The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 6, 1892, Page 1

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meet The Butler Weekly C VOL. ene ee XIV. Missouri State y Wes. BUTLER, MISSOURI, WEDNESDAY JANUARY 6, 1892 NO. Dal OF BUTLER, MO. CAPITAL, $110.c00. Receives Deposits subject to Check, Loans Money, Makes Colleeti and loes a General Banking Bus DEPOSITORY FOR COUNTY FUNDS. In the Real Estate Loan Department. Make Joans'| on Real Estate on lony or short time at Ail Boulware, 7, Kurk, Monroe F Ballard, J N Farmer Brown, Lula rtlett, Edmund Farmer er. Margaret Dealer — Pharis, r, John Farmer Pharia, Jk Foreman Times officePowell, Normal Sch Pi _ Kos CF Gre Booker HH Ba JM Far Davis, Dutcher, © H Pr DeArmond, A, ohn Farmer m, J Physician Caroline and Eliza » Isaac Sullens, JL president vice-president WM. E. WALTON BOOKER POWELL BEYOND HUMAN AID. al | Kingen, Cattle-Phief, and) Miller, Boy Marderer, Pertsh in the Blizzard. Cheyenne, Wy., Jan. 2.—There is great news of the jail breaking of Thursday night. One of tne men is dead and another and for the third there is no demand. the vars) three is dying, Kingen, ngtorious cattle thief, sentence, perished on Miller, the double | murderer, in the shadow of the seaf- | ‘They have been on the open plains ever with the ther- mometer close to zero, a biting wind | and half a feot crust. They had no food and only light clothing. They wore their pris- | on earpet slippers. beside the dead cattle thief and was eight-y the plains. boy fold, was with him and dying. since their departure of snow under a Miller was lying aroused with great difficulty. He said he thought Kingen died during last night, but was not sure. They had money but did not dare to visit rauches, as they were hood from which Kir stealing cattle for several years a neighbor- has been The searching party was headed by Capt. Smith, an ex-navy and army ofticer, and one or the who guarded treasure coaches in the Black Hills | stage line days. Half a dozen cow- | boys were along, and several of them intended to kill Kingen anyway. The sheriff and coroner will leave for the scene in the morning. The body and the dying boy are at a ranch seven miles from the raidroad. , Kingen was worth $25,000 and leaves | a wife and two childrhn. men Remarkable Vitality. Little Rock, Jan. 1—A few days ago John Brooks of Buena Vista, | Ouachita county, this state, tired twe bulletsinto the head of Fayette Rob- inson, his father-in-law. The bul-! lets made four holes, from each of which the brain oozed. The shoot- ing occurred a week ago and strange to say Robinson still lives, his phy- sicians being confident of his recov | ery. Heis resting easy and talks as intelligently as he did before the shooting. The row was the result ofa family feud. Brooks is in jail awaiting the result of his father in- law's injuries. Judge Noah M. Givan of Cass county is being everywhere named | for Judge of the supreme court. He was a candidate for congress at the time Judge DeArmoid secured the nomination and was one of the list to drop out of that heated contest. Judge Givan has served as a judge of the circuit court and is one of the Missomi. If he uld yield to the pressure of such friends as Hon. Robert T. Railey Le will make a wide mark iv the came paign for suprente judge.—St. Lo Republic. ablest lawyers in Banker | led to his arrast, y Wm E Cashier Farmer TI Cay k Clerk Shoes mer J. R. JENKINS DON KINNEY asst. cashier OR. GRAVES IS GUILTY. Mrs. Barney's Slayer Will Suifer | Death. Colo., in the Graves murder case returned a verdict at 10:15 to-night of of murder in the first de had been out about five Dex: Denver, Jan. 2.—The jury} ree. They 10urs: Thacher Graves, whe is to suffer the death penalty, was a prom- | inent physician of Providence R. I He was charged with the murder of | Mrs. Josephine Barnaby, widow of | # J. B. Barnaby, a wealthy clothing | dealer. Graves had gained the cor fidence of the woman and had per { sunded her to contest her husband's | | will, She was successful and there |upon entrusted to the doctor the] manigement of all her property jand allowed him = a salary of | $5,000 a year. Last spring, while Mrs. Barnaby vy sojourning in Denver, s re “1 throagh — the t mail a bottle supposed to contain | whiskey. It was labelled “From | your friends in the woods,” and was at first supposed to have come frot Mrs. Barn had lived in the Adirondacks a ye She drank from the a family with whom before. and died a few days later. At the! trial it was proved that the liquid contained arsenic, and that Mrs. Ba naby’s death was caused by erse- nie. The handwriting on the bottle was shown to be that of Dr. Graves ; Her will gave him $25,000. She jhad become dissatisfied with him | and shortly before her death was | contemplating getting a new man- ager. These facts tsgether with other evidence against Dr. Graves, trial and = convie- tion. An Obligmg Conductor. Nevada, Mo., Jan. 1.—William MeGuire, a prominent farmer resides near Sheldon, and Miss tie Brown of Johnson county, souri, were married at Stanley.Kas., a few days since by the station agent at that point, who is a justiee of the peace Conductor Backiey hind- who Net- iformed. They terday. They left for Sheldon to reside. Miss Brown had made her home with her uncle until she ial | ed to meet her lover. Evaded the $ ub ‘Treasury ‘Tsaue. | Clinton, Mo, Jan. 2.—The County Farmers and Laborers U to day to discuss the sub-trea re. per arrangement of seve The ve and the diset pone the vote a ing was made az dently the ms to vote on so gigantic a propositior. attendance > WAS represent when a post- meet- Evi- prevailed. guilty | bottle, | Mis- | | ly consented to hold the train a few | minutes until the cermony was per- then took a short/ | wedding tour and arrived here yes | ed to} WHAT THE LABORER GETS Unt Beantifal iff it unly luced Was » Y ¢ Pos A Ss Me- 1 ages jé e Amer { Com Unile ta 1 ity ¢ m, 60 that the eq iivalent wes from 53 to 65 peor cet id W Just as we were fancving ies elves Ss cut in Ayres serves t ut Ane n re the 10t! uss also be- ing ie of the pactieaie pets of the Mekinly tanff, The Ameriean Wool jand Cotton reporter of December j AT mentions still another reduction | fof wages in the cotton industry. |It is the well known New York mi reduction,” the The cause of the says jthe Reporter, “is lepresged | condition of the marked and the| | slow sales.” Demograt has As the frequently | stated ever since John M. I ers senatorial victory iu ever succeeding month mz and more neta presidential possi- bility, but a presidential certainty A copy of Jerseyville, I!inois, Dem ocrat is before us, ond in itis a most | jloyieal analysis of the present politi-! cal situati ces for success John [| M. Palmer as nominee of the! National Democratic Convention} |wouid reach a degree of certainty not possible with r r man, | least or west. The editor of the pa | per m nedis Mr M. Page, Secretary of the N Association, and he i o al ewspaper editor of the He had just reiurn- he rom noe ugton where ba h his exter | quaintare hee among leading dem-| n excellant opportunity of | drift and foree of De , elntive to men and meas- ur His conclusion that Senator Palmer is the coming man scems only an able man, but he is one idol- jized by the farmers of this stateand \admired by the agriculturists of the country far more than any other man | yet thought of as “possibility.” He is a man that commands the respect and confidence of all interests the business the east as well as the | south and west. Heis all right onthe | tariff question and all other leading issues. He can easily put Illinois, | Indiana, Iowa and Wisconsin in the Democratic column, and with a run- {ning mate like Flower, as Bro. Page suggests, New York will be insured. | Palmer and Flower would mean cer-j The more the combi- the strouger weems.—Carthage Democrat. tain success. nation is studied, it To Work on Alliance Vetera ns. Topeka, Kan., Jan.—4.—Alexan- | dec Terrell, county commissioner of alte nty, Jerry Simpson's \home, prop oses to perfect organiza- tious of anti-alliance veterans in ev- ery county to gather recruits from \the w ex-soldiers and keu the faith of the strong ones new political party. Terrell’s to show that the members of ance in the south arethe men bitt opposed to liberal siation. Terre’l in the 1890 was a stioag pecs and was elected sioner on the people’s yas a'so 1esponsi- k alliance | Wea | ple ‘s party mau ; county commi | party! tic | Ray. g{astonishmert that so many other- very rational to ug, for Palmer is not; A GRATEFUL MOTHER. FA Her Sows Loathsome Disease Removed Boy Only Twelve rs Old—Clironic OF BATES Caturch-—Great ! » Prom Capital. Cash Tb ON. THOMPSON 1 K. ROSIER E. A RENNETT E ip 1 NGHAM 1 RS i bal several years, check, not a terrible lischarged so m eives Depc lt Was a chary my eral banking bu mind to ep him supphed with udkerchiefs. I had to use every {this remedy at hand before the ut I could get ut hand. It was |t2¢k comes, to become intellige rishing how he could discharge to its use, is only the most common ed to give him Peruna about aj ents of erdinary basiness. month ago, and the discharge from | snd to the Peru na Drag Manu- | facturing Company of Ohic not have| free pamphlet en the trextment of }to use 2 handkerchief at all. The | Cutarrh, La Grippe, Coughs, Colds, Pe ru na seems to act like magic in Consumption and all other climatic I feel as if I canuot tind | diseases of winier. | his head is enti », fora i ies cough. | his case. | iy ceased, and also | He now does words to ¢ xpress Me- d by the Clie my gratitude for | The ae) s yerdict on the j the medicine; but I do regret that 1) Kinley bill is illustrate never tried it befo I thought! re Was bo cure - aaa and had } lesson and explanation: | given up trying to have him cured; “The of th Hut when T saw the disease so thor- McKinley tariff grow with the d S. jOughly explained in the paper by Iti is not necessary to go gunning for bt IT would try | | the “, as they ¢ beneficent results 1e Dr. Higtman I thoug his medicine. I never will be with. | | to show themselv out Peru: forward If we glance tin the house, and I will} pack to 1889 we find that there were recommend it to all my friends. Very sincerely yours, Mrs. A. E. Ackerman, IE. Grand ave., Chippewa Falls, Wis. ay gare In 1890 the McKinley bill became | ; alaw, and rding to directions, Pe | 2 Lie eager 1176 republicans in the house of rep- | resentatives: 176 PE RU NA AS A FAMILY MEDICINE. Used acco will secure the | after one year of ita family against | ; ‘republicans in the house of Sy chitis 2 pueulmon Tt is a fact of ever increasing entatives is only | pleurisy, eonsump- ‘tion. This Is the pe ople’s ve dict. _| Wise sensible and provident people | " jwi YouCan Rely precaution as to have a bottle of Pe-| U pon Hood's Sarsapariila as a pos- runa at hand, bring upon them-|itive remedy for every form of scrot- jselves the needless suffering and | ula, salt rheum, boils, jall other diseases eee by impure foolish expense that a professional | blood. It eradicates eyery impurity |mman is forced to witness every day. | and at the same time tones and vital- A cold in the head, which a single!izes the whole system. | bottle of Peruna will cure, soon a , | becomes a case of eatarrh, which will). Constipation, and jails troul les ‘with the digestive jtake many bettles tocure. A sore | liver, are anon by ‘Hood's throat, which one bottle of Pe-ru-na} Unequalled as a dinner pill. |will cure, soon becomes chronic pharyngitis or enlarged tonsils,) which will require 1aany bottles. A/| slight cough, which, without a ves- tige of doubt, would soon disappear with the use of Pe-ru-na, becomes chroni¢ bronchitis, which requires the persistent use of Pe-ru-na for some time. for the neglect of so simple a! Gold at Excelsior Springs. Excelsior Springs, Mo, Jan. 1.— Great excitement prevails northwest of here over the finding of gold and silver at a depth of fifteen feet. The | gold assays $105 to the ton. Anoth- feet which appears to be much rich- Every practicing physi- cian sees many cases of consumption a each year due directly to a neglect | of coughs, colds, ete., which, if Pe-| runahad been kept in the house | and used according to directions, | A CANARD The New York Press Exposes would bave been prevented. | (hat ‘Important Bill” Busi- In no other department of domes- | ness. tic arrangements is the such stu-| The article credited to the New pendous disregard of the welfare of | ; York Press, going the rounds of the the family as in guarding against | papers in which it is alleged that the common ills of life by the use! unfavorable action has been taken | of effeetive and reliable family med-|in the New York Legis'ature against icines. If the following advice could | the Bx vyal Baking Powder, proves to reach every household in the land.! have been a canard, gotten up and and with such eloquence as to win circulated by opposition baking pow- obedience, it would convey a bless- | der makers for purposes quite ap- ing to each of 2 value that woul difficult to exaggerate. The advice | The New York Press is this: Get a bottle of Pe-ru na,j the fraud. says “No such leg read the instructions on the b: until they are nt to every oue. 44) t The lie is made The € to our knowle ige.” from whole cloth. F un thoroug Press dis- stood, do exactly as they direct, and | claims responsibility for the no catarrb, cold, cough, sore throat, pu and objects to being bronchitis, pleu ia Or! made party to such wethods adopt- any other climatic disease will dis-| eq by some baking powder manufac. are not yet ready | ble for the nomination of Judge Mc-|turb the peace of the household so ‘turers in their efforts to substitute long as this is continued. To have | their goods for others now in use. cago Globe in the following picture, ; workings we find that the number of | repre- | pimples met | orgaus and the} Pills. | RMERS BANK COUNTY, i $50,000.00 oekraiser , issues drafts 3 » and tran: + Tespectfully solicited. sacts & SS ‘The Most Pleasing Way. Of preventing the grippe, colds, headaches, and fevers is to use the liquid laxative remedy Syrgp of Figs, whenever the system n dsa gentle, yet effective cleansing. To be ben- efited one must get the true remedy anufactured by the California Fig up Co. only. For sale by all druggists in 50e. and $1 bottles. 7 Towa Corn. From the Washington @tar Aman recently from Towa says that he saw a farmer standing at the foot of an enormous corn stalk. asked “How big: is the stranger. “I don't know,” mer, your corn!” answered the far- “DTseut one of my boys up to a little while ago a ried to death “How so! Can't he get back? “No; that’s the the trouble. The cornstalk’s growin’ up faster than he see i Im yout him.” wor ean climb down. 0 wenseneseccscecsescesassesecercees: Fa : DOCTOR ACKERS ENCLISH REMEDY for Coughs. Colds and Consumption, Is beyond: cuestion the greatest of all modern remedies. ; It will stop a Cough Inone night. It will check? : aColdinaday. it will prevent Croup, telieve* Asthoia: and CURE Consumption if taken ins time. IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE WHOOPING COUGH ; GO TO-— CG. A. VAN HALL, —SUCCESSOR T |er lead was found at a depth of fifty, 'F. BERNHARDT & CO. —FOR— PURE DRUCS MEDICINES TOILET ARTICLES, TOBACCOS ANT NINE CIGAR:s, ARTISTS MATERIALS OF ALL KINDS Prescriptions Car Mpou A liberal Patronage of the public is solicited,

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