The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 12, 1893, Page 8

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Do You Want to see a No. 1, First Quality Custom Hand Made Boot at offering at that price. Best Boot on this earth for the mouey, Come and see us. Max Weiner, A BAD WRECK. TAE TUCKER BILL PASSED. Mrs. A. B. Cowgill Daughter-in-law Quite a Jubilant Demonstration When and Two Children Badly Hurt- The Resuit Was Announced. As Mrs. A. B. Cowgill, ber daugh Washington, Oct. 10.—The Tuck- ter-in-law, Mre. H. J. Cowgill, and er bill to repeal all existing federal two small children of Mr. B. F. Cox, electian laws was passed by the w-re eoming to town Saturday morn- House this afternoon by a vote of ing inatwe seated spring wagor, 200 to 101, party lines being strictly drawn by one horse, when crossing druwo for and against the Miami bridge near the = Senator water Hill of New York, who is the author works power house, about four miles of « similar bill in the seuate was on west of town, the auimai took fright the floor while the vote was being and began to ran and kick. The taken. Quite a jubilant demonstra- ladies stayed with the vehicle lit tion was mede by the democrats was upturned on the rock macadem, when the result was announced. a short distance from the bridge, Republicans, fiuding the opposition wheu all were thrown violently to jbad their own quorum, were stopped the ground. Mrs. A. B. Cowgill is/from filibustering by the iron clad and elderly lady aged about 60°o1 65/ order under which the House was years, and her injuriesare for the | operating beyond demanding an aye most part internal and considered ,and nay vote cu the Burrows and to be very serious. She was terribly | Lacey amendments. The democrats bruised about the head avd body} admitted that the bill was defective in and since the accident has lost the/that it failed torepeal statute 5,528, use of her lower limbs. At latest| whch inferentially permits troops at account she was considered to be in| the polls, but the modification could a critical coudition. |not be made under the order and Mrs. H. J. Gowgill, was also bad j will have to bemade in the senate. ly bruised abot the body and tbe} Some of the republicans claimed left side of her face was terribly ,cut| that in defeating the Lacey amend- y | | | niet ler heap | Childrens Overcoats, | Boys Cape Overcoats | Mens Long Ulster Overcoats | Mens Long Ulster Overcoats Mens Melton Overcoats Mens Fine Worsted Overcoats ( age tto 9 at MWe age 10 to 14.at $2 00 worth 3 50 | Boys Long Ulster Overcoats ege 14 to 19 at 350 worth 5 ~ Fit You in an Overcoat This Season, worth $1 75 00 2 00 worth 50 400 worth 6 50 7 00 worth 10 00 11 00 worth 18 00 w silk lined) Don't buy before looking through our stock of Overcoats aud Suits 50 dozen Mens and Boys winter caps at 25¢ worth 50c and Tie. fell Dead Ina Wagon. Clinton, Mo. Oct. 10:30 this morning Thomas L. De JOE MEYER, Clothier. For Sare:-—One coal black Jen- 9 —About | Bet, 10 years old, good height and in foal. Callon or address C. B. 47 2t. and lacerated, but fortunately so far | no internal trouble has presented | itself. The two children aged about ment the democrats have repealed all laws to prevent bribery and bal- lot box stuffing at elections for dele- ~ Duvall § Percival of this city are saving the farn- ers of Bates county thou- sands of dollars by giving them the benefit of their lower rates of interest on farm loans. Dr. A. KEK. LYLE, Butler, Mo. Special attention to Surgery, Ear, Nose and Throat diseases. OFFICE: Southwest corner Square, | The people quickly recognize mer it, and this is the reason the sales of Hood's Sarsaparilla are constant- ly increasing. Try it. Capt. H. C. Turner, Sr, and Mrs. Ann E. Turner, of Mt. Sterling, Ky, are visiting friends in the city. Butler was complimented Monday by a visit from a large number of the business men of the county, and were a nice looking set of fellows, wearing good clothes and a_ broad and winsome smile. 3 and 5 years, girl and boy got, off) gates in the territories and Mr. reasonably well and with slight} Tucker called attention to the fact bruises. | fact that section 1848 of the R-vised The vehicle wasa total wreck. statutes provided in terms tbat afier over Boston Store. Residence: On South Main st, °40-2m O. K. Caldwell, ex cashier of the defunct Citizens’ Bank, of Nevada, was again arrested in Kansas ona T. W. Legg, the buggy man, for! warrant sworn out by Chas. Trum- buggy repairs and everything in the | mer, charging Cuidwell, while cashier buggy line. 5 25-tf| of the late Citizens’ Bank with re- SSNS Re eS ceiving of him the sum of $700 at a The Thess eoneincies: ie eee €* | time when he knew the bank to be names to its subscription list. insolvent or in x fuling condit-ou. A.M. Wal'ace has received hig| The Citizens’ Bank, it will be re- membered, suspended on July 9, appoinment as postmaster at Hume. 1891. At the November term of Ed Austin and Jas. DeArmond | court Mr. Caldwell, with the officers have returned from the World’s fair. | 824 directors of the suspended bank were indicted. There are three in Isn't it about time the appoint-|dictments agaiust Caldwell. The ment of Gen. Joe Shelby was being | cases have been taken to Benton made. county on change of venue. Senator John B. Newberry, spent | On Thursday last Graves & Clark Tuesday in the city aud gave the | as attorneys for the merchants,asked Times a pleasant call. the Probate Court to grant a tem- porary injunction or restraining or der restraining Wykoff as acting mayor from signing the occupation | tax ordinance now pending, or any similar ordinance, and also restrain American} ing Ross and Burrus as council- men from voting for same, un Inthe great jam at the fair in} til such time as the circuit court Chicago Monday a large number of! could pass upon informatious in the peoplejwere killed and, injured. ‘motion of guo warranto, compelling them and each of them to show by what legal right they hold their re- best paper published in Bates county. essen dt vee peek i "| pective offices. These informatious The booming Tras is $100 per) Wilt be tiled upon the first day of year. the Nov. term aud the grounds tak- eu will be two in number, first, that these officials were not eleced accord ing tothe law then in force, and second, that the City of Butler is M. Carl, of Coffeyville, Kansas, | not duly organized as a city of the passed through Butler, in search of third class. The temporary injunc- a pair of mares stolen from his tion was granted which disposes of premises on the night of August 23. | the occupation tax ordinance until One was alight bay with blaze in these informations can be tiled and face, 3 years old, black mane and heard. tail and large scar across breast; the other was a sun-burnt black mare, left fore fout white. He offers $25 reward. J. P. Burton, five miles west of | town, will have a sale the 25th. He expects to move to town. Read the bargains offered in the advertisement of the Clothing house this week. People want and will have the Lane & Adair are offering some more bargains iu their advertise- ment. Read what they say, ladies, and call and see their new stock. | Through Geo. McNeil, who was im the city Saturday, the Ties was pained to learn of the sudded death of A. T. Mudd, which occurred at Set : the residence of his father, S. T. td CS | Mudd in East Boone township, Sep Hood Ss u res tember 22nd. The deceased had 7 been living in Whiteom, Washing- ton, for the past two years, and in company with his brother, S. A. | Mudd, arrived at the home of his father on the evening of the 2lst, one day in advance of his demise. He had been afflicted with rheumatism for several weeks and concluded a change of climate would benefit him. | On the road home he was stricken with something like paralysis of the ; throat and rendered speechless, but | retained his mental faculties. Mr. Mudd was 44 years of age. and until fit aur teeta ‘taking bis Eek ara ra the west Purifies the Blood was one of the leading democratic @] was attacked with a painful itching and | politicians ot the north part of the swelling. Red blotches came ont on my body. | county, and several years ago was a could hardly see. Words cannot express my | prominent candidate for treasurer suffering. When I had taken six bottles of | of the county. No man stood higher Hood’s Sarsaparilla jin the community in which he lived. all traces of the disease had disappeared, and | He was an upright and honorable am now perfectly well.” G. A. STEARNS, | citizen in every sense of the word, Gravity, Iowa. Be sure to get Hood’8. | and hundreds of friends throughout Pr ‘all Liver Mis, Bilious- | th will 1 f his di toons ie ore Bl Liver SS Awe jis death The ladies can give no intelligent | the first election each territory account of the accident and from) should make laws to govern its elee the first jump of the horse s have lost their presence cf in im to’ tions. Delegate Smith also called ik lattention to the fact that some of The old lady was taken to alou-e/ the teritories, like Arizona, operated near by where the aceident occured | “like most of the progressive states™ and renained over night, being re | under the Australian billot. moved Lome Sunday merui Tbe fact that voting on the Tucker Immediateiy aft-r the mishap Dr.) ill was to begin attracted a full Boulware was called, a:.d did whatjhorse. The benches on boih sides he could to reiieve the sufferers, aud | w. re filled and the gaileries crowded. owing to the severe injuries of Mrs aia Cowgill he has been compelled to Thousands are Idle. make daily trips siuce. Providence, R. I., Oct. 9.—A big —— strike in the woolen mills at Olney- A sli constituted silyer orator | ville, a suburb of this city, was in- from un other state swooped down | gugurated this morniog. s Probably on Butler Saturday evening and| 6,000 persons are out of work, and plucked the ta:l feathers from the! the strike is growing rapidly. Be- eagle at the court house Saturduy | fore it stops, uuless all signs fail, night. After orating tor an hour he| every woulen manufacturing estab made the statement that there 18 |lishment in this State will close its but 25c per capita. The next thing doors, and there is talk of cotton- in order was passing the hat and 4) workers joining in the strike. There donation of 10c from each person has been discontent ever since a no- was aked. ‘I'he boys said, if there | tice was posted in the mills last week is ouly 25 per capita and they/ of a reduction of wages, and several gave the foreizn orator 10c of it,| meetings were held, aud speeches that wou'd ociy leave 15¢ per capita | calculated to precipitate a strile in the cow, and they would|were made by labor agitators. It take the fellows «wivice and not! was resolved to wait until this morne reduce the circulating medium toling when the scale was to be posted, a lower basis uutil they heard | before taking detinite actiov. The later news from the senate. So the! price list was posted this morning. hat was returned to the table about) Tue weavers in the taft and weedir g asempty xs the§ ator’s head, the|miils held a Convention, which re- band struck up Home Sweet Howe, | sulted in their leaving their looms and the meeting adjourned. |and cowing out on a strike. As soon The Osewola Damoera: sis uuless {43 they went out acry was raised, can be made the | “Let us go to Pleteber’s mills,” and in which was| the crowd marched down to the _| National Worsted Mills some arranger failure of theiv bat desposited the County's schoo | ere they |Stationed them-elves in front of the imills, shouting, “Come out.” and the 1 ey, all the schools in Si. Clair wil of necessity be closed. : } weavers promptly left their looms. |The strikers then proceed to the BABY ONE SOLID RED other mills, bringing out all the men jempioyed in the mills of Charles Literally on Fire with Eczema, | Fictcher. The help in the Riverside Screaming and Clawing all = the Time. . | Mills haves yielded, and every woolen }mill closed at noon. Seven thousand } persons are idle in the village, and a jcontest has commenced that will jinvolve the woolen workers of New | £ sgland. Our little baby, almost 2 years old, was | ——_—_—_——. taken with some form of Eczema when she Knocked unt by a Woman. was about three months old./“Her little body was one solid red from the . coigiin Gzivern Pierre, S. Dak., Oct. 7.—Mrs. G. W. Barnes, living ten miles from Added to this were Abscesses and Suppuration. Entirely Cured by Cuticura. Stout and Hearty. Now to be literally afire, screaming is, Butler, Mo. Witt of Lamout, Mo., fell dead. He Dewiey Boe SAEe <. was in a wagon with his sister and) A farmer's wife living west of brother in-law, en route to Webb | Princeton, gave birth to four child- City to visit their father and broth-| ren on Tuesday of last week, aud at ers. He ate a hearty breakfast and last reports all four were hving, was apparently in health. Sitting The largest weighing seven pounds inthe rear of the wagon leaning and the total weight of the four was against a irask he was first observ- | Over twenty pounds —Brookfield ed gasping for breuth, aud he died | Gazette. at once without a strugg’e _ Coro-} ner Gibbins viewed the body and | wrong and the remedy for the im- heard the statements of bis grief | | prisoument of the St. Clair County stricken relatives, and without an | Judges must be found. Shylock De- | control of our courts must not mean ceased was about 25 years old and | the abolition of liberty of person as had been subject to an organe dis | well as the contiecation of property. ease of his heart and «ther vital or-; __s¢ Qouis Chronicle. gavs, which had for years produced | inquest issued a burial permit apasms. Public Sale. I will offer at public sale on my place 5 miles west of Butler, Wednesday, Oct. 25th, 1893, the following described personal property: Six head of horses and two colts, five mileh cows, 20 head of stock hogs, three steer calves, 15 tons clover hay, farm implements, con- sisting of one Moline 16 inch riding plow, one cultivator, one three sec- tion harrow, and other things too humerous to mention. TkERMS: Sums of $5 and under cash over that amount a credit of 12 months will be given without inter- est if paid when due, if not paid when due to draw 8 per cent from date. Note to bear approved secu- rity. J. b BURTON, Cc. B. Lewis, Auctioneer. Virginia Items. Herrick Bros. TIMEs. Amos and Billy Herrick are with us again. Isaac Park renews his allegiance to the TIMEs. O M Drysdale’s new barn is 16x28 and 10 ft high. Pever Ferguson has a No. 1 cow and calf for sale. Born, to the wife of Cy Summers, of Mulberry, a boy. Amos Lockridge of* Mulberry, is very low with fever. School commenced at the Crooks school house Oct. 2nd. Tom Wright wants to buy a big horse to match Bally. Alf Jackson is doing good running the road grader. We think Geo Maloney has gone to the world’s fair or southeast Mo Grandma Jackson and Uncle Jesse Francis were married one day last week. A literary society was organized at the Grandview school house Satur- day night. Michael Maloney, John McFadden and Wm Cowan left Saturday for the world’s fair. Win. F. Smith and Jas. Oldham have returned from the strip without securing homes. subscribed for the work Geo Sampson and Fred Nesilerode | have gone into the coal business, southeast of Butler. Mr. John Durrett moved their teacher to the John Hensley house so he will be nearer his school. J W MeFadden’s cistern is complet- ed and is a good one. The blasting was done by Carr Dudley and son Ed and the mason work by W A Downy. Rev. Stephens, of Butler, made . and clawing all the time. When she was about five months old, there was added - toheraffliction, abscessesand _Suppuration. We tried the soles of her feet tothe crown of her head, and she seemed Pierre, was waylaid by a lone high- wayman upon her return home PEL D's, and some other | Yesterday afternoon. The fellow bad 3 remedies out any relief. watched her draw alarge sum from the bank and expected to make a good haul. Upon his approaching the wagon she picked up a board and knocked him senseless to the ground from his horse, proceeded Ai deliberately on her way, leaving the | highwayman to be picked up later CUTICURA WORKS WONDERS 0%; Tbe fellow was seriously injar- } Nothing can be more encouraging to dis- jed, but will recover. couraged parents than the remarkable cures | daily effected among infants and children by | the Ccticura REMEDIES. Cures in childhood | mean a lifetime of freedom from torturing, disfiguring, humiliating humors. <* Itead read considerableabout the CuTicURA REMEDIEs, and one of our neighbors had used them, claiming that they were as good as claimed. I concluded to try them, and after the use of three or four boxes of CUTICURA, and about one and one-half bottles of the CuTIcuRA RESOLVENT, With the CvTicura Soap, our little one is now entirely cured, and is stout and hearty. Your CcTiccra REMEDIES are all and more than you claim them tobe. always havea word to my friends and neighbors for your excellent remedies. Tue business men of Butler should | not allow the city to gradually get ae Gold throughiat Waeaccd = Prise, Ourecons, | behind in the payment of its legiti- i S0c.; Soar, 25c.; RESOLTENT, $1. POTTER DEve | 4ND CHEM. ConP., Sole Proprietors, Boston. |mate debts. The people look to 4a“ How to Cure Skin Diseases,” wailed free. | business men for counsel and advice Pl PLES, blackheads, red, rough, chapped, and ‘in a matter of this kind and if the SN Se ieee eee city needs fostering they should alt STOPS THE PAIN. meet and devise ways and means to anmation Seeeenorar pains re. |prevent the accumulation of an care Ant Pain Plaster, 2co + [endless debt on the town. quite a prohibition speech in the M. E. church one night last week. He isa splendid speaker and had a full house. Wiley Comiford and wife have re- turned from asix weeks’ trip to El- dorado Springs so much benefited in health that they think of return- ing soon. Grandina Covgill was thrown from a@ spring wagon Saturday and ,seri- ously hurt. The horse took fright at the Miami baidge west of town and ran away, totally demolishing the buggy. N. M. NESTLERODE. { | j | When Babs was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria Whea she had Children, she gave them Castorig A statistican bas figured up what a man has done when 50 years old. He has worked 6,500 days, slept 6,- 000, amused himself {4,000, walked 12,000 miles been ill 500 days, has partaken of 36,000 meals, 16,000 pounds of meat aud 4,000 pounds;of fish. eggs and vegetabies, and drunk 7,000 gallons of fluid, which would make a luke of 800 feet surface if 3 feet deep. Now let someboay pre- pare similar figures of a woman's work. Tipton, Mo , Oct. 9. 12:20 p. w.— John Woods, sa aged citizen of this place was fatally injured to-day by a vicious ram. Mr. Woode was alone in the barn yard and being quite feeble was not able to resist’ the attacks of the ram. The animal butted and pawed him into insensi- bility. That Joyful Feeling With the exhilarating sense of re- newed health and strength and in- ternal cleanliness, which follows the use of Syrup of Figs, is unknown to the few who have not progressed beyond the old time medicines and the cheap substitutes sometimes of- fered but never accepted by the well informed. R. S. Catron insures growing cops against hail, also writes fire and tornado insurance. 413 tf For Sate Cuear—A nice little farm of 80 acres, 3} miles from Bat- Jnr, in good cultivation, if sold in 30 days possession will be given this fall. Terms torent. Also a good. nice house acd lot in Butler, on East Dakota street, four room house, al- most new, with two good wells of water, will sell low down terms to suit. Apply at this office. 46-4 | Wastep—Salesmen; good pay for | honest workers. Beginners taught; | 900 new outfits just ready—cost 4 | years time and thousands of dollars, | but worth all they cost—the finest jever used. We sell direct through | our own salesmen. Nomiddle-men. No Tree Dealers. Sraax Bros. Nuz- SERIES axp Orcarps Co., Louisiana, | Mo. 4t 46. O°PRICE’S Baking eal aking ‘The only Pure Creaw of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia; No Alum, Used in Millions of Homes—4o Years the Standard

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