The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 5, 1896, Page 2

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eer eeetconees : Se aOR ace Auman COREE = PE “PRO Ae NO | 74 i} TRACK OF A ‘TEXAS CYCLONE Ruin and Nevastation in Wake of Storm. DWELLINGS BLOWN DOWN. Several Injured and One Person Kuiied Outright. Dallas, Texas, Oct. 29 —A special | 4o the News from Sherman says: A well defined tornado Squirrel Creek bottom, four miles west of the village of Farming, aud about one hundred miles southwest | of this city. Persons who saw it at . | tion say that out of a seething, tum- $ 1 bling mass of inky clouds a funnel- shaped column descended until it} touched the earth, and then it begau to move northeastward, accompanied by the usual terrific crash aud roar ag it tore through the bottoms, up- rooting large trees and demolishing everything in its path which for the first mile or two was thirty or forty yards wide. The first house it is to have struck was on the George Duke farm, one mile west of Howe, and about five miles from the starting point. No one hurt at this place. From this point until it struck the Jim Farris farm, two miles south of the city, a distance of about two miles, it ic kaown to have risen and descended several times, and what damage it did has not yet been ascertained Several persons have gone to that place, but it will be several hours before definite information can be had. At the Farris place, a tenant kut, occupied by a family named Hayes, was literally torn tu pieces, and every member of the family was more or less injured. Hartshorne, I. T., Oct. 29 —Yes- terday evening’s cyclone played havoc in Mine No. 12 at Krebs. At Wewoka Gov. Brown's big store, the known was uew church and four other buildings j were blown down. Several people were hurt at Woweka, but none seriously. At Mine No. 12 several persons were reported killed out right. The tornado struck Alderson, a mining town belonging to Chocataw Joal Company, eight miles distant, destroying the section house and three other buildings. No persons were seriously injured. Guthrie, Okla, Oct. 29.—During the night a disastrous tornado pre- vailed in Lincoln county, 30 miles east of here, followed by a cloud burst. A dozen or more residences and other buildings were wrecked, and an enormous amount of damage was done to property and crops: Mr. and Mrs. John MeLaughlin were instantly killed and a number of others were badly injured. There are rumors of other deaths farther north. ILL FATED SHERMAN. Sherman, Tex, Oct. 29.—A tor- nado originated about 5:15 o'clock last eyening near Farmington, 16 miles southwest of Sherman and after forming took a northeasterly course, passing about three miles east of Sherman. The first destructive work of the storm was noted 12 miles southwest of Sherman, where it demolished a tenant house on the farm of George Duke. Wo one was hurt at that place, and the tornado rose from the earth, striking again at a point about four miles southeast of Sher- man. Several persons telephoned from a suburban residence in the neigh borhood, asking that searchers be! sent out to look for persons who are missing. Requests were also made for physicians, bandages, stimulants and other articles necessary to care forthe wounded. Reports of the number of wound- edare very indefinite, as it was pitch darkness soon after the passing of the storm. A man who was in the Farris fieldis among the missing. Denison, Tex., Oct. 29.—A torna do doing thousands of dollars’ worth of damage passed over nurth Texas last night The storm fell heavily on this city, unroofing many build. ings The post-oftice was damaged. Reports from the surrounding country indicates loss of life and great destruction of property. The tornado was accompanied by a eloud burst. Relief parties have gone to the country to ascertain the extent of the damage aud help those who Gere injured. formed in} S | ita incep-} ‘DEACON BROS. & CO. | Heavy and shelf Hardware, Cutlery and Guns ‘Tinware } and Stoves, Field and Garden seeds, Buggies, Wagons and machivery, Wagon wood werk, Iren, Steel, Nails, Salt, Barbw Machine oil, Glass Xc. | ORIGINAL ROUNDS OAK Best heater in the world. Farm Buggy paints, | | i | KEEPS FIRE -:- -:- - i with weod er coal, | TRIUMPANT over al others. ; | Give you references | from 1000 Bates County People. | The Starling with cast top and bottom. The best air tight wood heater in America. Call and see our line of wood and coal heaters. | Train Load ot Gotd. Secret of Beauty | Chicago, Til, Ovt. 29 —Railroad is health. The secret ofhealth is | ™Pivyes at the Grand Central Pas sengr Station theught the advance guard of the army had arrived in | Chics go when the Baltimore & Obio jfast cxpress train pulled into the | Station night. The United | States Express Co, had a special j car attached to the train and all ex O- | cep’ one little corner of this car was | filled with men who carried reyolvers ia | and guns having bristling bayonets. the power to digest and assim- ilate a proper quanity of foed. This can never be done when the liver does not act it’s rart. Doyou know this? Tutt’s Liver Pills ar< lute cure forsick headache, dy pepsia, sourstomach, mak: Just | In the little corner, however, was a | suficient wealth to satisfy a dozen | gangs of train robbers if they had | secured it. | The wealth ipation, torpid ] iV. consisted of gold amounting to a legal tender value of $2,500,000. It had been shipped from the Sub Treasury in New York to the Sub Treasury in this city and it was transferred from the express jear to the Rand MeNally building this morning The transfer was due to the fact that the Chicago Sub | Treasury was taxed to relieve the Indiana comes near standing at! reeent strain on the Sub-'lreasury in the head of the list. The population | San Francisco. in 1890 was 2,192,404. The pension | ers number now 88,836, and the! amount paid is $10,581,861. This is | nearly $5 per capita for every man,| a1, permitted to make this extract: woman and child in the state. | “I have no hesitation in recommend- Massachusetts with a population) ing Dr. King’s New Discovery, as nearly the same as Indiana, but a! _ — were almost marvelous in little larger, had only 38,340 pen.‘ the case of my wife. While I was sioners. dbawing os 614 Pie =o eet eee ot : nes See Rives Junction she was brought wide difference is due largely to the down with Pneumonia succeeding movement of Massachusetts veterans | La Grippe. Terrikle paroxysms of west. | coughing would last hours with lit- Towa, with about one seventh less | te interruption and it seemed as if | she could not survive them. A friend | recommended to us Dr. King’s New known as the home of a large nUM-) Discovery: it was quick in its work ber of veterans, has 37,798 pension- | and highly satisfactory in results ” ers drawing $5,463.976. | Trial bottles free at H’ L. Tucker's Ohio etands at the head of the list | drug store. Regular size 50c aad $1. WHERE PENSION MONEY GOES. Distribution by States Shown in the Commissionor’s Annual Report. Marvelous Results. 50 4t From a letter written by Rev. J. Gunderman of Dimondale, Mich., we population than Indiana, avd well in the total number of pensioners, | which is 103.921, drawing $15,432, 462. HMlinois, with a slightly larger population than Obio, and 70 per cent more population than Indiana, has 68,688 persioners. drawing $9,- 844,792. New York has 87,006! pensioners drawiag $12,409,269, | and Pennsylvania has 98,837, pen- sioners drawing $15,159,588. Kan- jsas has 42.433 pensioners drawing | $6 321,389, while New Jersey has | but 20,017, drawing $2,445,465 Missouri draws nearly $3 perin-| Qno day a dark hued couple pre habitants for pensions, amounting | sented themselves as candidates for to $7,272,320 for 53,862 pensioners. matrimony, and be soon sent them | South Caroliaa comes at the bottom jon their way rejoicing. In a few} of the list of the older states with | days the man returned and stated 2.669, drawing $203,215. Arkansas i that he could not live “wid dat ‘ar | through northern immigratior, has 5 z ; oman.” jraised her roll and gets annually | “Very well,” said the J. P., strok $1,339,167. jing his long judicial beard, “bring Nearly every country in the world me $15 and I'll give you a divorca.”| is the home of at least one pensioner, ae inane peanenesson there being one in the Azores, three lauaa i oe jin Brazil, two in Algiers, four in the divorced “‘by due process of law.” This is the onlyinstance on record | Argentine Republic. nine in Chili, one in Egypt, one in Reumania, one. in Venezuela, ten in Japan, one in | Korea, three in Liberia and even one in Finland. An All-Around Mar, | The Tifton Gazette has discovered | | @ justice of the peace who “takes the | | prize.” By arrangement with the | ordinary he was authorized to issue} marriage licenses. In these days the} negroes were beginning to enjoy the! | folks, and the J. P. was gathering in | | pocketed the license fee, but also! | charged a stiff price for tying the | knot. | of an ordinary, a magistrate, a prea- cher, a clerk of the supericr court, a! judge of the superior court3and| twelve jurors. | Improper and deficient care of the! | casTonia. scalp wil! cause grayness of the hair | | Tes he. as jand baldness. Escape both by the Biatare HE 2. erexy__| use of that reliable specicific, Hall's | & oA de Lich Fvye Ft | Hair Renewer. | something to get in, howev 11891 corn |A year later, in the jluxury of marrying just lke white|} | quite a lot of shekels, ag he not only | § where oue man exercised the power)! } Book about it free Keep Plenty ef Siock H Experience bas demonstrated that | the farmer who keeps his hog stock | up year in and year out is wise. | Southern Stock Farm says: Itis all} } : . | well enough to say that it don’t take | lany time to get into hogs. vert everybody wants to buy it costs} Thej| |fact that hogs and corn get wide! ‘apart im price at times is largely due | | , < ¢ Peas tar’ at 5 ruir ito lots of men going out of boge| fered, started at 500 guir when corn is b and hogs low, andi going into hogs when corn is low} high. For instance, in} sold for 50 cents a bushel | and bogs and hogs for That year of bh ) per hundred. | it was a bg to get rid) 7s with a great many farme! fall of 18% nd the men} everybody wanted bh who got cut in at in at) down | figures I ially of profit have the object lesson of low prices | cut their margin Just now we} on both coru and hogs, with the al \ most certainty that so far as corn is | concerned low prices will rule for a| With hoge, however, the| prospects are better for an up turn. | long time. If business revives during the win | ter, and especialiy if our foreign | markets are retreved by favorable | legislation, as they can be, the pros pect is for better prices. So it is well to keep up stock whichever way things go. In fact it has been prov en beyond question that sticking to hogs through good conditions and bad proved best for all farmers who have tried it. We venture the pre- diction that the man who carries over a good lot of brood sows this season will never regret it. According toa celebrated anato- mist there are upwards of 5,000,000 little glands in the human stomach. These glands pour out the digestive juices which dissolve or digest the food. Indigestion is want of juice, weakness of glands, need of help to restore the health of these organs. The best and most natural help is that given by Shaker Digestive Cor- dial. Natural, because it supplies the materials needed by the glands to prepare the digestive juices’ Be cause it strengthens and invigorates the glands and the stomach, until they are able to do their work alone Sbaker Digestive Cordial cures indi gestion certainly and permanently. It does so by natural means, and therein lies the secret of its wonder ful and unvaried success. At druggists, price 10 cents to $1 per bottle. Ashland, Ky., Oct. 29.—At Pres- tonburg, Floyd county, free silver Democrats, led by a deputy sheriff, attempted to how! down the speak er, Hon. Augustus H .Wilson, of Louisville, Ky., and in the content- ion that followed Ed Peary, a young Republican, was stabbed and killed by a young man named Marrs, a Democrat. The meeting adjourned in a genera! row, in which the offen ders were roughly handled. Marrs was arrested and narrowly escaped being lynched on the spot. Chief Justice W. H. Hot, of the Kentucky Court of Appeals, who was Mr. Wilson’s companion on the itrip, passed through the city this jafternoon, en route home to Frank fort, and stated that a speaker took | his life in his hands when he talked sound money in some of the upper valley communities. CONSUMDLON Outdoor life and Scott’s # Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with § Hypophosphites have cured J thousands of cases of consump- & tion in the early stages. They cure old, advanced cases too; but not so many,norso prompt- ly. When a case is so far ad- § vanced that a cure cannot be made, even then SCOTT’S ® EMULSION checks the rapid ity of the disease, relieves th peins in the chest, reduces the : night sweats, and makes the comforts and prolongs life. the recent massacre at Egin. hard Sells Out. i Newmarket, Oct., 20.—The entire | stud of American horses belonging} to Enoch Wishard were sold today at Tattereall’s and fetched, guineas ($38,692) There was a large crowd present, including the Duke of York, Sir John Blundell Maple, Lord Rendlesham and Sir and Lady Fitzgerald George H. Ketcham was first of-) as, and at | $125,009 | < j\A general banking business trang 1,200 guineas was sold to FL. W. Dani C. Hibbert bought MacBrigys for | 200 guineas, M. La Baudy bought Wishard 2,000 g eas Count Lehn droff, aide decamp of Emperor Wil ham of Germany, purchased Helen ,| Nickell for 1,150 guineas, Ramapo was knocked down to S: and H for 400 gureas, Penvy went to F. W) Day for 420 guineas | CASTORIA nts and Children. Massacre Contirmed, Boston, Oct. 27.—Advices from Kharput, Eastern Turkey, received in Boston confirm dispatches in re gard to the extent aad barburity of These advices state that many of the dead were left in the streets for days as food for dogs and Jarge numbers were thrown into the Euphrates The bodies were seen floating down the river 50 miles below the city. In some cases whole families were obliterated. Exact statistics, of course, cannot be given now, but it is feared that 2,000 is an under- estimate. All the testimony at hand concurs in showing that the mass acre was official, and that it was wholly without reason. A man may dre3s as well as his own good judgment and the assist- ance of an artistic tailor may elect. He may take his “tubs” but if hia digestive organs are out of order, he will have an unwholesome ap- pearance. His complexion aud the white of his eyes will have a yellow. ish cast. His tongue will be coated, appetite poor, his teeth rusty, his breath abominable. He is one big, unmistakable sign of constipation The quickest, surest, easiest way to cure this trouble is to take Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They are made of refined, concentrated vege- table extracts. Nothing in the least harmful enters into their composi tion. They hunt down all impurities and “make them move on.” They are the product of many years’ study and practice. Dr. Pierce cannot af- ford to put forth a worthless article. Address with 21 cents in one-cent stamps to cover cost of mailing only, World’s Dispenearv Medical Associ San Francisco, Cal., Oct. 25.—The sub treasury here has just pulled through a rather serious run, which threatened to annihilate its goid re- serve and leave it without a dollar with which to redeem the perfect avalanche of greenbacks that pour- ed in over the counter. Timely rid came from Chicago and other sources and when the outflow of gold finally stopped the $12,000,000 of a few months ago, despite the frequent ad- ditions that have been made, was re. duced to a bare $1,000,000. Hopkins’ Steamed Hom- Elegant lunch in milk. Always in season. iny (Hulled Corn}. Quart can, licts Accidentally Killed Her Son. Marysville, Mont, Oct. 29.—Mrs. J. W. All shot and accidentally killed her 10 year old son and fatally shot her husband this morning. He was whipping the boy and she interfered, when he turned on her. She took a rifle and shot at him, but killed the child by accident. She shot him in the head. He may die. She is erazed with grief. Use Thisttes for Ene!. the result of experiments last winter, jthe mill at Castalia will again this winter use the Russian thistle for Don’t experiment with cures ch, your faith to the one remedy which has been THE STAN @ 4, DARD FOR i i cough easier. In these cases it & { : } i i VER 20 YEARS. { For sale by all crugsists at 50c. and $1.00. SCOTT & BOWNE, New f the ill offers farmers $150 per | ton for all the thistles they can bring | }in. Thus the farmers in that section | ill receive an income from what has eretofore been one of their greatest jenemies, the thistles growing in| |such profusion in some localities | that small grain has been completely crowded out. 1 7,370 | Maurice ; Duke! Z y o fo Wrapper. Coamberlain, S. D., Oct. 28.—As! | fuel in place of coal. The proprietor | hat destroy the digestion. Pin a Bates County Bank, BUTLER, MO. Successor to Bates Co. Nationa! Bank, Established in 1870. Paid up capital acted, PESjoTYGARD, = - - Presiden, HON. J. B. NEWBERRY Vice-Prey, | J. C. CLARK Cashier i wW. f. WOODS. Real Estate and Life In surance Agent. {ADRIAN - ~ MISSOUR | Thave se number of farins for | a lar, fsale, rangin i JO aeres up, This 1] din Bates county vis t hoice real estate. Call and see me | before buying. G RAVES & CLARK, as ATTORN#YS AT LAW. Office over the Missouri State Bank North side square. ee See DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over McKibben store. Ail callanswered at office dayor night. Specialattention given to temale dis eases. DR, J. T. HULL DENTIST. Newly Fitted up Rooms, Over Jeter’s Jewelry Store. Entrance, same that leads to Hagedorn’s Studio, north side square , Butler, Mo, “SMITH THURMAN. § LAWYERS, »ua. Office over Bates County Natn’l Bank. Butler, Missourl, DR. Fred RB, Jones, Phy-i1cian, Office over McKibben store. Residence, M. B, | church parsonage, corner Ohio & Havaunsh streets. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and e Surgeon. Office norta side square Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chi | en a specialtv.: DR. T. F. LOCKWOOD. Cpecial attention givne Surgery. Chronic aad » Nervous diseases, Does a general both in the city and country. Calle answered atalltimes. Office over Joe Meyers on East side[]. Residence 2nd house North of Me- Brides cn Havana atreet. ' The Old Reliable PHOTOCRAPHER North Side Square. Has the best equipped gallery i Southwest Missouri. All Styles of Photogrphing executed in the highest style of th art, and at reasonable prices, Crayon Work A Specialty. All work in my line is guaranteed ™ give satisfaction. Call and see samples of work. | ©. HAGEDORN. aes ae Butler Academy, A FIRST-CLASS Preparatory ‘School. ARTICULATES WITH STATE UNIVERSITY FALL TERM BEGINS Sptem ber 7th, 1896, | Classical, 5 2 Latin Scientific, | ; English, $ $ ° v § Commercial, | Musical and Elective Courses Tuition, for literary conrses,$9 pet j term of three months. Music $2 j per term of twenty fonr lessons- Commercial, $27 for the course pine months. Board, in family at, from $159 to $5 per week. Roome rented at from $1.0 to#2 PeTmonth. Send for catalogue. Jno. W. Richardson, PRINCIPAL, % EUILER, - + - MissoURl i EL

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