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~The Butler Weekly Cimes. , VOL. XVI. ; BUTLER, MISSOURI, THURSDAY APRIL 26, 1894. Missouri State Bank OF BUTLER, MO. | $110,000. NO 23 Cash Capital. $50,000.00 COUNTY DEPOSTORY OF BATES CO. OSCAR REEDER ..... : R. J. HURLEY A BE E. D. KIPP........ AWFUL WORK OF A CYCLONE. - = ar oe a | BRIGHT’S DISEASE OF KIDNEYS. | | One of the Disguised Forms of Chronic Several Persons Killed and Many | Uataczh: i Woundei by the Twister in Mr. J Brake. Petrolea,Ont ,writes: Texas Connty.- Four years ago [had a severe attack of Bright's disease which brought} me 80 low my doctor said that noth ing more could be done for me. When one of your lectures on the above disease was read to me I took Peru na and Man a-lin, and found it acted just as represented. In throe months I was a well man, and have continued well ever since. Syuproms—Dull pain in the back; CAPITAL, West Piaius,Mo, April 23.—Later jreports from the cyclone which struck Summerville aud its vicinity On the Sih have just been received. The evclone di! not d+ much dam age tutie tos, but spread death, ruin and desodition in its) path in the courtry Vu Keel’s house was blown away ai! ss wife aud baby killed and twe childven fatally io Transacts a general banking business. We solicit the accounts of far- mers, merchants and the public generally, promising a safe depository for all funds committed to our charge. We are prepared to extend liberal ac- commodation in the way of loans to our customers. Funds always on hand to loan on real estate at lowest rates, allowing borrowers to pay part or all at any time and stop interest. sc eesees seeee President .-lst Vice-President 2d Vice-Preaident veces soeee Cashier DIRECTORS. Or. T. C., Boulware Booker Powell * Frank M Voris , : : : Be ee ari tai Receives Deposits subject to check, Lones Money, issues Drafts and Hl Dutcher HH Piggott HC Wyatt jured Their hired git] is supposed | S°@04Y, Bgh-colore ine, contain-| transacts a general Banking business. Your patronage respectfully JR Jenkins rs Weight Wm E Walton to be fatally irjued, and a hired | iPé albumen and various sediments; Solicited. e re = : - haud named Matsinger was killed, |2+U8e® cpa [sometimes vomiting, D. N. Thompson 8 Sica) cee E. Shutt R. J. Hurley OTHER S'TOCKHOLDERS, his throat being cut and wind pipe puffiness of the face and feet; dropsy Jobn Steele h aititeox, Clare is. ‘ x. A. Eennett. va pate 7 ‘ J. K ier NOM ey. { E Bartlett Frank Deerweater Robert McCracken Dr{W E Tucker me ide ti of the legs; shortness of breath and a oe . Rosier. Marrero: ies pA DeArmond a VOwen ME tanner Se general _eeie pallor and dryness wae — = Loju Brown John Evans wen 1 F g ; i GA Gerathers Ga Bbreaman Gharles Pharis Wm Wale” — ee ee of the skin; chilly feelicgs, alternat | fore he was hanged and he confess-| | One Louisinna planter receiv. d HB Chelf G B Hickman JK Rosier GP Wyatt oli i ed to her, but said the others had | $468,900 in sugar bounty, while Robert clase Bemustbory i, BStarke. MorWener A stick penetrated Mra. Keel's — — = Bae f|the money He would have told sie received auma siete fr = CP &8LColeman' © H Morrison Clem Slayback Oscar Reeder ji REATMENT.—A tablespoonful o: : H roc ee ee TRDavie ~~ DrW D Hannah Jobn H Sullene. body and pivned her to the ground. { i ea Summit Items. Winter-like' weather prevails, yet the corn planters go. Such weather however, is not the best for an in- crease of the little pests, chintz bugs. Mr. S H Smiser and wife, A W Stearns and wife were attending preaching at Spruce Sunday. Township board meets May 12, to attend to some road business; anyone interested should bear in mind the date. Summit has a good and economical board, if its political complexion is not entirely democratic. Some good sales of cattle have been made the past week. Better watch a leetle out, boys, and not try fora good thing. Might be plenty of cattle for the fist half of eink Yes, this is what they said, hogs will go to 6cte. Don’t build too high on it, though. Will not that postoffice, store, &., make the Shawneeites feel proud? Doe, is it a sure go? The worthless conglomeration of humanity who tore down a certain bill, posted on a public corner in this township, is getting too stale to enjoy ood health much longer. Can anyone tell why the candidates ol pase north, south, east and west of Summit? No democrat need: re- ply. What a far-away look that promi- nent republican took on, after the democratic convention adjourned last Monday, when told that no res- olutions were presented indorsing or denouncing the administration. He certainly did not give us credit of ordinary sense in politics. The boys are not napping so early in the sea- son, as you may find out later. Will Atkinson is rustling now for a public road, and, judging from the progress he is making, will not be long in getting one. He needs the road very much, and no good citizen will try to deny him its privilege when all whose land it touches have signi- fied their willingness by signing the petition, Mr. Amma Smiser has returned from school at Warrensburg to rest his eyes, which were weakened slightly by a spell of measles. He has made good progress in herstudies and it is regretted by his parents and | friends that such course is necessary. WEuNS. Maysburg is wide awake and fullof business. | Dr. Sherman Miller of Henry coun- | ty has located in Maysburg perman- ently and is having a good practice. He is a single man and says he don’t intend to get married until a bill for free coinage of silver is passed by congress and signed by Cleveland. Many people in the vicinity of Maysburg are sick with mumps at this writing. Thomas Buck sold his hogs for $4.- 60. He sold his cattle for $3.00 and 4. 'T. Pelly is feeding 40 head of cat- tle and 20 head of hogs which will be | ready for market about the 10th of | May. : A majority of the farmers are about done planting corn, some planted | before the cold snap is up, and look- | ing fine. Many farmers have sowed their oats | over the second time on account of the first sowing being killed by the cold weather. Some will plant their | vats ground in corn. | M.S. Thompson is planting a large | corn crop. i J. R. Pfost is preparing to plant a/ large coin crop. He is one of the in- dustrious farmers of this seeticn. } Wheat in this section is looking fine and promises to yield well. If the‘ farmers of this, Mingo township, { don't raise good crops it will not ve their fault. ** | Virginia Items. Mr. Christopher Corlett was down on the river and had a chat with the widow Gentry. There will be a meeting at Olive Branch school house, 3 miles north- east of Virginia, for the purpose of organizing a Sunday School the first Sunday in May at 3 o’clock. Come out and lend a nelping hand. The supper at Hot Water school house was no failure. We wonder which is ahead, John Williams or Morton Jenkins, as Mor- ton takes her out and John takes her home. Cole Hensley shipped stock Monday The directors of Hot Water district are complaining considerably about their teacher who was employed to teach their school for three months, but is likely to consume one month in instructing the children in theatrical performances. Charley Hensley found the ramrod of his gun that he shot away last winter. C. H. Morrison says that when a man loses on a cattle shipment the boys invariably call him ‘‘Short” but he wishes to know why all the boys in western Bates and eastern Kensas call Cole Hensley ‘‘Short” since his late visit to the City. The was to be debate on banks and liquor traffic at Nestlerode school house last Saturday night was a fail- ure. The bank opposer did not ap- pear from some cause but G. W. Park and Joe Whintiery were there ready for the fight. Morton says he does not admire the Keeley arrangement as he does the Kelly. G. W. Park will leave this week for Caldwell Co., Mo., to spend a few days with his brother, Abe Park, who has been sick all winter. Abe Park moved from here two years ago to Kidder, Caldwell Co., Mo. Prohibition Park is now making arrangements for a 4th of July picnic and medal contest at Virginia. Mr. Jas. Whinnery’s baby turned over a teapot of boiling tea and scald- ed itself severely from the shoulders down. The doctor was called and relieved the little sufferer. Mr. Pettypool got word from the doctors at Nevada to come and get his wife, as she is now entirely cured. Dr. J. J. M, says the health is good in this neck of the woods. Mr. Owens, candidate for treasurer, was around hunting out the demo- erats. Mr. O. has the appearance of a fine man. J. W. Park shipped a car load of hogs and cattle from Amoret to K.C., Monday. Joe T. Whinnery is laid up with a} bad arm, caused by sticking a hedge thorn in his arm and he is having a serious time with it. It has run into blood poisoning. John W. Park makes his 15 cents if it’s by the hauling of dead hogs or digging holes to put them in. Sd Dudley and Miss Diua Newkirk has gone to the Nation on a visit. Mrs. Newkirk and Carr Dudley will soon follow. : Miss Mary Rapp and Miss Minnie Herrell went down on the excursion Friday from Amsterdam to the end of the road. They report an enjoy- able time. N. M. NESTLERODE. The Evolution Of medicinal agents is gradually rel egating the oldtime herbs, pills, draughts and vegetable extracts to the rear and bringing into general j use the pleasant and effective liquid | laxative, Syrup of Figs. To get the true remedy see that it is manufac- tured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale by all leading druggists. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov’t Report Royal Baki Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE John McCaskill’s house was blown away, leaving the family sitting on house fell before the cyclone, and the family were more or less hurt. The houses of William Dyer and George Kirkman also went down. Dyer was wounded badly, but Kirkman escaped injury. The damage to the country can not be estimated. Great excitement prevails among the people in and around Summerville. Men worked all wednesday night taking care of the dead, looking after the wounded and procuring bomes for the home- less. Since the cyclone the doctors have been busy attending to the wounded, of which there are many. INCUME TAX QUESTION. Champions of the Tariff Bill May Con- sent te Strike It Out. Washington, D.C., April 24 —The Democratic Senators continued their conferences today with a view to reaching an agreement upon the tar- iff bill whereby it can be so amended as to make sure of the selid Demo- cratic vote iu the Senate. The friends of the bill feel that it is important to have the measure receive the full party vote, and they also want the hearty support of the entire party in having it pastas speedily as possible. of the fall campaign. In order to know what to do, they have made a canvass 0° the dissatisfied Senators and they have arrived at the facts and are now prepared to make the changes which will accomplish the purpose they have in mind. Among the Senators consulted were Messrs. Hill, Murphy, Smith, Gorman, Gibson and Brice. They jfind these six to be opposed to the income tax and to the present sugar duty They will probably make one or two exceptions in granting the demands of the discontented Sena- tors. They ask, for instance, that the income tax be stricken out en- tirely. This request will hardly be conceded, but this part of the bill will be materially modified. Not only wil the committee be found willing to reduce the limit of income to be taxed and the rate of taxation, but they will also, more than likely, the tax shall cease to be imposed This they will be willing to do on the test would prove the popularity or unpopularity of the tax, and they jthe voters and of Congress. ithe striking out of this paragraph. | Children Cry for | Pitcher’s Castoria. | Children Cry for | Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for [Pitchers Castoria. the floor uninjured. Frank Parrott’s destructive They wish to get it out of the way) be agreeable to fixing a time when the theory that in afew years the think if it should prove popular it can be continued at the pleasure of It is} not probable now, however, that the | | champions of the bill will consent to Pa rn na should be taken before each meal, between meals,and at bedtime, and enough Man alin at night to produce one natural action of the bowels each day. When the disease is of long standing heated Pe-ru-na should be applied to the back in ad- dition to the above treatment, and the diet consist principally of milk and dry toast. Avoid liquors and tobacco. Send for free copy of Family Phy sician No. 2. Address The Pe ru ra Drug Manufacturing Company, Col umbus, Ohio. SWIFT REVENGE THIS. Angry Kansas Miners Quickly Pan- ish a Negro Murderer. Weir City, Kav., April 23.—Asa result of the killing of a white men by three negroes near here last nigkt and judge Lynch held court this morning. The murdered man was a Frenchman, Alfred Haimont. The negro lynched for his murder was Jeff Tuggle. It seems that yesterday three ne groes went to Haimont’s house two and one half miles north of Weir City, in Crawford county, and asked him to charge a bill. He did so, getting the money from a sewing machine drawer. Last night about 11 o'clock the negroes returned and knocked at the door. Haimont. see- ing who it was, slammed the door in their faces and refused them admit tance. They then broke in the door anda fight ensued, one of the blacks hav a pistol and the others knives. Haimont was shot in the chin, the ball glancing downward and lodging | below the collar-bone. The other then stabbed him several times and he ran out toward a neighbor's house, about seventy yards distant pursued, by two of the negroes, while the third remained in the house. He dropped dead at his neighbor's door. The three negroes then seized Haimont’s baby and held it up by the heels, threatening to kill it if the mother did not give up the money. She gave them the keys to the sewing machine, and after secur. ing the money, about $80, they left the house. One of them, Jeff Tug gle, was tracked to his home in Weir City this morning, arrested and turned over to the deputy sheriff of Crawford county, who took him to South Cherokee, where he arrived about ten o'clock. A crowd of miners, accompanied by Mrs. Haimont, met the officer, and the latter, upon seeing the pris- oner, immediately identified him and pleaded and fought with the officers | who had him in charge for an oppor-/ tunity to avenge her husband's death | and it was with difficulty that she | | was prevented from assaulting him. He was then taken to a justice's | | office, when a mob, mostly trom) | Weir City, gatbered, and the officers | | being unable to protect him, told | ‘him torun for his life. The mob over | dered impervi their names but the mob didu't give | $50.000 to 302,200. him time. An inquest has just been held and a sealed verdict rendered. Trouble 1s anticipated to-morrow between ne- gro and white miners. Suffering Among Settlers. Denver, Col , April 22 —The com mittee appointed by the county commissioners to investigate the re- ports of suffering among the poor scttlers in the eastern part of the State bas returned. By reaeon of the utter failure of last year's crors the ranchers have suffered greatly during the winter because of their inability to secure fuel and other ne- cessities. A majority of these people are Danes and Russians, and have gone through the winter using buf- falo chips for fuel and with almost nothing to eat, roasted wheat for coffee, bare footed and almost naked. The committee distributed food, clothing and seed among them. and will send other supplies when neces- sary. This condition of affairs ap- plies only to a limited section of country along the Kansas line. Both Dying. Fayetteville, Ark. April 20.—J. J. Morgan and John Mason, two mer chants of Harris, seven miles east of here, had a shooting affray last bight. The men exchanged more than a dozen shots at each other and this morning both are dying. Business rivalry brought about the trouble. Some time ago the store of Mason was burned and he and his friends are said to have be lieved that Morgan caused the fire. Since then the animosity has been kept kindled to a white heat. ~~ Strunz Up. New Orleans, La., April 23.—Sam Slaughter, Tom Claxton and Dave Hawkins, the three negroes confined in jail at Taliulah charged with being | members of the party which shot and killed Manager Boyce on Friday last, were taken from their cells by a mob last night and hanged to the banis- ters of the Courthouse. Pomp Clayton, the ringleader of the negro band,and four accomplices are in the swamps north of the rail road, between Milliken’s Bend road and the river. prosecuting the search and the sus pected men cannot escape will probably be lynched as svon as they are caught. THE RACE 1s wow health and the system ren- sl are ous to disease when the blood and the liver active. For the liver tinel which permits or forbids the disease to enter the circulation of T con; |, torpid and dis- ‘oa. congested, ¥ ag 1 weighed } before taken sick, and was Teduced to ‘pound& in sixty time. For any one fering witb | caught bim and strung him up to a} tree on the Malloy farm near Chero- | spot just be-| trouble as I was, I ad } \ A hundred men are vigorously | Tf this McKirn- Isyism could be extended to planters of sweet potatoes it would be just as fair. There is a good deal of sug-x in the sweet potato.—P D. Tortured Disfigured Humiliated By unsightly skin and blood dis- eases. Is there hope of cure? CUTICURA RESOLVENT ; Is the greatest of skin purifiers, As well as blood purifiers. Because of its peculiar action on the PORES, It is successful in curing = Torturing, disfiguring, humiliating humors, When the usual remedies and even The best physicians fail. — vegetable, innocent, and effective, It especially appeals to those who fered long and hopeles Suffered long and. hopelessly. It acts upon the liver, kidneys, and bowels as well as upon the skin and blood. Its use at this season Insures a clear skin and pure blood, As well as sound bodily health. It is the only Purifier acting on the Skin and Blood at the same time. Bold throughout the world. Price, Curicuma, B0c.; Soar, 2ic.; RESOLVENT, $1. PotTeR Dave 4ND CHEM. CorpP., Sole Proprictors, Boston. “ How to Cure Skin and Blood Humors,” free, &e-Facial Blemishes, falling hair and sim- ple baby rashes prevented by Cuticura Soap. —<—$ $< If tired, aching, nervous mothers knew the comfort, strength, and vitality in Cuticara Plasters, they would never be without them. Trustee’s Sale. Whereas Laura EK Lewia. a single woman, b; her deed of trust dated ary 29, 1892, anc recorded in the recorder’s office within and for Rates county, Missouri. in book No. 107 page 356 conveyed to the undersigned trne- tee the following described real estate lying and being situate in the county of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit: The urdivided one-third interest of in and to the northwest quarter of section seventeep (17) in township thirty-nine (39) of range thirty- three (33; whieh conveyance was made in trust to secure the ——- of one certam note fully described in said deed of trust; and whereas,detault has been made in the payment. of the annual interest on said note which de- fault according to the conditions of said note Tenders the whole of said note due and paya- | ble at once. Now therefore at the request of the legai holder of said note and pur- euant to the conditions of said deed of trust. I will proceed to sell the above described prem- ises at public vendue, to the highest bidder for cash, atthe east front door of the coart honee in'the city of Butler, county of Bates and state of Missouri, on Friday, May 18tb, 1894, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore | noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that They | | dav, for the purposes of satisfying said debt, interest and coste. C. A. ALLEN 23-46 Trustee | | i Trustee’s Sale. | Whereas T T Eyeman snd Cstherise Eyeman | his wife, by their deed of trust dated | April. 2nd, 1892, and recorded in the | Tecorder’s office within and for Bates | county, Missouri, in book No. 16; page 440 con- | veyed to the undersigned trustee the follows | ing aescribed real estate lying and being sitw- | ated in the county of Bates and state of Mis- souri, te-wit: Lo: one (ijand thesouth half of let two () of the southwest quarter of section thirty (%' and the southwest quarter of the southesss quarter of section thirty (30) sll in tewnabip forty-two (42) of range thirty-one (31) contain- ing in all 172 acres more or lese which convey- ance was made in trust tosecure the psyment of three certain notes fully descri in sid deed of trust; ana whereas defsuit has been | madeinthe payment of two said notes mow | past due sad unpsid, Now therefore, at the re- ; quest of the legsl holder of said notes i i an t to the Soe = — I jeabove descri! pomiaes je vendue to the highest bidder for cash st the east front door of the court house, in the city of Butler, county of Bates and state of Mis— souri, on Friday May 18th, 1894, the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- See five o’clock in the alternoon of that dsy, for the purposes of said deb:, interest and costs. 45 “ FRANK ALLES, Trastes.