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i i : 4 BUTLER WEEKLY TIMES J.D. ALLEN Eprron. J- D. Atren & Co., Ptoprietors. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: The Weexry Times, published eyery | Thursday, will be sent to any address | one year, postage paid, for $1.00, The Sutton brothers are thought | to have been lynched near Unadilla, | Ga. An unknown traveling man com-/| mitted suicide on a train en route to Chicago from St. Louis. As a result of last Octobers’s earthquake cisterns in parts of the Ohio Valley will not hold water. Governor-elect Bushnell of Ohio predicts that McKinley will be the Republican presidential nominee. The Anchor Line steamer Cali- fornia had smallpox and was detain ed at Quarantine off New York. A new young woman invaded a New York shooting contest Thanks- giving and carried off the turkeys. Waverly (Neb.) citizens publicly denounced s doctor and druggist who eloped with two young ladies. The inauguration of Governor- . Make ‘You Kind Folks ai Tends ney W ith Beautiful Presents From Our Grand o, <3 aN oy. « Ss, Eee. » a In S ‘S Rp pear gna “HOLIDAY STOCK: All That Is News Novel and Appropriate Will be la Desirable Selections of FANCY GOODS : NOVELTIES Prices are S° Low That Everyone Can Have a Christmas Present if They Trade With Us* J. A, TRIMBLE, DRUGCIST East Side Square, SSSGSEIGKISOIEK Our Mt, N 30 WA IS be held at New Orleans in 1903, to | cemmemorate the centennial of the purchase of Louisiana by the United States. Senator Peffer announces that he will not act with the republicans in the organization of the senate. It may be the senator is waiting to be urged (ny CIN Ce the sugar trust. Senator x David B. Hill’ B. Hill's lecture elect Bradley of Kentucky will take place December 10 with elaborate ceremonies. Mrs. Helen Barnes of Oswego, N. Y., as cashier and clerk, is charged with having robbed her employes of $11.000. During a fire in a church at Owensboro, Ky., the congregation continued to worship and maintain- ed perfect order. Sean nnnnemene” Between praying for the Arme- nians and praying for Bob Ingersoll, the Christian world has the greatest task, short of an armed crusade, it has ever undertaken.—Pest-Dispatch xX ww A long line of confederate infan- try, cavalry and artillery moved through the streets of Nashville, Thanksgiving carrying the stars and stripes. This is additional evidence that the war is over. The fate of murderer H. H. Holmes, has been sealed by Judge Arno!d of the Oyer and Terminer court Philadelphia. When the words that sealed his doom were pronounc ing by the court, Holmes turned to his attorney and remarked. “Well that settles all.” The business men of St. Louis are making an effort to secure the two natioval conventions, republican and democratic for that city in 1896. For that purpose a big meeting was held Monday night at the Mercantile club roams and $26,000 was sub- scribed. C. C. Dickinson, of Henry county has trotted out as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Con- gress. There are quite a number of other lawyers in the district who are anxiously looking that way, but we have an idea that DeArmond is still in the lead.—Pleasant Hill Gazette. The official figures from the Ken- tucky election show the entire pep- ulist vote of the state to be but 16,- 911, and is 7,000 short of the vote of 1892. The democratic vote was 163,- 962, and republican 172,436. With such a showing in a state election it is not to be wondered at that the chairman of the state populist com- mittee should resign, followed by the county committeemen. Sree Io his book of memories just is- sued Senator John Sherman makes this bold declaration, which has raised the ire of his friend General Alger. The Senator says: “I believe I had conclusive proof that the friends of Gen. Alger substantially purchased the votes of many of the | delegates from the southern states | who had been instructed by their | conventions to vote for me.’ ———— The selection of Robert G Inger- soll to deliver the annual address to! the senior class of the Missouri | University is in very bad taste By| this action the boys not only wound their mother school deeply, but smirch the reputation of the entire state, and at the same time eyince a| flippancy calculated ta inepire con. tempt for themselves. -—NevadafPost. | tour in the northwest has proved a failure, and the Senator has closed his business arrangements with his manager and returned to New York. He was disgusted with the recep tions he met with. Edward H. Allen, one of Kansas City’s most enterprising citizens, president of the Exchange Building Association, ex-mayor of the city and for many years president of the board of trade, died at his home in Kaneas City Sunday night, from the effects of a severe cold taken at the Atlanta exposition a week ago. Congressman ‘Hall’s income tax resolution needs plenty of fuel. It will have continuous cold weather in arepublican house. There is but one republican law of taxation and that is to make {the homes of the eommon people pay the bills. If those who toil want to have comforts say the McKinleyites, let them pay for the privilege.—St. Louis Repub- ic. Of unusual interest to every read- er of this paper, is the announcement made elsewhere in this issue, by the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, unques tionably the greatest of American newspapers. The mail subscription price of the daily and Sunday Globe- Democrat is reduced at one blow, from twelve to six dollars a year, placing it witbin the reach of all who desire to read any daily paper during the great national campaign. The Weekly Globe-Democrat remains at one dollar a year but is issued in somi-weekly sections of eight pages each, making it practically a large semi-weekly paper. This issue is just the thing for the farmer mer- chant or professional men who have not the time to read a daily paper | but wishes to keep promptly and thoroughly posted. It is made up with especial reference to the wants of every member of the, family, not only giving all the news | but also a great variety of interesting | and instructive reading matter of all kinds. Write for free sample copies | to Grose Printina Co, Sr. Lovts, Mo 3-6t. Words Fail To express the gratitude of many who despaired of help, but have been cured by Hood’s Sarsapa- | rilla, as in this case: “T cannot tell the great value Hood’s Sarsapa- Tilla has been to me. For two years I have been in poor health, taking med icine \ | Hood’s Sireapoutla Isthe only True Blood Pu nently in the public eye today cea | An International Exposition will | | nation’s necessities, | pension list. PIANO OR AN ..T. N. MAGRUDER HAS PUTIN A FULL LINE OF .... ANOS AND ORGANS BKIMALL P at Butler, Mo. The what took the cake at th e Worlds Kimball Pianos and Organs is the only instru- ments that is fully Warranted in Your own NOW IS YOUR TIME ——TO BUY A—— ORGAN Kimball instruments is Fair. The OAK GARLAND % ¢ COLD WAVE COMING! time if you want to keep warm. Buy an OAK GARLAND rer or WILSON’S HEATER of 3EN NETT-WHEELER MERC, CO. CNVTUV) ZVO0 Carry a full line of -- OAK GARLAND AND WILSON HEATERS .-. Cook Stoves, Ranges and Hard coal Base-Burners. Also wagons, buggies guns, amunition, hardware, groceries, queensware and tinware. All goods guaranteed as represented, or money refunded. Prices al ways satisfactory. House They are fully warranted by the Kimball Co., also by Mr. T. N. Mag ruder, general agent for South western Mo., store room and oftice west side square lst door south of Post Office. Prompt attenti fine tuneing. on to orders for Shot to Death by a Posse. Cynthiana, Ky., Dec. 1.—Murder- | has begun to cause trouble among Den meG a nonieace er Orville Eals, while resisting arrest by a posse to day, was shot to death, | after he had butchered hie wife, killed an officer and badly wounded two other men. Eals was a farmer living near Browningsville, and his wife had deserted him for John | Fields, a tenant on the place. Eals | induced his wife to return on Tues day, and killed Field. Eals, who defied arrest, was well took refuge ina hut. A large posse | came upon the hut late last night, and to-day at dawn the attack was | made. When the rush was made! from the heavy timber, Eals began | firing. A mannamed McCombs fell | mortally wounded, and two men,; named Wells and Herbert, were seriously shot. The storming party | effected an entrance to the hut and | a horrible sight met their gaze. the floor lay the mutilated body of Mrs. Eals, almost nude and covered with ugly wounds, while near by lay | she | had been killed. The posse fired a/ fusillade of shots as it entered the | a bloody hatchet, with which hut, and Eals was shot to pieces. Views of a New York Banker, Topeka, Kan., Dec. 1.—Wm. J. | Quinlan, cashier of the ehimical | | national bank of New York, in a let- ter to Frank G. Willard, cashier of | the Merchants’ National bank of this | | city, says: “I would say that the imports have been largely in excess of the |exports, which has resulted in the | shipment of gold. to the distrust in Europe regarding | Our currency, our securities are un- doubtedly shipped back to us, and| ‘that aggravates the situation. I/| doubt very much if there is any | ground for your believing that mon- | eyed interests are speculaiing on the | etc. At any rate, we are not aware of it. Our troubles in this country are largely due, Ithink, to the existence of the greenbacks and the enormous Retire the United States notes and cut down the pen-| sion list to fair proportions (I verily belieye that fifty or sixty millions will cover all legitimate claims) and most, if not all, of our trouble will vanish into thin air. Micawber said: | ‘Income, 2 shillings, 6 pence—ex- | penditures, = shillings, result mis | Hood’s Pas = > jery'—and that is the condition a this nation.” armed and | | On} Besides, owing | | The pie counter in Washington the republican congresamen and | some of them are getting mad. | With the opening of the new ! $1,000,000 Wool Exchange, New | York importers will rival the great London market. A miner at Cripple Creek, Colo., | Was arrested with gold in his poc- kets. The Doctor mine is said to | be $25,000 out. Oswego, N. Y. Dec. 1.—Mrs. Hel- ;en Barnes, wife of Attorney Charles | Barnes of Oswego, who has been | seperated for four years from her ; husband, and who during that time has been employed by Chappell, | Bacon & Co, dry goods merchants jof Fulton, as cashier and clerk, is | | charged with systematically robbing them of over $11,000. It is said | that $7,000 cash, which she had on deposit in Oswego and Syracuse, as well as hundred dollars | Worth of dress goods, bas been re- covered by the district attorney. EART DISEASE, ic many other ailments when they have taken hold of the system, | mever gets better of its own accord, but | Constantly grows worse. There are | thousands who know they have a defective | beart, but will not admit the fact. They don’t want their friends to worry. and Don’t know what to take for it, as they have been told time and again that heart disease was incurable. Such was the case of Mr. Silas Farley of Dyesville, Ohio who writes June 19, 1894, as follows: “I had heart disease for 23 years, my heart hurting me almost continually. The first 15 years I doctored all the time, trying several physicians and remedies, until my last doctor told me it was onlya question of time as I could not be cured. I gradually grew worse, very weak, and completely dis- couraged, until I lived, propped half up in bed, because I couldn’t lie down nor sit up. Think- ing my time had come I told my fam- lly what I wanted | done when I was | | gone. But on the first day of March on | the recommendation of Mrs. Fannie Jones, | | of Anderson, Ind., I commenced taking | Dr. Miles’ New Cure for the Heart | and wonderful to tell, in ten days I was | nd on March 19 com- H several ! | | yearsold, 6 ft. 4:3 inches and weich 20lbs. i I believe IT am fully eured, and } Tam now only anxious thateveryone shall | know of your wonderful remedies.” | Stas Farrer. Dr. Miles Heart Cure is sold on a itive tthe first bottle will benefit. ts sel eee 6 Ss i or id pn, req yt of price Dr. Mites Medical 3 Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure. Restores Health | |CRA |DOLLAR AY \" ou will find it invaluable as a new: BENNETT-WHEELER MERC. CO, ' Missouri State Bank OF BUTLER, MO. CAPITAL, = ce . . . $110,000. ; 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. DIRECTORS. “ Booker Powell Frank M Voris CH Dutcher H H Piggott HC Wyatt John Deerwester} ck aa re TR G Weat JR Jenkins TJ Wm E Walton Geo Ay mith OTHER STOCKHOLDERS, E Bartlett D A DeArmond Dr W D Hannah Dr W EK Tucker argaret Bryner John Evans Robert McCracken W BTyler Lulu Brown Dr J Everingham A McCracken E Tarner Hurley Lumber Co Edith Everingham John Pharis Wm W Trigg HB Chelf C&E Freeman JK Rosier Wm Wallis J Courtney G B Hickman JW Reisner GP Wyatt Robert Clark D B Heath L B Starke Dr NL Whipple CP&8 LColeman Semuel Levy Clem Slayback Max Weiner. JR Davis CH Morrison John H Suliens. RG West Frank Deerwester Peter Swartzendruber - DUVALL & PERCIVAL. BUTLER, MISSOURI. FARM LOANS. Money to loan on farms at reduced’rates‘of interest. Your Notes are Payable at our Office and you find them here when due. We give you’privilege to pay at any time. Money ready as 8000 as papers are signed. 33-tf. National and Representative Reduced Subscription Rates, by Mail Postage Prepaid. SUNDAY EDITION, 2s to 40 pages, - - - - One Year, $2.00 © One Year, $1.00; Six Months, 50e. The St. Louis Globe=Democrat Republican Newspaper. DAILY AND SUNDAY, - - One Year, | $6.00; Six Months, aa WEEK LY, issued in Semi-Week!y Sections, 8 pages each | Ax zee Creat a EE SATURDAY EDITION, 16 pages, - - One Year, Tuesday and Friday, 16 pages ev ery week, Soe eee The Globe Democrat is universally conceded to be the best of American newspapers, and at these REDI« ED RATES it is al the cheapest. ‘Fhe Globe Democrat pays for and prints more news tb any other paper in the United Statex, the coming great National Campaign, within the reach of all. The Globe DemOcrat where at 2 cents for the Daily and 5 It will be indispensable durii and the Low prRIcE plac is sold by news doalers every- 5 cents for the Sunday issues. Dew livered to regular subscribers, Daily and Sunday, 15 cents a ek, @ 4 centsa month. If your local ‘dealer does not handle it, insist upon ne procuring it for you, or send your subscription with remittanes 4 direct to ti publi shers, es" Part ular attention is called to d in Semi-Weekly Sections, iss THE WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMG Friday, mak 5 eight pages every Tnesd. alarge Semi-¥ kly Paper for only 1@ just fills the for the busy man. who has” paper, and yet des es to keep promptly & to every State—alinost to every Boge office 2 All America is its legitimate field. No matter where you liv Spaper and home journal. Sample conies free on application to CLOBE PRINTING Co. | ST. LOUIS, MO. | not the time to readad | thoroughly posted. Itg | the Union.