The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 16, 1892, Page 3

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| ci gi engin cai CAPITAL, - + $125,000 00 SURPLUS, - - $25,000 00 .F.J. TYGARD, - - - President, HON. J. 8B. NEWBERRY, Vice-Pres. J.C.CLARK- - Cashier $500,000 We desire to place out on real estate security «a large amount of money. Will Give the best terms and lowest rates yet offered by anyone in (ee ee iat ay Notes drawn for one, two, three or five years. Have some money to loan at on or before a given date: Calland see how cheap we can let you have money. The Bankers Loan & Title Co P. C. FULKERSON, Manager. BATES COUNTY National Bank, BUTLER, MO. THE OLDEST BANK TH LARGEST AND THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN BATES COUNTY. W. A- ROSE, LIVESTOCK AUCTIONEER. Will do business in Bates, adjoining counties. A risonyille, Mo. Reterenc 3ank ot Ha Cass and ddress me at Har- First National Bank and sonville. 4tt ——GO TO-— C. A. VAN HALL, —SUCCESSOR TO— F. BERNHARDT & CO. —FOR— PURE DRUGS MEDICINES, TOILET ARTICLES, TOBACCOS AND NINE CIGARS, ARTISTS MATERIALS OF ALL KINDS Prescriptions Carefully Compounded A liberal Patronage of the public is solicited. WANTED—CHICKENS & EGGS | Is a Human Vampire. Columbus, O., Nov. 4.—Deputy Marshal Williams of Cincinnati has removed James Brown, a deranged United States prisoner, from the Ohio penitentiary to the national asylum at Washington, D C. The prisoner fought like a tiger against being removed. Twenty five years ago he was living on humen blood. He wasa coast in 1867. During the tup two of the crew were missing and an in vestigation was made. Brown was found one day in the hold of the ship sucking the blood body of one of the sailors. other body was found at the same! place and had been served in the] same manner, Brown was retur ued | to Boston and convicted of murder} and sentenced to be hanged ident Johnson commuted the Pres Seu- serving fifteen years in Massachu- setts he was transferred to the Ohio prison. He has committed two murders since his confinement. When being taken from the prison to night he believed that he was on his way to execution and accordingly. resisted J. R. Simpson complimented us by a pleasant call Satnrday. A Bad Boy’s Wicked Work. back 400 feet in the railroad tunnel at Rocheport a few days ago, when several small boys touched off a keg of blasting powder and two sticks of | dynamite inside the tunnel at the en trance. A heavy explosion followed | and screaming, frightened peop rushed frantically to the openi: ie A large quantity ‘of powder and 1 dy-| namite were stored in the tunnel ut the time and the great wonder is thet it did not explode and cause terrible disaster. But it failed to go and the result was that no ove was seriously hurt. Clarence Boyton, the boy who set it off by aid of a fuse, had his face badly burned all the powder and dynamite in the tunnel been set off it is likely that none of the people would have got ten out alive. Ed Miller = the fright occasioned by the explosion | was past description. The tunnel is being made for the M. K. and Eastern railroad, and when complet. ed will be the longest tunnel state.-—Nevada Mail. Will you sutter with dyspe er complaint? Shiloh’s Vitalizer anteed to cure you. Sold by H L Tuck er, druggist. M puri Mines. al report of State Mine Inspector C. | C. Woodson for the ar will show that the mining industr oped wonderfully except in regard | to iron, in which the metal output for the year was 126,521 tons. Aj steady decrease has been marked in this ore for the last tive yea The value of the lead and zine ¢ is placed at 5,826; 1 $9,116,939. There are 14,840 men employed in the mines and no serious distur bances have occurred during the year. Prices haye not been so high as last year for lead fou al A of the spring and summer by ince I will pay the highest market price for chickens and egg delivered at my store at Virginia, WMo.- T also have good feed stable in eonnection with my store.$ Netson M. NestLerope. Missouri Pacific Ry. 2 Dailv -Train 2 KANSAS CITY OMAHA | 2 and§ rains. In value the increase in Jes zine and coal is nearly Miners are in demand in nearly all | districts and a vast amount of capi- tal is being invested increase facili! ties. Croup, whooping cough an tis immediately relieved Cure Sold atH L tion drugstore. Did you ever notice how quick | people forget the men and issues of | a general election,” said a well posted polician. “Ask some one who's nd Ruther | was vice president under ford B. Hayes or under Grant during | his two terms of office, and not one out of twenty will answer correctly, | although they may have carried ban- {ners and yelled themselves hoarse | jee for all three of the men who were | elected to the second office in the) United States. Almost any one will | at once name the vice president un- | der Garfield, but this fact is due en- | tirely to the assassination of = Garfield and not to polities. Hendricks is well See | through his connection with the de- | | feat of the republican party, but ten years hence the average citizen will COLOR ees ae LINE 9 Daily “Train, 5) Kansas City to St, Louis, |” THE PUEBLO AND DENVER, PULLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING C488 Xansas City to Denver without cnange H. C. TOWNSEND. General Passenge: and Ticket A’gt ST. LOUIS, MO foere but little recollection of the | men whose names are now familiar | to all. When the excitement attend ing an election is over most of the the forget j people onee familia D sin the pursuits of every day ife.”—Jefferson City Tribune Some Foolish Pe be- all aoe s charged with being a vampire and| Portugese sailor and shippe’ ona fishing smack from Boston up the, from the | The, tence toimprisunment for life. After) Ed Miller, in company with his} uncle George Miller and family, and} fifteen or twenty other people, was | Had | in the | Jefferson City,Nov 1.—The annu- | has devel: | and zine ore. | Mining was greatly retarded during | >| down!” $1,700,000. | Tucwer’s Prescrip | “ ‘and the two trains collided, sm THE ORIGINAL ROUND OAK STOVE nts Fish Bro’s af fais Farm es | 'R. R. DEACON, | } ‘SuomeM GUIS pue sagang doy | SONS & co. Brave Bob McCulloch. | St. Louis Republic. | Everybody knows Col. Bob Me- Culloch, State Register of Lands, | ©ibut if one did not know him he | | would never suspect what courage | land bravery lies behind that quiet | hadd modest exterior, says the Tipton | |(Mo.) Times. This fact is known to |many in this locality, for there are a| |number who belonged to his com- | mand in the late unpleasantness. It is related that in one of those des- péerate cavalry charges for which | Co!. McCulloch was noted, he jan officer riding down upon him with ja drawn saber. Somewhere in the melee Colo.el Bob had sa j ber saw lost his and his pistols were empty. | | Time for reflection was short, but | Colonel Bob was equal to the emer | geney. Seizing his pistol by | barrel, he raised himself in his stir- rups and threw it with all th. er he could command. the pow- | His aim was true and the weapon struck his an- | tigonist’s sword hand, which w right cut n on for “Yr ip against cav- lary,” with such force that it tum Hbled him from his horse and beat i ithe guard of the sword until it was necéssary to pry it up before the hand eculd be released. The Colo- {nel took his assailant prisener. On another charge Colonel Bob's horse is shot from underhim. He | pressing on when n the ging up | feder: es ther roan steed. n rider on a big, Col. Bob explained bis situation commanded him to di was came fiery and The d remarked: mount. rider began to protest an | \“T am a noneombatant. I belong to | army of the Lord.” “Well,” the grim old hero, “you are a d long way ithe said from headquarters. Get And, bestriding the roan, he soon reached the front and led the charge as usual. Nope! Hope! There never was a goose so gray, | But some day, soon or late, | An honest gander came that way And took her for his mate. There is hope and lifeand comfort } There is hope, and life and health sfort for our wives, our moth- our sisters and our daughters in the New Davis Vertical Feed Sew ing Machine. It is the lightest run- jning, the simplest constructed, the siest comprehended, and the most | dure te, It brings light to the eye, |eolor to the cheek, elasticity and life | |dey and prosperity to every house- jhold. ers, Collision at Pleasunt Hill. Pleasant Hill, Mo., Nov. 10.—A : collision oceured in the west yar¢ this place to-night at 8:30 oe jAs the No. 304 Mo. Pac. regu'a seuger, south bound,due here at pulled into the yard at a li anorth bound freight train out upon the maiu track to switeh | i both throwing the tender of tk ine fror is ing the front end ger engine through the hea: H Postal Clerk Joe El ran on the passen The wreck ng cleared away. No = OS : 3 2 es z ns will be delayed save ;| regular trai 1304. pet Dr i get Dr. | miles south are | than ever Pronounced Tien Yet Sayed. From a letter written by Mrs. Ada E. Hurt of Groton S. D. we quote; “Was taken with a bad cold which settled on my lungs, cough set in ‘which finally terminated in consump jtion. Four doctors gave me up, ; saying I could live but a short time. I gave myself up to my Saviour determined if I could not stay with my husband and friends here on earth I should meet my absent ones above. My husband was advised to Kings New Discovery for consumption coughs and colds. I gave it a trial, took in al! eight bot- tles: it has cured me and thank God I am now a well and hearty woman Trial bottles freeat H. L. Tucker's drug store. Regular size, 50c and | $1.00. vi irgima Items. Que night of Jast week W K EI- liott lost his two houses by fire; Mr E had searcely time to escape; noth- Insurance light.... is on the -Unele Jim Bur- Mrs Satterlee of Elk hart was in town visiting the other day....Mr with typhoid fever... Carr Dudley is d at present working at Worland and running a feed stableat Virginia... . Mrs Humphrey and daughter, Miss : in Butler Satur- ing was saved. Miss complaining list... Minnie Morrison rus und sister, has three chil- .Mr g good business Downey dren s > were visiting day....Mr A E Biggs daughter from California, is home on a visit .... Miss Donna Craig was married to that man from the nation; they went at once to their home in the pation — sicing....W R Craig had an at toe more work for Dick .The roads for two in better condition before.... Emanuel Nes- tlerode is building an addition to Mrs A J Barry of El- is visiting her moth- NELs. the wi this winter... tune to split his gré ax; no his house... dorado Spring s er, Mrs Craig, Shiloh’s Vitalixer is whatt you need tor constipation, loss ot appeite, dizzi- ness, and all symptoms ot dyspepsia Price 10 und 75 cents per bottle. Soll vy H L Tucker. Cold Water ‘Beat ce old L ead Columbus, O., Nov. 7.—The City Railway Company attempted to lay a double track railway in Oak street yesterday. It being Sunday the property owners could not invoke the aid of the court very readily. les Funston stood in his lot with a cocked reyolver, but was arrested. Mrs.Fuaston then took his place erm ed with a garden hose. She swept the stream along the street drove the off and workmen Women neighbors did likewise aud soon doz- ens of hose pipes were defending as many !ot fronts, keeping men from work uutil Sheriff Guthke anction papers. 2 ee arrived le conse- | noted Char- | Mr. Watterson’s Views. “The vote of Tuesday is pean and decisively a verdict against the | policy and the theory of protection. Whatever else was done or left un- | done in the canvass the issue be- jtween a high tariff and a low tariff, ja tariff of bounties and a farff¥ for} revenues only, could be misunder- stood alone by these who lacked the integrity and eourage to meet it, or by those who kad a corrupt motive The for confronting and evading it. transaction in the national conyen jtion on that point left double coustructiou nothing to Overcome by s¢ of the truth, the brought in a tariff merely sent the mor strange terror tform committee ank, which not idea of demo- cratic reform to the rear, ally asserted, in the the republican dozma of protection The convention took this monstrosity by |the thr aad rep! keynote of at uud smote it, threw it out ced it by a decla ration embodying the true democrat- ic gospel that ringing the government has public purpose of raising money enough for its own support; that any other design of a tariff is uncon stitutional aud unjust, and pledging the party if returned to power to stamp out the fraud of protection as illustrated by the McKinley act and the usurping reciprocity nominated Grover it regarded as the most distinguish- ed and thorough going representa treatise, it Cleveland, whom tive of these declaration among living The response which Mr. Cleveland gave to the platform, amended and revised, was conclusive and cheered the hearts of honest tar iff reformers all over the land. In his Madison garden speech and in his letter of acceptance, despite the fearful forebodings of the timid and the misinterpretations of the dishon- est, he stood firmly by the great is sue of revenue reform, as set forth by his message of 1887, by the St Louis platform of 1888, by the cam- paign of education following the lat- ter and by the latest expression of the party at Chicago, emphasized aod punctuated by the unequal con- test between the forces of light and darkuess on the floor of the national convention. Americans. Every effort to divert the canvass from this issue lower the standard of revenue reform proved abortive. Every effort to belittle and befog it served only to reveal it the stronger and the brighter. As late as Saturday the national demo- cratic committee, making its final appeal ts the voters, placed this care dinal prizciple of democratic faith and purpose before ali else, deliver- ing it with clearness and force which leave nothing to be desired. The answer of the masses is spon- It puts and to a taneous aud overwhelming. doubting demoezrats to skame for their cowardice. It imates and assures upright democrats in the courage of their convictions. It tells us that the people have lost neither virtue, nor their intelligence; but that, giving a plain statement of the case between right and wrong, they can not be bought or bullied out of their duty to their God, their country and themselves. It ends forever all disputes among dem | ocrats about tariff policies. It is an fannouncement to America end te world that the governmezt-of the United States has at last stepped out of the bondage of protectionism and upon the bre open highway of free trade with all mankind; no more dark closet reciprocity treat- ies;no more McKinley duties de- signed to check imports; no more labsurd and burdensome de make the rich richer aud t | poorer by taxing the necess jlife: no more Chinese walls strict trade aud commerce; no more Chinese gongs to alarm the ignorant | ery American to sell sellto the best profit and where he can buy the cheapest, with/ jall taxes needed into the public | | treasury, none diverted to buik it EcEate fortunes "—Louis r Journal where he can Good Looks. G.oJ ‘ooks are more thax _deed, depending on a heilthy ec n- | dition of all the vital organs. Ifthe liver be disorderly you have a bilious | sok, if your stomach be disorderly | ie acis s directly on these vital g Cures pimples, blotches, boils, | gives a good complexion. ees Tuckers drugstore 50a bottle. but actu | no right of taxation, except for the| skin} Sold at} 2 post OFFICE EOQOK STORE | you have Spee look, if your eted you havea pineh-| W. H. H. Larimer. Church C. SS Ed. M. Smith. ae —OUNSIGN YOUR— CATTLE, HOCS and SHEEP To LARIMER, SMITH & BRIDGEFORD, MANSAS CITY. rhe man Franz Bernat On the aorth side of the square, Butler, Missouri, Does his own Watch & Clock Repairing Also Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Sil- verware at ACTUAL COST AND CARRIAGE, For the next twelve months As a watch 7 can r of 32 years eioinuaed and w ive sou satisfaction. Fine Watch Repairing a Specialty. [answer ail inquiries if stamp le taclosed for reply.” PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL. Harmless, ani wich me staring, inconvenience, or bad effects. For particulars ich C cents te atainpe, Ma 0. W.F. SHYDER B'VICKER'S TP°ATER, CHICASS, LL: CORRECT Mairsouri'Pacific Time}table, Arrival and departure otf passenger trains at Butler Station. Nort Bounp Passenger, - - q250 a.m: Passenger, a - 3:5¢ p.m. Passenger, - - 9:25 p.m. Local t cvight > 10:05 a.m, Sovutn Bounp Passenger, - - 7:04 a. m. rassenger, - - 2:28 pm. Passenger, - - p.m Local Freight - 9-1:37 Pm. F. M. FULKERSON, DENTIST, BUTLER, MISSOURI. Office, Southwest Corner Square, Dr. Tucker’s old stand. DR. Lawyers. T. W. Sitvers. J. A. Sitvens, SILVERS & SILVERS, Attorney-at-Law. Will practice in the courts of Baes and adjoining countiet, the Court of Appeals, Supreme Court at Jefferson City and in the Federal Courts. weBOffice over Farmers Bank; door from head of stairway, third DE ARéOND & GuITH: ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Will practice in Bates and adjoining counties. $F Olice over Bates Co. Nat?l Bank. PARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORNaYS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, down’s Drug Store. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. All calls answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- eases. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chik- en aspecialtv. WHY NOT? When youtgo tothe Post Office for your mail, why not price STATIONERY, SOAPS AND TOLLET/ARTICLES, Juet Received over Lans- 125,000 Envelops from N. Y. and the foolish, but the right of ev- | 1% Ibs Toilet Soap from Philadelphia, CIGARS. From Gaiiimore, and s general eccortment of STATIONERS SUNDRIES. We have all these things and lots of othersin QUANTITY! QUALITY! PRICE! i eas y buyer. Examine goods andsee ifwe are not correct.

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