The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 18, 1893, Page 1

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a i ee yn Cimes. BUTLER Two Grand G Now, Beyond ali Ringling Brothers World’s Greatest Shows » MISSOURI, THUR ala Performances in Butler May 24. DAY MAY 18, 1893. NO. 26 Comparison, the Largest and Crandest Exhibition on Earth. REAL ROMAN HIPPODROME 3-Ring Circus, Elevated Stages, Mighty Millionaire Menagerie, Royal Aquartium ,Mam- moth Museum of marvels, 1ar-famed horse fair and equine congress, embracing 350 of the finest blooded horses in the world, together with the greast aggregation of European Aerlalists, Gymnasts, Acrobats, Riders and Arenic Specialists of every descriptson, «ver exhibited in this or any other country Spectacular Equine Carnival and 100-horse Ballet Militant! An army of fine bred, imported Equines, in astounding evolutions, Pretty Pironetting, ponderous pyramids and triumphal pratriotic tableaux. TREMENDIOUS REVIVAL OF THE CIRCUS MAXIMUS, Terrifle Gladiatorial Combats, rbsorbing trials of strength and endurance. grand gala day sports and spectacles. 2 ond 4-horse chariot races, jockey rac th lady and gen- tlemen riders; novel elephant and camel races; child-delighting } races with mon- key riders. laughable donkey races with clown drivers; and other exciting racing con- tests, More high salaried performers and more novel features than any two other shows all exhibited under the largest tents ever constructed. Charles W. Fish, the Wor!d’s Champion Somersault Rider. Keno Sisters, Europes premier equestriens, the unrivaled arenic yueens of two conti- nents. Bros, Vernon, absolute kings of the air, the highest salaried aerialits in the world. Si Hassan, Ben Eli’s troupe of Arabs, genuine Sahara bedouins, in amazing feats of skill and dexteritp and colossal man-supported pyramids. Mikako’s troupe of royal Japanese equilibrists. Largest living Girafle standing fullis feet in heighth Prince Chaldean, the jond maned Percheron stallion; monster bi-horned Gnu; mam- moth Hippopotamus; shools of educated goats and ponies; mirth-making porcine cir- cus; 20 Mexican herses in astounping drills; two ponderous herds of performing, danc- ing and clown elephants. FREE DAILY PAGEANT OF SURPASSING SPLENDOR! Golden Steam Calliope. Msscow’s Silver Chimes, | Missouri State Bank Receives Deposits subject to Check, Loans Money, Makes Collections and does a General Banking Business. DEPOSITORY FOR COUNTY FUNDS. DIREcTORs. 1S, Oscar Keeder, R. G. West. H.H. Pisott, Booker Powell, c. R. Radferd, - Bouiware, Deerwester, Cc. Wyatt. c. H. Dutcher, Geo’ L. smith, Wm E. walton, J.R Jenkins, WM E. WALTON. Preside J.R JENKINs, Ca A Forger Foiled. oo charge and he is to go to Butler for an investigation. “Till then we with- warrant | hold further Hill : : | Review. swor tby Mr. C. E. Briscoe of the | sworn out by Mr 3riscoe oe aan « sie week to await investigation. “LT Am So Tirea” J. A. MeGill, a farmer of western Bates was arrested on a comment.—Rich in same neighborhood, on the charge, jail last of forgery. information obtainable by our report- P er, McGill has been doing a land of- fice business in “banking” with According to the best | Is a common exclamation at this sea notes! 82n. There is a certain bracing ef {feet in cold air which is Jost when the weather grows warmer; and when nature is renewiug her youth, her admirers feel dull, sluggish and tired. This condition owing mainly to the impure condition of the blood, and its failure to supply healthy tissue to the various organs ofjthe body. It is remarkable how susceptible the system is to the help to be derived from a good medicine at this season. Possessing just those purifying, buildiug-up qualities which the body craves, Hood's Sar- saparilla soon overcomes that tired feeling, restores the appetite, puri fies the blood and in short imparts vigorous health. Its thousands of friends as with one voice declare “It makes the weak strong.” other people's endorsements » signed for some time past. His transaction ex- tend over a period of about a year, and his present shortage is estimat- under his own name, 1s ed at over £600. Among his deals are two notes made at the Rich Hill bank, three at the Farmers’ & Man- ufacturers’ bank, one on a Mr. Wil- liams of Hume, three on the Hume banks and one on the Missouri State bank of Butler. The notes general ly bear the names of E. Kline and C. B. Briseoe. as endorsers. One of the notes at the F. & M. bank is! acknowledged as genuine, but all the others are under dispute. Mr. | - McGill is an innocent, honest ap-/| pearing man, and denies that he| ' forged Mr. Briscoe's name, claiming | that the signatures are all genuine. "= Constable Sheppard has him in 4 The George R. Smith college for colored people to be erected at Se- dalia is to cost $50.000. { Subscribe for the booming Tres Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report. Baki oval | ~~ | The procession leaves the show grounds promptly at 10 o'clock on the morning of the exhibition streets, ten kinds of music make the air merry with melody BUTLER. WEDNESDAY.MAY 24. Two complete performances daily, afternoon at 2, night at 8, doors open one hour earlier. $110,000. | It is over a mile in length. Seven of the 30 dens of performing wild beasts are exhibited free No postponement on account of weather. : " and open upon the The procession moves, rain or shine. Will positively exhibit at One 50c ticket admits to all the combined shows. Children under 12 years half price. Special excursion rates on all Railroads. DIED. { Ex-Goyernor Crittenden Neparts. | } Mrs. Martha Flesher, nee Irwin, | Ex-Governor Thomas T. Critten- 4 the subject of this sketch, was born E jin Highland county, Virginia, | dep, recently appointed consul gen- | | Nov. 11, 1808. She was married to) eral to Mexico, left Kansas City at | Geo. Flesher July ist, 1824. The fruit of this marriage was two children, a son and daughter. The daughter alone survives .The family emigrated west in 1865, first to Indian, then to { inois, and in 1870 to Missouri, set- tling in Bates county, at what is now Virginia. Twelve years ago her has- band died, leaving her to widowed life. 11:05 o'clock this afternoon on the | | Santa Fe Mexican express for the | City of Mexico, accompanied by Mrs. Crittenden and her maid. He will ; larrive at bis destination Tuesday 4 morning in time for breakfast, and Cash Capital. $50,000.00 OF BATES COUNTY, | : 4 -.y, At once enter upon his duties —K. D. N. THOMPSO es : She was converted and united with Kaas bi P | J. K, ROSIER... Vice: Preeitent 4 j the M. E. church when about twenty | C. Star. | E. A BENNETT ce-President : | years of age. For many years, both ae { cE. D. ao s+es, Cashier q | east and west, she was connected with C.L Mills returned last Satur | We: SILVERS a Seen | pioneer Methodism and the preachers day from Preseott, Ari, where he! found at her home a hospitable wel- jcome, She had a refreshing memory (of the past ministry and revivals of j the church, She was of Welsh descent and in- herited a strong and enduring consti- tution, her mother having tived to the ripe age of ninety-one. Her work in the chureh has been Inost active and consecrated. Until in the seventies she was a devoted |Sunday school teacher, rivaling in | activity those of younger years. She abounded in good works. At the de- i cease of a sister, she took her chil- dren and raised them to adult had been to was quite ill. He reports him much 1 improved in health. In regard to! the country Mr. Mills thinks it an irredeemable desert, fit only for the red man. No rain has fallen for over three years and vegetation of al) a Ress : : Where to Stop in Chicago. Trustee's Sale. 4 kind is conspicuous for its absence. | ek (ies ee v i : hans ft Sere an | othe perplexing question which is} ye wire iy ater deg at Minnie P. Hus esays that 160 acres of Bates! every day asked by people who de- | vember 4! Ixv1, and recorded in the secent- 3 county land is worth more for agri-| sire to go to Chicago to attend the visit his brother who 4 Receives Deposits subject to check, Lones Money, issues Drafts and transacts a general Banking business. Your patronage respectfully Solicited. q er’s office within and for Bates county, Mis- souri, in book No. 107 page 24 conveyed to the ge. cultural purposes than the whole| world’s fair. “Where are we going | undetsigned trustee thee tein eg weeeattes | Her two grand children, at the death | CU!3T@! Purpe to stay when we get there!” ‘This go | rencatate lying and being situate fn the coun of their parents, she also took and | territory outside of the river -alleys. Sty g oa S18 | ty of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit: The northwest quarter of the southeast quar- ter of section twenty-three (23) township fort: (40) Tange thirty-one (31) except three (° 4 acres out of the northeast quarter of the nort: 2 east quarter of the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of said section twent y-three (28) township forty (40) range thirty-one 31, containing thirty-seven (37) acres more or lees which conveyance was made in trast to secure y the payment of one certain note fully describe * in said deed of trust and whereas default hes been made in the payment of the prineipc! ot s note and interest thereon now 4 past due and unpaid Now therefore at the re- r aest of the legal holder of said note and pureu ant to the conditions of said deed of trust, 1 wi. q Proceed to sell the above described premisce a easily answered, and if you will go to the ticket agent of the Kaasas City, Pittsburg & Gulf Railroad Co., he will tell you. reared, and they in turn have minis- tered lovingl¥ and faithfully to her in her declining years. - _ She was naturally remarkably pure Hoch eee oe eee and Arrangements have been made for ardent. Y | When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. th distribution by the Kansas City, Inan unfinished letter, written When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. Pittsburg & Gulf Railroad Co., of a a grand-child, the day before she was | when she became Miss. she ices to Caines pamphiet entitled “Homes for Vis taken sick—the lith—she said, i : * i ; s World’s Fair.” = | eee =e ne eee t oes * in | when she had Children, she gave thera Castoria itors to the World's Fair. This is s° ermine) Pe areliable pamphl containi Vs e pampliet containing the will not rob me of mueh time. I know 1 Liat ine carae sales names and addresses of about 9,000 —Adrian Journal. at run. Tam). les 8 0 at public vendue to the highest bidder for cas willing to bear whatever the good families who will furnish accommo- | #t the east front door of the court house in the Lord puts upon me. So, I say the — city of Butler, county of Bates and state dation to visitors from May Ist to October 31st, 15: The pamphlet | Missouri. on i | 1 maps which | | i ' Friday, Juue 9th, 185 will of the Lord be done.” Phe past seven and one-half years TS HOME FIRST. e : 1 1 linlane ae : between the hours of nine o'clock in the a she has lived in Butler, with her a comnins aus S noon and five o'clock in the afternoon or fee : grandson, Howard H. Flesher, where will enable the intending or to | day forthe purposes of eatisfving said debt, jshe died May the [ith, a er three select any quarter of the city that he | iMtTest and costs ELMER D. aS ; days’ illness, aged eighty-four vears would f C a % ess - | day Dag ght) 3 A ie ars, d prefer. Correspondence may | +: ———______Trustee. | 6 months and 3 days. i p Y | First Pabl 5 The funeral services were eonduct- ed at the house omTuesday at 10 o'clock a. m. by Revs. Wm. Stephens jand H. A. Babbitt, and concluded at the cemetery at Virginia where her | Temains were laid to rest by the side of her husband. | “Precious in the sigh of the Lord lis the death of his Saints.” Ss. Heury county furnished four con- Victs tothe penitentiary last week. Their naues are Geo Stevens and Jas. Allen, who of five years each for burglarizing a Store at Leesviile, Heury county; i Jas. Parkuum, two years for steal ing a pair of mules, this is the thief captured in Butler a few weeks 5 Newt Garner, four years for forg and Abe Emery, colored, two years for rebbery Newt Garuer is per fectly with the rules and workings of the penitentiary having finished only a short time ago a sen- tence of fifteen years ona similar charge. fa:uiliar received a seutence | It is the ambition of every citizen to point with pride to the material interest of his own town and county, aud patronize them as long as he | can do as well as to purchase the products’ of some other town or | county. We claim that in the | FLOUR, that the product of our | | own mills can Not be EXcELLED and 18 ' | Sot That we fully Warraytthe Roy-: al, Queen of Butler, or { the equal of any flour town at the Ler, too, that it is sold on trial: no XXxx, to be sold in the! And remem- same price. good bread, no pay. Come in and let us tell you more about it. Yours, respectfully, Lee Cutver & Co. Subscribe for the booming Tnres. $1 00 per year. | j matter of ; St. James bas arrived home. then be carried on and definite ar rangements made so that wheu vis- | itors arrive in Chicago they can pro_| ceed at once to their quarters. Any} ticket agent of the Kansas Cit Pittsburg & Gulf Railroad Co. will |render ali consistent assistance in | procuring temporary quarters in| Chicago for their patrons. ef » 1993. Trustee’s Sale by given that on r FRIDAY, between the hours of Dine 6 ock p. m., at the front door ci court house in Butler, Bates i. I will. as trastee in a dee David B. Requa, dated th- 0. an c yooeraed in the re 6 in Bates county. Missouri. on the second day of Oetober, Inen’ in book 46, at page sis, sell the northeast qua> ter of the southeast quarter ot sectiom diirtees Meeor els P vrea nine (39) som, of | Fange thirty-one (31) west ofthe fifth pries | Meridian, sitasted in the sald Batra ee a ates cowsy 5 Biss | Missouri, at public vendue, a Robt. T. Lincoln, ex-minister of derfor cast, Yo saainee: 2oike highest bat the United States to the court of | said deed of trust, the note and Biel there- by being past due and unpaid and defenives j x LUCIUS H. PERKINS, Trustee. / Slonecker, Wheeler & Switzer Att’ys. a we Powder 'y Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia; No Alum, Used in Millions of Homes—4o Years the Standard.

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