The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 8, 1894, Page 8

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— ; - : Duvall § Percival of this| ©. P. Catron & Co. will buy court! The proposition to build a $5,000! city are saving the farm | cost and loan money in small amounts | ers of Bates county thou-| on good chattel securities sunds of dollars by giving them the benefit of their lower rates of interest on farm loans: Farms ror catz.—I have several Farms in Bates county for sale at low prices und easy terms. 94t. W. E. Warton On Friday and Saturday March 2nd and 3d a general examination will be held for teachers’ certificates | at the Y. M. C. A. Hall in Rich Hii Jxo. P. Tuunman, | Schoo! Com. 9 3+ ©. B. Lewis is selling coal deliver ed at 7 cents, deliveriug mail for} uncle Sam, eryivg auction sales aud | running a first class livery stable. | He is a hustler. | A young man in Lowell, Mass,, | troubled for years with a constant | succrssion of boils on his veck, was compl-tely cured by taking only three bottles of Ayers Sarsapril'a.. Another result of treatment was gr at . improved digestion with in | creased avoirdupois. C. B. Lewis, Bates county’s dead shot auctioneer will dispose of Mrs. Allisou’s p-reonal effects at auction at Lone Tree, Cass county, the 224d. He has also a large sale to ery at Dayton about the same time As a firet class auctioneer Charley heads the band wagon. John Rider of Cape Girardeau county was out hunting Monday night, and while looking up a tree for a coon an ow! flew down, striking him in the eye with its claw, tearing out the ball and carrying it away. Rider is now doing very well, but is suffering a great deal fromthe shock Scrofula eradicated and all kindred diseases cured by Hood's Sarsaparil Ja, which by its vitalizing aud alter ative effects, makes pure blood B W. Lansdown, of Russellville, Mo., dropped a draft for $4 in the Truzs ili Saturday. He has a gen eral merc! ardise store at Russell- ville, and we are glad to Jearn that be is doing a good busi- ness. He sends regards to all old friends in Butler. Russeliville is 16 miles from Jefferson City, on the Lebanon branch railroad, W. A Rogers, postmaster of Van Horn, Iowa, shot himself througt the heart in his office Monday. Ge» Christian, inspector, called at the office and made a demand for money qrder funds. Instead of the post _ master complying with the demand, without a word, he took a pistol from a shelf and shot himself in the pres |! ence of the inspector. Deacon Bros. & Co. have reuted the large vacant room adjoing their store and will use the same as a sample room for exhibiting the dif ferent makes of farm machinery hand e! by the frm. This will be @ convenient arrangement for the farmers as well as for this implement firm. ‘hey are now receiving new implements and a sample of cach piece of machinery as well as many new improvements in planters, cul tivators etc., can be seen in their sample room. At Fayette, Mo.. Sunday fire broke out in the masonic temple, the ! finest building in the town, and in a short time the entire structure was leveled to the ground The third floor of the building was occupied by the Missouri Blue lodge, chapter andcommedery. All ths records | parties and criginally cost $23,000. | cost of $16,000. The capacity is ten Leight tf. Judge Stratton announces in the | Nevada Mail that he will not be a| candidat+ for Supreme Judgeagainst Judge Black. The good news Tuesday morning of Gen Shelby’s appointment to the marshalship pleased the people of thie community without regard to| prty. It is announced that the ice plant at Lamar is to be moved to Clinton. | Th+ plant belonged to St. Louis | | 1 | The Clinton company bought it at a} tons per day A fire at Purcell Indian Territory | destroyed six buildings Saturday The Perry House, a larg® hotel was among the burned bnild dings The hotel was packed with boarders at the time and many made j narrow escapes The loss is esti muted to be $80,000 ' Prof C. H Duccher left Monday evening for a mouth’s visit in the tropical bouyant climate of Califer nia His first stop will bein San Fran- cisco after which he will visit many other important cities of the state. We wish him a pleasant trip.— War- rensburg Journal Democrat. J.S Demming a wealthy farmer | of Benton Illinois is missing He] started for St. Louis Jan. 23d with several car loads of cattle and $1, 000 cn his person siuce which time he has not been heard from. Dem ming is estimated to be worth $1,- 000,000 and it is feared he has been murdered. The late Miss Woolson ia said to have Jeft no unpublished manuscript with the exception of one or two in possession of Harper's Magazine. Her short stories were in great de mand and rarely remained long in the hands of the publishers before being printed. “A Transplanted B»y,” in the February Harper's was written two years ago, and is one of the series of sketches of Italian life of which enough were finished to make a small volume. The body of Charles Moll, musi cian ef Light Battery F. who disap- pexred Jan. 16th, was found in the Kaw river Sunday. It is feared he! committed suicide while laboring | uuder a fit of mental aberation caused by loseing the savings of years in investment in Florida lands. He had 28 years of service to his credit and would soon have been placed on the retired list. He served as} musician in Sheridan's corps during the war. Joe Meyer, the east side cloth will leave Monday for the east to| buy his spring stock cf goods He will be absent a week or ten days. To the reporter, said he had made all the arrangements to put in the largest, handsomest stock of | spring and summer clothing to be| found in this section of the state. | He said he was going to take his} time in making his selection and! would use due diligence as to the} wants of his trade as to quantity, quality, style and price. Mr. Meyer} has been raised in a clothing store and thorughly understands every | detail of the business from a box of paper collars to a wedding suit and | now that he goes to make his own | selection and buy on his own account the trade can look for some extra bargains and elegant goods. The! Toes wishes him a pleasant trip and safe return. | he and archives of the lodge were lost. | The second floor was occupied by offices, and the lower portion by/| business firms and abank. Fayette | has no means of fighting fire and the loss is a serious oneto the town. R. 8. Catron insures growing cops against hail, also writes fire and tornado insurance. 423 tf) The Modern Invalid Has tastes medicinally, in keeping with other luxuries. A remedy must be pleasantly acceptable in form, purely wholesome in composition, truly beneficial m effect and entirely free from every objectional quality. If reaiiy iii he consults a physician; \if constipated he uses the gentle family laxative Syrup of Figs. Awarded Highest Honors World’s Fair, “are Cream of ...ar Powder.—No Ammonia; No Alum, in Millions of Homes—4o Years the Standard ,|Sarsaparilla has proven that it pos school house was voted down at| Adrian last week. Good schools} are the making of a town, and Adrian | can weil afford to stana the expense | of needed improvements of this kind Will McCormack and Miss Jenetta, | daughter of Mrs. Atkinson, were | married Wednesday, J 3ist, at) the residence of the bride's mother | in Spruce township The was largely attended by ¢ the contracting parties secdibg | iends of Saturday night burglars atiempt ed to blow the safe open freight depot of the Mo. Pucific and! M K &T railroads, at Nevada,but } were frustrated by the arrival of the| employees of the road The burg | lars had drilled a hole in the safe, loaded it with a quarter of a pound of powder, attached a piece of fuze! and were in the act of touching it off when scared away There was only about $9 in the safe and they would have secured little for their troubl.. Commercial tourist Johu Baruhill, of Kansas City, was circulating among his many friends in Butler, Tuesday. Mr. Barnuiall was married | to a lady of Kansas City Inst week and the affair was the social event! of the week in the city. He bas just returned from a trip through Okla | homa, and said he saw a number of | Bates county folks dos 3 Among whom was Capt. George Todd, who was conducting a drt store and largely interested in real! estate. Your attention is called to the ad vertisement of W. G. Womeck in| this issue. He says he is going to! quit the grocery business and that| his stock yoes at cost. Thesale has begun and at the prices he is offer ing groceries it seems to us he wi!l not be long in disposing of his stock Read the list of bargains and prices and call and lay in your supply at once. You will not Lave another opportunity of the kind in a long time to get groceries so cheap. Harry Henry gave usa pleasant call Tuesday. He is now living with his mother, Mrs. A Henry, at Iowa City, Iowa, and being under the weather, came back to Butler to spend a few months and escape the severe winter which they have beeu having in Iowa We were sorry to learn tbat he was not feeling well and hope the change to a more mod | erate climate will prove beneficial | He reports his mother to be enjoy | ing good health which ber many ; friends in this community will be} glad to learn. Why Hood's Wius. President Lincoln said: “You can not fool the people a second time”) They are two quick to ree real merit or lack of it, and cli to those things which they find to be what is claimed for them. It is especially gratifying that the sale of Hood's Sareaparilla increases most rapidly iu those sections where} it is best known. | The inference is plain 70 Hood's} sesses genuine merit. It maintai a high standafd, which other not even approuch Itis the p favorite blood purifying and b ing up medicine, and is more { lar this year than ever this because Hood's ( ba] Over a Century Ola. | Hannibal, Mo. February { —i the Blue Ridge Plateau of S western Virgiuia lies Gia; son ty. Near the little village vue lives a venerable lady. Mrs. Jestin Pool was born ou the) 15th day of October, 1793. So she |coat pocket aud proceeded to turn | was discovered to be so far from the has passed the one huud:edth mile| stone on ber earthly pilgrma; j At the early age of 10 years s became a member of the Methoc chureb, in whese communion sh lives tod.y. She is perhaps th only person in Virgicia who has! been 90 years a member of the, church. She has led an active. in dustrious life, and walks, staff inj j hand. to church, one mile from her | home, in pretty weather. | In 1812 she was married to Wil | liam Pool, who died in 1874, at a! ripe old age. Some of her children are nearly 80 years of ace When the war between the states | began, in 1862, her youngest son i entered the Confederatearmy. After}township. “Que of them was the| made to ran into the burning barn ‘© | body of Jown Brown, the first sheriff | twent head of young horses, whic: jof Vernon county after the war It | were in an out lot. | the battle of Antietam he wa- ported missing. A comrade saw him at the root of a large tree ina stoop- ing posture, spitting blocd, as if he /taken away by friends. OF MORE LANE & ADAIRS IMMENSE CLEARING UP SALE. Remember we have one of the largest stocks of goods in Butler, and will not be undersold by any house. cannot be surpassed in quality, quantity nor price. look at them. cloths for making ladies wa Just take a look sts. Our stock of —==Dress Goods==- Just take a 50 feet of shelving filled solid with Dress Goods; ithe finest line of black goods in the eity. Beautiful line of Broad- for making capes; a beautiful line of Scotch plaid goods at our DOUBLE-WIDTH PEPPERELL SHEETING Never before were they sold for the money we now offer them: anything you want in way of muslins, cotton flannels, ginghams, shirtings, calicves, toweling taking our inventory. Boots are still going at cost and will continue until they are sold out. get that we have an immense stock of them and fit and suit you both iu price and quality. furnishing goods go in this sale sale at lower prices than it formerly cost to produce them. all go ata big reduction until after Don’t lose sight. of the big BIG BOOT & SHOE SALE Bi ig reductions on shoes, don't for- Pant, shirt and Call in and take a look at our Jeans Pant at 85c; Cottonade Pants at 75c —Anything from that up to a good solid Cas- simere Pants at $3.25. All these goods are new and fresh, bought during the panic many of them for leas money than it cost produce them and now weare still knifing them they must be sold if prices will sell them. Call in and see us. Very truly. Lane & Adair. The supply of hogs at the stock yards in Kansas City Monday num- bered 4,408. The shipments were mostly from Texas and tke Indian Territory. Millionaire Corrigan has been lying at death’s door at his home in Kansas City the past week, with heart disease. His wife was buried Monday. J. J. Davenport, ex mayor of Kah- sas City, taking offense at articles published 1m the Star, called at the ofiice of Mr. Nelsov, editor of the paper, Suvday morning, pistol in pocket, for the purpose of satisfac tion. Discussing his grievance he became abusive and struck at the aforesaid editor, At this juucture the editcrial staff came to Mr. Nel on’s aid and Davenport was prompt- ly kicked dowa the fhght of stairs to the street. Linding walk he drew his guu u his over the air blue with oaths, when he wa The Star, uffair says, had ed to use his in its report of t Davenport ati pistol while in the editorial room he would have been shot dead in his tracks, as a reporter for the paper had him covered with a revolver during the interyiew. Moved the Nesada Post. “I helped move three dead bodies to the Wilburn graveyard recently,” said Joshua Whitesides, of Harrison Bodies had been buried in the orchard of a the side- | Forty-six Horses Cremated. ‘tle Stables ot H.C Ireland at) Chilli- cothe Destroyed. Chillicothe, Mo., Feb. 4.—Forty- | six head of horses, the property of H. C. Trelavd of this city, which were stabled two large barns nearly two miles apart, were cre mated at an early hour this morning by incendiary fires, causing a prop- erty loss of 10,000. Shortly after miduight fire was | discoved in a barn in the rear of Mr. | Ireland's residence in this city, but | before the fire department had ar- {rived the b. ding was a mass of flame. aud was totally destroyed, together with twelve head of valu j able horses, xs also a large amount of grain and other articles | The fire bad hardly died out when | a blaze was discovered south of the i city, and the firemen started iu that direction, but turned back when it in lcity limits that it was ussless to go. | This morning it was ascertained ithat this fire was caused by the | burning of a big barn ou the farm of Mr Ireland, ove mile south of |town, avd thirty four horses had | perished in the flames, making a | total of forty six borses, about 2,00u , bushels of corn, 100 tons of Loy and ja large amount of valuable farm ma ichinery was also destroyed. The ‘loss is estimated at $10,000, on which was an insurance of $5,000. | Iu the last mentioued fire evidence | is not wanting that an attempt was; Where does all the money come from that is now being loaned by agents, and has been loaned here for ten years or more? It came from the east The west is mortgaged to the east. L«t the east pay the income tax.—Lamar Democrat Mr. Stephen McIntire Like a New Man As the Result of Taking Hood’s Sarsaparilia “C. I Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: “ For three winters past I have suffered with the grip, and it left me all out of fix. I had a pain in my left side and was troubled with my stomach for about six months. 1 had a tired feeling and I could not work, for the muscles of my leg would give out, and I would have to sit down and rest. Nothing did me any good. I read so much about Hood’s Sarsaparills that I de- cided I would try a bottle. [noticed after three doses that I was getting better. taken three bottles and £ a Sere: Feei Like a New Man. I get up at4o’clock, and can plow and work about the farm all day without-ge ry tired. Ican truthfully say that Hoo : Hood’s'*Cures parilla brought me out, and I feel like a spring | Mr Ireland is a noted breeder of | were shot in the mouth. After this;the home place near Brown Ford | fine horses, is a member of the State | he was never seen again This stor came back to the mother, and, al | though nearly 30 years have passed | away. her fond heart goes out in| hope iuaé she will yet see him be- fore she dies = - j Children Cry for | Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. \for twenty years. and portions of the coffin were found. The body of a child of his buried at and a pair of slippers remaine The third body was that of Samue' vens’ graveyard. His coffin was intact and his clothing just as it was {when we buried him ten years be fore. the skeleton, however. The clothing enveloped only ‘most prominent citizens of this | county. The destruction of his prop-| |the same place had entirely disap rerty has completely prostrated him peared; only the bottom of the coffin | and his condition ie regarded as ser He is not aware that he bad : | account for this outrage. | | Furk, who was buried at the Ste-; There is as yetno clue to the incen- | , diaries, but it is believed a more | than one person was engaged in it | as the two fires were 50 ‘close to-j gether. If they should be captured j summary vengence wi ve meted out to them. | chicken. I have advised several of my friends Sey ae ee have ‘say that done them good.” £ TEPHES McIntime, Weston, Hood’s Pills cure liver ills, constipation, Diliousness. jaundice, sick headache, indigestion. Sheriff's Sale. Oniy his skeleton i Bosrd of Agriculture and one of the } Sin Bari sad suthority of s_ transcript exe- ipt ued from the offie- of the clerk cireuit court of Bates county, Siesoust, ae — Haff, I hare levied and i: Ls all the right. title interest « Ciaim of in and to i? : bed the following deseri real estate situated in Bates county, M: a to-wit: The weet twenty-three acres sttbe ogee sears oly tn, agetear i ion No. 23, townshi: itin Bates county, Mo Twill on? 1 TAnBe Friday, March 2. 1894. 16-45 SE aN er reat eNO ee

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