The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 4, 1895, Page 3

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. PLUG argest piece of tobacco ever sold for 10 cents. The | Go Excusing Their Motives. “The annual report of Hon James R. Waddill, state superintendent of insurance,” says the Springfiil2 Democrat, “which has just been printed and given to the public, has created a flutter among a certain class of insurance men, particularly in St. Louis, who have been attack- ing it and its author through the columns of the papers. They charge him with ignorance and presump- tion—ignorance in that he does not understand the business of insur- ance, and presumption in that he should hold or publish any opinion without consulting them. It is probable that Mr. Waddill doos not understand the business to the extent and in the sensehis critics under stand it. Itis not to be de- sired that he should, or that he should act aud speak from their standpoint. This is not what was intended by the enactment creating the insurance department or by the governor in appointing Mr. Waddill superintendent of it. The stand- point of the insurance men is that of the insurance companies. The stand- point of Mr. Waddill is that of the law and public. Consequently,what his critics are pleased to call pre- sumption on his part is merely a con- scientious performance of his official duty. Mr. Waddill is therefore, happy in havirg 2 double endorsement—tbat of the reliable and intelligent com- panies which are able to see the in- terests of the public as well as their own, and the adverse criticism,which is really 2 compliment of the repre- sentatives of the selfish and unscrup- ulous companies,which see only their own interests, and fight every law and officer of the law that comes be- tween them and their victims. It does not require any expert knowledge of the insurance business to understand that stringent laws and courageous officials are required to protect the public. Not only in this State but in every western state a general cry has gone up from the people that there is a com- bine among insurance companies that rates are exhorbitantly high that the companies do not meet their obligations honestlyfand that more} staingent laws and more cour- ageous officers to enforce them are needed. It is not likely that out- side of insurance companies Mr. Waddill will lack the support he needs, and it is apparent that his critics have selected not only a bad) line of attack but a bad time to at. tack him. Rain Making a Fake. Cleveland, O., June 27.—Frank Melbourne, the erstwhile Western “rain king.” whose services were in such urgent demaod in the West two years ago,is located in this city. In speaking of his experience as a rainmaker Melbourne admitted that the whole thing was a humbug, and that he never possessed any more power in that respect than any other man. He says the American people like to be humbugged,and the great- er the fake the easier it is to work it. Melbourne made a fortune in the business and spent it like prince. you Billious, consztpated or trou- tied wah Jaundice, Sick 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, &c. If you have any of these symptoms, your liver fs out of order and your blood is slowly being poisoned because your liver does not act properly. Herbine will cure ali disorder of the liver, Stomach or bowels alivermedicine. Price aches Fie tale bettles at . Be iy nts. Chere drogst re. oe the pastry « | handwork and expensive. | stitched handkerchief is gen | twenty-fice dollars, and both bargai ape treets of this town to-night: W. Patterson, register of the United | » ULCERS or} OILS, ~ HOUSEHOLD BREVITIES. = s : i 5 es 4 Be ce DUEL IN THE STREET. | gaaaasssnssOSSSSOSSSAASSSSSSNESY? —Southern Silver Cake 1 -—— ig Is ESSENTIALS ters of a pound of butter, one pound e O n A Federal Official and a City Marshal! $ TO 4 white sugar, three-quarters pound . ! 5 . 2 1x HEALTHY flour, one-quarter pound © stareh, Sui 1k ‘ % whites of eighteen e ; 2 South Enid, Ok, June 25.—Two! % Liebe eal | ul cream tartar. ter anc i $ 4 ep , wounded is the record of aterr * ts IMPURE. & 2 tragedy that was enacted on the _——agy If you are troubled with} rmer. Lo) 5 | R By Shorteake. | ais é the pulps upon the e: st layer of over grapes p the upper of whipped « and solution o stir into it mixture b it with and three days a brus stick the broken in the s: ness of this invaluable. — Le —Fried Apples.—T apples, rather tart, wash ing, and slice across round slices, half an inch thick 1 Hav sod the core in the mic ful of butter brow sady to turn ed. sugar over th is prefe prinkle uncool cinna so that the flavor will penetrate the apple. — ed side Good Housekeeping Dressing. rd-be then add the yolls of one raw work to a perfectly with a little one teaspoonful well and stir in by de tablespoonfuls of cre stir continually Finish spoonfuls of vine Cream Salad yolks of three smooth paste; season alt, pepper and melte while by cream adding two rand mixing well together. —Western Rural Virginia Molasses Cake.—Cream ‘up ef butter and one cup of udd three eggs well beaten, one poonful e of ginger, cinna- mon and powdered cloves, one cup of molasses and two cups of flour. Just putting into the pan, dissolve one teaspoonful of soda in one-half cup of sour cream, buttermilk or cream, stir this into the batter. Bake in a moderate oven about an hour. Served with cream it makes a very nice dessert. —Boston Budget. —Chicken Patties. —Pick from a cold chicken the meat und cut in small pieces. Put in a sauce-pan with a lit tle hot wi id milk, butter, salt and pepper. Thicken with a little flour and the yoke of an egg. Line patty pans with good crust, glaze with the white of anegg, and bake. When done fill with the chicken and send to the table hot. Cut out round cakes of the crust for the tops, and bake them. Children are delighted with individual patties.—Iousekeeper. No More Colored Borders on Those Used by Fashionable Wow White handkerchiefs this season are not simply an evidence of quiet taste, but a fad. Fashion has pronounced its veto of those flimsy bits of cambric with colored borders. Their popu- larity for the present is a thing of the past—they are vulgar. In some of the more e where the salespeople a ys speak a superior tone of * customers, there is not a handkerchief with a vestige of color on it tobe se Should you displa) by ask- ing for such a thing in such a place, the v proper saleswoman, with an elevation of her brows, will inform you that ‘our customers are carrying onty white handkerchiefs this season.” clusive shops ee yur “gaucheri In no channel does a dainty woman display her daintiness more than in the way she fills her handkerchief box. Since borders of delicate blue, pink be she » her Women their esche rel native, and buff must now turns to craving embroid for the de unlimited have handkerchiefs mi first the linen or exclusive t having which is carried out by an art needle-woman Ordinary persons, however content with cheay these there is the ust be i for ron mpler means of se- lecting from a myriad of styles. sheer linen or One ighly in favor is of te, hemstitched, bat edge of real Valene stitched linen handkerch tily embroidered with the initial in one pret- corner—always in white. A pretty idea is to have one's initials embroidered in an exact duplicate of one’s handwriting. This, however, is The hem- ally con- ceded to wear better than the one with embroidered edges. The plainress of many of them is relieved by a border of embroidery above the hem. In handkerchiefs with fancy edges | one might, on forever,” and still not describe them all. Some have lace, others have em- broidery, and many have both. In the way of novelties there comes a hand- kerehief dir from is of sheer batiste, with two s of the batiste, not over half an inch in width, one on top of the other, all around the edge. Nothing more or inal in the way of my lady's mouchoir has been seen for ong time —but think of the laundres s to price— all the way from t -five cents to rent) at the figure. Silk handkerchiefs for men and wom- en alike are altogether out of date, and are supposed to give a mark of provi cialism to the people who carry them. The sales girls say that onty people from the country ever ask for sucha thing.—N. Y. World. —Robert Burns never was well bal- anced. His excesses were wild in their extravagance and were generally fol- lowed by spasms of repentance and melancholy. ke Tennyson's brook. ‘go | ‘QUEENSWARF A Produces Harness an Fink’s Leather Tree Saddle keep Doubl single Feed and Provisions of all Kinds. CICARS AND TOBACCO, 'Alway: pays ‘the highet market price for County East Side Square. Butler, Mo- McFARLAND BROS. MeKarland Bros, the harness men of Bates county, Mo. hand harness from $3 to $15. all stylesand prices, from the cheapest to the best SADDLE” made in this country. Bring your old harness and trade in on new ones. Butler Missouri. a B | States land office, and City Marshal! & P | Williams are dead with bullet holes in their bodies and J. L. Izenberg, Si ND C LASSWARE | editor of the Daily Wave, is at home| % with a ragged furror made by a bul- es ARED AWAY * , best blood remedy on earth. ¥ of nai skin diseases m N T SPECIFIC Co., Atianta,Ga. ¢ SLU N SASS Vest on Currency: South Side Square Butler Mo. pioneer They} everything that horse owners need. e wagon harness from $10 to & buggy harness, $7.50 to $25; second Saddles of STEEL FORK “COW BOY \and publish in to-day’s issue of the] | Wave criticising the acts of Register | Patterson started for the Wave office | to demand satisfaction. Onthe way jhe met Izenberg and took him to! : | g | = y to- | task for the article that had appe cottage near: here, has) this:to say ic |and especially to Missouri: “There | question without equivocation. | . | must determine to adopt the geld | The bullet | : standard permanently, retire the |his face. : exclusively on gold or we must open jtrigger. The bullet struck Williame| es & (newline. Hagin dao o jexists on the part of {United States aes present conditions. center of the for head. Williams | : fs x 5 I believe in real bimetalism, the use was taken to his home where he é the other, I would take silver for BOTS EO Moe | we would then at least be indepen- The shooting created the wildest 5 time of the Rothschild syndicate. 10, 1893, and started the Daily Wave pea : . ah : When asked his opinion about He is a fearless fighter, and writes aieasn a ances consider the silver question. ee te ee out oF season | Senator Vest said that he believed cFarland Bros He was opposed to Patterson be- e : 208 state committee would obey the de- in the Strip. Neen & i 4 : mand of the majority. The matter The Wave is a Democratic news- Fo ie eof ; RAIN Crgamns CF Jacobstl Cures PROMPTLYano PERMANENTD Witkou? RETURN oz ad atDauscists ANO DEALERS EVERYWHERE ‘Tue Cuas-AVoceter Go-Batto-Ma- The price of wire nails jumped up sixteen cents last week, and wages at the nail mills will jump 10 per eent next week. The Calumet Hecla Mining company of Michigan employing 3,500 men, have advanced wages 10 per cent. The indications from all over the country pointto a return of prosperity, and with gooa crop prospects in the west there has not in years more cheering prospect.—Hannibal Post (rep.) | And dontit hurt your feeling lke thunder to have to acknowledge it? many been a Shanghai, June 26.—Outrages up- jon foreigners at Chang Tu, capital "of Szechuen. have been appalling. | The Viceroy of tke province, it ap- pears, encouraged the Chinese mob {to destroy the missonary and other property, and it is reported that a Chinese official attempted to behead Bishop Durand. The French minister at Pekin has sent an ultimatum to the Viceroy of | Nanking, demanding prompt redress and threatening naval action. | Six teams with as many families of men, women and children and a | drove of horses and cattle with num |erous dogs passed through the city jthis morning. They were from | Lincoln county, Nebraska, where the ;spokesman of the party said they jhadn’t made but one crop in five |years. Last year the people there | were fed by donations, and this year “ithe drouth was so bad that seed }planted could not come up. The }entire party was making their way |te Jerico. Cedar | Post. i | county. —Nevada | Wha egUse ot Talking | About colds and coughs in the sum- mertime. You may haye a tickliug cough or a little cold or baby may have the croup and when it comes you ought | to know that Parks cough Syruy is the best cure forit. Sold by H. L. Tueker, jlet, in the side his face. Th \fight grew out of an article wrote) | Patterson. | | After the paper had been circulated Sweet Springs, Mo., June 25.— {Senator Vest, who is stopping at his \ed in the Wave. The men quarreled | oS) ACAD A) GEC LS = jand came to blows. City “Sacha jlabions)to jibe counstys ss) = = | ) | Williams ran to seperate the men. | A | 5 1 | Just as he ran between them Regis paar tonnes cnioatteR PR = | ter Patterson whipped out a revolver | and fired at Izenberg | struck Izenberg in the corner of the : left eye and — around the side of} a ea banks with their paper based Patterson then turned the weapon our mintelto ever on the city marshal and pulled the} : si : The financial servitude which now |revolver and shot Patterson dead, Bhatia Praag ass woud bullet striking him squarely in the| > 3 2 didi g chock. we of both gold and silver as standards Izenberg was me takeu to his a excitement here. Izenberg came to UE gate ge emetine — Enid shortly after the opening Sep.|,- . d 2 : nee a calli tate c tion of th aly = Pena ping ata formawood peer : = *f He seldom spares and flagellates his oe the majority of the party desired a cause he was what was termed a car- : put Ngee Sie thes Macau descteiahs convention and he assumed that the = SN Goe HUES Gawldc CEES Soca noah has gone so far that more irritation | TRAPPING CHINCH BUGS. [lees 4 ae u would come from the refusal to cali | the land office printing, and Izenberg attributed it to the machinations of Ieee OPPO TS So HN | A New Method Devised to Kid the} Patteraon. not know that I shall attend the Country of a Pest. Izenberg is ous the best known convention. In any event abseut or Topeka, Kan., June 20.—Edwin Ree en ea Okla. Shortly present, in the senate or out of it, J , Lloyd,a farmer residing near Altoona a ne hee am against the single gold standard he was assaulted by Editor Whitta barscaenuanaa Lea ere ae ker of the north Enid Tribune, who struck him when he was not look- ing. Before he could retaliate a a crowd seperated them. Register Patterson was well liked. He was brilliant public speaker, aud enterprising man. He leaves a wife and | three little girls. Marshal Willlia:ns | leaves a wife and one child. Wilson county, has devised a meth- od of trapping chinch bugs which promises to rival Chancellor Snow's famous remedy. Mr. Loyd's corn- field joins his wheat field for a dis- tance of forty rods. When the wheat was cut and shocked, the bugs at- tacked the corn by great droves. This is what Mr. Lloyd did: First he strewed a line of salt along the cornfield next to the wheat field. Then he saturated the line of | salt with crude petroleum. Next he! set a lot of one-gallon jars along the Horrible Execution. Columbus, O., June —Michaei McDonough, the Kenion wife mur- derer, was hanged at 12:08 this morning in the penitentiary annex The execution was a sickening one The rope cut deep into the neck whe the body dropped severing the the trachae and jugular vein. The blood spurted over Dr. Jones, onc | of the physicians, who was standing under the scaffold, then flowed in a jtorrent to the stone floor of the an courageous 3100 Reward £100. The readers ot this paper will be pleas- jed to learn that there is at Jeast one/room. Some of the spectors turned line of salt, on the side next to the |< hives, and thee i, | White and with difficulty kept their wheat, putting them a little below! n C tarrh Cute t own to the medical arth being a i nerve. The heart beats ceased just 11} minutes. McDonough exhibited the utmost jindifference to his fate up to the !time he went on the scaffold. He was the coolest man ever sat in th: death cell. On the scaffold,however he became very nervous and his knees were trembling very noticeably | when the trap was sprung. He fell | only feet, however. Me | Donough was 60 years of age, and | bis neck did not haye the muscular resistence of a young man This was the first bungling execution in in the surface of the ground. The ground was heaped up two or three made funnel-shape. The bugs struck |} the salt and petroleum and turned |te along the line. all going the same di- | be rection. They crowded up till they | were crawling over ng the foundati giying the pa ng nature |The proprietors h i r P LA, one another. | i, curative powers, Coming to the jars they tumbled in | Hundred Dollars to by the million. They perished iu ofl | Doge Sites which had been placed in the jars. | ge§_Sold by druggists, 75. Speaking of the bug-trapping | 2 : 5 scheme a writer for the Kangas| Ice seems to be just a little scarce Farmer gaye: “I watched the oper- | at Winston, North Carolina. The : : guests of the Phenix Id EC ieee ation for two hours. In that time I) saa ae Sama Ba jin the penitentiary in ten years. " S 7 77 7 ] ce, Ss r 5 | . . = saw the contents of fifteen jars a sales Dee safe Be) McDonough’s crime was the stab posited ina pile. There were two| ¥- bite me Proprietor of the hotel, | bing of his wife in Kenton, O. He bushels of dead bugs. Very few i a few evenings REO, because they/had seryed a term in prison for bugs got across the line. 1 am sat- learned that the ice used in their ice | shooting her and had been released isfied that if the farmers would all j tea aud other cool drinks, bad at firet | about a year when he committed the adopt this plan the chinch buge|been utilized in cooling a corpse. | 4° uid nnod be exterminated | It was the corpse of Charles Johnson | ee a8 ay | : _aud Mr. Kittelle claimed that a rub | Any reader of this paper can get Charles Ringo was indicted by ber sheet was between the ice and| The St. Louis Globe~Democrat Ab- the Grand Jury at Hunticgton. W (tae body and that the the cooling | solutely free for three months. Read Va, Thursday morningfor the mur-| ™aterial was not therefore injured | the offer in this issue and take ad- der of his two children on the night im any way, but was as pure as ever | Globe Dee ashes ism J of March 18. After being murder-| The guests however could not see it a ee : . | Weekly sections, eight pages each, ed their bodies were thown in the thet way, and raised such a noise | Tuesday and Poles. 8 ns every Olu Sse over it that the landlord was forced | week, making it practically a Semi- to make an assignment and quit the) Weekly paper, yet the price is only + hotel.—Ex. |one dollar a year. In politica, it is | strictly Republican, but it gives all Is Your Tongue i the news, and is absolutely indispen- ae i Coated, your throat dry, your 2 | sable to the farmer, merchant, of When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, | gull and ‘indamed and do sou teel mes | Professional man who bas not the | When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, / generally when you get up in the morn-| time te read a large daily promptly | When she bad Children, she gavethem Castoria, jing. Your liver and kidney are not|and keep thoroughly posted. Sample | ——< ee work. bod don’t you taxe | Copies will be went free on pam 5g ‘ar! ure cure. it : o ge CLO.. » aothingke | tiom to Globe Printing Co., St. Lonis yu feel better it costs you nothi | : Seid by HL Tucker "8 | Missouri. } seven Absolutele Free. ‘When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.

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