The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 13, 1892, Page 5

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BOSTON STORE. D.N. Thompson who has been | spending the past two months in| Florida is home agaiu. He reports | a most pleasant time and his health | greatly improved. OUR } | ae | Frank Allen has bought the south I fs - | half of W. W. Cook's Jot and intends | s selling good goods at cheap prices, OW | building a neat residence this sum-| ‘mer. The lot is one of the most de- Line of Fine Shoes, prices, way down bed rock prices, that is. _> what the people say we have been doing for the past 10 days, and we will keep it up for 10 days longer. Now if you Want to save money come to the Boston Store. | dence. | | LOCAL ITEMS The palatial Deacon residence on | | quality hill, is near completion. This | will be one of the largest anc 1 finest | houses in the city a Next Sunday is easter. Captain Tygard spent Saturday | in St. Louis. ; Dick Wright now wears the star! Wm. E. Walton spent Sunday at 80d carries the billie, and Eldorado Springs. Herbert Walton, of Lone Oak fa- vored us Saturday. | he will) | wake the city one of the best mar | shals she has had in many a day. Mrs. F. M. Mount lefc Saturday! evening for her home at Sedalia, ale] tera pleasant visit of two weeks} with relatives and friends, | city. Easter hats and bonnets at the opera house millinery store. = ae in this} Col. Pace’and Major Kellar went to St. Louis Friday night. erat Frank Crumley now holds a po-}| | sition in a drug store at Rich Hill. Mr. C. is a number one druggist. He spent Sunday in the city with his family. Applications for the position of night-watchman are plentiful. The picest line of spring millinery in the city at the opera house millin- | ry store. : = eye Rev. Peirce, pastor of the M. E. church, south, is on the sick list. He was taken sick about the middle of last week and was unable to fill) his pulpit Sunday. Frank Rosamond has been quite sick for several days with painter's colic. Our young friend, A. A. Miller, son of Alf. Miller, writes us that he | Ladies for easter hats call at the ting it Will friend Carroll please tell us | | why he abuses the democratic party | so much and the republican Also the this county between the peoples and parties or whether they party so little difference in republ republican are one and the same thing Grand State . O. F. order, Col Ff. PP. Ri Lecturer of the I work ctures on odd fellowship The egotism of youth always respectful. The Atchison Globe | says: The reason some people dis- | like to bear very old people talk of | their youth is that they don’t enjoy | the thought that the world was in | teresting before they were born in | to it. The district Sanday school con-} vention, composed of S Oak aud Mt. Pleasant townships, | will meet in this city at the Baptist ehureh next Sunday at 2 o'clock. | The programme is an interesting one | and as there will be new officers to elect for the ensuing year, it is im- | portant that the convention be well | attended. unit, Lone Nevada, Mo., April 9 —Robert M. Spencer, associate editor and busi-| ness manager of the Daily and Weekly Mail of this city died at Warrensburg this morning after an illness of about ten weeks grippe. and unmarried. from la He was about 25 years old His funeral will take place to morrow afternoon at 2 o clock. He was » mason and a well has located at Ibapah, Utah. A movement has been started over in Kansas to erect a monument to the late Senator Plumb. Hon. W. W. Graves went up to | Kansas City Saturday on legal busi- ness before the court of uppeals. Our old friend Wm. C. Heddenr, of Osage, favored us pleasantly while in the city the last of the week. The different school districts in opera house millinery store and see the nicest line in the city,and Misses | Jessie and Mary Evans will fit you out in the latest style. Recorder Newsom turned over the books of his office to his successor, H. M. Cannon, Friday, and for the next two years his Honor will look after the evil doers of the city. It is a little bit amusing when the pot calls the kettle black, but when the original and only great Ringster poses as a “ring buster,” it is excru- tiatingly funny. Vernon county responded nobly to the aid of the ex-Confederate home at Higginsville. Rev. Blakemore united in marriage at the residence of the bride's par- | euts, two miles east of town, Sunday | afternoon, Mr. C. A. MeComb and | Miss Edith Orear. Rev. Dr. Kuhne, was unable to fill his appointment to preach at the Baptist church Sunday night on ac- count of sickness. W. L. Ogg, a prominent farmer) &x-County Treasurer Oscar Reed- of Spruce township, gave us a pleas- | ey his wife and twe youngest chil- ant call while in Butler the last of | dren, Mamie and Garlic. apent the week. | Wednesday in the city. Th-y are Misses Jessie aud Mary Evaus | living on their farm near Altonn. know what the ladies waut in mil = linery and they have the goods. Call This is prettv tough weather on | and see them at the opera house | the farmers, and bas put cern plant- millinery store. ing back. But the Bates county | Johu W. Duncan was down from | farmer will get there just the same’ Adrian Saturday. John has been | with a big crop at the end of the quit e sick for some time, with ec | aeanene zema of the skin, but is improving. | Saturday was a rustling, bustling | | day with the merchants. The farm- lers that came to town on that day | came for business and trade in every | branch was good. R. M. Handley, formerly of this | county, now a prominent cattleman | ToW.LEGG| | A nasal injector tree with each bottle ot Shiloh’s catarrh remedy. Price 50 cents. Sold by H. L. Tucker. 1T— | of Vernon, was in the city the last | of the week and gave us a pleasant | | call. BUGGIES, PHAETUNS, &e. | A. J. Wier, one of Butler's most | ‘artistic carpenters, is the happy Cart Springs | father of a little daughter, which ar- | | rived at his home Friday last. The} Times extends congratulations and | best wises to the little miss. With 8 Full Line of Repairs for Wheels, Tops, Springs, Cart Shafts, Neck Yokes, Poles, Will build or furnish new &e., always on band. A female patient named Martha | Wal Kenhagan committed suicide in Nevada asylum Saturday by hang- ing herself with a towel fastened to {the bars of her window. She was! | sent to the asylum from Kansas City’ | December, 1891. work Cheap as the Cheapest. I handle the finest PHETON AND SURRY every aa Noah Nyhart had bills printed last week for his Norman and Mor- | gan horse and for his fine jack, Bar Come and see me. Satisfaction guar- | celona Mr. Nyhart is very proud of the achievements of Barcelona,. | and says he can show some as fine | colts as can be found in the county j brought to Bates county. Cushions $1 00, Shafts $3 50. anteed. Charges reasonable. South | east corner square. Iron Block. jal spite. |stain from ealling na:nes or saying anything that would tend to provoke ‘voted wife, an obedient daughter | jacres of land in | bandle country known journalist. Since the city election returns have been made public we are more than ever convinced that frind Atki-- son was right in saying that the ‘re-| publicans held a convention at the court house and invited the Union labor party in to seé them make nominations.” As the nomination was allthey got. But then the un ion labor fellows seem to learn noth ing by experignce and at the next election the republicans will invite them again and they will all go. Then after the nominations are made they will do xs they have done be- fore, vote the republican ticket. We are continually being asked by democrats from the country for an explanation of why the mayor, nom- inated by acclamation on the demo- cratic ticket, was defeated and the balance of the ticket elected. It is easily explainable and well under- stood by the citizens of Butler and will and should react upon the man who instigated it from purely person- But the Tres shall ab- a discussion and cause dissent in the party ranks The sad intelligence was received | that Mrs. Ed. D Latimer, daughter) of John Winsett, died at her home | in Kansas City Sunday afternoon. | The body was brought to Butler | Tuesday, ani fun ra' services were conducted by Rev. Blair, at the C P. church at 3 o'clock p.m. and the remains were conveyed to the Oak Hil! cemetery, followed by the heart broken husband.sorrowing rel- | atives and friends, and interred by | the side of her mother who had pre- ceded her but a few short months. Mrs Latimer was a loying and de- and a christian lady possessed of an | amiable cuaract r. An appropriate obituary will be wiven uext week. | Win. E Walton fora while in Texas a few s us that / weeks he took thousand the southern Pan- He says the land) is very fined and he optioned it xt a big bargain. © He propos+s now to} an option on eighteen the trade. Mr. Waltvou says he wants | jtotake half the land in his own | name and is willing for the rest to be} | Blakemore, Ed Williams and others jtake pleasure in lending him our aid junder Mayor Pace’s administration Itt Ways We ai-| latest and best lanation. the in | style and quality. You need a spring | suit or ‘ The best p'ace to} procure th aiis what you want to| know about us assist you by | comparing ours with eel : | Our’s is the “Baltimore High Art’ | kind—the best wade—the best fite; ting—th) mast siylish—realy made | clothing that movey ean buy That's oar kind. The others seli— well, the other kind —not quite :o good. We know whereo! we speak. That | the “Balnmore Hizh Art” is the best nead-—best fitting ¢ otiing sold | in Bates county. You rarely find this make outside of the large cits It is made especiatly tor those who are in the habet of haviog th areloth ing made by atuls.aalthe style, fit and make must, therefore, equal Haus dreds of Bates county citizens will tell you that “our kind” fits them better—holis tozether better and holds its clothing they ever bought tailor’s work or its no sale shape longer than any Aud then, too, the price is 10 more than the other kind—in fact, many tell us it’s less That's why our business is booming while others are cow plaining of dal! tines. Please notice: That “our kind” is the best cloth ing in Bates county. That you buy it for the seme or even less money thin the“other kind” This being the case, why net buy your next suit of us? We eli shoes, too—good ones. Bud and Cy Patton, John Fran- cisco, Claud Arnold,Jo- Sheiby Rev. with horses, blankets and camping utensils, leave to-day for the prom- ised land to join with the serambl rs in taking possession of th» Cheyenne and Arapahoe, reservation to be giv- en to the white man by Uncle Sam at the boom of the cannon, at high noon, April 19th. We hope the boys will meet with good luck and each will secure a clin with a ten foot tind the country up to their brightest imagi- nation and flowing with milk and honey. vein of coal, and ihey wili Mayer Wykoff, elect, has taken hold of the reigns of city govern ment, and the Trves hoyes that his administration of municipal »ffairs will b+ successful through ut and that he wil! bametruvg by fear of eligibility in any undertak- ing for the city’s good and prosper- ity that may come up under his term of office. We hope too se him make a good and effici-r t officer and will not be and hearty support in all matters pertaining to the welfae aud yood of.the city. For the ; ast two yeas the city Las grown and prospeied as} it never has done before «nd we are anxious to see th= good work go gn. the weather will be favorable, we} suggest that the pres- t board give, the streets and sidewalks * the city GENTS, BOY S, AND YOUTHS, Can not be Equaled. MAX WEINER. \Headquarters for good honest Shoes. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Corn plowing in Texas was all through with three weeks ago, so says Mr. Walton, who was there. The Skill and Knowledge Essential to the production of the most perfect and popular laxative remedy known, have enabled the Cahforma Fig Syrup Co. to achieve a great success in the reputation of its remedy, Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the universal laxa tive. For sale by all druggists. apr The schoo! board met Saturdiy night and installed into office the new members, Messrs, J. W. Ennis, Solidly for Cleveland. Topeka, Kas., April 6—Up to date nearly half of the 106 counties in Kansas have held their Democrat- Lic conventions to send delegates to | the state convention at Salina, April 20. Every county so far heard from is for Cleveland and many have instruc ted their delegates to vote for him. Why send away for bulk garden seeds when you can buy them just as cheap at home. It will pay you to buy L L. Mays northern grown | seeds whether you want a nickel or ,a dollar's worth Sold by R. R. | Deacon, Sous & Co, Butler, Mo. Settled. Rich Hill Review. | Ata meeting of the board of di- | rectors of the Rich Hill Water, Light jand Fuel Co., this morning, Judge | Templeton was elected president in and Don Kinney. W. W. Ross, was | place of Juo. A. Kellar resigned, and elected president of the board; J. W. | @ settlement effected with W. P. Eanis, vice-president; C. A. Denton, | Munro, by which the company as- secretary, and Don Kiuney, trea:ur-| gmes control of the works. Mr. er. The vote for the additional levy | Kinder, the efficient hustler under showed conclusively that the people | Mr. Munro's mauagement,will retain of this district do not propose to |his old position under the new or- shorten the school term four or tive| ganization, and speedy relief is ex mouths which would be suicidal as} pected from present conditions no first class teacher could be per- | CatsrchiiaeNewiRnetena: suaded to take charge of our schools | for that length of time, when they | ti could do better elsewhere. Ely’s Cream Balm gives satisfac on to every one using it for catarrh- quently the sechocls would be at the mercy of incompetent teach-| ers and the board would be powete less to avoid the disaster and confuse sion that would inevitably follow. As it is, the public schools of this city, in point of efficient instructors stands second to no sells of this system in the state. The work kept abreast with the times and it is hoped that the good results of the past will be improved upou in the future. On? thing eertain, there must b+ no stumbling blo the path of tbe public schools. COPYRIGHT 1891 The smallest is the best in pills, other things being equal. | But, with Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel- lets, nothing else is equal. They’re the best, not only because they’re the smallest, and the easiest to take | —but because they do more good. They cleanse and regulate the liver, stomach and bowels in a way the huge, old-fashioned pill doesn’t dream of. Think of trying to regu- late the system with the ordinary pill. It’s only good for upsetting it. These are mild and gentle—but thorough and effective, no pain—no griping. One little pellet for a laxa- | The Sick Head- tive—three for a cathartic. best Liver Pill known. ache, Bilious tion, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks | form a syndicate in Butler and close | As winter has now broke and soou| and all derangements of the liver, | stomach and bowels are prevented, relieved and cured. Put up in sealed vials—a perfect vest-pocket remedy, always conven- divided with those desiring to invest. | their especia! attention, 8) that the) jent, fresh and reliable. He has great faith in th~ future of | this great and growing state, whieh | he says is settling up very fast and | is firmly of the opinion that there is) Texas real estate at this time. big money to be madein investing = | ;Same may be put in gool condition | jbefore the advent of cold weather. This much if nothing more is expec- ted and absolutely demanded and. the sooner work is comenced in this! direction the better. | They’re the cheapest pill you can buy for they’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is re- turned. It’s a plan peewiar to Dr. Pierce’s medicines. You pay only for the good you get. Can you ask more P . Conse- | is ‘Ss put in | Headache, Constipa- | al troubles.—G. K. Mellor, druggist | Worcester, Mars. , I believe Ely's Cream Balm is the | best article for citarth ever offered to the public.-Bush & Co.,druggists, | Worcester, Mass. An article of real merit-—C. P. Al- | den, druggist, Springfield, Mass Those who use it speak highly of it.—Geo. A. Hill, druggist, Spring- tield, Mass. Cream Balm has given satisfactory jresults.—W. P. Draper, druggist, | Springfield, Mass Resolutions of Respect. At a regular communication of | Pappinville lodge No. 140, A. F. & | A.M, the following preamble and | resolutions were adopted | Wuerxas, it has pleased the Grand | Architect of the universe to remove | from our midst cur late Brother Na- | than Godfery, and Wueneas, it is but just that a fity ting recognition of his many vitues | should be had; therefore be it Resolved, That while we bow } | with humble submission to the will of the most high, we none the lees mourn for our brother who has been ‘taken from us. Resolved, That in the death of | Nathan Godfery the lodge laments | the lass of a brother who was au in- | dulgent father to his two mother- \ less children, who was ever ready to | proffer the hand of aid and the voice {sympathy to those in need and the | fraternity and a citizen whose up- ‘right and noble life was a standard of emulation to his fel ows. | Resolved, That the heartfelt sym- pathy of the lodge be extended to his bereaved family in their affletion. Resolved, That these resolutions be spread upon the records of the lodge anda copy thereof be trans- mitted to the family of our deceased brother and to the county papers for publication. Geo W Rogexts Jaxe Scamipt Jaco Hers. A. Besxerr, Sec’y. i The Handsomest Lady in Butler Remarked to a friend the other day that she knew Kemp’s Balsam tor the Throat and Lungs was a superior remedy, as it stopped her cough instantly when other cough remedies had no effect whatever. So to prove this and convince ou of its | merit, any druggist will give you a sam j ple bottle tree. Large size socand $i,

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