The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 25, 1895, Page 7

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OLDEsT AND ORICINAL Dr. WHITTIER: 10 WEST NINTH STREET, {NEAR JUNCTION ) KANSAS CITY, @ @ MISSOURI. Regular graduate | authorized by the | ed to be the lead-| state, and conced-/ “Rattler Attacks a cyclist. __[eunvenasp's DOMESTIC LIFE. | Bartow, Fla, July 17.—“Si.” Mur-| | augh had a thrilling cxpinionne | Wettaes toa Friend About to Marry | nake today. He and! the President Says it Hes Been Sa companions were riding on ao | “One Grand Sweet Song.” | wheels, when Murdaugh saw a mon- Atlanta, Ga., July 12.—The recent | jster rattler in front of him as event at Gray Gables has | droye his bicycle over the snake, but|induced John Temple Graves, of the reptile uged to twine itself) Rome, this state, to make public an! la arattle « ing anamoss Suo-| about the salbiee of the rear wheel, in BLOOD, NERV. | and proceeded io strike Mardaugh OUS and URINARY, DISEASES. Wetvon. Debility With its Many Gloomy Symptoms Cured. Lost Vitality Perfectly aad nc All Restored. Syphilis Cured for Life Without Mercury. Urinary Diseases Quickly Relieved and ! and Thoroughly Cured. ably successful? Because he . ; , hy makes no promises that he SEE cannot fulfill. Avoid cheap cure-alls and unskilled physicians, and consult Dr. Whittier in person or by letter (giving symptoms) and receive the candid opinion of a physician of long experience, unquestioned skill and sterling integrity. MEDICINES from our own laboratory fur- nished at small cost and shipped anywhere secure from observation. TREATMENT never sent ©. O. D. FRE CONSULTATION. URINARY ANALYSIS. Office hours—9 to 4 and 7 to 8. Sunday 10 to 12. ‘ Guide} Health and Emergencies for 6 cts.—stamps—to prepay. Call or address tn strict confidence DR. H. J. WHITTIER, © West Ninth Street. Kansas City, M& i$ Dr. H. J. Whittier invar- |i It Soaks Into the Flesh | right down through the | fevered parts to where the inflammation is rooted. That is why Mustang Liniment ‘cures all aches and pains of man or beast.” If it evaporated or re- mained on the skin it could not cure. That is why volatile extracts fail. Theycan’t go down through ‘the inflamed parts. Mustang Liniment owes its success to its ower of penetration. There is nothing mar- velous about its cura- tive powers. It is sim- ' plyafew common sense i edicts combined in a way to make pen- _etration possible and 3 | insure a cure. Mustang Liniment has been used for one- half a century. Write for “Fairy Story Book,” illus trated, also “Hints from a Horse-doc- tor’s Diary.” Both books mailed free. Lyon Manufacturing Co., 42 South sth St.. Brooklvn. N. Y. y » ,.REDUCED, SIZE INCREASED. THE SUBSURIPTION PRICE OF THE KANSAS|CITY TIMES HAS BEEN REDUCED TO $4.00 A YEAR. $22 .<00FOR SIX MONTHS; $1.00 FOR THREE MONTHS. 4p tropolitan news’ one can now & daily per. onee. Address, KANSAS CITY,|MO. a first-class me- 1d 6 day tor per. Every ‘ord to take a Subscribe at e Times always leads THe KANSAS CITY TIMES in the back with every revolution of the wheel. Murdaugh’s horrified companions |screamed to him, and the rider, shrieking “I am bitten,” tumbled off the wheel in a faint. His compan- jions came up and found that the snake had been striking the broad leather belt which Murdaugh wore about his body. The snake's last stroke had been so powerful that it could not withdraw its fangs from the belt, and the reptile was found thrashing its tail abont Murdaugh’s interesting letter sent to him by President Cleveland four years ago, ou receipt of an invitation to his! wedding. Mr. Graves is an intimate friend | of Mr. Cleveland. The letter follows: No. 816 Madison Ave., New York, Dec. 2, 1890. My Dear Mr. Gravee: We received the invitation to your wedding a day or two ago, and I am glad that your letter, received only a few hours ago, justifies me, on be- half of my dear wifeand myself to do more than formally notice the occasion. And first of all let me as- legs. The snake was killed and Murdaugh revived,but he was death- ly sick from fright for several hours. The snake was 6 feet in length and had sixteen rates and the usual button. Its fangs were nearly an inch long, but for the leather belt Murdaugh would have been killed: Negroes Want Lite for Life. Greenville, S. C., July 15.—Ira Johnson (colored) who killed a white man named Longford at Piedmont July 7, was taken from the county jail at 3 o'clock this morning bya mob of 100 men. They carried him outside the city limits, swung him to a tree and riddled his body with bullets. The lynching was conducted qui- etly and few of the citizens knew anything about it until this morn- ing. The crime is deplored in the community especially as court con- vened today and the negro would have been given a speedy trial. There was no doubt as to his guilt. The negroes are greatly excited over the lynching, and Johnson’s lawyer says he could have establish ed a clear case of self defense. They want to lynch a white pris- oner in jail charged with the mur- der of a white man, for retaliation. One militia company is guarding the jail and another is under arms in its armory. Johneon had been carefully guard- ed, but as all talk of lynching him subsided, the vigilance was relaxed. A Kentucky Lynching. Winchester, Ky., July 16 —Bob Huggard (colored) was lynched at 12:50 this morning for assaulting a young woman last Saturday. A mob of 200 men surrounded the jail about midnight and hitched their horses. The electric lights were turned out and the city left in darkness. The Winchester division of the Kentucky State Guard, numbering nearly one hundred men, had been ordered to watch the jail, but the mob over- powered them. Huggard was captured by a mob soon after the crime and was taken to the woods to be lynched. He was released on promise of the mar- shal to prosecute him for murder. Shot His Daughter’s Assailant, Birmingham, Ala, July 17.—The two daughters of George Wright, a prominent farmer of Jenifer, Ala, were accosted by an unkown negro in the woods near their father’s home. An indecent proposal was made. The girls screamed and fled home. Their father got a shotgun and made them go back to the woods, He followed. The negro reappear- ed and assaulted the oldest girl. The father appeared aud shot the negro, who fled badly wounded, and will be captured by a posse. A lynching is expected. Those— —Pimples; rt that your =e is not rigi ht full of im iy emplesin ¢ a alnogeeh and un A few bottles of 8. 8. p Ber pone peal ? all foreign and im matter, cleanse Are teil-taie sym the blood thoroughly, and give a clear Gad@ rosy complexion. It is most effect- ual, and entively harmless. : 2) sure you now, how much we appre- all anions onal vessels will be | made as nearly fire-proof as possible | hereafter to avoid disasters peculiar | to the Chinese-Japanese war. Two members of the Italian | Chamber of deputies fought a duel | | with sabers last week because of a| dispute inthe house. Both were! wounded. | HERE is but onc! way in the world to t of having the best paint, and t is to use only a well-estab! brand of strictly pure white lead, | pure linseed oil, and pure colors.* | The following brands are stand- ! ard, “Old Dutch”’ process, and are | always absolutely Strictly Pure White Lead “Southern,”“Red Seal,” “Collier.” ciate the kind and touching senti- ment you convey to usin our married state. As I look back upon the years that have passed since God in his infinite goodness bestowed upon me the best of all his gifts—a loving and affec- tionate wife—all else—honor, the opportunity of usefulness and the esteem of my fellow-countrymen— are subordinates in every aspiration ef gratitude and thankfulness. You are not wrong, therefore, when you claim, in the atmosphere of fast coming bliss which now sur- rounds you, kinship with one who can testify with unreserved tender- ness to the sanctification which comes to man when heaven-directed loye leads the way to marriage. Since this tender theme has made us kinsmen let me wish for you and the dear one who is to make your life doubly dear to you all the joy and happiness vouchsafed to man. You will, I know, feel that our kind wishes can reach no greater sincerity and force than when my wife joins me in the fervent desire that you and your bride may enter upon and enjoy the same felicity which has made our married life “one grand, sweet song.” Very truly your friend, Grover CLEVELAND. A year or so ago Mr. Graves re- quested the president’s permission to publish the letter for the sake of its influence upon the home life of the people, and Mr. Cleveland promptly replied that although the wording of the letter had passed from his recollection he would, for this purpose, freely commit its use to “the delicacy and discretion of his friend.” Attacked By a Congar. Hazleton, Pa., July 17.—Michael Kearney, a farmer living im Sugar Loaf, at the foot of Sugar Loaf mountain, was attacked by a cougar in his chicken coop this morning. The animal made a spring and land- ed upon his shoulders. It tried to chew his throat, but the farmer, knowing its habite, sacrificed his arm to save his throat. The cou- gar bit his arm and tore it to strips. Kearney’s wife was in the barn, and, hearing his cries, lost no time in ob- taining arifls which stood in the kitched always ready for use. She returned to the coop, but feund the entrance barred by her husband’s body. He was then beneath the cougar. She broke off a board and, getting a good aim at the cougar, fired both barrels, killing it instantly. Kegrney warearried unconscieus to the house by his brave wife, but he will recover. The cougar was nearly 4 feet long. An Old Man Kilied. Chillicothe, Mo., July 17.—Mr. Sidney Calkins, an old and wealthy citizen, was run down and instantly killed by the southbound passenger train of the chicage, Milwaukee and St Paul railway in this city at 4:20 this afternoon. Deceased was about 75 years old and was reported to be worth $50,000 He had been cut- ting seme grase near the track and had a wheelbarrow load when the | but failed. Is Your Tongue Coated, your throat dry, your eyes j dull and inflamed and do you teel mean generally when you get up in the morn- ing. Your liver and Kidney are not doing their work. Why don’t you take Parks Sure cure. If it does not make feel better it costs you nothing— cowececesccoccorooooooocs | Uli by H.L Tucker train came around a curve, and he| tt tried to make a crossing near by, | © * If you want colored paint, tint any of the above strictly pure leads with National Lead Co.'s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors. These colors are sold in one-pound cans, tach can being sufficient to tint 25 pounds of Strictly Pure White Lead the desired shade: they are in no sense ready-mixed paints, but a combination of perfectly pure colors in the handiest form to tint Strictly Pure White Lead. Send us a postal card and get our book on paints and color-card, free. NATIONAL LEAD CO. St. Louis Branch, Clark Avenue and Tenth Street, St. Louis. TWO PAPERS PRICE OF ONE. St. Louis Post-Dispatch AND THE BUTLER WEEKLY TIMES, Will be furnished our subscribers on the fol- towing terms, which is the regular subscription price of the ja eae ears cae Daily and Sunday Post-Dispatch and the Timzs -lyear.. Daily Post- pate (Sunday Except. ed) andthe Times year Sunday BA es and cite l year $2 00 you order the Post-Dis- In other words, patch through the BUTLER WEEKLY TIMES. You get your home paper FREF. THE POST-DISPATCH 18 | -Whe Best The Best Afternoon| Sunday Paper Paper | BY FAR IN THE | Published In United States ST. LOUIS. IT IS THE ONLY ST. Locls PAPER STANDS PAT FOR HONEST BIMETALISM And For Western Men And Measures, and Corporation Spnession: It is now edited and managed by H. Jones. The people of the West aces his ability as a journaliet, where stands on all publicquestions and what heisfor. He never leaves them in doubt. His ideas and sympathies are with the West- ern and Sonthern people and not with Wall street. Everybody WILL WANT A NEWSPAPER THIS YEAR. In which the preliminaries for the great contest 1n 1896 will be tought. This Offer is Special and Limited. Send your orders at once to THE TIMES BUTLER MISSOURL What Nerve Berries have done for others i they will do for you. For the People against the piutocrats, Trusts VIGOR oe Mw E nu Easily, Quickly and Permanently Restored. A positive cure for all Weaknesses, Nervousness, Debility, and all their SOTH DaY. train of evils — early errors and later excesses; the result of over- work, sickness, worry,etc. Develops and gives tone and strength to thesex- ualorgans. Stops unnatural losses or nightly emissions caused by youthful errorsorexcessive use of tobacco,opium | and liquor, which lead to consumption | | and insanity. Their use shows immedi- | aie improvement. Insist: having } cnuine HERVE no other | nient to carry it vest pocket. | $1.00 per box, six boxes, one full | ent, $5.00. Guaranteed to cure : any case. - If not kept by your drug- | gist we witi send them by mail, upon | Teceipt of price, in plain wrapper. Pamphlet free. Address mail ordersto AMERICAN MEDICAL CO., - { CINCINNATI, C. 4 For sale in Butler, a by H. L Tueker, i j °., Do You Know Do You Know t» pe without labeling them po Do You Know thst you shou! oa unless you or your phy: ian know of what Do You Know tha ¢ its ingredients is published - Samuel Pitcher Do You Know = is now sold than of all other remedies for chi nited States, and of Do You Know that the Patent Office Department of ti ee other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his s to use the word “Castoria” and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense? Do You Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection — was because Castoria had been proven tobe absolutely harmiess? De You Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 3g eee cents, or one cent a dose? is perfect preparation, yourchildrem may Do You Know that when possessed of th a be kept well, and that you may have u ke Well, these things are worth knowing. They are facts, Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. ae ce ree el ee a eed. aa) The fac-simile is on every wrapper. signature of Trustee’ 8 Sale. ® Whereas J O Sears. a single man, -by his deed of trust dated May 12th, 1390, and record- ed in the recorder’s office within and for Bates county, Missouri, in book No, 92 page 372 cn- | veyed to the undersigned trustee the following | descrited real estate lying and being situate in the county of Bates and state of Missouri, | to-wit Twenty-one (21) feet offofthe west side ot the west half of lot one hundred and forty (140) in the town of Adrian including one-half of brick wall on or near the east side of sald | twenty-one (21) feet, which conveyance was made in trust to secure the povment of one certain note fully described In said deed of trust; and whereas, default has been made in the payment of the ‘principal of sald note and the accrued interest thereon, now past due and unpaid. Now therefore, at the request of the legal holder of said note and pursuant to the conditions of said deed of trust, I tk proceed to sell the above described — at public vendue to the highest bidder for | cash at the east front door of the court house in the city of Butler, county of Bates and state of Missouri, on Friday, August 2nd, 1895, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that day, forthe purpose of ete said debt, interest and costes. J.D, ALLEN, M4 Trustee. — THE-- New York Weekly World. Has Been Changed to TWO PAPERS EVERY WEE INSTEAD OF ONE And at the same price as The Weekly. Only One Dollar a Year| Send in your order at once, and re- ceive two papers every week. Why read the news after itis old. Get it while it is fresh in the TWICE--A--WEEK WORLD. Tell your friends and neigh- bors about the change 2nd induce them tosubscribe. School Fund Mortgage Sale. Whereas George H Morris and Susanna Mos- Tis, his wife, did on the 9th day of November. 1392, execute and deliver to the county of Bates, in the state of Missouri, their 00} fund mortgage, which school fund mortgage was duly recorded in book 120 st page 59. in the school fund mortgage records of Bates county, eee feels to the oald county of Bates, and state of Missouri. the following described tract of land, lyin; — situated in said Bates county, Missouri, to-wit East half of the: northeast quarter of section nineteen (19), township thirty-nine (39) range thirty-two (32), inthe county ef Bates and state of Missouri. which said conveyance was made to secure the payment of acertain school fund bond therein described; and whereas sai! — al and interest are now past due and ai Now, therefore, in pursuance of an on ler of the county court, I will proceed to sell the above described premises at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash, at the east front door of the court house in the city of sat county of Bates, and state of Mis- som on Saturday, August 17th, 1895, ; between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that day for the purpose of ae debt in- terest and costs. Sheriff of Bates Counts. WHY TAKE A WEEKLY When you can get THE WORLD TWICE A WEEK): For The Same Money. Remember, ail otters made regarding the Weekly are good tor this semi-week- ly. The price, premiums, subscription offers—all are the same as tor The Weekly. We simply giye you two pa- pers a week instead of one. Now won’t you help by sending in your own sub- scription and your neighbor’s if you can? Address, THE WORLD, NEW YORK CITY. 324f. Sehool Fund Mortgage Sale. Whereas J A Poteet anes N J Poteet, his wife did on the 4th day , 1889, execute and deliver to the county of Bates, in the state of Missouri, their school fund > Which hool fand daly cman book 20 at je im the school n 2 veying to the sald county Of Bates, and state Missouri, the following bed real es- tate, lying ae in said Bates county, Lots eleven (11) and twelve ia twenty-six (26) in the town, ska of Wate nut. in the county of Bates and state of sonri; which conveyance was made certain WANTD—CHICKENS E &EGGS | Seseereae ra aianees Dc drop in and see N. M. Nestle- sue b eee, rode at New Home, Mo. He will | give you the highest market price Trustee's Sale. for chickens, eggs and hides. Also | takes subscriptions to the Butler | Weekly Tres, at $1.00 per year and | as agent is authorized to collect and receipt for theSpaper. Nersox M. Nzsrizzop. | Whereas Mary M-Rhosds and A J Rhoads her eee, by their deed of trust cated May 5th and recorded in the recorder’s office within and for Bates pn hee cringe in book No. 110 at page 62, con | signed trustee “the following, pede real estate lying and being cituate in the county of (PAIL of lot eight @) in block mons o! it (3) in block number thi: (3) im the city of Rich Hill, Mo., Lyne pote } seis focars — in trust josccare ihe pay- ment of five certain notes fa! described in | ssid deed of trust and wher ef Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby given, That letters of ad- now past due and eerie on the estate otf J L McConnell, thereon, — eens — ——. atthe request of the were granted to the undersigned on er oO notes an: ursuant the 2 neath day of June, 195. A the probate | conditions of said deed oftrust I will court of Bates county Missoa | proceed to sell the above described bremises Il persons having clalme ‘acainet said es at vendue to the highest bidder for fates required tosxhibitthem for allow | Cash, st the east front door of the court house. j anes to to the, administrator within one year | im the city of Batier, county of Bates and state after the date cf said letters, or they msy be | of = Monday, July 29th, 1895, lauded from any benefit ef said catate, and | itench claims by not exhibited witin two | years from the date of this publication, they | | between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- barred. the afteenoon ois ue | noes and five o’clock in ~ ofthat ‘This 15th day June, 1505. for the oe said debt, 3. F_ LUDWICK. | interest interest and conte ‘ALLEN.

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