The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 17, 1895, Page 5

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Still continues of any winter at the uniform Cheap suits in proportion. and with such success that we will be nearer this season than ever before extraordinary inducements we are offering OUR CUT PRICE SALE but that’s hardly surprising considering the Remember we weight suit in our honse for only $13.95. price of None reserved—they all go—and there are a few worth as high as $2? in the lot, and whole stacks of $18 and § On our $995 table you'll find $12:50, S12 > and even $18 values—all going $20 values. $3.35 Come and see these goods. W give you choice out of goods oull scarcely 1 SNAP OP Those XTRA VALUES we are Offering in mens winter suits. They are worth from $3 to $5 more than we are selling them at in THIS SALE. A TW Childrens overcoats lett You can buy at cost: McKIBBENS. | Saturday would have been a most , exerllent day to have tested i muscle of pile the tran Give thei | exercise, a little out door they will feel better for it. The many friends of Miss Bell | McClements in this city will be sor- [ty to learn that while out skating the | [ os on the rock Get your window glass at D. W. RUMMONDS. Serious Charge. M.D Bradley, living near Papin- ville,was tried before Squire Herschi, one day last week on the serious charge of attempting to kill his wife. The prisoner plead guilty to resist such values |near Adrain the other day she had | the charge, and was bouud over by | the misfortune to fall on the ice and | the justice in a bond of $500. Be- | break the large bone of one of her} ing unable to find bondsmen he was jlegs. The break is below the knee! sent to jail., At the time of his at- jong will lay her up for some time. | tack on his wife it is said Bradley : | Miss Fannie Woolery we understand | was under the influence of liquor ~ | will finish the term of school being | 89d was ouly prevented from killing Boys and Childrens suits at cut prices—all boys aud childrens overcoats at cost. Winter underwear at cost. Wool over- shirts and wool socks at Special Prices. Don't fail to see us before buying—Will show you clothing at lower prices than you ever saw before. Py Cie m "I Bll ; iD ii BUTT ER WEEKLY TIMES LOCAL ITEMS The banks the hardest. Deacon Bros. & Co, have a novel ty in their show window. Mrs. Geo. Jones of Wichita, Kan- sas is visiting Mrs. W. S. Arnold The estate of the late Jay Gould has been appraised at $80,934,580 79. The law prohibiting the killing of quail out of season went into effect Jan. 1st. The Review says all the Rich Hill Coal Co's. mines are running for the ‘<tirst time in two years. , tives and friends in the city. ~ Peora, Virginia, Decatur and Jack- sonville, Ills., people have contribu ted liberally to the Nebraska suffer- ers. The West Virginia republicans | will make a fatal mistake in electing ( ‘Steve Elkins to the U. S. Senate. Cattle are reported to be dying near Blairstown, Henry county, with a strange disease which has become | epidemic. Kansas now has a republican gov- ernor. Governor Morrill took the oath and was inducted into office | 8 Monday. j a Henry Snyder was convicted in the justice court at Kansas City Monday,and sent to jail for one year for stealing a pin. The pin was a diamond though. South Dakota's treasurer, Mr. Taylor has absconded and $370,000 of the state’s money went with him. | At least our good republican friend Taylor has gone and so has the money. The Ties congratulates W. E. Welch, of the Adrian schools, on hie ointment as one of the vice pres. idents pf the Southwest Missouri . Teachers Association which meets * ab Carthoge next year. occupation tax strikes the Charley Johnson and wife, of | Warrensburg, Mo., are visiting rela | Ice being put up off the lake is about 6 inches thick. W. W. Graves went to Jefferson City Monday to look after a case in the supreme court. Dr. Choate, Bates county's repre- sentative was honored with an ap- pointment on two committees, that of roads and highways and township organization. | Walter Crabtree,charged with kil ing John Leach at Deepwater. has been granted a change of venue from Henry county, and he will be tried at Osceola, Mo. Silas Levy left Monday for St. Louis to attend the funeral of Judge Sam‘! Levy’s brother. The deceased | had been afflicted with consumption and has been sick for some time. Quite alot of supplies for the Nebraska suffers, has been left with the mayor, and will be shipped this week. Among the donations is sev- eral thousand pounds of flour. A snow fall of froma foot to 15 inches in Ohio, Sunday. In Cleve- land the street cars were run with great difficulty and for.a time hun- dreds of cars were stalled in the center of the city. Saturday morning the thermome- \ter registered six degrees below | zero, the lowest {notch reached this winter. The wind blew a gale and there was little business or stirring on our streets. The Nevada Mail calls on the city authorities to pass an ordinance pro- hibiting the sale of the disreputable sheet, the Sunday Sun, in that city. Such an ordinance for Butler would be the proper thing also, as the mor- | culation. Warreusburg. Mo. Jav. 12— | While searching over the personal | | effects of Adam Fickas an eccentrie | old man, who recertly died near this icity, Administrator J. W. Sudda: ath | to-day found over $4,300 in currency | and greenbacke hidden away in: cracks and crevices. The estate is one of the most valuable in the} spiey and interesting letters from | discern the difference between the! {her thie winter. county. ae aoe We see from the Windsor paper that W. R Taylor, living near that town, returning from his barn drop ped dead at his yard gate. He was 77 years of age, a pioneer citizen and | had held the office of sheriff, collect or and judge of the county court, of | Henry county. “It takes more money taan the average man thinks, to run a first-! class loca! paper, avd the friends of the Union must rally to its support, | or we will not be able to continue indefinitely,” says friend Atkeson, of the Union. The above may ac- couat for the patent inside the Union has adopted to lessen expenses. Daniel K. Swearingen, editor of | the Burlington Courier, a populist | | Parties ee Rich Hill ae | business very dull among the mer Chants owing to the slack in work at the mines. Lane & Adair, Butler's popular dry goods firm, are making a whole | sale reduction in boots aad shoes. They sre anxious to clean up for the | spring trade and are actually selling foot wear at prices in many instan | ces below cost. If you want cheap boots and shoes now is the time to make your purchases and Lane & Read their large advertisement for farther particulars in this of the Trwes. There is no humbug say. Call and see them. paper,was tried in the United States | court at Ft. Scott, Kansas, Saturday for sending obscene matter through the mails during the campaign and was sentenced to one year in the penitentiary and to pay a fine of $50. | Dispatches from London report a | terrific snow storm in England Sun- fo; g few minutes on his return he; The storm. day, the worst in years. prevailed through out the country. | In places the snow was 12 feet | and the railroad traftic delayed. | Telegraph wires were down in all | directions. Saturday Jacob Miller, a furniture polisher in Chicago. crazed by jeal- ousy, caught his young and hand-! some wife by the hair, pulled het | Saturday evening Meredith Haw- | kins, a farmer living west of town) | was in the city making some pur- | chases. jhis wagon standing in front | Sprague’s store. Leaving the team A sneak It was a} found his foot wear gone. thief had plucked them. | bold piece of business, but Butler | deep. The mail carts were stopped | ;at the “present time seems to have several of this class of citizens, er | one very mischievous and energetic i character. Farmers are daily conm- | plaining of loseing laprobes and} | other articles from their vebicles| tied up at the rack or hitched in the} i alleys. head back and cut her throat with a! razor. She expired immediately. He) then rau to the factory where he! was employed, aud shot James Olander, the foreman, in the bead, | inflicting a slight wound. | interesting communication from the | | etate capital of the workings of a' | republican legislature. She has a} position there during the comizg! 'gession and promises to let the! | Toes bear from her quite often. ; Miss Ida has had enough experience | in the newspaper business to knew | how to pick out the grain from the ebaff, and we look for some very If we were editing a paper and’ practicing law at the same time, and | 'was co try a case before justice /eourt and got unmercifully licked, | | we hardly believe we would fly to: | the columns of our paper to make! al statue is not improved by its cir- | Miss Ida L Crame writes a very | ,.,, client believe it was the stupid- jity of the court aud jury that we were pot successful. The fact is, that jacklegs ought not to practice i law, it's taking money from a client | A Little Cash Goes a Lang Way. | under false pretenses and the differ! lence between such a pretended at- , torney ‘nd the fellows who bet on! election aud then go to law to recor- | er is so slight that it is hard to, gs | Adairs store is the place to get them. |g bank and never will be It takes all | issue} about this firm, they mean what they | Among the articles bought! | was a pair of boots which he put in} of jtaught by Miss McClements. | The Tises office printed hand. | ;some wedding cards last week for | our young friend D. H. Warford. of | | Altona, who will wed Miss Mary S. | Wills, of Pilot View, Kertucky. The | | ceremony will be performed at the home of the bride, Thursday Janu ary 24th The bride is a sister of | | Mrs Jackson Haggard, of near Alto | va, and visited our county about a Mr. | Bates county's | year ago. most | loyed happiness. {the banke seem to be strictly in it, | jand because they can’t hide, dodge | or renig they are caught coming and |going- The state and county gets | | them, the city asks and gets ite |sbare, they are hit harder than any other business in the occupation tax pleasure of contributing to Uncle Sam's income tax. If there is any thing else you want in the way of taxes and don’t see it call on the banks. Some people have an idea that share-holders in banks are a lot of aristocratic blosted bondholders, who ought to pay all the taxes. Well | lows, as they are not stockholders in their time whittling goods boxes bill if they met it in the road. Poor Digestion Leads to nervousness, fretfulness, peevishness, chronic Dyspepsia and jgreat misery. is the remedy. It tones the stomach, | creates an appetite, and gives a rel ish to food. It makes pure blood | ;and gives healthy action to all the organs of the body. Take Hood's for Hood's Sarsaparilla Cures. Hood's Pills become the favorite | cathartic with every one who tries | them. 25c. Warford is one of | substantial | | young men and in his matrimonial | venture the Times wishes him unal-| | When it comes to paying taxes | jand lastly they have the extreme! |we will not dispute with these fel- | and they wouldn't know a fiye dollar Hood's Sarsaparilla | | his wife or doing her great bodily | barm by ,the timely arrival of the lady's brother A Evans, who pulled | Bradley off of his wife and prevent- ; ed hit from inflicting further injure ; to her person. As it was Mrs Brad. |ley was quite badly burt Bradley , bears the reputation of being of a viscious disposition, and when in his | cups is no respector of persons, and it is said this is not the firat time he has abused his family. Get your pictures framed at D. W. | Drummonps. i A Sbilifal Onearant Dr. Boulware was called a few days ago to operate on Huyes Brix- jner, son of Adam Brixner, living ‘four miles southwest of town. The ; young man was afilicted with ab- |dominal abscess, aud not knowing the cause of his ailment allowed the | abscess to grow until the pain be- {came unbearable and his case a |serious one The doctor applied the knife and making an incision of |about four inches tapped the cavity and relieved the young man of near- ly one gallon of pus. The discharge was so very offensive the waiters | could scarcely remain in the room and had the operation been put off a day or two longer it is highly | probable the case would have reach- ed a stage beyond medical skill. | During the summer, in plowing | with a tongueless cultivator, Hayes buckled the lines around his body, | to take up the slack and his team | becoming unmanageable, jerked and | wrevched him seyerely before extri- cated by other parties in the field, and he attributes his present trouble to this mishap. Owing to the location of the ab- scess the operation was a very dif- ficult and dangerous one and the | young man can congratulate himself | that the knife was in the hands of a skilled physician The patient is | doing well at present and the pros- ) pects for his early recovery are good. LOOK AT THE PRICES WE ARE MAKING And think if it does not justify you Mens suits om Mens overcoats from Boys suits long pants from Boys overcoats from Childrens suits from a TO BUY FROM US. ee $2 50 and up 1 75 and up 2 25 and up: 1 50 ana up 75 and up a fi All caps and Lined gloves At cost. JOE, MEYER, PEOPLES CLOTHIER.

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