The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 2, 1891, Page 1

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th VOL. XITI. ae — a coe _ BUTLER, MISSOURI, WED NESDAY EPTES IBER 2, 1891. : Missouri State Bank OF BUTLER, MO. CAPITAL, teceives Deposits subject to Check, Loans Money, Makes Collections at does a General Banking Business. DEPOSITORY FOR COUNTY FUNDS. In the Real Estate Loan Department. on Real Estate on long or short time at lowest rates without delay. STOCKHOLDERS? Allen, Mrs. Levina Honiware, TC, Physician Kurk, Monroe Farmer Ballard, J N Surmer Brown, Liuia tartlett, Edmund Farmer Bryner, Margaret Chelf, H. Bb Farmer Coleman, Sam’! L Caruthers, G@ A Farmer Christy, J M Physician Clerk, Robert Farmer Courtney, J M Stock Dealer Deerwester, John Farmer rArmond,D A, MC yans, John Farmer eringham, J Physician ‘emam, Caroline and Eliza ler, Isaac Reeder, Oscar WM. E. WALTON BOOKER POWELL president SE A CORRECT Mursouri Pacific Time Table Arrival and departure ot passenger trains at Butler Station. Nortu Bounp Passenger, - : 4:51 a.m. Passenger, - - eo p.m. Passenge™, - - g:25 p.m. Local F eeight - + 10:05 a.m, Soutn Bounp Passenger, - - 7:04 a. m. v assenger, - ~ $36 Passenger, - - 9:46 p Freight - rn AN ALLIANCE SCHEME. The Country to be Filled With Co-op- erative Stores. A Topeka special of the 21st inst ; Fields, T. W. House, G@. O. Jarvis, | the six, but because says: A committee of seven, consi of the president of the farmers’ al- liance and the executive board was Kinney. Don Ane’t Cashier i Levy.8am Dry Goods & Clothing Tyler, W B Farmer Morrison. C H Farmer Miller, Alf Farmer McCracken, A Farmer McCracken, Robt Farmer Owen, M V Farmer Pharis, John Grocery aris, C F Grocery Davis, J R Foreman Times ofcePowell, Booker Farmer Ayptcher, © H Prof Normal Sch Pigott, H H Bank Clerk Rosier, J M Farmer Radford, Chas R Farmer Reisner, J W Insurance Sullens, J L Banker vice-president ALL WERE SUCCESSFUL The Rainmakers Satisfied Over the Eaperiments in Texas Fort Woith, Tex., Aug. 28.—Gen. $110,000. ; G. Dyrenforth, under whose charge the rain experiments have been conducted in western Texas, jpassed thisugh Fort Worth last here from 6:05 till 1 bight, teiuaiuings an ang | 6:40. He was xecoumpanied by Prof Make loans| (i Myei, the werouaut, Prof. Ed- ward Poweis, Paul A. Draper and jE iward W. Ranuells, the manager jof the Nelson Morris, or “C” ranch, |where the experiments have been jcarried ov. General §Dyrenforth is lerk | enthusiastic over the success of the | experiments, performed as they were in one of the most arid sections of Slayback, Ra Smith, @ L Liveryman Smith, John T Lawyer Starke,L B Depaty circuit c Turner, Mrs M FE Capitalist Tucker, W E Dentist Voris, Frank M Farmer Vaughan, J M Capitalist Wyatt, HC Lumber dealer Wells, Wiley Teacher West, RG Farmer Wolfe, Pattie Walton, Wm E Cashier Wright, TJ Capitalist Weiner, Max Boots & Shoes Walle, Wm Farmer Walton, G W Farmer Walls, J T Physician Whipple. NL Physician Williams, R V Farmer He said: could possibly have been. have an unimpeded sweep on the | plains in that part of Texas and which are ecoustantly present. Sev eral times our balloons were broken J. R. JENKINS DON KL cashier asst. cashier from their fastenings, and in some jinstances the cords of the netting WILL RECEIVE SUGAR BOUNT {speak of. We at last were compell- jed to erect coverings for our balloon jend for our mammoth oxygen fur- jnace. After this no serious obsta \ |cles were encountered. During the Austin, Texas, Aug. 25.—There | three weeks, while the experiments | are fourteen sugar planters in Texas were being made, over half a dozen , who avail themselves of the bounty | rains were had, three of the a being | under the McKinley law. The state | what are called | which owns a large plantation, un. | | der advice of Gevernor Hogg, refurs| kiud and so was the fourth. led to accept the bounty. The fol The others were good rains, but I owing planters have filed the neces |speak of these especially, as they | Texas Planters who Expect to Receive $300,000 Brom Uncle Sain. srass rains in that section. The first rain was of this sary bonds with the United States | Were soaking rains. The last ex collector here: Ed H. Cunningham, jPeriments I consider the most suc- | George Druely, J. L. Bonney, L. A. |cessful und satisfactory, uot only , Ellis, Wm. Dormorant, Win. D. | because it was the the heaviest of it was produe- ' John Lang, Wm. Masterton, Ro D. | ed while the barometer was rising ing | Willis, Mrs. B. B. Davis and James | | Cornell. The law requires the bond | Gratifying to All. to be nbout one half the amount of | The high position attained and appointed by the Kansas alliance | the bounty which the planter esti the universal acceptance and approv convention this after- noon to investigate a co operative scheme proposed by S. W. Sandus- commercial ky of Columbus, general secretary | of the Kansas alliance exchange. The scheme, if successful, will build up the largest trust ever or- wanized in the United States. It is claimed by Mr. Sandusky that the company known as the Na- tional Union Company has been chartered in New York with a capi- tal stock of $20,000,000, $,3,000.000 of which has already been paid up. Each town is to have a company store and a resident manager,who is to have charge of the store and has a vote in the meetings of the com- pany. Goods are to be purchase dy reg- ular agents in large quautities and shipped direct from the centers or distributi x points to every store. The distirbuting points are to be New York, Chicago, Kansas City, New Orleans and Sait Lake or San Francisco. Goods are to be sold at the lowest possible figure, the protits to be paid out in salaries, expenses and rebates to regular purchasers.” Colonel Shepard settles it. In re- rring to the “holy coat” he says: “The worship of this unauthenticat- ed coat is downright idolatry, and violation of God's come is in direct mandments. Drunkeiiness—Liquor Habit —In the World there is but’ on Dr. Haines’ Golden Specitic. one cure It can be tee without t taki nt cur Cag to-day believe they quit dr ng OF their own free wiil. No har elfects results from its administrat Cures guaranteed. Send for circula tul particu Address in confidenc Golden Specific Co,, 185 Race Street, Cincinnati, O. 45-ly. ‘mates he will receive. i | 000 respectively from the govern | , they will all be named Joe Shelby. | | 000, and it is evident the gentlemen | ¢ The largest | al of the pleasant liquid frait reme bond is that of Colonel Ed. Cun- | ; xative known, illustrat ningham, $50,000, and the next, that jlent laxative known, illustrate the { Col. L. A. Ellis of thi | value of the qualities on which it’s of Col. L. A. Ellis o is city, $30, succ atifyine gratifying ‘up Company. ' to the California Fig Syr- expect to receive $120,000 and S60, 39 ment. These fourteen plaaters who | A FEARFUL WRECK. are on record in the collectors oftice, | and they embrace all in the state, estimate the crop to be raised by | them this year at 19,000,000 pounds, | the bounty on which will be $300,- | 000, if all the sugar stands the high est test. Many Others Injured. The most disastrous railroad wreck ever know in North Carolina, 2 : took place Thursday morning on the An Empress Mad. Paris, Aug. 30.—A dispatch to the Estafette from Vienna says: “The | ' ; the Western North The train was made up of a bag Carolina road. empress of Austria shows symptoms | 8°‘ sud mail car, second and first é a i _ lass coaches. Pullman sie see of insanity. She is very eccentrie, | CMSs coaches. Pullman sleepers and desiring bizarre costumes in which | SUPerintendent’s private car. to appear in pubjie and indulging in| On the high bridge, spanning a other oddities. The emperor bas called a medical expert who has pro rails spread, eausing the jentire train to plunge into the asm, sixty five f creek, the ¢ cet below nounced the case a grave ¢ associated with an heredi . being are known to Twenty passengers dy. The Duchess DAlex have bec killed outright, besides ter of the empress, is in the t: nine were > seriously! asvlum at Gratz mad kine /ipjured and about twenty more bad- of Bavaria is a cor rh there iy br Rev. J. M. Sykes.a Pre had zd to work in China, ead and missionary who ist been ass j Named For Joe Shelby. is among the Every car was August 24. 1591. Ts Nevads Democrat. Dear Sir—Mr. Ben Armst t a person raped with their Henry township s 1g the through the colur : that he regrets very t r z West was \ i e2us i yw towausiman, D. : Sueby’s AGKER’S}et- : Conettpation. ? PURE : PINK oecuscceseeecceseces H L Tucker, Agent. Small, ant and @ favorite with t Indles. Sold in bi tis a boy, and bis name ge is Joe Shelby. and if be lives to see eri twenty more such happy occasions x Y. Z. | the country and under circumstances | | which were as unfavorable as they |ant. We are here to investigate and | Our work has been seriously ham- | : : | pered by the strong winds which | PO/“onment for this purpose was) y. parted as a result of these winds I} dy Syrup of Figs, as the most excel-| RAIN-MAKING TO BE TESTED Private Individuals Teras Deter. mined to Settle the Question. in | Midland, Tex., Aug. 30.—The raine jmaking experiment inaugurated by , the government, and which has been operating on the Morris ranch, 25 | miles from this place, is to be push- ‘ed toa final and thorough test, re- i gardless of what the operations or |results of the Dyrenforth party have |been. R. J. Kleberg. of Corpus | Christi, Tex, and ex Senator Collins {of San Diego, Tex . are here investi- | gating to ascertain what the Dyren | forth party has done. A reporter called upon them, and the following is their statement in ;substance: “This thing must not be stopped now, as it is too import- to learn, not to make statements. We realize that the government ap- small and probably not enough to eury it very far. We shall wait till after this party make their final test iat El Paso, and if it is not then | further demonstrated as an absolute fact. we propose, individuals, backed by our as counties and many jvery strong financial interests, to make a similar and conclusive test. We realize that it is necessary to re- |move every doubt before the gov- ernment can be expected to lend any further assistance, and that is what jthe individuals we represent pro- | pose doing. We yo direct to Austin jand shall interview Governor Hogg jand seek to further enlist his influ- jence in the furtherance of this un dertaking, with which he is already | deeply interested and favorably im- pressed.” | great King estate and other of the j most extensive ranch and land own- | ing concerns in the state, and they | mean business. The world now may /expect this theory proved a success failure beyond reasoable or | doubt. a a Rid Weeds trom Farms and Roadsides. Harrisonville Democrat | Fifty years from now, aye twenty- \five years from now, the noxious s is based and are abundantly weeds on the farms and roadsides | will not be allowed to go to seed. lWe are of the opinion that some far mers think weeds a necessary evil— , that it would be next to impossible ,to get rid of them. Notat all. All | Twenty People Dashed to Death— that is necessary to be done is to let | , the farmers of one school district, | for instance, agree that they will cut | down and not allow the weeds on | | their farms, and along the highways |to go to seed, and it will be buta {along the public roads. It wouldn't | be a very great burden for a farmer |to run over his stubble field, for in-| stauce,and cut down euckleburs before the seed matures. 'It is not really a herculean task to , clean our farms and highways if we would go atit systematically. It is being done in older states aud they re rid of tHese Nothing 1 bring Missouri to the front so these pests. s Yidding curselves of A Remarkable Case. A postal of date of Aug. 24, 1891 jreceived Tuesday of Mr. Todd of Richland township, states Miss Etta g co 19 ays to- tative w: ble case or hice uf on at that time had b hiceoughing record of 294,000 times during that period. If she haskept up this record during the 19 days. | she has hiceoughed 500 times.— Nevada Democrat. H These gentlemen represent the| Bos brid Statesvill |comparatively short time until blue! fpoaion tenet (nen seen choo | grass will have taken the place of! he wild sun flowers and other weeds | the young |} FARMERS BAN OF BATES COUNTY, Cash Capital. _ $50,000.00 ly N. THOMPSON : J. K. ROSIER Vice-Pr ELA BENNETT 2d Vice-Pr ED. KIPP Dr. J. EVERINGHAM y T. W. SILVERS Attorney | DIRECTORS. | nage Clark:Wix, Farmer and etock raiser. . Hurley Lumber Company. President» nd Farmer. . Farmer and Stock raiser. tt, of Bennett, Wheeler & Company and 2ud Vice-President. Emery ¢ Investor ockraiser ock Raiser = “Butler Carriage Works.’’ D N. Thompson, President, farmer and stockraiser | ohn Steele, Farmer and stockraiser ._. McKee, Farmer and stochraiser. E.D. Kipp, Cashier. | | Receives Deposits subject to check, loans monsy, issues drafts, and transactes | general banking business. Your patronage respectfully solicited. ee 2S SS SF EE TSN URRENDER OF SANTIAGO. | A Young Thiet. John Radford, constable of Spruce | township, and Chas. Lusk came to 'The Victory of the Chilian Insar- | town Friday night about 12 o'clock | They were after Edwin Girst, a | gents now Complete. young who had left his home near | Johnstown ant taking with him horse and about £200 belonging to his father. The youug man was seen in But ler Friday and had the horse fed at i z Potter's livery stable Acting Secre- | Tavern: It'is reported that young tary Wharton received the following | Girst, has been captured and t! cablegram from Consul McCreery, | horse and money recovered. dated Aug. 30, 9 p. m: eS Balmaceda has turned overthe, ONE MASS OF SCALES. government to Baquedano and fled. | Canto goes to Santixgo to night to Afilicted 3 Years by Dreadful Skin assume control until the arrival of | "d Blood Disease, with Intenre Junta from Iquique. Good order Pain and Loss ot Hair. here. All Other Remedies Fail. Relieved Instantly and Cured in 4 Weeks by the Cuticura Remedies. 31.—Official of Balmaceda’s fall reached the naval and state depart- | Washington, Aug. i | corroboration ments this morning. ne Acting Secretary Soley also re- | ceived the followin; Admiral Brown, cablegram from dated Valparaiso have a few words to say regarding the Ca tours Remedies They have cured me in fo. 8’ time froma Skin and Blood dive August 30: bs - 1 - whichI ve had for over three y¥ . President of Chili has surrender- | {yin times. my skin would be very sore, end ed the government to the Chilian | aie king and peeling off in white . 5 weather my fi sone mines General Baquedano and has left | ors. w hen in the cold air the pain war "4 os oo hee a inte ft would al bring rs to my Valparaiso. V alparaiso well organ ayers ao eloninca: GanleoRnie ized. The foreign forces have re. tion, hair. [have tried every embarked. The above is somewhat obscure. but itis interpreted at the depart known remedy that was recommended to me, bat it was of ho use, and gave me very little benefit. So hearing of your Cuticura Kemedi > | Leoncluded to give them a trial, fi | plication gave me almost instant lew weeks’ time I found myself cured = cals am thankful for what they have done for ine (ene to mean that the polic j Your Cuticura Remedies are a blessing to Seay, era Ot as Be “ranized | those who may have the opportunity to 4% jin V ulparaiso is so well organized | them. [can recommend them to any as to relieve the foreign admirals of Edmund Ker further necessity for keeping their | 206 Union Ave., Chicagy, Li}. marines on shore duty. Z i force | Cuticura Remedies See aun ee Effect daily more great cures ot humors and | THE SURRENDER OF SANTIAGO diseases of the skin 1 blood than any 1 | a ” other remedies comb Cuticara, the great According to the Herald dispatches | ekin cure, and Cuticura Soap, an’ exquisite | = : = . | skin beautifier and purifier, externally, and | from Valparaiso, the Chaneral regi- meut of the Congressional army took | | Cuticura Resolvent, erand greatest of humor remedies, inter: evers species of itching, burning y, pin E RS: ply on’ blotchy disease of the ekin, realy formal possesion of Santiago last | biood from infancy to age, froin pimples to scrofala, when the best physicians and all jnight. If this is true the last act of | cr remedies tail. sg. Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, ie Soap, : the bloody revolution which has 23c.: Resolvent, $1, Prepared by the torn Chili for the past seven mouths | Potter brug and Chemical Corporetion, Boston : = r-Send for *‘How to Cure Skin Diseases. ’’ is closed. 64 pages, Willustrations, and 100 testimouials. | As soon as the news reached S FI cha tiago of the overwhelming defeat cf * | the government troops and the sur; render of Valparaiso, the peop'e | knew that Balmacedi’s PLES, black-heads, red, and oily ekin cured rough, chap; yeCuticura Soap. OLD FOLKS PAIN Fall of comfort for ali Pains, ! flammation, andand weaknes the aged is Cuticura Anti t power was | TBST gone and their hatred of his governs! xine stretatenthe Le aenee ment broke forth. The cry was 7¢0U# infallible. | raised that Balmaceda should be killed, and a mob started for his W E CLAI M house. It grew in numbers and fury as it went through the streets and by the time it reached the ex- THE ecutive mausion it was ripe for any The president, how- there. Enraged, the mob burned the execative bloody deed. ever, Was not ininsion it was in flames the mob he home of Senor God- ay, the ex-minister of and an ardent Balmace list his place. Ti : marche tot wasa Chill, she xT . AND STALLIONS, she became Miss, she clung to Castoria When she bad Children, she gave thers Castorig CHAS. S. CONCKLIN. Prop i JAS. S. WARNOCK. Sec’y NO. 41 }

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