The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 9, 1896, Page 6

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anent Seve S SCOTT'S EMU Scott's s Ei SONGS ON KA Missouri Glee Sunflo ong " on; arent ht > 6 SION } gain i is improvemen en alter you cease flesh; Sound mulsion with trade-mark of 1.00 sizes. The si Club Sings of the wer State. NEVER GO Ba -Butt son Made Topeka Was Worse. Kaneas City World. The Missouri THERE AGAIN. d he Town Leayenworth of Atcht- Them Curse. University Glee and Banjo clubs have been out in Kan sas. they Last night at the auditorium made their reappearance on Missouri soil, and the feature of the joyful event was a song written by James DeArmond, of Butler, son of Congressman De »Armond, descriptive of their experience in the Sunflower state, where the people gave them the “Marble He: art,” and where they will never go anymore, no neyer. Mr. DeArmond warbled the song himself to the tune of ‘Oa the Bow His aud ery.” felling rendition was his world’s of meaning full of voice expressed And the gusto with which the boys came in on the last line of the never go there any more,” marvel tame manner wi dered the other con iB programme. Th it posed mostly cours the song. “We just got ba er state, We packed our our freight; The audience heart, It caused no We all took sleey ‘To shelter our vy rain, We'll never Our grips were h light, We jumped our light; The road was lor But we had eneu And Center Rus ahead, The Kansas Topeka was bac worse, But the town of curse, We outnumber The only reason None of our purs We've had noth We were in Law Thesun shone, So very few pec But Capt. Piatt And if he'd com \nd stay arounc And if everagai On this one thir dough; That we will ne The only thing go, All yeu hear is years “For they say And they d In Kansas! in Lawrence, like $100} e,went into gave The total receipts o chorus, “And we'll was truly the rather th which they ren- numbers upon the e big audience, com of of over sidering Missourians, convulsions It ran as follows: ck from the Sunflow- grips and we pulled marble us the ef when we bad to part vers beneath the train gices from wind and And now we're safe in Missouri again go there again. eavy, our hearts were »oard bill before day- 1g, the ties farapart, gh, so desided tostart h Thompson was far And as he started he only said: landlord has gone through me. And I'll neve rgo there anymore. 1 and Leavenworth Atchison made Louraudience 10 to5, that we alive: es worse for wear, ing in them but pure fresh air But we're thankful because that’s there, 5 And we'll never go there anymore. rence Christmas day, but we made no hay; It made us lonesome t » show at all, yple were in the he we fou eup to M.S. U. ifora week or two, He'd never go back anymore. hwe goout to show 1g you may bet your ver be that is freei here air: Where ‘Uncle Tom's Cabin’ is all the jee d company, the Jayhawk’s crow, rgo there anymore. CH¢ AES ich things In Kausas! And we'll never go there anymore” ft the Glee club | Topeka and Leaven- worth and Atchison were something African or the Cripple Creek dis.| I Many VESSELS BLOWN ASHORE | id gtrue blue, | | Siips on the New England Coast at t he} Storm’s Mercy.—Loas Will Reach $1,500,000. Boston, Mass., Jan. 1.—Scores of | Vessels were driven ashore by the} ‘gales of the paat thirty six bours| i id the ‘the New Ex; | $1,500,000. | While no lives are known to be lost, fifteen men are at ‘at the merey of the sea, stranded in | Nantucket Bay, beyond human aid. |The vessel was sighted in distress ,¢ in Nantucket Bay at sunset and un-)| til the sea moderates a lifeboat can- not be launched. | The Ellen Lincoln of | Gioucester went to pieces off Nauset. | on Cape Cod, and her crew of nine teen men were with difficulty taken |'" | off the breeches buoy. e to st land ec dan along ping will exce ast the present | | | | | schooner | driven on the beach two miles below. The mortar and lines were quickly carried along the beach, and, after |the deck of the eraft, which had al |ready begun to go to pieces. As the last man reached line the masts of the schooner tered and fell with a crash. the surf tot- Her of wreckage whirled about in the angry sea. The schooner Hattie M. Howes is a total wreck at Vineyard Haven and the schooners Fred and Elmer of Boston went to pieces on the rocks of Cape Porpoise, the crew in each case haying a hard struggle to reach shore. Another Gone. Richardson, the eldest of the eight widow pensioners of the Revolution is dead at her home at East Bethel. Patty F.int was born in Connecti- cut February 1, 1801. In 1830 she married Godfrey M. Richardson of Cambridge, Mass., who, at the age of 16 away from his father’s home in Cambridge, Mass. and helped throw up the redoubts on Breed’s Hill the night before the} battle of Bunker Hill. He husband receiyed a pension as) a minute man by special act of Con- gress, and this devolved upon Mrs. Richardson. Mrs. 29 and her husband were married. ran Richardson 56 was w Cheap Metropolitan Papers. There is no excuse nowadays for| a citizen failing to subscribe for great metropolitan newspaper in ad- dition to taking his own county paper, ‘The Twice a Week” Re public of St. Louis which is credite qo with the largest circulation of any | weekly paper, is only $1 a year, and | for this sum it sends two papers a| week, or 104 papers a year—less than one cent each. The weekly) contains the best and brightest news | condensed from the daily paper, to- gether with a well assorted collect ion of reading matter and useful information. A popular feature of prominent men in the presidential campaign. These will be given almost in fuil. “‘Pwice a-Week” Republic will al- ways be abreast of the times, for no paper has facilities. The Daily greater news gathering and Sunday Republic can now be had by mail for a little | more than one cent and a half a a day jor $6 a year, when advance | Thoug y re | ducec I its | value twofolc ny valu laine tes T4t. Extensive, Va, dan. 1—N. i , the mi aire lard refiner | of Ghee ZO; arene s | and L D. Hooper, E. kK. Willard bankers of New | York; General L. M. Logan of Rich./ 2"! i | | mond, Va., and others have organiz- el the Piedmont Gold Belt, « arter- with a capital stock of 100,000 to develox > OU A Very | ex Because they played foot ball three ae snsive scale large gold minin; g prop sovering several thousand res in dele County, Vir la gimia. Investigations of experts, it is claimed, show that the average of | these ores give a very much better, | Percentage of gold than either South | triet. | bas been in search of a man named | | His name is known all over the civ-| Co: | Fleming for the past 18 months, ar : on e@e MISSOY that he has located his man in a cer- coun- me i yhith is en ald become involved in war eons tain Iowa town, whither he is en 1 A t route to cause his arrest. i ife he would at once turn; ©" * nother S sateen = “ hb stealing |his entire o x ¢ ingendaeal Hoon eae Easy sath steane panna ; Strong ¢ Point $s cessful Spe; Milton's wife and three children|means of destruction and teaching TO in BLOOD, from their home in Clinton onthe|the American soldiers how to use| 1 uni ‘night of September 3, 1893, and the same. Mr. Edison would not DISEASES, : | me’ a ro - oo é e-alls skilled physicians, 0 Searcely bad their landing been | Lowa, Illinois and Indiana. | method Mr E Higon has suggested & set Ss er in person or by letter (gis ‘ y ba : g jaccomplished when the schooner | | Smuggler, also of Gloucester, was | jtwo attempts, a line was sent across | decks fell in a heap and only a mass! Rutland, Vt., Jan. 1.—Mrs. Patty |€ hen they | in| its columns next year will be speeches | A reader of the! | work in my line is gu tee: } erm of 3 pre sued for $500 by James Lynch pi eemanactiod acai ee *9| cou probate court, in Bates “county | or = a ae to Wm. Davrid- -3-EVERY. aS AGE-s- samples of work.= be cs eatinti a t : 50D an yyuch’s 14 year old ugh- ginning ont ne Has the Z Stamp in red on wrapper. ae [ter Minaie sez stamp inredon warns | C, HAGEDORN, | Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, ane Best Salve in tt Ule | OLDEST ano ORICINAL OO, WHITTIE 10 WEST NINTH STREET, (NEAR JUNCTION.) KANSAS CITY, Husband's Long Haunt. | The most wonderful inventive Eldorado Springs, Mo., Jan. 1. — genius who ever lived is Thomas A.| T. A. Milton ef Clinton, Mo, who | Edison of Menlo Park, New York. world for Cuts SaltRheum Fever Chiblains ns, and posi- or no pay required. erfe t satisfaction | Sent ed wo: in- An Mr. E lison is an recent or For ense a id that if this rived in this city to day, and reports | equip a line of infantry drawn up to with musket and with subsequently murdering one of the children and leaving another in| the woods from any} would put a fire- | house, not far from this city, to die | lhose in the hands of each soldier | | from starvation and exposure. land tell him to throw water on the! The mother has been in the hands| approaching enemy. The supply OF f Springfield (Mo.) officers for near- | water he would charge with electric- | ily a year, during which time 16/ity in a manner with which | members of a well organized detect- | familiar, and every one of the enemy | | ive agency have been oe or on whom a seers ot water fell would | | This one! iy ervous Debility With its Many Gloomy Symptoms G Lost Vitality Perfectly and Permaneatly Restored, | Syphilis | “Cured for Life Without Mercury, |Urinary Diseases Quickly Relieved and Thoroughly Cag WV h 2 ‘Dr. H. J. Whittier i CHART TER OAK receive a charge | bayonets, but he over a mile ition to its perfect opera- bility, is that it with the small- quantity of fuel. BENNETT WHEELER MERC. CO., AGENTS BUTLER, MO. ee ed | fe) he is! ov. makes no promises # He is said to be wanted in Mis-|of rendering an attack upon Ameri-| souri for various crimes, and the can soldiers ding dangerous. | | party effecting his capture will re-| | ceive a large reward lize all war tacties, and make an ordi- s) and reeeive the cundid opinion gy an of long experience, unqu ing integrity. S$ from our own laboratory fm nd shipped excee and it would completely revolution- | e from obser dangerous | | ‘Trafic in Wives. jnary fire company more fevered parts to where | TREATMENT never sent 6.0.2, | ‘in close quarters than ten regiments! 4+ eon a ey 5 on ae . | ar, Pa, Ja —The selling 1 the inflammation is | CONSULTATION. po abar bes pee 2 ee PS | of well drilled soldiers. —Jeffers . ‘ Ae v s why ‘FRE URINARY ANALYSIS, of wives by the Italians in this sec-;_. i pv site Phat is iy eae me ite E {City Tribune. | ang Lisiment Office hours—9 to 4 and 7 to 8. Sunday 1 | tion of the coke region kas been re-| ~~ zZ j Mustan Hou ic id (To Health and Em vived by the sale of a gitl about 15) Colorado's Gold Ou all aches and UGE; tor 6 crs.—stamps—top OES 8 | E = | Ress) Call or address in strict confidence | years old to an Italian for $300. The | Denver, Col. Jan. 1—For the} pc ns of man or notary | DR.H.J. WHITTIER, | father of the girl had been previous. first time in the history of the State) lf it evaporaied OF Fe= | @west Ninth Street. Kansas City, ly offered $200. This suitor was|the gold output for the year just} mained on the skin it overbid, and the father gave the|closing exceeded in value that of} could mot cure. That ee girl to the man who offered the most /silver. The most careful compu-| js wity volatile extracts | BENEFICENT AND WISE, for the prize. The ceremony was|tation of the mineral output} fail. Theycan’tgodewn solemuized yesterday. Near the|for the year from the statis- a the inflamed Anchor Coke works there is an Ital-|tics attained shows the following:| parts. ; Read what Maj. Waddill, Supers, ian settlement, where, it is said, the | Gold, ee 340,495; silver, $14,255,- n tendent of Insurance,says about grossest immorality exists among | 049; lead, 114; copper, $877,- Mustang — = a of this class of people. It is no un-| 492; wey $35,432,150. For 1589 Cente ae tees ciation of Kansas City. Wm. D. Marmay, Deputy So the output was: Gold, $11,235,506; silver $14,721,750; lead, $3,268,613; $767,420; total, The increase in gold production is common thing for parents to barter | their children to anyone who will give them the required sum. Liniment owes its success to its power of penetration. Jas. R. Waddill, Superintendent A. F. Harvey, Actuary. | copp There is no little preaching, both , almost wholly from the Cripple There is nothing mar- INSURANCE DEPARTMENT, in and out of the pulpit, as to the! Qt aictrict velous about its cura- STATE OF MISSOURI, ever-present danger of sudden death Sees tive powers. It is sim- ST. LOUIS. and like all truisme, it grows dull co RCS Kan sae 1.—Four ply afew commion sense — May 25th, 1895, the general ear after a time. Yet it| brothers, Robert McFayden, aged ingredients combined Judge C. W. Clarke, 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 ther is very wide of the proposition Lup derstood you to be contending for What I understood you to want was a clause in your policy providing for} the payment of half the policy in the event of total disability, but the prop: osition vou make now is in the event of total disability, at the request d jis a startling certainty, asthe record | 13; John, 16; William, 12, and Arch- | for the year just closed shows. As|ie, 11, were burned to death in their far as recorded, the loss of life by| home at Frontenac, Monday night. | shipwreck was 4,250; by railway ac-| Two brothers of the deceased, | cidents, 3,632, and by other causu |who returned froma visit to rela-| alties over 24,000. Add to these dis- | flames, | jmal figures the 5,759 reported mur- | said that the four boys were within | ders in the United States alone, and | Search we have a total of 37,641 violent | bodies lyin *4.a way to make pen- ration possible and sure a cure. ustang Liniment been used for onc- he a ——T i 1as tives while the house was in | the ashes revealed the | on their backs and with | nn Both b tra tor mailed free, | : ; ea | 5 if the policy-holder, to pay half in ab deaths, or an average of over one) bits of ing. This Lyon Manufacturing Co., leotute MiesHAceaC me oe yay i | hundred for every day in the year. | showed pdbeetired (42 soot eat ots Brookty aN ae ; a condition as that in your ‘polieyig beneficent and w Beneticent fi that it gives to the “polic¢ y holder in his extremest need, and wise ia} that it enables the company to settle an approaching total loss at fifty per | Even a life insurance advocate could| when the started and it is be | hardly find a more eloquent illustra-| lieved that they were the | tion of the ever-impending possibil-| foul play. jity of an untimely taking off, especi tire victims of | | | | diseases. —Globe Democrat. There are some people who are cent, Tthink such a condition jally if there could be added to the} , : PAR that in your policy is a wise provistanl jnever positive in HAIR SAE GROA and as quoted by you in your letter, | dismal list the vastly greater num-| | Tdont know? or guess | ¢ and besutifies the hate | 1 could urge no ‘objection to it what ¢ now, xuriant gro | ber who are dying daily of what are} eS ae fea | Never Fails to Restire ever. Ido not re gard this as an at iene tocucaieal cae There is a world of such peo-| cident provision at all; it may arise} cal men as en | ple, and itis refresh sometim es| from sickness, may come from old | age,inay come from sudden stroked paraly sis, a confirmed case of rhew matism, cr it may arise from an ace dent, and it is not paying an accident to hear a person speak as one having | like Mr. Chas. F. Soy-! - ! convictions, G RAT EI FUL = Sits.” coe . > , ies r, of Bangor, Pa. who wrote: “I —COMFORTING. | claim to make such a settlement, It Wher ean recommend Simmor cE P P a ID iF ; : 0 A a an ea meeue nt oe c ner { : Pca oe alas se the whole amount of the poliey | a ae an ng j Live egulator to all who are trou | oe 3 half at the time LM ne Ce ee 'bled with Dyspepsia or Liver Com- RAKFAST—SU 7 holder most needsit. This, 88 When she had Cuil he gave them Castoria, betes : ae F AES SIDES regrigiagotale I have before stated I regard 0 wise and beneficent. Very respectfully, Jas. R. Waddill, Supe rintendent. F.C. SMITH, Azt If the necessity exists for wool in the interests of the es 1- ed Cocoa Mr forour breakfast and sup- » flavored beverage which may heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the of diet that aicon- built up until ney to dis- are float- | The heroes of the late flood are| the two Russell boys, both under 16) who live near Smithfield, can campaign, the same necessity |} exists for nominating a republican |: Sasper | the who will clearly eounty. During the flood two fam. | Bs hates wee |i Sra recal as BUTLER, MO lilies, aggregating 13 men, women) a ee PEcue chive ste rauon Zon ey iret nie aoa fortified wie and children were encamped on the|@3thivg. raw taterial included |; ate ply with boil Order of Publication. White farm. They were missed and | A¥4 vobody does that so well xs Sethu ee ee STATE OF MISSUURI,/ County of Bates. '§ * In the Probate Court for the County of Baws & ovember term, 1505. WM Campbell, ef ecutor, James H Steele, deceased, Order of Publication. 1, executor of James H Steele the court his petiti [JAMES McKinley —N. A's World Homepathic}Che- , England DR. TAFT'S ASTHMALENE ASTHMA gees rm The DR. TAFT BROS. Mi. C Rochester, supposed to hsve been drowned. | The boys began a search, finally find- ing them in a wagon box on a hay | stack with a mile of water around them inevery direction. The un- aaa of asid deceased sa Sinan fortunates h been there for 24) b n the cold and storm and witho food and nearly exhausted n, sue case that The lade by a heroie effort conveyed cf sald decest ithat, ap piinaties as afor unless the cootrary Be the firet day of the nes commencing & Ty next, an the whole, oF id decease 1 debe them two at a time in safety to the land. Sold by au Le dat to sleep in t and went he use. When found by the f a Ad rnext morning be exclaimed: 2 5 Li be j in't stole nuffin’ Jas ‘ drap | e000 FOR EVERYBODY g J ; i q ¥ \ ped off ter sleep at der sho’ an’ dab ae fool n s* len = me sleep, dat’s | I. Tse mighty cold, doh. The Old Reliable | i} 836% “Fe > fe sDuez re be | Zisa troe copy k —— Sie | Pr or _ RAPHE R eer ae an EMEDY ‘' = pinata Soni eatofice in’ Butler Be ror gar) Mianpranc. in| Wat iW, bastos, Liver — | Hf] | of Protaiwt Comptaras. ( LierPiis Styles s of Photogrphing From Shelbina comes the storof | peoces vie oe es & woman whe opened a can of corn, art, and at re > Drives and found a man’s finger therein. i penabemnser ate sto! Crayon Work A Specialty. Recorder Bryan, of Callaway, is| 5-4t

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