifty farmers and stockraisers. Our farmers are now raising a better grade of horses and the tendency each year is to breed We bave some as to fine stallions. tine bred horses in the county as can be found in any state, yet there is no facility to develop them at home. Ifa man in this county owns a valuable animal he ean never sell him at anything like his real value and if he is ever developed he has to be taken away aud some one else besides the breeder reaps the prof- its. A Fair and Trotting Associa- tion could be made a very profitable investment and if properly managed prove very valuable stock. We do net mean by this to simply prepare Under a rule adopted at the open | ing of the balloting last night, the! name of Dr. Clardy, the farmers’ al | liance candidate, having the smallest | number of votes, was withdrawn on | the eleventh ballot. On the twelftu W. L. T. Hardy, nuw attorney gen | eral, was dropped and on the next ballot: Mr. Brown was nominated After speeches by Brown, Clay, Har din and Clardy the couvention ad journed to 8 p. m. | In the evening M. C. Alford of | Lexington was nominated for lieu | tenant governor with little opposi- | tion. | W. J. Hendricks of Fleming coun ty was nominated for attorney gen- | eral on the fourth ballot. . | Auditor, L. C. Norman, of Frauk- fort. Treasurer, H. S. Hale. | Register of Lands, G B. Swango, | of Campton | Superintendent of Public Instrue-| tion, Edward) Thompson, of Owen-! on. Clerk of the Court of Appeu Adams, of Cynthiana. Just at the close a resolution in dorsing Grover Cleveland and John G,. Carlisle and naming Cievland fer president was offered by J. P. Tar- vin, of Clinton, Ky., but the dele- gates were in no humor to delay and a motion to adjourn was carried de- feating Tarvin's motion. | als, A. | i} The Ladies Dehghted. | The pleasant effect and the per- fect safety with which ladies may use the liquid fruit laxative, Syrup of Figs, under all conditions make it their favorite remedy. It is pleas- ing to the taste and to the eye, gen- tle, yet effective in acting on the} kidneys, liver and bowels. 20 are ee ee | It is said that President Harrison, while in Omaha, Neb. expressed, in private conversation, regret that the supreme court of that state, compos- ed whoily of republicans.should haye given the decision depriving Guver nor Boyd of his office. | The presi- dent must have moditied his views considerable that subject since Reed's congress, presumably with Mr. Harrison’s sanction, displaced democrat after democrat on purely political grounds. But the result of last fall's election may have hada salutary eff.ct on his mind on Young Raum tn Disgrace. Washington, D. C., May 15.—G. B. Raum jr., a son of the commission- | er of pensions, has tenered his res ignation as the assistant chief clerk of the pension bureau and the same has been accepted. Secretary No ble learned, upon what appeared to be perfectly trustwerthy testimony, that Mr. Raum, jr. had been a par- ty to certain irregular and unlawful proceedings in connection with three appointments to minor positious in| the pension bureau. The tempora.| |ry appropriation to his own uses of | | 872 belonging to the government is |also charged against hi i Blown Up By Dynamite. | Oak Grove, Mo.. May 15 —The| house of Daniel Morg iet and: respectable citizen, three miles south | ‘ef this place, was demolished by an explosion of dynamite last night. It| is not known who perpetrated the outrage. Mr: was broken and she AL, B ¢ a Morgan's collar-bone Was otherwise} injured. Mr. Morgan was badly in- jured, though not fatally. His two children escaped unhurt. but a step-| ;8on was thrown several yards and. jalighted on a fence. He was not | badly hurt. | | for trying to restrain them. The night was a terrible one for the poor people of Pozo. Eighty four women and childreu crouched in the darkness under tables, etc, in the railway house, and more iu the dwellings of the engineers Pa pine reigned supreme and the druuk- ene: w killed each other, lighting over their victims. Many of them were shot down by the officers for their Lrutality, bib it was not until Sund.y morning that Commandant Lop:- arrived witha strong force of orde: 'y troops and put anend to the riot. The night after Iquique re- ceived train after train of the wound ed. The dead are not counted yet, but there must be at least 500 or 600. Tt will be sad news to the many friend's ef Capt. Richard A. Collins of Confederate battery fame. who commanded a section of artillery in S i valry during the civil war to lear that he is hopelessly insane and lias been confined in a St. Louis hosyital ever since last December. apt. Collins fora long time resided in L:fayette county, and at one time jrepresented that county in the leg- islature His young wife to whom he had been married only 3 years | has applied for the appomtment of | a guardian for him. His estate con- sists of a legacy payable annually to him or his legal representative.— Howard Co. Advertiser. An Eastern syndicate proposes to build an electric lne from Nevada te Eldorado Springs, a distance of ninteon miles, provided each place will give 315.000. It that it will take $4,000 a mile to build the line. It is generally be- lieved that the amount will be raised | H.L. TUCKER, | (Successor to J. G Walker) DRUGGIST. | Dealer in Drugs and Medicines Prescriptions Carefully Compound- ed. A night Clerk can always be had by pulling the Knobin front is estimated | | { Good Law. But Bad Politics. Atay 1 republi - speak of Gov. Boyd. Presid said: ~I do not know of any whic regret x lis- } Soyd. I do not I ible to spenk of tbh situation as it 1 affect the busi- ness interests Nebraska. but z yard atous v blows which ths possi- that the splacement « ocrat elected by the people bya court constituted solely of repubhi- Tt would have been far better for Mr. Boyd to have served out } term of office unchanged than that the party should bear the charge of having ousted him from office, The lawyer is quick to percieve the jus tice of legal technicality, but it is quite a different thing .to impre upon the people the equity ofa tech-| nicality which practically disfran-! chise the popular vote. Should i happen by any strange fate that Mr Boyd should recover the eftice in | the federal court. the populace would} at once accept such a decision as | complete endorsement of the suspi- cion that the decision was political rath«r than judicial.” cans AGEN ES FOR (‘PHBE BUCKEYE FRAMELESS AND WOOD SINGLE APRON BINDERS, shampion Mowers, Uok LEVER SULKY HAY RAK WITH POLE OR SHAFT [eae pe oral oo i CARRIED IN STOCK IWINE. JUST HEADQUARPERS FOR BINDER RECEIVED THE LARGEST LINE OF Top Buggies, Phaetons, Road t Dutler’s New Flour Mi. | M. D. Shannor, of Butler Mo.,; closed a contract in this city yester=| day for the erection of a flour mill} at Butler. Shannon is a member | of the firm of J.T. Shannon & Co; They have operated a mill at Butler | for many years. Late in February | ithey suffered a loss of $40,000 by} the burning oftheir mill. It had acapacity of only 40 barrels a day but the new mill willhave a capacity | of 100 barre’s u day. It will be built on the site of the mill which (was burned Work on it will soon begin.—K. C. Times May 16th. RAW AS BEEF-STEAK Feartul Dise Baby's Sufttering trom Skin tse Coverin ntire Body Cured by Cuticura. My baby was taken sick when it was three months old, andIna few days it began to } break out. We emploved both of the home doctors, and they could do nothing for him , Then we sent for the bust doctor in Eaton Rap ids, Mich., and he doctored him for two weeks and he got worse all the time. and then I took him to Jackson, to adoctor who at: tends especially to skin diseases, and he Qzot worse than ever. then Ptold my hus: band we had better try the Cuticura Rem edies anyway: didn’t have any idea they would do any good, butin less than two mouths trom the time we began giving them to him he was entirely well, and not a spot on him. His hair began growing right off. and we thought he would always be bald beaded. ‘There was not a spoton his whole body, face , and head, only his nose and eyes, but’ what wa raw as beef-steak So poor there was not | anything but bones, and se weak he could raise neither hand nor head Mrs, Frank Barrett, Winfield, Mich. Cuticura Resolvent. The new blood Skin Purifier, and gaeatest of Humor Remedies, cleanses the blood of all im- \ purities, while Cuticura, the great skin cure, and Cuticura Soap an exquisite skin beauttier, clear the skin and scalp, and restore the hair Thus the Cuticura Remedies cure every speties of itching, butrning scaly, pimply aud blotchy skin, sealp and blood diseases, from pimples to scrofula, from infancy to age, when the best physiclans fail Sold everywhere Price, Cuticura, Soe ; Soap, 25c.: Resolvent, $1 Prepared by the Potter Drug and Chemical Corporation, Boston FSend for *‘ How to Cure Ssin Diseases ’” 64 pages “illustrations, and is testimonials. BABY'S Skin and Scalp puritied and beautified by Cuticara Soap. Absolutely pure. | RHEUMA IC PAINS Ip one minute the Cuticnra Anti Pain \ Plaster relieves rheumatic sciatica kidney, t and museular pains and 3. =) hip. weakness W. M. ARNOLD. CONSTABLE MT. PLEASANT TOWNSHIP, i i / . : : | Special attention given to private col-} | lections. | SHIRLEY CHILDS SELLS THE WHITLEY BINDERS, MOWERS Buggies, Phetons, Spring & Road Wagons And a Full Line of Leading Cultivators. AND HAY RAKES, | - oe : . - ence gS And a Full Line of Repairs for Champion Machines.| o3 CARTS AND SPRING WAGONS, IN THE COUNTY. THE LARGEST AND BEST ASSORTED STOCK OF ardware, Groceries, Stoves AND QUEENSW ARE IN SOUTHWEST MO. Co, Bennett, Wieeler Mercantile EMERY BLOCK, BUTLER, es cavemen es MO. Sheriffs Sie. virtue and authority of a special eveeu- tion issued from the office of the clerk of the circuit court of St Clair county, Misseuri, re- turnable atthe July term, isvi. ‘of said court to me directed in favor of James W Sibley ant Jagainst A J Devine, 1} 1 upon ail right, ttle, intere fevied and <1 and clatin of and to the following described real estan gah situated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit ENGY est hal lots tamt a « Horthwest bay quarter of seetion five and the bait oft. ea 3} tive of the northeast q Forsection six ia e township thirty nine of range Bates county, Missouri, I wille Thursday, Juce Ten. so] between the hours of vine boven Riet stract of the laws, showing Low Obtain Patents, Caveata, Trace, Marks, Copyrights, sent free. Sr MUNN & CO. 361 Broadway, 2 New York. _ day, at the east front dour in the city of Butier Bates county sell the same or so much thereo! us + required, at public vendue to the highes der for cash, to satisf\ said exeencien and cent © W HARITSOUCK 26 Sher of Bates County eee SE eR A AS aT. NEW Fla? Nt W GOODS? Having purchased the ssoek of woods known ns the Grange sive © GROCERIES < DRY GOODS, T lesire to say tones teisting, of newrey nis that Ihave re plenishet tie stoe. cn {. i up the store room in shape and Twould be clit: eall and see me. PRODUCE OF ALL KINDS WANTED. Toasall gure ¥ t fe vis to beus low as auy 28. |. SES Lee yeas 22-year emer SS eR W. L. DOUGLAS $3,.% SHOE Best in the World. Awarded the medal for ri ‘s and proficiency in work by the Mansa: chanice’ Associatio: 54.00 Tra sie, 5950 song *3.50 7 aroe. $2.00 ran °2.50 sii" $1.75 site For BOYS’ & YOUTHS ®2 & %1.75 ni or” = SCHOOL SHOES. 3 2 .00 cooteeae W, 2) Dougias Shoes for Gentlemen are made in Congress, Button and Lace, sized § to 11. includ uz halt sizes and widths, and all styles of toe. Boys’ sizes ito 51-2, and youth's ii to 1s 1-2, also balf size . 7d Douglas $3.00, $2.50 and $2.00 Shoes for Ladies are made in “Opera” and “Americar Daas eied aa Se C (except in $2.0) shoe}. D, EB, widths $1.75 Shoe for Misses, 1! to 2and half « rand spring hecis. | SAUTION ¥y BEWARE OF FRAUD. Do you want to wear the genuine W.L. DOUGLAS | Soe S SHOES? If so, read this caution carefully. W.L. Douglas’ name and the price are | oaee ple aa speed ail his Sdvertised shoes before leaving the factory, which prokects the | Oasis name aad the price ee cere SOs, If a shoe dealer attempts to sell you shoes without W. L | os! bottom. and claims they are his make, do not be decel | eye Fa tthpuse the dealer may be your personal friend, put him down ass frand, i | salt is 8 duty you owe to yourself and your family during these hard times. to get the most ¥: | esemcmer., You,can economize tn your foot-wear if purchase W.L. Douglas Shoes, whi a | mM, represent value for the mone: e e e world o | onan nee money than any other make in the world, as thousan: who bay | . Wanted lecal agent i if | lorresper a invited in every city and town in the U. net already occupied i advertised agent cannot supply you, take no others, but send direct to factory, enclost trersieed) oe BS = ay Mau, Gentienien and pga — size =i Jorn, styia and widtl |. Lad ease yle usually worn, ug oF loose taferred. te Eizle desired, size ani igen usually wor, and if a snug or loose Ott UGLAS, Brockten, Mass. Shirley Childs|MAX WEINER, Agent: Butler, Mo.

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