The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 22, 1897, Page 6

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tN ene anne Main Buitoing 902270 : Will Open its Fail Term Sept. 7, 1897. = i ri £ e * > uition in Normal Department per week, 80 cents: Tuition in Businees and Shorthand and|Deighbora began to murmur. They Thessaly should be evacuated. a'ypewriting Department per week 81.50: Life Scholarship in Business Dept Joc SELES ny He aa ee standing in the —__________ 35 : Lessons in Music, La ¢ 2 . take See she Mererrenamaat tested for cation? except Music, Law and Art. Send this to your friend,|™1ddle of the road crie y Are you Billious, constipated or trou- Write for Catalogue. Address, i COLLEGE, | bee taken the cesd we gave them, | pied with Jaundice, Sick Headache, bad Pe 7 vay hl c i ‘i 3USIN JOLLEG i t = THE MISSOURI NORMAL AND BUS sip dice an they have planted and growr more | taste in the mouth, foul breath, coated 33-3m 8 NGFIELD, 'e THE COMING INSTITUTE Tobe Held at Butler, Mo, Beginning Monday. Aug. 2nd, and Closing Aug. 27th, 1897. FELLOW TEACHER:—In view of the fact that the time is near for the beginning of the Institute, I hope that every teacher is making arrangements to attend. profession depends greatly upon the effort you put forward to attain it. eacher is esponsible one. To become Saeaisite ‘s ck a of which every one might be proud. The question then arises, arc you at present capable of assuming such responsibilities? | should be youraim. It is a duty you owe to your profession. for the improvement of teachers. weak teacher may be benefitted by the become qualified in the various subje experience of the Ss, strong ones, ideas Ihave associated with me the following named gentlemen: Profs. Frank Deerwester, 1. B. Allison and J, P. Thurman, teachers of Bates County to make necessary further comment, < é The following is the daily program. Please select your subjects you wish to pursue in class work, in order that you may be able to enter upon the work immediately after the assem- bling of the Institute. I desire to call special attention to the fact that class grades will be given upon fifteen days’ attendance, day of organization and three days of examination not included within the fifteen: Bonnon. | ALLISON. j AL ; ; | Arithmetic. DEERWESTER, Civ. Government. Psychology. S43— 9:20) Management. {Read’g and Spell’g) Language. Geography. 9:20 9:55 | History. Physiology. Civ. Government. Grammar. 9:55— 10:15 RECESS. | seal oF. 10:15—10:50 jRead’g and Spell’g| Numbers. Psychology. 10:50—11:25) Management. | Arithmetic. Civ. Government Grammar. Physiology. History. | Writing. Geography. ACCOMMODATIONS. Private board at reasonable rates will be furnished. of those desiring to board teachers. Director’s Day and Graduating Day will be made a special feature of the Institute. Graduate’s Day those graduating from the country sehools will receive their diplomas. A new course of study is being prepared under the direction of the Conductors and Instrue- tors of the Institute and will be ready for use at the beginning of the Institute. Respectfully, ARTHUR BORRON. School Commissioner of Bates County. SS eaten Miesour: Pacific Railway Time Table Tanuel Twenty Miles Long. NORTH POUND, Denver, Colo, July 14—Two Gee gangs of workmen have just begun digging the longest tunnel that man ever attempted to construct. The main bore will be twenty miles long and connecting with this are subsid iary tunnels with a totel length of 30 miles. The starting point of the main tunnel is at the foot of ths mountain leading to Pike’s Peak, near the o!d town of Colorado City. The main tunnel will pacs directly under the ccne of Pike’s Peak ata depth of nearly 7,000 feet beneath the town of Victor. Its average depth from the surface will be 2,800 feet, and it is desigaed to test the mineral deposits of the territory at these great depths. Prof. Allison will have a list of names Upon No, 1 No. 311 Local Freigh INTERS' No, $49 Depart .. No. 850 Arrive. . Drowned at a Swollen Ford. Nevada, Mo. July 14.—The body of Dr. Chenning, together with’ bis buggy and the bodies of his double team found in Big Creek, five miles | east of Welker, last night. The doc- tor left his home at Walker, thie county, for Eldorado Springs Satur- | day morning, expecting to return that day. Nothing strange was thought of his continued absence til! Tueeday, when a telegraphic mes- Murderers Taken from Missouri to Kentucky. Saye frcm Eldorado Spriogs in an- | Pahucah, Ky. July 14.—Officer, swer to an inquiry by his wife, er- jleft here this morning for Missouri. rived, statiog that the doctor had to arrest two Kentucky murderers. left there last Saturday afterncon. 'Cap Stubbs, alias W. T. Travis, A search then followed. It is sup-/ alias W. 1. Earaesi, is said to be in posed the doctor took the ford in- | custody near Poplar Bluff. stead of the bridge and the water | He is one of the men wanted 26 being very high the horses were years ago at Smithland, this State. Swept oftheir feet. ‘The body was | Stubbs shot down Clay Robertson, shipped to Appleton City, Mo, to |, prominent merchant, efter insult- day for burial. The dcctor "AS | ing his wife. about 40 years of age and leaves a He was captured at Cape Girar- wife and two children. He had | deau, Mo, and carried back to the est angele age county: /00ly:| ocgue of aie murder. A week later = jhe wes turned cut cf jail. Since then he has been at large. The other murderer is Alex. Smithson, who killed Dr. E. N. It is not a remedy put up by Tom, Dick or Harry; it is compounded by expert pharmacists. Ely Bros. of- fera 10 cent trial size. Ask your ssa See epee By. a years druggist. Full eize Cresm Balm | ae 50 cents. We mail it. | Vienna, July 15.—A violeot shock Ely Bros., 56 Warren St. N. Y. City. ‘ of earthquake visited the town of Since 1861 I have been a great sufferer from entarch: T tried Ely's Laibach. 45 miles northeast of Tri Cream Balm and to all appearances | este, at 7 o'clock this qOUnDE am cured. Terrible headaches from | Many nonees were reduced to ruins which I had long suffered are pana and the inhabitants of the town were —W. J. Hitchcock, late Major U.S. j thrown into a panic. The damage Vol. and A. A. Gen, Buffalo, N. Y. | '8 Widespread and pecuniarly heary. | The shock lasted several seconds. _—_— sath aoe Bowling Green, Ky., July 13.—) Lynched. Your position as a the educational leader of your district and If not, tobe prepared for such Institutes are inaugurated Itis aplace where they may exchange ideas, where the It is not a place to but rather a place to learn how to present those subjectsin proper and attractive way to the inquiring mind. In carrying out the foregoing These gentlemen are too well and favorably known to the Virgil Belcher and Jobn Martin, two | yeung farmers, fought a duel with | knives on horseback in Hadley coun- A Parable for Populists. seeds to sow. |good he desired that his neighbor ‘should profit with him in the fruit The Missouri Normal & Business College “i as cas ;of the new seed he posessed. At jrelies cn the mucd exploited inabi!- | | first the neighbors only smiled and | ity of the powers to agree upon a |shook their heude, but by and by a |few tried the seeds and saw theyjtaken to enforce their demands. | were good, growing freely and protit-) War on a tremendous seale is freely ling much. Then they joined in with the wise man to urge others and ye aud to spare. crop. them to try it. Your success in the men who were working in the fields. Then the wise man siid: “Fools, the seeds are the secda of truth and sunshine of humanity have helped to carry them to your brethren. Be content. Go home and bs; ready to help those new converts to ovr har- ves‘, carry the eead to all the esrib, for when ell have beard and tried all will be full and filled.” Then the mvrmuriog brethren, who it seems had not offered the truth in good faith, who loved ergu- ment and strife and who sought not the good of all, slunk away in shame and I noticed that they watked in the “middle of the road.” Gen. Hancock's Vindication. New York World. When the gallant Gen. Hancock, the Democratic candidate for presi- dent ia 1880, ssid that the tariff was largely “‘a local issue” he was much laughed at. But the votes of Sena tors of all parties during the prer- ent session have gone far towards justifying his remark. We have seen Southern Senators calling themselves Democrate voting for a duty on cotton and supporting the demands of both the sugar growers and the sugar trust on the plea that they benefitted theie sec- tion. More recently a number of Republican aud Populist protection. iste, voting with the Southern Dem- Ocrats, succeeded in getting cotton bagging, cotton ties and burlap sacks put back in the free list. Again it was the “local iseus” that controlled. Again principle was spelled with an “a.” The inconsistency of yotiug a tax on iron ore, on coal, on cotton. on flax and hemp and even on lum- ber, es some of the Southern Sena- tors did, and then putting upon the free list manufactured articles into the making of which these taxed raw materials enter, is a striking illustra- tion of the dcminance of selfishaoess in legislation. It has beccme not merely a loca}, but largely a personal question. pe a James’ Tribute. Harrodsburg, Ky., July 14 —Sun- day Frenk James of St. Louis, Mo. was the guest of Col. J. P. and Kit China at Morgandale, two mnles west of town. After a fumptuous dinner chairs were set under a spreadicg oak near the veranda. Kit’s reighbors and friends of the family from town dropped in and jcined the party uatil 25 or 30 were | hstening to the interesting visitor from St. Louie. Two miles from where the atter- tiye listeners were seated Mr James said he was engaged in asharp cor- flict This little fight near Gakland church, oceurred ia January, 1864, while Mr. James was a confederate seldier under Qvantrel!. Fotr of Quantre!l's men were killed and now sleep in God’s half ecra at Oakland eburch While at the depot. Mr. James Atlante, Ga. July 13—Word has been received here that Oscar Wil- liame, a negro who aseaulted the 6 ty yesterday. They met ona road | year-old daughter of Senator Camp. and passed a few words. Knives | bell, was lynched to a tree this were drawn andthe result is both morning by a mob of 2,000 men Men may die. who have chased him since Saturday. having been fully informed in regard to the fate of his four comrades who lie buried at Oakland church, a tow! Being both wise and others to take of the seeds, until the whole country-side was blooming like a garden and every man had enough Thea certaia of the wiee man’s and now half the people have this We no lovger have to urge It is not feir—they are infringing on our rights,” aud straight way they not only murmured but querreled and threw stones and mud at the passers by; they fought justice, from them good laws can be made and peace and prosperity will spread over the lend, the winds of sorrow, the ra‘n of adversity and the Sultan’s Defi. Londen, July 14—The decision of the Sultan not to yield to the ul- timatum of the Powers is regarded Sjus a direct challenge to Europe. | S The Ottoman Government evidently | s coercive measure; which shall be! predicted as the result. t| The Tork has insisted upon retain- ing all that portion of Thessaly north of the River Salambria whic stream would then become th Southern boundary of the Turkish Empire. To this the powers made strenuous objectious. insisting that 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 out ot order and your blood is slowly being poisoned because your liver does not act properly. Herbine will cure all disorder of the liver, Stomach or bowels Ithas no equal as alivermedicine. Price 75 cents. Free trial oottles at H. L. fuckers drugstore. 44 ly Race War, Huntsvil'e, Ala, July 14 —Mays- ville, a little town 12 miles northeast of this city is greatly excited and trouble between the regzroes and whites is anticipated. Sam McKin- nes, a white min shot a negro farm hand named Jack Nancs. The ne kinds of weathe old and doing disliked to take her from school but we had to do it. + For THER’S EFFORT fl Sees Her Daughter in a Pitiful ¢ dition, bet Manages to Rescue Her, From the New Era, Greensburg, Ind p, and she grew pale and dwin nost nothing. Her legs and drawn up and ber Several doctors ha s d that none of ‘ i us to take her to the sp rd we could not affords ly n il to get her Here she grew ed that she could: and it . For some time w nd the phy was at her worst a with a box of Dr. Williams Pink Pale People and wanted us to t *\ they were advertised to be po eases, and ker ter had used [nervousness with such good results thought they might help Mabel. “We tried them. ‘The first box her some, d after she had taken the e to sit up in bed, Wik half dozen boxes nd about. She has ‘ogether now, and ever, and going to school g started in again fi er cure was undoubtedly due 2 opportunity id reeove: é 2 able to be out about nine boxe: as well a ened) Mrs. AMANDA Steygy her limbs, princi-} Dr. Williams’ Pin Pills for Pale She was going to | contain all the elements n to to walk it three quar- | new life and richness to the blood rach day, going through all! store shattered nerves. They are She was thirteen years boxes (never in loose form, by the » well in her studies that I hundred) at 50 cents a box, or six $2.50, and may be had of all di dire by mail from Dr. Willi cine Compsay, Schenectady, N. ‘2 several months she was confined te the gro {worked on McKioney’s farm. This afternoon they had a disagree ment, and the negro moved toward pgs white m>n with an axe elevated and ready to strike. McKinney drew his pistol and sbot tha pegro dead. The negroes of tha neighbor- hood are greatly arouse and a war between the races is feared. Try Allen’s Foot-Ease, A powder te be shaken into the shoes. At this season your feet feel swollen and hot, and get tried easily. If you have 5 | feet or light shoes, try Allen’s Foot-Ease. It cools the feet and makes walking easy. Cures and prevents swollen and sweating feet, blisters and calious spots. Relieves corns and banions ofall pain and gives rest and comfort. Try it to . Sold by all Gruggists and shoe stores for 25e. Trial package free. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N.Y Fierce Brigands. Sergeant, Ky., July 14 —Travelers arriving here from Pouad Gap in the Cumberland Mountains, state that brigands bave again taken pos- session of the Gap and are murder- ing and robbing people. A traveling man was recently waylaid. Pools of blood have been observed by travelers. It was once necessary to send troops into the Gap to dis- peise the bandits. is ca every wrappers ee eee Broke His Neck. Urbava, O.. July 14 --Gecrge Baker, aged 12, son of Upton Baker, who was shot by the militia during the storming of the court house, met death in a peculiar manner yester- day. He was unloading hay with a hay fork, when a trace broke and flew back with terrific force, striking the boy on the jaw, breaking his neck. Removal, We take pleasure in announcing that after this date Parks Sure cure will re- move all traces ot rheumatism, kidney roubles and liver complaint from the user. It is the only medicino that is guaranteed to cure these diseases or no day. Parts sure cure is sold by H. L. Tneker, Girl hidnapped. Louisville, Ky, July 14 —Consid- erable excitement has been occasion ed in Crawford county, Iudiene. over the kidnapping of the 14-year old daughter of Morris Mooremen, by book agente. Two men enticed the girl into the buggy and boarded al shanty boat, floating down the river. | | The girl's father and friends ara in | pursuit. | » Don't Stop Him! He has a bad attack of colic and is making tor | J. A. Trimble’s drug store after a bottle of Foley’s Colic Care, 25 and 50c. tae Rate Interest Mon ; FON Harness and Saddel Fink's Leather Tree Saddie McFARLAND BROS§ McFARLAND BROS. South Side Squa ‘Butler Mo. Read and See Whut we Keep ii We keep everything that horse own : Double wagon harness from $10 to single harness, $7.50 to $25; second harness from $8 to $15. Saddles styles and prices, from the cheapest Steel fork cow boy and cle leathers seat saddles. Lap robes, horse bl dusters and fly nets. Harness oil « fullline of mens and boys gloves. © buggy tops new and repair old ones, your old harness and saddles and t new onee. We have the largest ness store in the Southwest and ness arefall made at home. IBUTLER, Mo. ») ) PR AAFAARSS: 47% es) TO LOAN. We have money to loan on good farms at Six per cent interest with small commission, time five years, interest payable (INCE a year. Will write the note payable on or before so borrower can pay amount at any time desired and stop interest. Everyone wishing to borrow or change old loans are requested to call and see us.money ready.no delay HE WALTON TRUST COMPAI BUTLER, - MISSOURI. PPR RIRR RRR RLPLR RR AA Bloody Record. Richmond, Ky , July 14—Henry Jiles has been arrested for the mur- der of Joe Gattliffe at Big Hill, Sat- urday He is one of the most no- tories crimina’s of Central Kertucky. He confesses to killing three other pha men besides Gattliffe-acd says he/| th has four living wives. CASTORIA lots miles west of this place, declared his intention to return here in the near future and have their remains | 7% removed and headstones cet nu; mark their craves. tinils p to = For Infants and Children. is haf Thing Tn Special Commissioner's Sale of Real | | By authority of a decree in partition made by the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, in the case of Adah Fitch, et al. ys.’ Lonisa J ne Danielson, et al. the best price to be obtained therefor, the foi- jowing eoexped real estate situated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: id | The cast half of lots number one (1) and two i mo Or eed erutrix withia one year {2) of the northeast quarter of section four (4) in | south number one (1) and two (2) of the northeast | guarter ofsection four (4) in township forty (40) range thirty-three (33). Estate. Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby given, that 4 cutrix of the estate of A’ J. Park. Gee were granted to the undersigned om day o! icra 1896, by the probate All parvens Nevibe vistms ageiadl persons having ciatms tate, are required to exhibit them ri I will sell at private sale, at iste of said letters, or they may be from any benefit of e214 estate; a claim be not exhibited within two forty (49) range thirty-three (33); also | half of the southeast guarter of sec- | tion thirty-three (33) in township forty-one (4) | the date of this publication, tn of range thirty-three (33); also the lots number one (1) and two (2} of the northwest quarter cf section four (4) and the west east half of | ever barred. This gga ry ie) haifot} 4 ag ' Notice of Final Settlement. - 242 acres i land is situated in Homer township, and ¢i; acres adjoinining it in West Point Pp The whole 322 will be soldin a body, or | % acres it will be divided into smaller tracts to suit purchaser. JOHN C. HAYEs, eer SicSpecial Con Se Commis ioner. = Notice is hereby given to all ere : all others interested in the estate of , that I, Jobn Zinn, = n

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