The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 21, 1896, Page 8

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j 4 IN WANT. Cora Bell Fellows Said to be Destitute. | —She isthe Wife of Chaska, a Sioux Indian. Huron, 8. D., May 12.—A letter from Mrs. F. W. of this city gives an account of a visit made by Mrs Cannon to Samuel Campbell, better known as/ Cora Belle Fellows, who married | Chaska, a Sioux Indian, while a teacher a year on the reservation, a few years ago. The affair caused a sensation, Miss Fellows being a Washington City belle aud highly educated. Follow- ing the marriage the pair were on exbibition in various dime mnuseums, and in that way accumulated quite a | fortune. On their last visit here Chaska and his wife wore fine clothes, diamonds and handsome jewelry. All these together with the money and | Chaska himself, have gone, and the} former belle of Washington sou iety | now lives near Carthage, Mo, a de-| abouts. serted and destitute woman, with Caanen of Car-| thage, Mo, to ber son, Dr. Cannon | brilliant | : é | City, and had married against the |of fae but of her clothing and | house furniture. The woman was | care worn and sickly looking. I soon discoverd that she was educated and | refined and evidently had seen bet- ter and happier daye. ‘During our conversation three little childrens came into the room, two boys and one girl. The oldest, 7 1 out 7 years old, and Mrs. ie boy, was abo |showed very plainly that Indian | blood coursed in his veins. The girl | jand younger boy were less Indian: | marked, but the traces were quite | told me noticeable. The woman they were her children, but did not say their father was an Indian nor that he was dead, but remarked that the little girl was quite small when } she ‘lost him.’ “The mother guid she was at one time a teacher at the Rosebud Indian Agency and at Santee; that before going there she lived at Washington wishes of her people. I afterward learned that ber hueband deserted | her and married a squaw. She now bas no knolwedge of his where- She is not strong enough to work, but tries to do washing or three children dependent upon her | other labor for the support of her for care and support. Mrs. Cannon says: called toa widow in destitute cir- cumstances. bread, meat, coffee, sugar, cookies, etc, and father took a small! sack of apples, and we two went to see her. She was, indeed, destitute, not only In her letter | children. She is capable of teaching, | but can get no employment in that “A few days ago my avtention was, line. The Aid Society of the Meth- odist Church has assisted her very E filled «baskets with | much and is now raising money to send her children to Nebraska, where pee has friends who will look after her. She is anxious the public should ferget her and her marriage with Chaska, the Sioux Indian.” My stock consists of a new and and see me. [ will cheap as the cheapest. est price paid for same. See OSCAR REAVIS © I wish toray to my friends that I have just opened, one door south of Post Office a NEW GROCERY STORE provisions, and [ extend to my friends a cordial invitation to call treat you Country preduce wanted, and the high- Gives me a call, 2 Oscar Reavis. PREPPY BRI FFP AEE ERAAP RES complete line of Groceries and RAPROARRRPR RPA DR me right and sell you goods as FURNITURE OF ALL DESCRIPTION. Has a full and handsome new line of sampels of Carpets, Wall Paper, Chinese and Japanese Mattings. :- THE LU-MI-NUM BICYCLE. -:- Styles up to date and prices that cannot fail to please. Undertaking in all its branches. GjB. HICKMAN, PROPRIETOR. ISAAC FOWLER & CO. ——-DEALERS IN—— ISAAC FOWLER. A Woman in Alabama Was Stabbed vy! ‘Her Husband. i Blount: Ala, May 12—A | week ago Willlam Kyle, a farmer re-, siding here, and his wife separated, as she alleged, because of his ill treatment of her. The woman took | 1 syle, up her temporary abode with a neigibor A protracted meeting has ;been in progress at the Baptist) ;Church uear here, and last night) Mrs. Kyle attended the services with | ithe family of the neighbor with, whom she was stopping. { Kyle was insanely jealous of his |wife. He went to church also, and |during services watched her every | jmovement. While prayer was in progress he crawled unnoticed upon | ;his knees and hands to the pew, | hee she knelt, and plunged a long} | knife in her back, crying out: “Now, go.” The woman's screams caused @ wild panic among the congregation, who, taking in the situation, made a rush for Kyle in an effort to lynch him, and might have succeeded but | for the action of two Deputy Sheriffs who happened to be in the cor gation, and who, during the excite- ment, hustled the murderer out of the rear door and off to jail at One- onta. Mre. Kyle was taken to the nearest house, where she died. Removal, We take pleasure in annGuncing that after this date Parks Sure cure will re- move all traces ot rheumatism, kidney trovbles and liver complaint from the user. It is the only medicino that is guarantcedto cure these diseases or no day. Parts sure cure is sold by H. L. Tneker Frank James asa Train Guard. St. Louis, Mo., May 10.—Frank James as a guard on express trains carrying large amounts of money or valuables is one of the novelties the express people are now arranging. Negotiations have been in progress for several weeks, and the probabili- ties are the contract will be closed within s few days. The effect of James’ name, in view of his former prowess in robbing trains himself, is what the express companies are aim- ing after. They donot know,they say that he could stop a determined rob- ber any more than one of their own messengers, but they think the or- dinary train robber would hesitate to tackle him. James is willing to accept the position and guarantees that no trainin his charge will be robbed except over his dead body, with one single provision, and that is that the express people put up a bond of $20,000, this amount to go to his widow in case of his death. Are you Billious, conszipated or trou- bled with Jaundic ick 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 is aut of order and your blood is slowly being poisoned because your liver does nqt act properly. Herbine will cure ali disorder of the liver, Stomach or bowels Ithas no equalas aliver medicine. Price 7§ cents. Free trial oottle. at H. L. fuckers drugst re. 48 ry Mind Addled by Wealth. Nevada Mail. J.C Wycoft, who was sent to the Nevada asylum last week from Pettis county, had his mind addled by sudden wealth. Recently Wycoff| fell heir to $6,000. This upset his | patient nu mind, and he set about to spend it, in a most reckless manner. He} imagined he had money everywhere, | and checked on banks regardless of | whether he had funds ou deposit to| | meet their payment. In St. Louis! ihe bought jewelry and checked on| jbanks where he had no funds. A} | asrdian was appointed for him, but [the guardian failed to keep pace! with his ward in his recklessness, jand at last it was deemed best to) send him here for treatment. ' “Ten invalids, neople out of a doz says arecent medi jond degree, | men had a j bad co 2 erbor| bottles! freeat H L areeett =) TANNER CAPTURED. \ In Bates County Twenty-Nine Years Ago. : Bich Hill Tribune. It is generally known among news- paper readers that John R. Tanner, the present republican candidate for governor of Illinois was once a fugi- tive from justice and that he fled to Missouri after the crime—which was the killing of his brother-in Clay county, Illinois, in self defense | —but it has just come to light that | Tanner was captured in Bates county -law in twenty-nine years ago It seems that the capture was | jeffeeted about nine months after the | erime by Sheriff Finch, of Clay! county, who had secured reliable in- formation that Tanner was in hiding | somewhere in this county. | The account goes on to state that | the Sheriff got off at night at a little} station, but does not say which, and | that he drove to the cabin Tanner was living, about midnight. Sending his; deputy around the back way to guard he knocked on the front door, | when Tanner peered out, clad in his| night shirt. The sheriff promptly poked a pistol up in the surprised Tanner’s tace and effected the arrest. | Tanner was taken back and ac quitted on the plea of self-defense. The arrest was the turning point of his life. Finch, the sheriff, is now the edu- | eator of the Kansas republican. 1 1 where arriving there! President Cleveland will undoubt- edly veto the Pickler pension bill, which provides that every federal deserter who served ninety days in the federal army shall be placed in equal standing with the heroes who served from Bull Run to the fall of Richmond. He should do this. While such a course may be loudly denounced by the “pie hunters who have done their fighting since 1865, true soldiera and loyal people every- where will approve of the veto. To sustain the Pickler bill will be to place premium on dishonor and hand out $10,000,000 to deserters, bounty-jumpers and camp followers who trailed in the wake of the army. The present law proyides for the ex- penditure of $150,000,000 annually for deserving veterans and their heirs, and “political sop” is the only excuse for the increase under the Pickler bill No president can af ford to do what the republican house has done—suffer the duty to the country to suffer by reprehensible political grabs.—Appleton City Her- ald. A book on kidney trouble and its treatiment will be mailed free to any- one who will write for it, addressing the Buker Pill Co, Bangor Maine,or enclose 56 ce nts in Postal Note’ or h ina registered letter; and one box of Buker’s Pills will be mailed together with the book, pest paid to the address given, Buker’s Kidney Pills is a new and ae ellous remedy assisting nature to relieve clogged and diseased kidneys; will also relieve bladder diseases. urinary troubles, backache and little aches and pains throughout the body. Back-ache and kidney-ache are very often the same and these pills will re- move the kidney trouble cure the aching back, and purity the blood. Safe in allcases, Being a new dsscovery, Buker’s Kidney pills are not yet on ‘scale at all drug stores. Inenquiring, be sure you get Buker’s (price 50cts) or ad- dress Buker Pill Co., as above, and mention this paper. Southwestern trade supplied by} Meyer Bros., Drug Co.,8t. Louis, Mo. | 42- 12m. John Hoepner iy Sentenced. Alma, Kan., May 12 —John Hoep-| | ner, convicted of murder in the see- was to-day sentenced to tweuty years imprisonment for | taking the lite of Frank Mitchell, a neighbor, on March 5, Alta Vista, Wabaunsee county. The two! few words over the dam. | age a hog belonging to the deceased, minitted They could u ot} agree as tothe damage. and the de-. ceased Ee ed the hog out end start ed to driv+ it home Hoapuer i de bear manded, after procuring ae otgan, that the paid 3 attention to hog be return dam ot survive °° ere Dr. & covery: i t was store. Yrs) H Or Ball i@ Pe) 6 charged for a small piece of other & brands, the chew is no better than “Battle Ax.” For 10 cents you © get almost twice as much as of © 5 other high grade goods. The5 & Oe) aS 18 io © SG SSOG TOSS GIOVS NODS GiCGaK “A HAND SAW IS A coop “THING, BUT NOT TQ SHAVE WITH.” SAPOLIO IS THE PROPER THING FOR Soe ae There is fun in the foam, and health in the cup of HIRES Rootbeer—the great temperance drink Mair to its You oy cures scalp diseases & ha Sic, and $1.00 at Dru; HINDERCORNS The only eure Cure for ‘orns. Stope all pain. Makes walking easy. Loe, et Dru: Chichester’s English Diomone Gra NAYROVAL PILLS in stamps for ss Keliel for send Be. articulars, ‘testimonials: sek ies,” an Letéer, by return Mall “10,000 Testimenisis. Name oper } Chichester Ch Co. Mad! Bead by al Lach inezegy bemlesl Co, Madicon tguary GERMAN AMERICAN iMESTHEMT C0. FOL =e 192, oH 2 Wall: N.Y. (Under supervision of . Department of | the State of New York.) Authorized C. apital - $1,000,400 | Paid up Capital - - - $200,00 | Letters of Credit, Checks and drafts on For- eign Cour at cheapest rates, SPE other money i many and .. Hungary. Foreign mor ank notes, bonds, bough and sold. Bik Bankers wanted as agents im various towns. JACKS FOR SALE. D. A. COLYER, r, Bates Co., Mo. “No wonder poor ; Binnie so tired, ca all day that great big piece of oe matter how much you are cent piece is nearly as large as other 10 cent pieces of equal quality. ansfers nnd all | i of interest to men, young ant old, 1 F CTS mail sealed for 6 cents stamps OLDEST AND ORICIN: 4 110 owe oth St., Kansas City, Mo. Regular graduate-authorized by the state, | and conceded to be tire leading aud most | Successful Speciatist In BLOOD, NERV. | CUS and URINARY DISEASES. | temper, lack of development. backache, dizti- ness, Spots before eyes and other gloomy symp toms perfectly cured. | dred troubles absolutely cured. | SYPHILIS many other sy out mercury. | URINARY SISEASES tusscustiy‘cuee VARICOC:LE orenlarged veins of eae Bol eed eer enren uae st ration. | did opinion of a ph: | experience, skill and any where secure Bi with its resulting de spondency, irritable NERVOUS DEBILIT | LOST VITALITY peostatcenScos saaeate ny stage, causing sore thrash. alling hair, pain in bones and ms, cured permanently witle surgical of without the use of knits or truss. RUPTURE CURE PILES, FISTULA, psisscs%aethoas ™ (Book on above diseases free for stamp.) J] who consult Di. H. J. WHITTIEE, te _ Pioneer Specialist of the West, either ia | person or by No promises made that a be fulfilled, Medicines furnished atsmall costand shipped from observation. Treatment never sent C. O. D. Free Consultation and Urinary Analysis Office hours, 9 t i Tto8 Sunday, 10toi Call or address in strict confidence DR. H. J. WHITTIER, 10 West Ninth Street, ction) Kansas City, THAT WRISLEY’S , “OLD COUNTRY”

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