The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 6, 1893, Page 6

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a few minutes for prayer. He step-/ —— (2,000 ROLLS IN STOCK. —_—_—o-———_ Chicege, Il, March 31 —Alone | ped back and knelt down. Gedney. | Designs, Colors, Qualities to suit everybody; also “AT THE FIGHT WITH A MAD MAN- { YOU WIS FIND THE BEST GRADE OF } |standing in hia place, reverently! ling, suve for the company of a mad- | bent his head. Doyle watched him) wan who fiercely strove vo hurl him | through his half closed eyes, and as/ aver the edge, was the experience of quickly asa cat he darted to the _ G Doyle of Chie : | scuttle and went through it like a! F = i OF - R-N =f= T = U-R = iD haa to bis quick wit. ac flash and into the arms of the men toe his strength he owes his life CARPETS, ou the top ofa sixteeu story bui! : 6 ' who were coming to save him. Que week ago yesterday Albert} Chicago, Ill, March 21. Two, Window Shades, Picture Frames, turszsy And Carpet Sweepers for the UNDERTAKING IN ALL BRANCHES. When in need of anytbing in my line, let me quote you prices before purchasing, they will help you. money in Southwest Mo. Also G. B. HICKMAN. | LILLIE JOHNSUN DISMISSED. Alice Mitchell’s Companion Set Free Memphis, Tenn., March 29.—To- day Lillie Johnson, who” was wit Alice Mitchell when the latter killed her girl lover, Freda Ward, was de clared not guilty of complicity in the erime. Miss Johnson was indicted jointly with Alice Mitchell for mur- der in the first degree, and remained in jail from January 25, 1892, the day of the tragedy, until April, 1892, whon she was released on a’bond of $15,000. When Judge Duboise ad mitted her to bail he announced from the bench that he did so sole- ly becasue Ler health was being in- jured by confinement. When Alice Mitchell was tried Jast July en a plea of insanity, the facts of the murder were gone into fully. There was no proof that Miss Johnson had any knowledge of her insane co defendant’s purpose of murder. As Miss Mitchell was adjudged insane it was supposed that Mise Johnson would be released, but Judge Du bose declined preemptorily to con sent toan acquittal or nolle pros., although the Attorney General stated im open court that there was no proof against Miss Johnson and | arged that the case against her be dismissed. Dubose said that he would wait until Alice Mitchell re- covered her reason and try both the girls. Today Jugde Scruggs, the successor of Judge Dubose, who has been impeached, was on the bench, and the attorney general, after recit- H ing the facts in the Johnson case and Judge Dubose’s cruel perversity, renewed his motiou that a verdict of not guilty be entered. was sustained and Lillie Johnson 15 free. Alice Mitchell is still in ingane asylum at Bolivar, and there is no hope of her recovery. She 1s not violent, but her mind is growing weaker every day, and it is plain that she will eventually become an idiot. The action of the court to day in releasing Miss Johnson is gener ally commended. All Free. Those who have used Dr. King’s New Discovery know its value, and those who have not, have now the opportunity to try it free. Call on the advertised druggist and get a trial bottle free. Send your name and address to H. E Bucklen & Co. Chicago, and get a sample box of Dr. King’s New Life Pills, free, as | a copy of Guide to Health and} Household Instructor, free. All of | which is guaranteed to do you good | and cost you nothing. H. L. Tuck- ; er’s drugstore. | New York, March 24—Colonel | Elliott Fitch Shepard, editor of the | Mail and Express, died suddenly | this afternoon at his home 2 west | iifty-second street. His death fol | lowed the administration of ether by Dr. Charles McBurney and the fam- ily physician, Dr. J. W. McLane, who were about to make an exami-| onel’s suspicions that he suffered from stone in the bladder was cor- rect. You should not be without it. Eyery family is liable tohave a_here- ditary taint of consumption in it. It may date back 3 or even 4 generations. This fact makes it necessary always to hare a remedy with which to combat this formidable disease. A cough when taken at first can readily be cured before | it gets a serious hold cn the lungs. Ballard’s Horehornd Syrup when taken in its early stages will cure consumption. It is guaranteed to bring relief in every | case, when used for any affection of the throat, lungs and chest, such as consump- tion, inflamation of fhe lungs, bronchi- tis, asthma, whooping cough, croup, &c. is | versal feed for the horse is hay fod- The motion ! the | Best Diet For Atling Mlorses. St. Louis Republic. | In the country especially the uni- | der and corn and if oats are raised they are fed till gone then corn takes their place. Ifa part of the corn were sold and the proceeds in- vested in a ton or two of good bian andaton of heavy millfeed and a half a ton of oil meal, and all these foods mixed together aud feed in proportions of two quarts of millfeed cheaper focd would be had, and the horses would be better for it. This is fully brought out in the Railway Review of Chicago, in which the vet- erinary surgeon to Chicago fire de- partment makes some suggestionr, from experience, as to food adapted to ailing horses. The sensible pre- scriptions could in many cases be safely given. with discrimination, preventives, or fur maintainance of equine keilth: “Bran stands decidedly first as the food most generally in use for the invalid horse; it acts as a laxative, is frequently tempting to the appetite, and is easy of digestion. There is no part of the general treatment more uuiversal thau offering this substance as a change of food. Is the horse very weary and his powers of digestion weakened in conse quence? warm bran mash, which comfortably distends the stomach and satisfies to one quart of corn chops, a much} We induce him to take a) edvey and his son Roberta young 1 from Philadelphia. he elder Geduey went to | Omaha on business leaving his son i in Chicago. Residing at the hotel} jis one George Doyle, a former Phil- jadelphian who had known young | Gedney his Naturally | they were much together, and yes terday they went to the roof of the hotel to Jook over the city. | They stood for some time when sud- an, registere: in youth. } | new jdenly Geduey gave a strange laugh and grabbing Doyle by the hand, he | began pulling him across the smatl | square and back again, as if the cool breeze had exilerated him to play fullness. Then he said: “Hold my baud; I want to look dowa.” Doyle did so and be gezed over the side at the people below who looked like pigmies. Then with a j baleful light in his eyes with a oice, in jcoutrast with his recent playfullress he said: “You've got to jump off the building or Ill throw you off.” For the first time it came back to ! Doyle's memory that Gedney had several years ago been treated for a mild form of insanity in an asylum at home. \s'ckening realization of the situation eime over him, was to call help, but Gedney was larger and stronger |than he and such a policy might have meant almost instant destruc- tion. He tried to temporize and and treat the matter as a joke. “Will you jump” said Gedney und without waiting for a reply he seized Doyle and began to drag bim toward the edge. Doyle fought with the desperation of despair, and the men closely locked togther, staggered to aud fro over the roof, Gedley stead- ily forcing his man to the edge. Twiee Doyle tripped him and they | fell together, twice Gedney broke euea only to renew the attempt to {hurl him to the pavement far below | Robert Haslem, agent, who has an cffice in the upper story of | straige earnestness in his His first impulse, as the y craving for food, thereby en-| abling him readily to lie down and | pose restores his wonted or. | : i Does he show slight symptoms of! & ‘yrap | A warm bran | plan of steaming. , cold or fever? mash is a convenient and consequently of soothing, the! ritable of the r pa es: it is a substitute mucous membrane for | the more stimulating diet he is ac customed to, and gently promotes | | the activity of the digestive appara. | es i tus; itis also a convenient medium | | for the exhibition of certain sim) le | remecties, to be mentioned hereafter | A lower diet than that with whi he is indulged when in full work is | judicious, and bran is selected. | | Is it necessary to administer purg- j ative medicine? A bran mash or two! rest Lis enfeebled system until re is ly invited that gen the Monadack building. just across the street, saw the men struggling and watched them for few a mo- ments thinking they were only in| He soon saw, however, that | one of vho were] rushing | formed Mr. and sport. the de fee hting ate struggle and death to the men ¥ and 8 act so fiercely to the hotel he in ‘n, the proprietor, accom. pinted by ax ed for the r stair port-r, the men start- they reac! t r te the roof Doyle, bare-headed, Ged he roof when rd eame dashing down. around ut yowas walking 2 Mr. Ed out of the senttieand ple: nan to pnd see the city. but Mr E tinally getting Gedney to come down for bis ou den declined snd sneceeded in boys, one 14 and the other 15 years | f age, were to day given practically life sentences in the penitentiary for | murder, both being senterced for} forty years. The younger of the: two convicts is William Blunck, the | other being John T. Luveine. The! trial has lasted three days, and while | it was certain that the verdict would | be “guilty,” it was hardly expected | that the punishment would be so/| severe. The crime of which the bovs were convicted was the murder of Albert Eckroth, on the night of May 15, | 1892. One of them pushed a re-; volver in Eckroth’s face, while the other attempted to snatch his watch. Eckroth resisted and was shot dead. Young Blunck was captured while running from the scene of the mur. der and by his confession implicated Luveiue, who was arrested the fol- lowing day When the verdict was read in the court room this after- noon, Luveine was overcome, but Blunck took it calmly. When his} brother app chok- j ing voice “Forty years is! pretty hard, Willie,” the young con- vict replied: ‘Well, what's it toj you. Go off and don't bodger we.” | plies in general. We are the only e county. sidered, cannot be underreached. North Main Street, Butler, Mo. oached and in a Rapid City, S. D., March 30.— Nowater, leader of the refractory Sioux at Pine Ridge and Hollowood, one of his chiefs, were brought here j from the agency this morning. No water was found at Chief Sword’s camp anlarrested by deputy mar- shul Mattieson on a charge of con- spiracy, growing out of his sheltcr- ing two men and refusing to deliver them to the authorities Hollowocd is a young back who fired on the Stallions for sale. D.A Trustee’s Sale. Whereas R A Barnerand E G Burner her ruary Iéth, 1802, and recorded in the record- er’s office within and for Bates county, Mis- hueband, by their deed of trust dated Feb- | policemau from Nowater’s camp. As Nowater is the head and front of the disorderly Indians his arrest is an souri, in book No. 107 pase 370 conveyed to the undersigned trustee t! ty of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit: he following described | real estate lying and being situate in the coun- | The east half of block eight (8) in Christian and Condee’s addition to the city of Butier, which conveyance was made in trast to secure the payment ofa certain note fully described in said deed of trust and whereas default ha important one. The Clifton house, a summer ho- tel near Marblehead, Mass., was de- stroyed by yesterday. $69,009; ns 000. W. P. Brooks & Co., furniture and carpet dealers of Boston, Mass., have as-igued with $100,000 liabili-| i ad $50,000 ava’ est accrued on suid note,and same is now past due and unpaid Now therefore at the request of the legal holder of said note and pursuant to the conditions of said deed of trust, I will proceed to sell the above described premises at public vendue to the highest bidder forcash at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, ty of Bates and etate or Missouri, on Thurday, April 6th, 1893, between the honrs o| noon and five o’eloc day for the purpos interest and costs fire Loss ne o’elock in the fore- inthe afternoon of that sof satisfying said debt, dle assets. The dead body of a man named Glusseock was found this morning on Swing! Liutning suburb of Joy Mo. Mud-r is suspceted. | $500,000. Allison, the Oakland, TIL, farmer | We desire to vlace cuton t to the peor farm ed with leprosy has been taken | Consumption Cured. An old physictan, retired trom prac- tice, having had placed ir his hands py an East India missionary the formula‘ot simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of Consumption, Bronce Catarrh, Asthma and all d Lung Affections dica ithe best terns and inv this line of business: Notes drawn for one. two, three or five years: \paue | date. ‘| Calland see how cheap |we can let you have money.- omplai having tested its wondertul ers in the been made in the payment of the annual inter- ; real estate security «large | \anvount of nroney- Will give | r] i lowest | jrates yet offered by anyone | Carpets, Window Shades, Room and Picture Mouldings, Window Glass and a completetline of TheSH ERWIN-WILLIAMS Paints and Colors, White Lead, Oils, Varnishes, Brushes and Painters and Decorators sup- clusive dealer in these lines infBates Our stock, the largest and most varied, our prices quality con- We employ a force of skilled Paper bangers and Painters and make contracting a specialty3 D. W. DRUMMOND, 22 KENTUCKY JACKS, Just arrived and on sale at HARRIS & LISLE'S stable, Butler, Mo. This is our cighth shipment of Kentucky Jacks to Bates county. We have wore extra large mammoth Jacks than ever before. i] demand here is for extra bone, weight, style and action and superior breeders, we have taken especial pains to supply that demand. The ma- 'y of these Jacks are 15 hands high, black with white points. desiring Jacks will do well to see this stock. We also have two good All this stock will be sold low for cash. & H. H. COLYER, Butler, Mo. Knowing that the Those Address, Bright Agents Wanted Quick to sell Crawford’sB L AINE —LIFE OF— Written by Mr. Blaine’s most intimate liter- ary triends. XG-THE OFFICIAL EDITION<@y The only work endorsed by Vice-President Morton, Att’y Gen Miller, Private Sec I ford, Sec Foster, and a host of other of Mr. Biaine’s Colleagues, Cabinet Officers, Sen: tors, &c ; hence will outsell any and all others five to one. Demand ie simply immense Send | 30 cents for outilt and save tim. Don’t waste | time on cheap-Jotm catch-penny books. Get the official work and best terms by writing quickly to HUBBARD PUB CO. 12-4 Broadway & Locust, St. Louis. STALLIONS —AND— JACKS, a ae PRIVATE SALE. ~ Lave some money to loan | ble on or before a Given | nation to ascertain whether the Col | 3} renders the bowels more susceptible | the purpose of tu | Eden and Mr. of its action, and a smaller portion | “°°? z him into a room and asked him why ‘he had attempted to tarow Doyle off ‘the roof He seemed surprised at jfirst, but laughed and said that it Bran mashes may be givin hot | ¥*S only a joke. Nevertheless he h ‘was locked in securely and his father | ‘telegraphed for. ce, was it?” Mr Halsem fizally got} ga drivk of the drug is, therefore, required to produce the desired effect, and there is at the same time less risk of pain ful spasms tion. or cold—cold are, perhaps, quite as grateful to the horse, but the mib- ace bling of the hot mash in catarrbal Jo a “Well! affections is particularly beneficial | Would give up my hope of heaven | from the necessary inhalation of T#ther than go through such a pees ‘ pleasantry for the second time. It} Of all the roots with which horses | ¥88 no joke to me, whatever it may | are tempted the carrot, as a rule, as] ners been to him. I fought as I the favorite, and perhaps the most|2¢¥er fought before. as I had no; beneficial. It is said to be somewhat |#4ea that for auy other man could diuretic in its effects, and exercise | fight. I tell you my life grew mighty salubrious influence on the horse. |S¥eet tome when I thought of being Certain it is that a sick horse may tossed sixteen stories down to a | be coaxed into eating carrots when |Etanite pavement. Once we were disinctined io partake of other nour-| Within four feet of the edge, and I ishment, and the greater benefit re-/thougbt he had me. I gripped one | sults.” ‘hand in his hair, aud closed the oth- | er on his throat, and I swore that if | |I went over te my deat, he would | not live tu ceil auother about it. I} would have dragged bim down with} The grand jary of Bowie county, me~ Texas, have indicted a number:f{ Doyles eseape was a peice of clev | county officials. er strategy. Feeling that his strengh | =e was almost gooe aud being some The Cerokee council at Talequah distance from the edge, he suddenly accompanying its opera | said Doyle. John Pease,'a student, was killed | by the bursting of a circular saw at Lebanon, Ind Tt is pleasant e tal es pestechy sate and always be depended on. oe . Sora by H. L. Tucker. is considering the sale of the strip! called to Gedney to stop; that he to the government. would jump cff. When he was loos-| i duty to ma t Known to his suffering fellows Actuated by this motive and a desire to relieve human suffering, I will send tree ot charge, to all who desire it. ipe, in German, French, or En—! th full directions tor preparing | : y mail by addressing | this paper, W. A.| 20 Powers’ Block, Rochester, | 20 1 vear; u with s Noves, N. Y. Nae } Burglars at Cole Cimp M», stole | papers worth $4,000 Claus Junge’s safe Tuesday night and se-| cured other articles in Louis Grath er's drug store. from | i i j Robert Harvey, the gambler who! shot aud killed Robert Little in St. Joseph, Mo, last November, was to- day sentenced to the penitentiary for thre2 years. $100 Reward $100. The readers ot this paper will be pleas- ed to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Hall’s Catarrh Cute is the itive cure known to the medical Catarrh being a constitu- tional disease requires a censtitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken | internally, acting directly upon the | biood and mucous surtaces of the = tem, thereby destroving the foundation! ot the disease, and giying the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its wor! | The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they ofter One Hundred Dollars tor any case that tails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO. Toledo,O WB_Sold by druggists. 17-1m |The Bankers Loan & Title Co | |P. C. FULKERSON, Manager. 1 ' Five Belgion Draft Stallions i W. H. H. Larimer. Church C. Bridgeford. Ed. M. Smith. a ——ONSIGN YOUR— CATTLE, HOCS and SHEEP | To LARIMER, SMITH & BRIDGEFORD, | : ~ | From 3 to 7 yeais old. KANSAS CITY. | ed to be sure foai getters, and getan T even lot ot colts. Low and Blocky-— | just the kind the market demands. Gan . show colts by each stallion. No stallion has been ailowed more than one service js day since coming to this country, | 3st and 2nd premiums og dratt colt | and sweepstakes on dratt stalions at La | exene district tairin $91. All stock | tully guaranteed. All recorded. Stock | can be seen at C. B. Lewis’ livery <ta- | ble, Butler, Mo. { | Imported March 28th, 1891, All have prov- CORRECT Missouri Pacific Time Table, Arrival and departure ot passenger trains at Butler Station. NortH Bounp i Passenger, Passenger, Passenger, Local € reight WESLEY WARNOCK, Agent. "FRANCIS & ELANIGAN, anes of siete dratt stallions. Aj- |s0 one harness stallion, brown rs old in 1392, 16 1-2 hands high, has prone ed very sure and extra “reeders. One saddle stallion 15 1-2 hands high, 4 years (old in 1392, goes all tie saddle gaits | One jack 5 years old, 1§ 1-3 hands high. | Has proved an extra good an sure breed- er. For sale at prices to suit the times, WESLEY WARNOCK, ps Passenger, rassenger, Passenger, Local Freight 1:46 p..m4 9-1:37 pem. &

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