The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 2, 1893, Page 3

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¥ . nesses to the shooting and no one Misouri Pacific Time Tabie | Arrival and departure ot passenger trains at Butler Station. Nortu Bounp Passenger, - : 4:47 a.m. Passenger, - + 2:42 p. m. Passenger, - - Q:1§ p.m. Local Freight - 11:20 a.m. Soutu Bounp Passenger, - - 7:16 a. m. Yassenger, - - pm. Passenger, - - 1:55 p.m. Local Freight ~ builders use e best only the best | " f materials— lumber, brick, lime, cement, sand— whatever goes into the construction ef a building; they employ only th | workmen and pay the best wag: get beiter prices for their worl: than their iess carefui competitois, and always the best contracts; they paint th ith k Strictiy Pure ee = White Lead manufactured by ¢ Old Dutch Pro- cess” of slow corr 1, and with one of the following b S$: Seal,” “Collier, “Scuthern” se th v Company’s P Colors. T small cans, tint twenty-f.ve 7 Pure White Lead These brands of Str end National Lead Co ‘or sale by the cost reli verywhere. 'f you are going to paint, it will pay y send to us for a book containing informa- a that may save you many a dollar; i, wis! < aly cost you a postal card to do so. NATIONAL LEAD Co., 1 Broadwey, New York, St. Louis Br: , Clark Avenue and Tenth Street. sold in x sufficieat to | unds of Strictly desired chade DEATH ENDS A QUARREL. Farmer Riley Evans Shoots snd Kills Farmer Peter Fine. Boonville, Mo., Oct. 25.—Another man was killed in Cooper county to-day. About 2 o'clock this after noon Riley Evans went to the field where Peter Fine was shucking corn and emptied five chambers.of a re- voler at him. three of the bullets en- tering his body and fatally wound ing him. A neighbor hearing the shots went to investigate and found Fine lifeless on the ground. He summon- ed a physician, but when he arrived Fire was dead. Evans went imme diately to the residence of Squire B. F. Bedwell and surrendered himself. T. H. B. Street, constable of Saline towuship, rude pust a short while later and the justice gave Evans into his custody. He smmumediately start ed with him to Boonville, and arriv- ing here about 8 o'clock placed hin: in jail. The circumstances surrounding the tragedy are peculiar. Fine has been living upon a farm belonging to the estate of Jahn Phillips, deceased which he had rented from the ad ministrator of the estate. A room in the house had been reserved for Belle Sherer, an adopted daughter of Phillips. Several months ago the girl married Riley Evans and brought him to the house to live. Evans wished to rent the farm himself for the ensuing year and wanted posses - sion this fall. Fine, having a corn crop ou the farm, considered him self entitled to retain possession un til spring. A quarrel was the result pulminating in Evans having - Fine arrested and placed under bound to keep the peace. This moruing Evans came to town purchased a revolver and returned to the farm. There were no wit- knows just how it occurred. The Overton, * Saline | township, and bore good reputations among their neighbors. Fine’ was} 40 years of age, and leaves a wife and four children in straightened | circumstances. This wakes the fifth | tragedy in Cooper county in the past two weeks—two killings and} three suicides. men resided near Secretary of war Lamont has asked the house military committee to a | mend the law in regard to detained | pay of discharged enlisted mea so as | to allow it to be repaid at ones with | out action by the Treasury ofticials. | A Sound Liyer Makes a Well Man.! Are you Billio: szipated or trou- bled with Jaundi ick Headache, bad | taste in the mouth, foul breath,’ coated} tongue, dyspepsia, Indigestion, hot dry | skin, pain in the back and between the) shoulders, chills and tever, Xc. If vou! have any of these symptoms, your liver! ts out of order and vour blood is slowly} being poisoned because your liver does} not act properly. Herbine will cure ali} disorder of the liver, Stomach or fbowels| Charles Krimbill in watching the | committed suicide by drowning him- ling. led herself in the i }mother is temporarily insane from | grew with South Chicago ant made} | his youngest daughter. jjust a year ayo, she was graduated | | tered the girl's head. She believed A PITIFUL TRADGEDY. Lives in Chicago This Week. Chiacgo Tribune. Andrew Krimbill, an old and) wealthy citizen of South Chicago, | self in Lake Michigan Monday morn- Henrietta Krimbill, his talen-| ted and beautiful daughter, drown- lake The twenty-four! hours previously. wife and, grief aud shock. The Krimbill No. 9806) Seventh avenue, ia as beautiful Lome, as) any ou the East side Andrew Krim- j jWN FIRE POT. bill ty South Chicago wien a level | fa waste of swamp land was there. He | was active and enterprising. He) 3oth his home ail life were charming. ¢ | money. fauily LOW Henriette wae | She was! | beautiful and talented. At 17, and) TH ro fromthe Morgon Park inary, | and so great was her talent a; al harpist that she was offered a posi- | tion in the Thomas Symphony chestra. But some strange idea en- <a SOLD that some day he would commit} suicide. She Jaughed when she Hardware, spoke of it to ber cisters. but some-| P Se tice the woul’. tells Hee nother! amps and Pump Repairing, Iron, that the belief haunted her. In the| DEA many marks of affection showered upon ber by the family the abiding ORIGINAL OF ITS CLASS. BY DEACON BROS., & CO. --__DEALERS IN—— Groceries, Seeds and Farm Machinery, Bain, Rarrison end Mitchell Wagons, Top Buggies and Spring Wagons. The Oiginl ROUND OAK. YY OULIUMOCT as LaywaHT VO panoy v Zarknq ay z 2 = a ogy 4uqy "NOLLOG LHOIL- a4IV ONY a! Bal qove uo , vO | UNM “dd ? Steel aud Wagon Wood Work. CON BROS. & CO. Southeast Corner Squaie, Butler, Mo. Fierstine was | left alone with the father. At 4:10) o'clock Fierstine started up from a! consciousness of an early aud awful)a few hours’ sleep. death, was for a time, lost. Saturday uight the young girl en tertained a party of friends Herjhalf dose, hearing a door close. | eyes were wet with tenis when she! Krimbill was gone. ‘there were; thanked him, saying: “Papa, you scunds of footstep on the back walk. are all so kind to me; why ts it?” Fierstine hustened out It was so The father suid nothing. He had| dark that he could see nothing Re- received, a letter from iin eldest| turning, he secured a lantern and daughter, Clara, at the Battle Creek (Mich.) Sanitarium that same day The ailing daughter said uotbing of her own ills “Hetty,” she wrote, ‘seems haunt awakened the other two watchers. Until dawn they patrolled the lake shore witho tt finding any trace of the father, insane in bis grief. a hat At dawn was discovered ed by the old fear. She seems to| near the Inke shore, and out in the believe that she must commit sui-jlake a dark object was floating cide. Can't we do anything for|Some fishermen in a boot were huil- | her?” ed, und the body of Andrew Krim During the evening Mr. Kriabill} bill was brought ashore. He had | remarked to his wife that Hetty|drowned bimself atthe same spot) seemed to be moody. It was late} where his duughtsr’s remains wee when the party came to an end j found. Hetty went to her room in the front} Mrs. Krimbill is being closcly part of the house. Hersister, Alice | guarded as the double sorrow thinking that Hetty in ,her peculiar} horror has unbilanced ber mind, mood should not be left alone, watch-! but it is hoped that ber condition is ed her for a time inside her door.} but temporary. and Finally the lights ia Hetty’s room! A coroner's jury, consisting of @ | were turned out. Then Alice retir-|G. Matthews, Michael Douhaue, | ed. Hugh G. Macy, Thomas and James Sunday morning her father rose early. From his garden he saw a crowd of men standing at the water's | returned in each case a verdict of edge, Amovg them was Warren) suicide while temporarily insane. Gustine, a. neighbor, and Officer) Nicholson. Suspectivg that there Farley and Johu Towu, met at the residence yesterday afternoon and Audiew Krimbill was ove of the | oldest realty dealers in South Chi- was something wrong Mr. Krimbill) cago and leaves av estate valued at hastened to the beach. The officer | from $80,000 to $110,000. He was was bending over a dripping form/an Alsatian by birth and was 67 just dragged from the water. years old. He came to this country girl has:been drowned, that’s | when a boy and for nineteen years | aid Turner, as he started to/had been a resident of South Chi- lead the old man away. . Mr. Krim | eago. In the carly “70's Mr. Krim-} bill was peering at the face in the! bill was sheriff of Lake county, Ind., | uncertain light. A shawl about the!and at one time was an aidermanic rewaius fell away. | candidate from the east side of| “That girl lives here. Ihave seen|South Chicago. He leaves a widow her somewhere,” said Mr. Krimbill. | and five children, three sons and two | He spoke hke a man in 2 trance. | daughters. Charles, aged 32, is a The old man leaned over the body, deputy eheriff and has served as! examining a ring on the clenched | south town collector. The other hand. , children are Walter, Andrew, Clara But before the messenger return |and Alice Krimbill. The faneral ed, bringing with him Walter Krim | will be held at 2 o'clock to day from vill, the girl’s 16-year old brother,| the Evangelical ehureh, which he the father had come himself and | was largely instrumental in estab knew his daughter. Tender hands lishing. carried the dripping form to her| home. Among the bills introduced in the Upon retiring to ber room the | house yesterday was one by Mr. Bell | young girl had dressed herself in | of Texas to substitute United States s S \ 2 soft white gown, as if for some fest | Treasury uotes’ for national bank al occasion. As scon as all was quiet notes and anothet by Mr. DeArmond in the house she had crept down to turn over the selection of govern- | ment employees to states pro rate: the stairs and made her way direct ly to the lake. | Andrew Krimbill was stunned by | I used Ely’s Cream Balm for dry the blow. Three or four years ago jeatarrh = It proved a care.—B. M. he lost a beatiful daughter by death | Weeks, Deuver. i and this child, strangely like her in, Ely’s Creain Balm is especially | the face, had to « certain extent | ®Japted as a remedy for catarrh Snead (he acl his. heater which is aggravated by dry winds cured “ye ache tn Ais heart. _#'r8-/and alkaline dust.—W. A. Hover Krimbili was overcome by the shock | druggist, Denver. and her hysterical grief added to! I can reccommend Ely’s Cream the tension on the old man’s mind. | Balm to all sufferers from dry catarr Will Homles and A. W. Fierstine, ‘from personal experieuce.—Micheal | friends of Andrew Krimilill aneistad ATs Caren ‘ieee tieeopcoed Catarrh in Colcrado. i ici eS f catarrh. It is8i s i Hthas no equel dial bonies at Urs | father daring: the day. At mid.| Gemand. Geo. W. Hoyt Pharmacist | Rckers drugstore. 48 1y| night two of the watchers left to get | Cheyene Wy. i .Y | 28th. | quit. A COLD WINTER COMING. Prof. Hicks Says lt Will) Last November To April- Prof. Hicks says that very hard, stormy weather will begin before or by the middle of November, the Ve- nus equinox throwing her character istic extremes into storm and temper ature for at least half of November and December. Theu the December solstice storms will be due witha Mercury equinox falling right into their crisis, December 23d- After thie, he says while there are 0 unusual causes present in January it is always safe to count on winter From |in earnest iu that wonth. Th. whole of February will be under the influ- euce of Mars’ equinox, central on the It will also dominate in the month of March, which will proyea very hard :nouth. There will be spells of extrewe cold with many storms of rain, sleet and snow,sandwiched be tween with thunder and hail and an _oceasionul tornado. If there be cause to expect the beginning of hard weather in Nov- ember, and that Mareb will prolong it, at least we may reasonably say that upon the whole hard winter. ear! we expecta The man who begins and prepares well for a dis agtecevle and hard winter will have no regrets, but cause for rejoicing- By all this Hicks says he does not inteud to sound a sensational alarm. There is no cause to apprehend any results out of the course of na ture, but nature's normal methods are often trying iu the extreme, and justify ail prudent provisions of man against her severity. The severity of winter will end the last of March, and a seasonable and early spring will follow.—Nevada Mail Eccentric. West Plains, Mo. Oct. 20 —Sid Cole ot Shannon county was tried this week for killing M. Prentice about four years ago. The evidence showed that the two men fought and that Cole killed Prentice after the lat ter had started away from the scene The Judge instructed the jury to ac- Just previous to this a poor fellow had been convicted of burning a threshing machine upou very pvor evidence and given two years. Just- ice is very eccentricin these parts. ate in Self-Gefense . Moberly, Mo., October 19.— Louie M. Legg, of this city, who shot and killed Town Marshal Wm. MeNabb, at Dalton, a few Sundays ago, was discharged by the Chariton County Justice Is Graud Jury at Keytesville yesterday- | The case was investigated for two days by the Grand jury and the evi- deuce showed that he actedin self- defense. Legg retursed to vis city last night. The gold reserve in the Treasury is now $82,628,985-an incrase of 1 _ million dollars in four days. currency balance is $21,047,807-a decrease of j million in the same time. Snakes Pat a Grizzly to Flight. George J. Carr and Howard | Taber, two «well known young men of Oroville were recently spending a Co few weeks hunting and fishing on | the headwaters of the West Branch | From them comes a graphic descrip | tion of a duel to death between rat |tlesnakes anda huge grizzly bear |They had been fishing all day 01 Chipsey creek, which is one of the 'most inaccessible tributaries of the | Feather and rans for miles through la deep canou of craggy rocks. | only in places that the stream can | be reached at all. ledees alone The ledges along the canou are the abiding places of countless rattle snakes aud to this isolated region have been driven the |few remaining grizzlies of the uppe Butte county It is y dangerous for the mountains place at best pole’ but to get a chance at the fiuny tribe the youug men had laid aside all thought of danger. ‘Towards eve ning the young men climbed out of the canou and stoppeed on a ledge jof rock to rest. Ou the other side jof the canon rose a perpendicular stream below They were surprised to discover on ashelf at the top of the chff a monster grizzly He stretched out asleep, aud from his bear. was proportions the young meu estimat ed that he must have weighed fully 1000 pounds. They had vo guns and were content to let the monster enjoy his nap. Seddenly their eyes caught the glimpse of a serpent’s form gliding up the ragged side of the cliff. It reached the shelf on which reposed the bear. It saw the big intruder, gave the note of alarm and then struck bruin with his fangs inthe jaw. The big beast roared with pain and anger and started to his feet, but the fangs of the snake held aud it swung back and forth With his paws he tore the reptile lose and it fell upon the shelf Mad with fury, the bear stamped the snake witb all fours, and in doiug so looseued apart of the cliff and it fell witha crash iutothe river. In- stantly, it seemed, the rocks were alive with snakes. Hissing and rat tling they swarmed about the bear and attacked him asa common en- emy. Roaring with pain he fought them as well as he could and flung mnany a one over the briuk. But the snakes were too many for him and h> started to retreat. The deadly virus was by this time cours- ing through his veins from 50 wounds \and be fell back struggliug and howl- ing With convulsive movements the bear worked uear the edge of the cavon and fell onto a sharp rock nearly a hundred feet below then rolled into a deep pool in the stream and was seen vo more —Oroville Mercury. Train Rolbers Gaiity-. St. Louis, Mo, Oct. 25.—At Ciay- ton yesterday the trial of the trio of train robbers, Pinnock, Ray and Robertson, who held up the F. isco train near Pacific, Mo, some time |ago, was called. Robertsox pleaded not guilty and was placed under $10,000 bail, in default of which he |was returned t+ jul. The other |men entered plew of guilty and were each sentescel t> fourteen tiary. Mrs. Zach Carter of Martinsville Iil., explaius bow she foand $11,000. Detectives havea warrant for her arrest. Going to | | | If so, buy one that cannot be stolen. The | only thief-proof Watches are those with t | } | | bow Xo the pendent, so that it cannot be pulled or twisted off. » | ‘To be sure of gettmg a Non-pull-out, see t cannot be had with any other kind. Ask your jeweler for pamphlet, or send for { The | one to the famous Boss Filled Case makers. KeystoneWatch Case Co., PHILADELPHIA. sportsmen armed only witha fishiog | wall cighty feet from the foaming | Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, The Best Salve inthe world tor Cuts ruises,Sores, Ulcers, SaltRheum Fever Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains s, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts per box For sale by H. L. Tucker, druggist. BATES COUNTY National Bank. It is | i BUTLER, MO. THE OLDEST BANK TH LARGEST AND THE |ONLY NATIONAL BANK | IN BATES COUNTY. ‘CAPITAL, = - — $125,000 00 |SURPLUS, - - $25,000 00 | i { F.J. TYGARD, - - - President. HON. J. B. NEWBEKRY, Vice-Pres, J. C. CLARK - - Cashier | i-_- Lawyers. | W ° O.J ACKSON —ATTORNEY-AT-LAW— Will practice in all the courts, Prompt attention to business. Office upstairs second door south ot Bates County Na- tional Bank. G RAVES & CLARK, I ATTORN«YS AT LAW. Office over the Missouri State Bank North side square. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEUPATBIL PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. Ail call answered at Office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis eases. year’s imprisoument in the peniten-| T C. BOULWARE, Physician and + Surgeon. Office north side square, Butter, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- en a specialtv. ‘ ——~+y, Franz Bernhardt ] { H On the oorth side of theequare, | i ' Butler, - Missouri. | Does his owr | Watch & Clock Repairing ‘Also Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Sil- verware at | ANTUAL GOST AND CARRIAGE | For the next twelve months. |As a watch maker of re experience can and will give you tisfaction. | Fine Wateh Repairing a Specialty. —GO TO—— G. A. VAN HALL, —SUCCESSOR TO— F. BERNHARDT & Co. —FOR— | PURE DRUGS Buy a Watch? | MEDICINES, | TOILET ARTICLES, TOBACCOS AND } i ‘FINE CIGARS, 4R2TISTS | MATERIALS OF ALL KINDS. } | Prescriptions Carefully Compounde f A libera} Patronage of the public is solicited. ~ “A’N AVMCVGES Eve AGNLS 3WOH Os =

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