The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 10, 1894, Page 8

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senciianSmmwENone pauenecnmaeen reer anne anisiaaguactuaa emia: scanisane — With ball bearing WHITELY Our carriage room, up stairs, is now filled with a very choice line of Top Buggies, Spring Wagons, Road Wagons and Carts, Hay Rakes and Loaders, Road Piows, Pumps, Fel GROCERIES AT bea" Highest market price DEACON BROS. & CO. THE NEW LIGHT DEERING BINDER, With ball bearing, lightest running ever made, only 1,000 pounds, THE NEW LIGHT DEERING MOWER. i | Also the Celebrated MOWER. d and Garden Seeds, &c. LOWEST PRICES paid for Farm Produce. Jim Shubert, Bob Stubblefield and others took a pack of hounds to Pleasant Gap township yesterday for a few days sport running foxes Rheumatism racks the system like a thumbscrew. It retreats betore the power of Hood's Sarsaparille, which purifies the blood. Miss Pauline Cranmer is a candi date for the office of county clerk over in Cooper county and she runs an announcement in the county pa pers just like her masculine rivals Farmers, try Bates County Ele vator Co’s flour. High Patent $1.70 per 100 pounds, Jersey Cream $1.50, White Star $1.30—single sack at same rates at depot, Butler, Mo. Jas. Bishop, a prominent farmer of Cedar county committed suicide the other day by hanging himself in his barn. He was 65 years of age and left a family of grown children. Smallpox is spreading in Iowa. The other day a boy at Clintov, Iowa attended a circus and during the performance was overcome by the disease and had to be carried out. Hundreds were exposed and the er- tire town is agitated over the mat- ter. As the strength of the building depends upon the solidity of 1ts foundation, so health depends upen the condition ofthe blood. To expel impurities and cause the vital fluid to become vigorous and life giving, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is the most pow erful and effective medicine in use. As Judge Fix declines to stand for reelection, the name of Wm. Kemper has been suggested as a suitable person to fill the place. Mr. Kemper is one of the best and most reliable men in Bates county, a thor- ough business man and he would fill the position with credit. township for the past fourteen years. feet, a muzzle on his bill, a cap on He has held the office of collector of his | For Sate on trape. One good threshing machine with saw mill at tachment. 14 horse power engine. Address, Cas La¥oiiert, *25.6t Butler, Mo. The Rockville Reflex turned its first mile stone last week The Reflex is satified with i'ts years work and the Times wishes it renewed prosperity on its second mile. The Bates County Elevator Co.,at | depot, Butler, sells flour and all j kinds of feed. Every pound of flour fully war:anted. 25-1. One of our exchanges hums in solemn prose:' “The Coxey heel is on thy shore, Maryland, my Mary- land, a little blistered, stiff and sore, Maryland, my Maryland. There’s cheese and hard tack still in store, and it will not be long before you'll seo the chumps iv Baltiwore, Mary- land, my Maryland.” C. P. Catron & Co. will buy court | cost and loan money in small amounts on good chattel securities. 12 tf. Tae work of setting the mammoth new engine at Power Bros. flouring will was completed Thursday even } ing, the boiler filled with water and the engine started. Everything con nected with the machinery worked | with percisiou and Friday the burrs were started abuzzing again after a silence of nearly three weeks. The mill had run completely out of flour during the shut down, and it will take several days to catch up When Baby was sick, we gave her Castors. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria When she had Children, she gave them Castoris the coal miners at Lewis Station and Calhoun, Henry county, to lay down |their picks and walk out. } and no grievances jless importance. |of George Newberry, ab: | big apple trees in the The walking delegate has induced! These] ,. : : i : A large rooster with socks on his | men hada good job, steady work | dissolution which must take place in A large number | his head and a card tied to his neck, | opposed striking but the majority | A Cyclone Visits East Bates and De- { stroys Property. | From P. M. Lane, of Spruce | township, who was in the city Mon | day we learn that a small-sized cy- clone visited the eastern part of tie country Saturday and did consider- | able damage. On the farm of ex , sheriff J. R. Simpson, a tenement | house and barn was demelished and his orchard was pretty badly torn, up, besides doing other damage of | At the residence | it twenty 1ard were taken up by the roots and carried | some distance and dropped in a field on the farm of John Harsha A by the twister and pieces In the same neighborhood a house occupied by Eldridge Kash was badly damaged by being moved from its foundation, the L part of the building being turned completely around and the roof carried away One of the freaks of the storm at Mr Newberry's was lifting a pig out of @ pen and carrying it away. Mr. Lane said he never saw it rain harder than it did at his place, the corn fields were a sheet of water and the land was damaged consider- bly by washing ditches through it. As far as he knew no one was hurt by the cyclone; it was a small affair and seemed to strike the ground and bound again, jumping perhaps a quarter to a half mile before reach ing the earth again. smashed to The candidates for the different county offices are bustling. Mrs. J. R. Davis, who has been} spending the past two weeks in Kansas City visiting relatives, re- turned home Tuesday. | John T. Fowler, living four miles south of Sedalia had the palm of his hand torn out by arabid dog Friday. The dog bit several head of cattle before it was killed. The city souncil passed an ordi nance, at its meeting lust week, to restrain chickens from running at large. We understand the mayor vetoed the ordinauce. Mrs. Lease, of Kansas fame, will lecture in Butler, Friday night May 18th, probably at the Opera House. Full particulars later aud by hand bill, County Court met Monday in regular session and transacted a large amount of business. Among which was the drawing of the petit jury for the June term of circuit court. The many friends of Frank M. Trimble, extreasurer of this county, will regret to learn that he lies at his home on north Main street in | this city, at death’s door. His ail ment is consumption. He has been bedfast for several mouths and has become so weak and emaciated that he can scarcely move his hand or speak above a whisper. His son, Jesse, who arrived from West Plains last week, being sent for, informs us ibat his father’s condition has passed beyond medical aid and the family have prepared themselves for the a very short time. The dispatches say a rain and hail majestically marched up and down | ruled and the strike was ordered. North Main street Saturday in defi | after accomplishing his purpose the ance of the pound master, city at | walking delegate left for Browning torney, marshal, town council | ton to induce the miners at that place and the ordinance restraining his | to follow. lordship from exercising the rights of an American citizen. The Coxey movement originated jin the republican states of Ohio, When the sexton entered the cem- | Pennsylvania, Oregon and Wyoming. | etery Friday morning at Marshal | These states gave Harrison a major town, Iowa, he discoverd the dead | ity in 1888. The legislation of the body of W. C. Wallace lying on the | republican party has caused the hard grave of his departed sweetheart, | times and it was right and proper Miss Mamie Bidford, who died | that the uprising of Coxeyism should about two months ago. Wallace had | be organized in the protected repub- taken poison and died with his face | lican states. buried in the fresh earth that cover | z Es ae ‘, ed the form of the girl. He left a!. Parts of Illinois and Towa suffered letter saying he took his life through | 8 Saturday's storm which from the grief and financial troubles. dispatches in the papers seems to have been general over the country The Bates County Elevator Co.,at | At Miami Station Iowa, over a doz- depot, Butler, are agents for the en houses were blown down, one celebrated McCormick Steel Binders | woman was killed by a hailstone and| and mowers which took art of the | the damage to the growing crops medals at the World's Fair on bind | and fruit will be great. ers and mowers. They also carry a' ces oe full line of farm machinery. road | wagons, buggies, spring and farm ; Children Cry for wagons and binding twine. Agents; Pitcher’s Castoria. Bates Co. for Russell & Co,'sThresh- | Children Cry for ing Machinery. 251m. | o: = Pitcher’s Castoria. R. 8. Catron insures growing | Children Cry for cops against hail, also writes fire and tornado insurance. 413 tf, Pitcher’s Castoria. Awarded Highest Honors World’s Fair, U' PRICE'S (ie DsPowder ‘The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia; No Alum, Used in Millions of Homes—4o Years the Standard | storm Saturday did damage to the jamount of $100,00 in Iowa City, | Iowa. The storm came up late in the | jeveniug, after a sultry day. and the} ; down pour of water aud ice was the j|worst the citizens ever witnessed ‘Ice fell in chunks, some of the stones | measuring 8 inches in circumference, | jand in a moment every pane of glass jin the city that faced the west and jmany that faced south, including most of the big plate glass windows in the stores were smashed. The} jhail stenes went through the tin |roofs of the business houses and a torrent of water poured through the holes made and stocks of goods were ruined by the water It was farmer's | day in town and hundred of wagons and carriages stood on the street. | When the hail stones began to fall! the horses broke loose and vehicles | }went flying in every direction caus | ing the wildest excitement in the town. The tops and beds of buggies | and carriages not under shelter were | literally ruined by the falling ice. | The trees. full of blossom were strip- ped bare and no hopes is left for | fruit. | | | | | | | | i | | | Hood's Cures. In saying that Hood’s Sareaparilla | cures, its proprietors make no idle or extravagant claim The adver-| |tising of Hood's Sarsaparilla is al | ways within the bounds of reason. | because it is true; it always appeals | to the sober, common sense of think- ing people, and it is always fully | substantiated by endorsements, | { which in the financial world, would} |be accepted without a moment's ‘hesitation. Read the testimonials published in behalf of Heod’s Sar- | Saparilla, all from reliable, grateful jpeople. They tell thestory. Hood's; Sarsaparilla cures. j If you have a farm to offer cheap | see A. S. Millhorn, the rustling | side land agent. 24-tf new buggy at Newberry’s balonging | ¢ jto Robt. Ewing was also taken up Just In CREPE EOF WAH GOOD MOIRE POLKA DOTTED SWISSES FIGURED DIMITIES IN STRIPES, TWO TONED EFFECTS. CHUSANG PONGEES AND THIBET GLOTH IN BOTH LIGHT AND DARK COLORS. See the new line which we will take great pleas- ure in showing you. Sam Levy & Co. C. R. Walters, the talented editor | of the Rich Hill Review, spent Tuesday afternoon at the hub, and! gave the booming Times a social call. Senator Newberry was in the city | Tuesday. He said the little cyclone which passed through that part of | the county Saturday just about) ruined the orchard of his son George. | Trees a foot through were snapped | off like pipe stems. Miles Wade and his two daughters | arrested at their home near the de- | pot on a warrant charging them with disturbing the peace of the Try Bates County Elevator Co’s | flour—it is fully warranted. High | Patent 8dc, Jersey Cream 75e and | White Star 65c per sack 25 1t. There will be eleyen Sunday | school conventions held in this cour- ty soon tbat will be the most | important of any held for some | time. Mr. A. E. Waguer, our state | vice-president, will be present at all | these meetings. Mr. W. is the right | man for aS. nvention; he is an, orator, a first class Bible teacher Feed Store and Flour Depot . J. W. Ennis, agent, has opened a | new feed store and flour depot in the building in the rear of the Bates county National Bank and will keep a full supply of flour, meal, corn, oate hay, bran, shipstuff, chopped feed ete. Call and see him. 25-tf Still at The Front. When you are in Pleasant Hill and want a first class meal call at Beyer’s and will introduce this feature atall | Bakery, on First street, near the the meetings. These coryentions will be in session from 10am. ‘till Pleasant Hill Banking Co.'s Bank. The oldest and best restaurant in veighborbood, had their trial Mon-, day before Squire Wright and were discharged. Henry White and Chas. Radford who are in St. Louis to attend the! trial of the post office burglar as | witnesses, walked into the jail in that eity Monday and p ively identitied the prisoner as the uan they saw in| Butler, associating with Franklin and Davis a day or two previous to the robbery. There were upwards of a bundred prisoners in the jail but there was no hesitation or trouble in picking him out as the man. Mrs. Media Boyer, consort of George Boyer, departed this life at their home in Homer township on April 23rd, 1894. She was 22 years of age. and was married September 3.1893. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Eroin, of Char jlctte township She led an exem plary life was a devoted wife and her death is to be deplored by the community in which ehe lived. The Windsor rolling mills bave laid in a stock of diseased chinch bugs which they give away free to farmers who are desirous of trying | |the new method of exterminating This is commendable public spirit which the farmers will appreciate. — Clinton Democrat. Owing to the delay avd trouble in securing bugs from Columbia, we believe a proposition of the county court to send a man to Columbia at public expense to learn the art of in- occulating bugs and then establish a diseased bug depot in this city would meet with the hearty approval of the farming community. Ifa plan of this kind were adopted it would give farmers desiring to try the experiment a better opportunity | to thoroughly test the matter and in case it proved a success the outlay would be as nothing compared with | the saving to the county in the way i of crops. dp. m at the following time and placer: Altona, May 28; Spruce, 29; Pleasant Gap, 30; Prairie City, 31; Rich Hill, June 1; Hume, 2; F 3; Virgi 4: Amsterdam 5; Adrian, 6; Butler, June 7 and Sth the annual county convention At this latter meeting J. W. Semelroth, our state president, wil! also be present. This is a privilege, having both these gifted men with us, accorded few places, and no S. S_ worker ought to deny himself the privilege of being present A. H. Curver, Secretary. AYERS A Bright Lad rig ad, Ten years of age. but who declines to give his name to the public, makes this authorized, confidential statement to us: I was one ye mption. gathering formed and I hurt my finger and < z Thad to take lots of medicine, but nothing has done me so much good as Ayer’s Sarsapa- Tilla. It has made me well and strong.”— T. D. M., Noreatur, Kans. AYER’S Sarsaparilila Prepared by Dr. J.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Cures others, will cure you —_— the city. Polite attention towards patrons and prices reasonable. Also bread of the finest quality made of a Foster, | brand of flour which has acquired a national reputation, in quantities to | suit purchasers. Wx. Beyer, : 23 3m. Proprietor. WANTED TO Exchange for Farm: | $15,000 stoek of lumber and hard- | Ware, situated in i Minois town doing good buisness, want good farm. | $16,000 stock fof gents furnishing goods in good Iilinois town of 30,- | 000. Want good farm. ‘ $13,000 general stock, residence and j store building $6,000. Largest and | best store west of Salina-Railroad center. Want good farm. $35,0000 stock $16,000 is in groceries | and provisions, ballance dry goods, | shoes, and clothing, doing good busi- ness of $10,000 a month, no competi- tion. Want $25,000; in good improv- (ed farms or rental property and $8,- | 000 to $10,000 cach. é $15,000 general stock, well situated, doing a large business. Want good farm and three or four thousand dol- lars cash. $5,000 general stock. Want good farm in eastern Kansas at its value. Noinflation. 3,000 atock of hardware and $2,500 stone building and will put in from 31,000 to $5,000 in good notes, due September 1, 1804. Want good farm. $4,000 general stock want good farm and 21,000 cash. Will assume stuai] encumberance. $2,600 hardware for good farm. 00 general stock and £4,000 od north Missuoritown good farm. dry goods, want good farm 000. Will assume 335,000. _ G.W, GLARDY, BUTLER MISSOURL. ee it ——-_ {

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