The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 4, 1893, Page 3

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Saag eo a lore peor f i i fi ( $500,000. We destre to place outon real estate security a large amount of money. Will give the best terms and lowest rates yet offered by anyone in this line of business: Notes drawn for one; two: three or five years. Have some money to loan pauable on or before a given date. Calland see how cheap we can let you huve 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. CAPITAL, - - $125,000 00 SURPLUS, - - $25,000 00 F.J. TYGARD, - - - President. HON. J. B. NEWBERRY, Vice-Pres. lc. CLARK Cc - Cashier WwW. A- ROSE, LIVESTOCK AUCTIONEER. Will do busioess in Bates, Cass and adjoining counties. Address me at Har- risonyille, Mo. Reterence.—First National Bank and Bank of Harrisonville. 4 tt —GO TO—— G. A. VAN HALL, —SUCCESSOR TO— F. BERNHARDT & CO. —FOR— PURE DRUCS MEDICINES, TOILET ARTICLES, TOBACCOS AND FINE CIGARS, ARTISTS MATERIALS OF ALL KINDS Prescriptions Carefully Compounded A liberal Patronage of the public is solicited. WANTED—CHICKENS & EGGS I will pay the highest market price for chickens and egg delivered at my store at Virginia, Mo.- Talso have good feed stable in connection with my store.< Netson M. NesTLERODE. R. R. = Southeast Corner Syuare, BUTLER, MO. CUTLERY, GUNS DEACON, SONS & CO. HARDWARE, | AND AMUNITION. H'arm Machiner TOP BUGCIES, SPRING AND FARM WACONS., | Iron, Steel. Nails. WAGON AND CARRIAGE WOOD WORK. - PUMPS, And Pump Repairing. Gas Pipe and Fittings, Brass Fittings, Bath Room and general house Plumbing done by experienced men. Since moving into our new quarters where we have plenty of room and light, we have added a complete line of choice family -GROCERIE S,-- And are prepared to pay the higest market prices for Butter, Eggs, and general farm Produce. Watch our locals for Holiday Goods. RR. R. DEACON, SONS & CO. = | ; Bruises,Sores. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts ~SaltRheum Fever Han Chiblains uptions, and posi- no pay req Sores, Tetter,C Corns, and a! tively cur or mone) For sale by H. L WoHe He Larimer, Church C. Bridgeford: Ed. M. Smith. a CONSIGN YOUR—— CATTLE, HOCS and SHEEP To LARIMER, SMITH & BRIDGEFORD, MA cry. b he mar ket re = ' Butler, Tanz Bernhardt) On the north side of the square, i - a Does b Watch & Clock Repairing sown Also Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Si- verware at CTUAL COST AND CARRIAGE. | For the next twelve months { As a watch maker of 52 years experience) can and will give you satisfaction. Fine Watch Repairing a Specialty. DYNAMITE'S EEADLY HAVOC. | Five Persons Killed and Mucn Damage Done by a Terrible | Explosion. Long Island City, L. I., Dee. 28. —At 8 o'clock this morning dyna- | mite exploded at the entrance of the | New York and Long Island tunnel, | killing Mrs. Rock, wife of a barber, | and Henry O’Brien, and injuring John Delancy fatally so that they died later and John Palmer of Wil- liamsburg, Minnie Daven, aged 19; | John W. Daven, a reporter; Mrs. Maher, John Maher and Mrs. Mary Greeny seriously. For a square about the ground quivered, buildings swayed to aud fro, and the pople of the district rushed out of their houses fearing their homes were about to collapse. | The tenements, 21 to 29 Jackson avenue, were shattered with the stores and offices below. The post- office was in No. 27 and the were buried beneath tons of ruins. When the explosion occurred the letter carriers and clerks were hurl ed to the floor amid amass of debris. mails remembers nothing of what happen- ed until he recovered consciousness. During his long experience in such work this is the first accident that has ever occurred. For lame back, side or chest, use Shi- loh’s Porous Plaster. Price socts. Sold by H L Tucker. Thwarted the Convicts. Ottumwa, Ia., Dec. 28.—A very clever attempt to break jail by thirty- two prisoners confined here was foil- ed by Sadie McMillan, a domestic in the sheriff's family. It is the custom for the jailer to unlock the cells and (give the prisoners the freedom of the corridor, aud, when desirous of getting out of the outer door, to shake his bunch of keys in the ap- erture, Miss McMillan always re- sponding to the signal. When the jailer had unlocked the cells to-day the prisoners suddenly seized him, bound and gagged him and shut him up in a cell Then one shook the bunch of keys to have the outer door opened. she. with great presence of mind, demanded to know if it was he The The killed were all in their homes which were contiguous to the scene : of the explosion. O'Brien, ove of) the killed, had his throat cut from ear to ear and his face was mutilated | by flying glass. He was lying on a! sofa when the explosion took place. A pane of glass was broken right over his head and a piece acted as 2 | guillotine. The yards of the Long Island and New York Tunnel company, of which | Wn. bounded by Jackson and Vernon av- | enues. Tenement houses of brick and frame and stores line both of these streets. The company is build- ing between this city and the New York Central depot. A large a This m it was frozen and three barrels were left just back of the tenem thawed out by a bonfire. Directly opposite the scene of the explosion was a row of tenements Steinway is president, are | of dynamite is used. ats to be was wrecked and the debris caught fire from the overturned stoves. The district where the explosion occurred is the most thickly settled section of the city and for halfa nues, hardly an unbroken pane of Missouri Pacific Ry 2 Dailv Train 2 KANSAS CITY and? OMAHA} At noon the fire was still raging and | ends meet, has wasted enough in the | the fire department seem totally un | things on his farm too insignificant | COLORADO SHORT LINE 5 Daily Train, 5 Kansas City to St, Louis THE PUEBLO AND DENVER, PULLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS | He ssid. tbat be tind placed Xansas City to Denver without change | four feet square though which s H. C. TOWNSEND General Passenger and Ticket A’ ST. LOUIS, MO | 20! glass could be found. injured it is not at present known. able to cope with the situation the workmen wereiu the tunnel, *] of the dynamite, being at the head. i ; | He was badly hurt, but was arrested at his home, where he was carried, | jcharged with criminal : forty one pound cartridges | pipes were run, for the pu ‘gt | tis immediately r occupied by five families. Every one | When the explosion occurred all Mclutyre, who was plxced in charge pose of j Z : ‘thawing them out. He says he can- answer did vot suit her and she hur- riedly called the sheriff, who arrived in time to frustrate the cousumma- Many of the prisoners were arraigned for tion of their well laid plan. grave offenses and are an unusually , tough lot. The sheriff has command- ed them all to be locked in their cells till after the next term of court | which will dispose of most of them. Croup, whooping cough and d Cure Sold atH L tion drugstore. sags 5 Prescrip Potent Littles. The farmer who makes his busi- ness pay is the man who finds his profits in things so small as not to be considered the majority of our people. Itisa quarter saved here, a dime there, and All sue- cess, no matter what their character, a nickel somewhere else. jare found precisely the same way. | | Take the great packeries, for exam- ple. If those packeries worked on ithe plan usually pursued by a farm- er when he butchers ananimal, every fone of them would fail; but they | saved and don't. Everything 1s | turned into money; the blood, the offal that results. through a long life, Miss McMillan | responded and, although it was dark | ;and she could not see the jailer, worthy of notice by has barely made | jas hay. Next day when he went ! past the barn from his dinner he | carried that hay along in his arms, housed it without the loss of a mo- | ment, and had xt least one good | feed fora cow. That's the way to do it.—Mobile Register. | That hacking cough can be so quickly | j cured by Shilo’s Cure. We guarantee | jit. Sold at H. L. Tucker's Prescription | | Drugstore. : | To Boil a Ham. New York World. | Runa knife or a skewer into the \ thickest part of the ham next the | bone; if the knife comes out clean | the ham is good; if it smells rank and smears the knife the ham is not !good. Select your bam, then, ac- | cording to this rule, lay it in cold | water. Scrape and wash it carefully, aud let it remain in the water all night. In the morning, when the water—enough to cover the ham— is nearly boiling, lay the ham in and keep the water in a simmer. When | it has boiled about an hour throw in two carrots, four onions, two heads \ of celery, a sprig of parsley, two or! \ three blades of mace aud four cloves. ‘If the ham is very salt it is well to | change the water before putting iu the seasoning, but if you do, be sure to change to boiling water. lo ob.) tain tenderness and mellowncss the | ham must not be allowed t» boil | hard, only simmer Too much heat hardens all meat, especially salt | When the ham is done set it | off in its own water and let it cool in | it; by this means it will retain mois- | ture. When cool, take it out, skin | and dredge bread crumbs and_pep- | per over it and set it in the oven un- til it brow | meat. | Mexican Cactus was thought to be worthless until it was discovered that is cured Catarrh. ‘‘Cacterine’’ isfthe rem- | edy. Sold by H. L. TUCKER. 1-8-t | {ed account is given to-day duel fought Christmas at Monte residence is unknown. FATAL DUEL AT MONTE CARLO. | An American Kills a Russian Count at the Second Shot. London, Dec. 28.—A more detail- of the Carlo by Count Peter Romanoff and an American named Brockton, whose They quar- reled at the gaming table, Romanoff being the aggressor. The Ameri+ can sharply resented the insulting remark on the part of the count and an immediate challenge was the re- sult. The two men fought in the grounds of a private villa and evi- dently meant a duel to the death. The conditions were twenty-five paces, with liberty to advanc: to within two paces of each other aud to keep on firing until one or the other should fall. Both American aud Russian came calmly to the mark, and &t the word being given to fire they did so with deadly intent, at the same time start- ing toadvance. The second builet from Brockton’s pistol struck Rom- anoff just above the heart The count reeled and fell and in a few moments expired. Considerable mystery exists as to the identity of Count Peter Roma- noff. His name, assumed, has suggested some connection with the imperial family of Russia. A New ¥ k paper suggests that Count Romanoff may or may not be the traveling incognito of the grand duke, Peter Nicolai-Nicolaievitch, who was the czar’s uncle. The grand duke Peter was born at St. Peters- burg in 1864, is aide de camp to the emperor, captain of the lancers regi- ment of the imperial guard and mar- ried in 1850 at Peterhof the Prin- real or ‘cess Militzi, the eldest daughter of Ft. Seott, Kan, Dec. 283—“Butch” | Sturm, a professional gambler, this | morning stabbed George Cox, a ¢o- professor, in the breast, breaking the knife blade off at the handle. | die. Sturm was captured and is in jail. The fight grew out of a game of poker. that are more marvelous than a doz- en doctors’ prescriptions, but they’re | | not those that profess to cure every- mile on Jackson and Vernon ave-|hair and bones. and every form of | thing. The income from | {any one of these things might be ex- Gray's refrigerator factory oppo- \ceedingly small, but the income} t|site the scene of the explosion was | from them thrown together foots up | Everybody, now and then, feels |“run down,” “played out.” They've | the will, but no power to generate vitality. They're not sick enough | to call a doctor, but just tuo sick to almost completely wrecked. A num-| to considerable proportions in the | be well. That's where the right kind ber of people were at work in the | end. really making the main profits building but how many of them were | of the plante. Many a farmer who, {of a patent medicine comes in, and | does for a dollar what the doctor | wouldn't do for less than five or ten. | We put in our claim for Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. We claim it to be an unequaled | to be considered worthy of dignitied | remedy to purify the blood and in- man |prosperous farmer and while hi folks were getting the dinner on the table, he took us out into his garden to show us bis Irish potatoes, on- A short row « ions and so on. age, bu passed their beari ke talked with us h season. Nout long ago we called on a} f but- | pulled those vines down from their ¢ account for the explosion. He | Poles and spread them out to cure atteution. to have made him a rich | vigorate the liver. We claim it to be | lasting in its effeets, creating an ap- | | petite, purifying the blood, and pre- venting billious, typhoid aud mala rial fevers iftaken in time time to take it is when you first feel the signs of weariness and weakness. Ss ples. is NOW. On the tral train at Tu body of gine pilot. en a farmer. scola, Til, e man was found on the en | fies Price 10 and 75 cents per bottle. aS i Cox is badly hurt and will probably | There are some patent medicines | the time to take it on general princi- the dead | penuiten He was E. S. MeMack- | Chief of Police Gaster of the prince of Montenegro. Shilch’s Vitalixer 1s whatt vou need tor constipation, loss ot appeite, dizzi- ness, and all symptoms of dyspepsia Sold vy H L Tucker. H A Street Duel at St. John. | St Joba, Kan. Dec. 28.--In a | street duel with pistols yesterday | between Ben Weber and Milt Thom- as Weber was shot througs the heart and killed. Weber was charged with |complicity in the robbery of the county treasurer's office about a | year ago and Thomas was the prin- cipal witness against him. The shooting was caused by the bad blood over the affair. Weber shot at Thomas first and missed and be sent a bullet through bis heart. Confessed to Imaginary Crimes. Chicago. Ill, Dec. 28.—Regard- ing the confession made Sunday} night ina prayer meeting in aa Af-| riean Methodist church by Williams | \3 colored man, of having murdered | We have all these things and lots of ethersim Tbe|aman named La Vaurne in Paris four years ugo, cable messages from say that no man of that name 0 QUALITY! j Pari Williams murdered there. i ° -| crime committed in Lo alla h BS Le wires that it i fore he could shoot again Thomas PATIENTS TREATED GY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL. Marwless. ard = ith wo starving. inconvenience, or bed effets For particulars address, with 6 ceuts 10 stampa, NO. OW. F. SHYBER P'VICKER'S TPSATER, CUICASe, MB CORRECT Mirsouri'Pacific Time!Table Arrival and departure of passenger trams at Butler Station. Nortu Bounp Passenger, ad 4:51 a. m. Passenger, - - 3:50 pe m. Passenger", < - 9:25 p.m. Locaf't reight - 10:05 a- m. % Soutn Bound Passenger, - - 7:04 a. m. rassenger, - - S pm. Passenger, - - 246 p.m] Local Freight - * 9-1:37 p.m. Lawyers. T. W. Sirvers. J. A. Sitvars- SILVERS & SILVERS, Attorney-at-Law. Will practice in the courts of Baes and adjoining countiet, the Court o& Appeals, Supreme Court at Jeffersom City and in the Federal Courts. BWwHROffice over Farmers Bank; third joor trom head of stairway. D® ARMOND & Spee: ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Will practice in Bates aud adjoining counties. e@e Office over Bates Co. Nat’l Bank. ON & GRAVES, DARK ATTORN«YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lans- jown’s Drug Store. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOBOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, | Office. front room over P.O. Atl cail 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. Diseases of women and chit- en a specialtv. WHY NOT? When youtgo tothe Post Officefifor frour mail, why not price STATIONERY, SOAPS AND TOILET ARTICLES. Just Received 25,000 Envelops from M. Y. SH bbs Toilet Soap from Philadelphim? CIGARS. Prom Baltimore, aud a genera] aesortment of STATIONERS SUNDRIES. QUANTITY! PRICE! suit any boser. Examine goods Tices and see if we are not correet. OFFICE EOOK STORE

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