The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 26, 1895, Page 6

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ell a Passed the Century Mark. Cassville, Mo., Dec. 13.—On the 16th inst. Mrs. Lucinda Kennedy, of King’s Prairie, will be 103 years of age, and is the oldest person in Bar-}| GREEN GOODS. | A Large Seizure Made and Two} Men Arrested. i) ry County by six years. Mrs. Ken | THE PHILADELPHIA CAR STRIKE. Ho nedy comes from a long lived family, We tees ae her motker dying in this county) Cars Were Run Doring the Day Under volice « ere hdrawn ati i 34, aved 108 years. maiden Police Guard, but Were Wit if Sega i ane ite: at Dask—Quaantreti's Law- mf name waé Harris, born near Louis- a eee a ville, Ky., Dec. 16, 1792. At the age of 16 sue married Jacob Nagle, KAxsa i. Dec 20-— wil who died near Memphis, Tenn., in = i a , 01 ; gton, an : Murphy, of St. Louis, have succeedec 1839. Later she moved to Arkansas i, grresting two men, who it is al-| with her father and mother, und)! have been making counterfeit | : money by wholes The men are 2 2 ady. w money by wt e married James Kennedy, who was a Gece Oe Diae Meade a soldier of the war of 1812 and par-| <tock commission man of this city, Bt ticipated in the battle of New Or-| and William Graham, a young farmer | 24 . * 2 ” = liv near Paola, Kan. Dyce was i leans. She came to Barry county in| beceertsd” tas lanes Go| 1853, where she has since resided.) gay afternoon, and at day-| break At the present time she is living} prey puis Graham 5 . 3 2 > was taken into custody at his home. | with her daughter.in law, Mrs. Ben Bone GP hate eupnosed |eoatederats jamin T. Eagle; enjoys good health! were previously in jail, two in St. walks about the place at will, Louis and two in Omat In addition | to arresti bids fair to live a long time yet.) 44 mine ol Her memory remains fair, and she | terfeit money and contis recollects the fortifications against | 5¢!Zure is th : 5 in the Indians at her childhood home. | and ¢ the Messrs. Burns men discovered $15,000 in coun- ated it. The gest made of and the goods” years. arre | are considered of vital importance. Mrs. Kennedy was the mother of 11} THE CAR STRIKE IN PHILADELPHIA. children, of which but one, Mrs.|,.P!taperrnta, Dec. : .—The trac- ti i Z si j tion strike situation 1: night was j Fredonia Mattingly of the same] practically unchanged. Cars were run- F neighborhood, survives. The anni-| on some lines during the day, un- | i versary of her birth has been cele-| Eee aaa oa oe pao fi brated by relatives and friends for} were in theirstables. There were fewer several years past, and the dinner |OUtbreaks during the day and . Monc rer } {mone of conseguence. This was to be given ondayin her honor! ty. yesult of | the rigid police oy will be largely attended regulations and the fact that the ie ee 4 streets where the greater crowds congregated were picketed with 4 Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, mounted squads of armed officers. Up ia i pean eee Gute toa late hour last n electrical aE The Best Salve inthe world for Cuts! workers of the company were in ses- i Bruises,Sores, Ulcers,SaltRheum Fever i Sores, Tetter,Chapped Hands, Chiblains i i Corns, :.nd all Skin Eruptions, and posi- tively cures Piles, or no pay required. I is guaranteed to give pertect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts per box For sale by H, L. Tucker, druggist sion. They passed resolutions of sym- pathy for the strikers, appropriated for their aid and said they were willing to go on a strike whenever the request was made by President Mahon, of the Amalgamated association. All day rumors of arbitration were plenti- ful. The strikers were. willing to sub- mit their grievances to an arbitration committee, but the company refused. QUANTRELL’S LAWRENCE VICTIMS. Wasuinaton, Dee. 20.—Representa- tive Curtis, of Kansas, will make an effort to have justice done in the mat- ter of granting pensions to the heirs of 17 men who were killed at Lawrence, Kan., during the civil war by Quantrell’s band of guer- rillas. These men enlisted at Law- rence in the 14th Kansas cavalr: were examined and were accepted as soldiers by the proper They wer Missouri Heirs to Millions. Nevada, Mo., 16.—Mrs. Barney Waring, wife of a Missouri Pacific engineer of this city, is in receipt of further encouraging news about the legacy of $60,000,000 in Baltimore, i to which she is one of the heirs. This estate consists of land leased by her great grandfather to the city of Baltimore, now covered with fine business blocks and very valauble. recruiting offi- have cers to been mus- { The lease expired last May and the|tered in and their names placed upon | i voperty reverts to the heira of the|*he Tolls next day. ‘There were 2 PEOpEnby Teverta tome Heiraict the Tien in this camp, and that night original owner. A Carthage woman is also an heir, and will come in for a larger share than Mrs. Waring, though the latter will undoubtedly be rich beyond the dreams of avarice. Quantrell’s band rode into the town, surprised these men while asleep and killed 17 of them. All were your men and several of them were mar- ried, leaving widows and children. HAYWARD’S CONFESSION. In His Ante-Mortem Statement He Boasted | Topeka’s Crave Robbers. of Five Murders. f S MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Dee. 20.—The mm | Topeka, Kan, Dec. 18.—The pc-|ante-mortem statement of f lice to-night arrested ex-City Scay-| Hayward, the full text of which makes 30,000 words, is in m y 7 5 v pects a euece M. E. Lowe on the charge or most remarkable document. It | that proper steps hav Some Tariff Nuts to Crack. | Williamsport, Pa. Dee. 13. —The | | Pennsylvania state grange, at its! ON TURKEY. Secretary Olney Makes a Report in Accord ance with a Senate Resolution. Wasnineton, Dec. 20.—Th he president | yesterd ied to the senate reso | final session to-day, passed a resolu- | ae ] > for c lution of December 4, calling for infor /tign requesting the American Tarif?’ mation received by the state depart- | ment respecting affairs in Turkey. | league ef New York and th Home| | Market club of Boston to answer the e The response is in the shape of a report } i p by Secretary Olney, summarizing but] y 2 | uestio not including the ofticia espond. | following questions: ‘ , and beginning -| Cana tariff on imports, directly Moosh in the or indirectly, protect the home mar- sre | ket prices of agricultural samples as | as beer P citizens | long as the surplus is sold for ex- rat while | itl aac “ mn | Or these are the same | If it can not, must not the unpros| tected industry pay for the cost of | eee indu sort, and the export and home price Pp i rty has suit two have not been person eases wh have been Be erotes tion of the ates | tries oppressivel} secure ind aS | Is not such a system of protection | citizens in their/injurously unjust and inequitable! to gis producer of ricultural sta- Secre | ary Olney ber of Unite is not aceu | ples? Will not a bounty on the exports} i} 3 jof agricultural staples for the pro over Asia Minor and zens in business, Armenians tempors that prot be zed| tection of their prices in the home ™\ market be just and orotection by a tariff ov im- equitable so t : nber of these persons i 500 and 600. The bulk of t sis in oper: 4 nelement is found in Asia Minor and Syri How's This! cS: te from o r olated and inaccessi dificult mountain ie rurne r Olne stances and in g agitation year past has ¢ w isted in Asia has been no sl task for E sentative of the United States to fol- low the interests of those whose de-| fense necessarily falls to his to demand and obtain the ures indispensable to their and to act instantly upon eve for help in view of real or appr surfaces ort Seld t peril. It is, however. 17 — y “| bear testimony to the | Hs | rom S » minis in dealing r ’ > : promp s of the ninister in dea ing | Norfoik, Va, Dee 11.—Susan ry grievance brought to his | . Mi notice and his foresight in anticipating | Wright, a 15 year old negro girl, ; complaints and securing timely pro- living witb ber parents at Suffolk, jection in advance of actual need. are “ are ity lied The efforts of the minister have |®!**) Muas west ui this city, diec had the moral support of the presence The body was of naval vessels of the United States | eoffined this morning and brought on the Syrian and Adana coasts from | S z - Mi, time to time as oceasion required and | tO Portsmouth, just across the Eliz- at the present time the San Francisco | abeth river from Norfolk for burial. and Marblehead are about to be joined | Oy the lid of the coflin being remov- by the Minneapolis which has lately x been ordered to the eastern waters of | ed the girl sat up and began laugh the Mediterranean, the squadron being ing, throwing those present almost under command of Rear Admiral Self- anes, Stee The iri a5 5h ridge, an officer whose record indicates Be oe nS girl says she could hear everything that was said around her bier and knew she was yesterday evening. the necessary discretion in dealing with whatever emergencies may arise.” The secretary says that while the ‘ physical safety of the citizens appears |to be buried, but she could not up to the present to have been secured, | move nor speak This evening she their property has been destroyed on at two oceasions. The meager reports from the Harpoot riots of November show that American j mission prope was destroyed to the | and the it will be Tecet returned home with her parents east last ty estimated value $100,009 notified that for full porte has been held reSponsible The » Castoria, ene em Castoria, not been ascer tion indemni in that ease. eneral of science has but after investi also be deman Apa Seeretary 0 y will Kansas City Star. —Orville Shelby, son of the United States Marshal Jo inci on several | BRADFIELD REGULATOR co. = . HAGEDORN OLDEST ano ORICIN Dr. WHITTI 10 WEST NINTH STREET, {NEAR JUNCTION.) | KANSAS CITY, @ @ MIS. { Reguiar DELICATE WOMEN BRADFIELD 'sS FEMALE REGULATOR. OU i —authorized = IS A SUPERB | TONIG 2nd | state, andea erts a wonderful iniuence inj ene penne her system by | cesstul Sp in BLOOD, OUS and UR DISEASES Nereas. ‘Debility With its Many Gloomy Symptoms 'Lost Vitality Perfectly and Permanently Restored, “| Syphilis | driving through the proper chan- nel all Health and | strength are au aranteed to result | trom its USC. | n mo S REC “ATLANTA, Sold by all Druggists at $1.00 per bottle. | | | tro ug the = where | st down throt vered parts e Cured for Life Without Mercury. 2 s Urinary Diseases Quickly Relieved and d Thoroughly Cura i is Dr. Hh J. Whittier Wh iably successful! Bes y: makes no promises th cannot fulflll. Avoid skilled physicians, and ca . Whittier in person or by letter oms) and receive the candid oy ysician of long experience, unque skill and sterling integrity. ME DICINES from our own laboratory i M1 cost and shipped anywl TREATMENT never sent ©. 0. D. FRE CONSULTATION. URINARY ANALYSIS. OfMice hours—9 to dand 7 to& Sunday 10 gg] Cuide: irae o cractemttpe: one or ad t confidence Mustang Li: ‘cures all aches an pains of man or bea if it evaporated or re- mained on the skin it could net cure. That is why volatile extracts fail. T hey can’t go down through the inilamed parts. Mustang Liniment owes its success to its ‘DR. H. J. WHITTIER OwWest Ninth Street. Kansas City, Mp d A BENEFICENT AND WISE Read what Maj. Waddill, Sup tendent of Insurance,says about the disability contract of the Bankers Life Asso- ciation of Kansas City. Wm. Jas. R. Waddill, Superintendent vA. F. Harvey, Actuary. 1D Murray, Depety wa. power of penctration. INSURANCE DEPARTME There is nothing mar- aati coe ec fol itt velous about its cura- ae ae? — tive powers. It is sime | jugge co, W. clarke, pat ply a few common sense ingredients combined °*4a way to make pen ration possible and sure a cure. Mustang amma has been used for o half a century. V.P. Bankers Life Ass’n., 205 Sheidley Bldg, K. C. Mo, Dear Judge:-- Tam in receipt of yours of May and the proposition you make th is very wide of the proposition I derstood you to be contending fog] What I understood you to want a clause in your policy providing the payment of half the policy ind event of total disability, but the p osition you make now Is in the evett of total disability, at the request'@ the policy-holder, to pay half in solute discharge of the policy. 8 a condition as that in your ‘polieyif beneficent and wise. Beneficent that it gives to the policy holder in his extremest need, and wise that it enables the company tos an approaching total loss at fifty cent. Tthink such a condition that in your policy is a wise provisig and as quoted by you in your lett I could’ pinee no objection to it wi ever. I donot regard this asan cident provision at all; it may from sickness, may come from age,may come from sudden stroked paraly: s, a confirmed case of rhew latism, crit may arise from an acd dent, and it is not paying anae claim to make such a settlement, If isan adjustment or compromise the whole amount of the policy paying half at the time when # policy-holder most needsit. This, @ have before stated I regard bo wise and beneficent. Very respectfully, Jas. R. Waddill, Superintendent. tailed free, Manufacturing Co., th St.. Brookiva, N. uthful ares 8 +3 hair falling. 3 scalp dise Bic,and gL HINDERCORNS, ‘The only eure Cure tor Corns. Stops all pain. Ensures come fortw the tect, Makes w: ig cosy. Licts. at Druggists. “GR ATEFUL—COMFORTING. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. ‘*By athorough knowledge or the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application‘of the fine prope ties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr Ep,s has provi ur breakfast and sup- FE Ss H Save us many heavy doctors’ bit y Suufcloustuse ofeuch articles onalecehat seane | |= zm stitution may be g aduall it up until | 45etf BUTLER, MO strong enough to resist every ency to dis- ease. Hunderds of subtle maaid are float- ing around us ready to attack wherever there is‘ weak point. W scape many a fatal shaft by kee} elves well fortified with pure blood and properly nourished frame.??— Civii Service Gaze Made elmply with boil- ing Water or milk y in half pound tins by Grocers. labell Trustee's Sale. Whereas Reese Thomas and Christi as, his wife. by their deed of trust dated Mi vember Ith, 1889, and recorded in the er’s office within and for Bates county, ae in beok No. #2 page 109 conveyed Allen as trustee the following "te r Ter and tenements situated in the ¢ of Bates and state of M uri, to-wit Lots five (5) six () seven (7) and eight @) block one hundred apd twenty-seven (127) oe 1 teone three and four {ff block one hi i and forty {140} and lots [1], two 1: , four 4], eight [8]. {9}, te: n i] and twelve {13} 1] and lote one, two +2, and 3]in block sixteen {J6} rteen in block fourteen [14} the town of Walnut, as shown on the piat of said town, now known as Foster, ure the payment y note in said deed desert ‘ault has been made in the p of said note, now past due anit unpal whereas it is in said deed of trust further vided that in case of death fusal to act or absence of said F scounty, Mi at the request of the legal holder of said shall proceed to sell the same: the eaid F M Allen is now dead, Now te fore, at the request of the legal holder off j note and purenant to the conditions | deed of trust, IDA re the under sheriff of Bates count eourt, wilh ceed to seli the said real es at vendue, to the highest bidder for cash, 6% thus Homepathic:Che- The Old Reliat PHOTOGRAPHER { orth Side Squa | east front door of the court house, in the | North Side Square. of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, on Has the best eqnipped gallery in} Saturday, January 4tb, 1896, 2 : was | cases of itizens who suf-|Shelby, we igi body snatching, and they claim to} made under the most formal conditions, aay in life and pe -rson in eens Tee 2 a ed = — ia have a straight chain of proof which | and with coleman assertions on the mur- | «: list, whos pe ea oka a aman ‘4 . . . : lerer’s part sty - telling u 3 “wit 2 sahoma wh € ry OW. | f . l firs sh consu | sett! secure lai ia who robbed three graves in the|time the name of eae the victims and See ue : ae ee ee ey oe Topeka cemetery to supply the Stier imy Eten details. = ss only é erate | townsite of El Reno, and held it for = : ° * does he claim to have murdered during o trial for the murder. 'g e. i i s Kansas Medical college with dissect-|}.°~ yiicr caroe ere | Se PARES Vay on) ae ED CEES CLE | ‘ : his brief career no less than five dif- Secretary O next treats of ar-| contested in the courts and finally i ing material. Lowe is already under|ferent people, but in describing the | rests of American citizens in violation | y ie ari racedies j ie a fierure: % 1 z a 3t *) ssi . | $1,200 bonds on the charge of mur-| ‘tious tragedies in which he figured | of treaty 1 of which there have | be lost posession of it. Those wko | he showed an utter absence of human | been a number. “Although,” he says, |came in possession of the ground | derous assault. feeling, and a pleasure in his achieve- | «4 i hea i : > Oe Dea sux is achi the treaty in terms gives to the min- | byilt business homes on it and it is i Dr. Minney, dean of the college,|ments that marks him as an unusual | jsters and consuls autho and power Goan pt ; i was also rearrested to-night on the| ‘re oe sete ' to punish Ame and ab- |BOW quite valuable. Shelby took : i is first murder was that of Carrie | solut ely *ludes their imprisonme charge of arranging with Lowe for] Hass, near Pasadena, Cal., whose lit- | hy Tariich aathovitins. the Ottoman pkos oh ake react iene the bodies, as were also F. H. Martin } tle fortune of ) he secured. Onee | government, while admitting to jin nie ie He. a cotaes into L. ©. Duncan, students at the col when tending bar in Long Branch he s extent the English rende nonaca ? : : had killed a consumptive man who of the tre on fre- | Possession of the land and the own- lege, who are charged with receiving} was there and who had money. “nt occasions, assumed to imprison | €T8 of the buildings must either pay the bodies into the dissecting room.|The consumptive had money and | citizens of the United States on crim-|bim an annual rental or move their Tiowe is said to have’ done the | peg to oS ie he aes ar i he rights of | buildings. Shelby says the lots , : refused to tell, on the ground to effect | withcut the improvements are valu- i graye robbing single-handed. Thej|that he had accompl who | ¢ fal source | eq at £5,000. H case against him was worked up by me Sania eat le uow, aes S| yrity is found | ck nen, ee i murder was oy sh ,0ting, too, and the ir he e2 S ta d7: x ' oy { Z in the case of persons of Armenian iia Police Sergeant Frank Ellison. | body had been thrown into the water. | origin, naturalized in the United | ‘ i =e ee | Then there was a Chi n killed inj ¢ in the terri- | i “When it rains soup,” said a man ja a gambling quarrel the brother of | urkey under | jie Mexi "aso Del Norte, | , chore ! trouble and treatment who is chronically complaining of | , S reir one who willl write tiow s . Bangor hard luck, “my plate is always up-| nee or patient may close ts cents in | Wardnea) BE : bee does i 2 | REPORTE 2 “FAVORABL Y. Asia Minor. tal Note, or cash in @ registered letter; { eh ut why does he not) ccnator Peter's Vill to Compel Oficials to MANY PERSONS KILLED. one box of Hi Pil be | : - : | { LLE r with the ; turn it up right and catch his share| Fxpend Appropriations. : j of the soup? In most, if not in all | WasninGrTox, Dee. iator Pef- ful Resaits of a Mine Expiosion at Com- | eases, the fault is rather with the, man than with the plate. Oppor-| t tunities come to almost everyone of | coccion p : } us, at one time or another. But we) ernment ne of travel : appropri is hard te } must be ready to take hold of them. | ®PPTOPt Pee ee: I : ciet ae GER | heads the calen were in that} e some piobastlinay Lat tps also He who does this is the lucky one;} pression that where the ex- Le ee he who lets the opportunities sli tended to cover fosion occurred. or ten le supplied by Me ‘ by unused is the one in “hard luce <) gar bo | are reported as been killed | Pree Go. St. Louis Mo. y unus a ‘d iue l the outright, although the names of the And opportunities once gone by are | in not The explosion | gone by forever. One cannot runj prot disti at Moncear, 14 the mill with the water that is pass-| Di! as repor F in see sey ‘i all eases where moned from ed. Unfortunately, wes : 3 J ately, we see many ofj and directs t and wi ° PARTEn _ (Den’ t Scold : these golden opportunities only} any hours.) From OAK K 3 S he a . appri plosion, 2 i when it is too late—Rural World. F Srgue? ... the Cook, 5 oe: ee j ‘A Friend in Need is a Friend Indeed.” i A triend advised > trv Elv’s Cream i six weeks I j | atarrh, It is a in state con- CHARTER OAK, most valua bie remedy.- eph Stewart, Ricu r inated M. 624 Grand Aven Broo. Keegan. Foster for governor and indorsed Dor they can be relied 7. ‘ ee was Central eveland’s stand on the Venezuelan Se ce rea between estion. H é ae disagreeable catarrh sme’ fend pox , KEM = a fe ee » Good Work. ie lett him. He appears as well as any aa = See 0., @ row occurred be- . + Wi: Oinstend ween ay =o any one, | short time thereafte . The "s | tween alot of negroes playing craps, BENNETT WHEELER MERC. C0., Price of Cream Ba siipiaeie seem found the dea in which Albert Paxton shot and ine Se is fifty cents, S accidental. | = | Stantly killed Charles Coilins BUTLER, - | | Southwest Missouri. All | between the hours of nine o'clock in Oe j a hoon ani tive o'clock inthe afternoo! | Styles of Photogrphing | 2xz torte parnoses of eatiotsing. sais pei ithe diene tie OER 4-40 Sherif of Bates County. ecu in the highest style oft ne} art, and at reasonable prices, etnre = p q H ia ~ Crayon Work A Specialty. Navures | Sope All work in my line is guaranteed to} Rem <agiel \ give satisfaction. Call and see / Manor LiverPs FOR a. *| Compraint samples of work.S

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