The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 24, 1893, Page 3

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nm a You have noticed [ that some houses always seem to need Hs pear they look dingy, rusted, faded. thers always look bright, clean, fresh. The owner of the frst “economizes” with “cheap” mixed Paints, etc.; the second paints with Strictly Pure White Lead The first spends three times as much for paint in five years, and his build- ings never look as well. Almost everybody knows that good paint can only be had by using strictly ure White Lead. The difficulty is ack of care in selecting it. The fol- lowing brands are strictly pure White Lead, “Old Dutch” process; they are standard and wel) enown—established by the test of ye-rs: “Southern” “Red Seal” “Collier” For any color (other than white) tint the Strictly Pure White Lead with National Lead Company’s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, and you will have the best paint that it is possible to put on a building. For sale by the most reliable dealers in paints everywhere. ¢ f you are going to paint, it will pay you to send tous for a book containing informa- tion that may save you many a dollar; it will only cost you a postal card to do so. , ~ NATIONAL LEAD CO., 1 Broadway, New York. St. Louis Branch, f: Clark Avenue and Teath Street. Missouri Pacific Time Table Arrival and departure ot pass trains at Butler Station. Nortu Bounp Passenger, a 6 Passenge Local * SoutH Bounp Passenger, - - 7:16 a.m. rassenger, b 5 pm. Passenzer, - 2 p.m. Local Freight = 755 p.m. Special excursion rates for the following oc- sat Pertle Spring: State 1eachers’ vorth League conven uly lth to Isth. kp Junior Order United Mechapics, Aug sth ‘ eect Clerks and Recorders of Missouri, Aug, ntl Cumberland Presbyterian Sunday ool assembly and Synod August 1th to th. Missouri State Bee-keepers association October 12th to 20th, 1 Summer Tourist Mo , at rate of $2 Sweet Springs, Mo. will be on sale until ‘kets to Pertle Springs, or the round trip, and to 50 forthe round trip, vb. 1, 1803. Now is your time to visit tie World’s Fair; rates $20.45, tickets good for return until Oct. sist. Round trip tickets with same limit will be sold to St. Louis at rate of $12 Round trip tickets to Sprin will b until Denver, Colorado Pueblo, Manitou and Trinidad, Colr® sale until Oct. sist, good for retun mber 15, at rate of $26.60 and good for return 30 days from date of sale at rate of $21 60 except Trinidad, which will be $23.85. For further information call on or address W.C. BURRUS, Ticket Agent, Butler, Mo. $500, 000. | We desire to place cuton real estate security a large amount of money. Will give the best terms and lowest rates yet offered by anyone inthis line of business: Notes drawn tor cone, two. three or five years: Have some money to loan pauable on or before a eiven date: Calland see how cheap ve can let you have money- The Bankers Loan & Title Co P. C. FULKERSON, Manager. Notice of Final Settlement Jj W Ennis in estate, intend to make thereof, at the next term ot the Ba Bates county, eron unty probate court, in state ot Missouri, the ryth day ot Av Notice of Final Settlement. tors and all tate of Elizabetn anty probat Missouri, to be held of August, 1885. att county, state of tler, on the ith day CHARLES DIXON, Executor Get the News. Every oceupation in the cor the is unxiou to session of Congress for relief citizen is directly and persona terested in every measure to be dis- cussed, and will promptly and fally. want the news It is during the time like this, that the great advant-| age of the Twice a-Week St. Louis Republic is conclusively demonstrat ed. Its readers get ALL the news each Tuesday and Friday—just twies as often and as fully as it could be had from any weekly paper—and yet it costs no more than the week- lies—ONLY ONE DOLLAR A Shot His Brother by Mistake. Fort Smitb, Ark., reached here to day | shooting af of a serious | Choctaw nation about seven miles city last Monc Walter x Massey live with their step- med Carter. The rel with his wife anc latter Carter t I | house and supposing it was Cut opened fire. In ti re fen and he soon learned that inst jof shooting his step fatber he bd mortally wounded his brothee Ae. | Massey was arrested asl jet jin jail here. At last accour u b-otber was alive with little ho; ‘| jrecavery. Hits the Spot. It may not be perfect comsolation {to buncombe politicians. but it is that the silver fight is putting edii- tional vigor into the determination to secvre a tariff reform about whose veness there will be \for doubt. |about the currency have | bo room of opinion animated the Democrats to a firmer union a tariff for revenue. The low pric of farm products have put tariff re form with s into minds before erowded protectionist — partisanship. Free distribution of products and briskness of trade are becoming a comiuon demand instead of a politi cal dispute. If American farmers must compete with India ryots who work for two cents a day, manufact- urers must take their chances with the rest. If the farmer compete with India and Russia, the mauufac- turer can compete with Europe. He will get free raw materials aud will be exporting at a profit before the revenue tariff months. is in operation six It is time he was helping to get the balance of trade he loves so dearly. Took Down the Notice. Kansas City, Mo., August 17.—- This morning the Dollar Bank took down the notice requiring depositors to give ninety days’ warn- ing before withdrawing their Savings ac- counts, and began receiving money and paying checks in the regular course of business. The notice wi eS Kansas City was undergoing a fin panic in common with the j of the country. the bank officials in order to prevent It was done by the jan extensive run, but now that con- |dence in Kansas City financial | stitutions has been restored, b and ness will be transacted as us jno notice will be required before de- jee : | posits are withdrawn | | | Murdered for their Money. | | rokee, Ia., Aug. Mr. and an aged couple | living alone on a farm in Tilden township, in Cherokee cour y murdered last eveni jeured only $250. The body of Mrs. | Shultz was found in the yard. She had evidently goue to the well for ; water and was struck on the head | with some bluntinstrument while on her return to the house. Her head | was pounded almost toa jelly. Mr. Shultz had retired and was evidently murdered while asleep. A blunt in- strument was driven into the skull ;to a depth of two inches. The crime ; was not discovered until late to day and no clue has been obtained. .16 —News | ir which occurred in the | | something for the people to observe | | posted thirty days ago, at the ume) | oe THE BORDER. | Daily Scenes Among Homeseek ers Which ‘Yell of Great Priyation. 3 City, Kau, Aug. ya number of families the border | since last spring for the opening of | 17.— | j Arka 2 who | Alre have been waiting ou the Cherokee strip have become dis | Jheartencd at the 1 outlook, aud pov erty las driven them back to tLe, villages, cities or neighborhoods | from whence they came. To get} back to friends and relatives some | have sacrificed a favorite colt, a milk and many | have been compelled to sell their | wagons and teams. Siuce their stay | cow or may be a watch, here among strangers many little} folks have died from change of cli- | mate water and’ the exposure of | camp life which many families have | been compelled from lack of funds; to put up with. Your correspon- dent has noticed several funeral pro- cessions wending their way to the cemetery. and the mourners, who in | some | | | instances rode in the same) | wagon with the dead, were in many | cises the ouly ones who followed the | jremains to their last resting place. | There has been no work of any kind the he season, and the early arrivals excepting during making | have | ‘simply waited until theirlast rations | were consumed and last eeut gone, and then given up in despair and | gone back Another thing caused | It was the failure | First Natioual bank | which ciosed its doors during | jmany to r jot the urn. here, the Many depositors month of June. | were well to-do people, who sold all they had in other States, expecting me to this new El Dorado, jdergo the L earn a livelibood, build homes toe ub- iships of pioneer life, and ispend what they brought with the: ain thisend. The failure of this with outside k left many of this class noi a dollar the world that passes that a in institutioa. dardly a day covered wagon or |something else belonging to an un- at | public auction on the streets. A | pa of matters eli no sympathy from the public, but if one should follow tuese unfor tunates to their humble camp many cases he would see half clad children and hear a plain story of | hardships and disappointments,sick sand may be death that would forever make of him an advocate of fortunate homeseeker is not sold ing thought such in ne “Uncle Sam” treating for and pur- chasing every foot of idle land in the | United States and throwing it open | for settlement immediately. | Another thing that has dishearten- led the poorer class is the fact that | so many are here and coming daily, | too. with such good teams and other- | Wise so much better equipped for the race than are they. The only DEACON BROS. & CO. Hardware, Groceries and Farm Machinery, oo DEERING AND WHITELEY MOWERS =: Osborne all Steel Hay Rakes. i TOP BUGGIES, _ SPRING AND FARM WAGONS. EACON BROS. & CO. | law does uot prescribe sufficient pun | | proach —Lamar Democrat | seph bucket shops for four years hour, When the city business man is Grew Ont of a Singular Accident. Sedalia, Aug. 16 —W. H. H has presented to the ci council br SISO rew out horse own a newly y one of t t will cost you not 7 cough cold or any tro throat, chest or New Discovery f consumption, anteed to money will be from LaGrippe tion found it just the very th = - |der its use hada speedy the young lady's home, and are now | ita mple bottle ‘: = .. } and see for yoursel : SUS" |thing it is. Trial bottles picion points to several parties, and |]. Tuckers drug store it is to be hoped that the real culprit | 50c and S100 will be discovered and caught. The in possession of the officers Missouri Crops. ishment in such cases. Thecommu-| T nity in which this is being done, is August Bulletin of souri state board the of 3 outraged to a white heat. The|ports the wheat yield, the peach scoundrel who writes these letters | crop and the apple crop poor. Corp, will do well to get out of this country. | buckwheat, Irish pofatoes, tim The young lady who is so foully and jand sorghum are reported fine. Fall cowardly attacked, is a respectable | pastures are put down at 17 per cent | daughter of 2 prominent farmer.|corn promises 97 per cent, north She is a lady in every sense of the} west counti leading with 105. per word, whose character is above re |cent. Oats averaged $2 per cent; Trish potatoes 96; sweet potatoes 03; Geo. Boham, a wealthy farmer| bacco 87; timothy 92; clover 88; and stock raiser, played the St. Jos sorghum 92; apples grapes.— Nevada Mail. There is more Catarrh in this see- tion of the country than ail other dis- eases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incura- ble. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed loeal remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local tment pronounced it incurable. Up toa year ago he was uhead, but the tables turned on him in the last quarter. Monday night he went to his hotel, saturated his pillow with chloroform, turned on the gas and went to bed. The next morning his dead body was found in bed He nee has proven catarrh to be a Jeaves a wife aud large family. nstitutional disease, and therefore, Sees aE requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheny & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internaliy in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mu- cous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars forany case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, J.P. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. kee Sold by druggists, Te. The fewest failures recorded dur ing the present stringency are those of farmers. Of merchauts 90 per cent fail at one time another, of farmers ouly 10 per cent. Agricul- turists are apt to consider merchants manufacturers and bankers as their evemies in some degree yet in this or The physici Mr Tilden during his last years brought suit for the sum of $100,000 for 8 year’s attenc RAewiotitteuacl tearing his hair in the vain effort to aes fiud inoney where no money is, the farmer au sit secure under his reof tree, knowing that come what will] he is sure of at least food uee ou the deceased | honaire, or $12,600 per year. It and shel- is to bes ter. He may have to economize | pposed Ba this doctor sharply. but 1uin does not stare Lim nae other patier Tf he charged in the face. Ail this is something— te : : record : his fees would | it is much —Jefferson City Tribune |S00% ke him richer than any other | = business man could hope to beeome | “ONLY NATIONAL SURPLUS, - - Mis- | ienlture ree! iy peaches 38; } Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, > Best Salve int w BATES COUNTY National Bank, BUTLER, MO THE OLDEST BANK LARGEST AND THE BANK IN BATES COUNTY. CAPITAL, - - $125,000 00 $25,000 00 PF. J. E¥YGARD,;. - - - Presiden: ERY, HON. J. BL NEW Vice-Pres. J. C. CLARK - - Cashier Lawyers —ATTORNEY-AT-LAW— second door » Bank. & GRAVES, PO eEAINSON ATTORN:YS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lane- down’s Drug Store. Dx. J. M, CHRISTY, DMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. Ail call answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- eases. Ps 4b C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- en a specialty. lPranz Bernhardt On the north side of the square, | Butler, - Missourt1. Does his own Watch & Clock Repairing Also Wate Clocks , Jewelry and Stl- verware at | | | AGTUAL COST AND CARRIAGE, For the next twelve months. Du sat Fine Wateh Repair: a Specialty. a) | The uit has been compromised, the Spaying $40,000 or $5,000 J cons bill must be made Tilden until he to most people quite enough to pay —Lix. cuts, and h flesh has set in. Diptherta Precaution. 1 —=GO"10—— &. AL VAN HALL, 20K ae ee Decatur, I, . 16.—Owing to} withoutit, Price pera : a Tucker, Butler, Mo. the frequent deaths in Deeatur iped His Etoping Wite. |C2¥5¢d by dipthe i Spokane, Wash , Aug. 17.—A Kal-|~" mayor to- vat to Shot and Se y ordered the | —SUCCESSOR TO— | 'F. BERNHARDT & CO. ispell Indian calle t ne = : = : promptly re conte Face Tomeat,” arrived yesterday’ |*. eA at ‘ Z 1 | gious or infecti to the secking his squaw, who eloped with board of health will b rautious yent tl a Spokane Indian “White Blavket.” He found her in the suburbs last |" night, and shot “White Blanket” and others after-|1 wards cornered him, cut off his ears | ‘ then built a tire in the center of the} car track, and then threw him ou it} bound The police arrlved too late} to save “Tomeat™ or catch his mur- derers. “White Blanket has to the woods and sclaped her.|°! °"" Idren have oceurred uong ¢ taken Fiends in Human Form. \ —FOR— PURE DRUGS MEDICINES, TOILET ARTICLES, TOBACCOS AND | hope for this class was that few Nevada, Mo., Aug. 17.—B. W. would be here to make the run and |} Tanner and Ira Short were arrested there would be plenty of land for on charge of Dennis Wilson, who is/all. But it now seems that every in jail for stealing the Kincaid cattle good claim will be hotly contested of being implicated with him in the! and this leaves the poor man, who theft. Two other men were impl'-/ has spent bis ail to get to the bor- \ eated by Wilson, and afterward re- der, expecting his old bony horses } leased. Tanneris a brother-in-law| to take him to a good claim, in a’ of Wilson. Ira Short is only 17) position deplorable in the extreme. } Cattle-Thieves Captured. [FINE CIGARS, | 42RTISTS |MATERIALS OF ALL KINDS | have been arrested Groatia, because they have m | The men have} for years made a trade of crippling | in Biskuyitz, | i | Vienna, Aug. 17 —A gang of men | i | ed young children. i { children and then sending them out to beg or sell them to others for the} i same purpose. Children were stolen} and taken to the gang’s house. Once! there they were bound and tortured. { When the police found the piace} | Prescriptions Carefully Com pounde isted off the c A liberal Patronage of the YEAR. It will be indespensible for | years old, and says he was hired by | the next few months. Send in your! Wilson toassist him in driving the, subscription at once. Extra copy ‘eattle from the pasture to Harwood | free for one year to the sender of a/for shipment. Both Short and Tan-! club of four new names with four |ner deny the charge. In default of A Cowardly Slanderer. We have seen a number of the fil- thiest. vilest letters ever penned, that were picked upon the public dollars. Write for sample copies and raiseaclub. Address Tar Re- rusic, Sr. Lovis, Mo. road, near Lamar, in which the char- | acter of a young lady was assailed | in a most brutal and cowardly man- ner. The letters were dropped near | bond of $600 they were committed to jail. Their examination is set for the 21st. | deformities, were found in the cellar yesterday they found two young {| girls with their legs broken. Anoth-| | er lay bound on a bed with her right | arm broken and both eyes gouged} out. Twoofthe children, hardly} | less horribly mutilated, were found in th cellar. Many instruments, which had been used in producing ound only on S Filied and ¥ S stamped w trade public is solicited. j this mark. | NEW YORK CORRESFOND=NCE ISCHOOL: | AW 243 BROADWAY WY. send to the mantfa.: Keystone Watch Case Co., PHILADELPHIA. and were taken for evidence.

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