The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 21, 1898, Page 6

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i at Butler Station. NORTH ROUND. Ho. 6 M No.4 M. No. 10 ak No. 512 Local Freight M. SOUTH BOUN Freight = DIVISION ERST A D SIO) aap +2 7-00.A. M. ‘ 11:59 A. M, E. C. Vanpervoort, Agent. ) Depart 0 Arrive K. C. Pittsburg & Gulf Time Table. Arrival and departure of trains at Worland. NORTH BOUND No.7 Freight daily except Sunday 12:10 p.m i “ree: 10:60 p. m No. 1 Express daily ee m. No. 9 Freight, daily except Sunday, m™m No. 3 Port Arthur Express, daily,.. nas SOUTH BOUND. No. 2 Express daily ....... +. .-2:21 p.m. No. 6 Freight daily except Sunday 1:00a.m No.s*! we “ ar 2:95 p. m. No 10 Freight, daily expect Sun mo . 4 Port Arthur Express, daily Remember this isthe popular short line be- tween Kansas City, Mo.. and Pittsburg, Kan., Joplin, Mo., Neosho, Mo., Sulphur Springs, Ark., Siloam Springs, Ark., and the direct route from the south to St. Louis, Chicago, | and points north and northeast and to Denver, Ogden, Sa. i rnucisco, Portland and points West and northwest. No expense has been spared to make the passenger equipment of this line second to none in the west. Travel via the new line H.C. Orr, Gen’l Pass. Agt., Kansas City, Mo. eS QUADRUPLE TRAGEDY, Nebraskan Marders His Wife and Chil- dren end Commits Suicide- Wilber, Neb, April 13.—Word reached here this afternoon that some time lest night Vaclay Haas, who occupied a farm in Monroe pre- cinet, fourteen miles northwest, bad killed his wife Terzie Haas, and two little girls, one a baby, by shooting He afterward committed suicide by cutting his throat. The parties were of Bohemian nationality, the man about 33 years old and the wifea NO MISTAKE. ciccpromecy ot NEURALGIA Missouri Pacific Railway Time Table | A.M. -M. M. Chicago News. Don't drop iosinuations A bigger man may pick them up. Don’t pick out for your friend a | man whose dog won't follow him. | Don’t think all books are talable because they are bound to eell. ; Don'tsit ina draft unless you lit. | Don't thiok that because a man | possesses a shining intellect that he is light headed. Don’t think because tim and tide waits forno man that no woman will wait for bim. Don’t fail to keep an eye on the | friend who offers you suggestions at the expense of another friend. Don’t underrate modesty. The needle has but one point, yet it would be almost along without it impossible to get Paper Seized. Dexter, Mo., April 14.—The Ene terprise, a Populist paper published | in Bloomfield, has been seized und-r attachment in a suit for $5,000 dam- ages for slander, and Tim Hosmer, the editor, and C. D. Bailey and Lafayette Stuart, correspondents, arrested on a charge of criminal libel. Their bond was fixed at $500 each. A few weeks ago a scandal arose jin the Dexter city schools. In com- menting upon it an Enterprise cor respondent implicated almost every one connected with the school. The School Board decided to refute the want the doctor to get the cash for Searching Questiuns. Topeke, Kas, April 13 —Insur- ance Commissioner McNall is ar- ranging to make the most sensational movement since takiog charge of the Kansss insurance department He will this week send out blanks to all the insurance compunies doing busi- ness ia the state for supplemental | statements to the annual reports of 1896 and 1897, requiring a report of money appropriated to influence | legislatures The two years cover the Presiden- tial campaign and sessions of all State Legielatures. Commiesioner MeNall expects war will follow with all the insurance companies as a result Council Bluffs, Iowa, April 14.— Last Sunday night two stores in this city were robbed. A young man, giviog the name of Frank Ward, was arrestei yesterday with some of the stolen plunder in his possession. He was identified as Frank Woodmanse?,a scn of John Woodmansee, a wealthy resi?‘ of Macedonia, Io., who is eat present traveling with his family in Cali fornia. Young Woodmansee lft home about 12 years ago. Give The®Children a Drink called Grain-O, It is delicious, appetizing, nourishing food arink to take the of coffee. Sold by all grocers and like who use it because when properly prep it tastes lixe the finest coffee but is free allits injurious properties. GRAIL digestion and stimulates the n 8 etimulant bat a health builde as well as adults can drink it v elit. costs about 1-4 as much as coffee, and 25¢. Goes to the Klondike. Des Moines, Ia, April 14 —The trial of ex Secretary of State W. M.| McFarland, whose alleged irregular- | ities in conducting the State census of 1895 caused a sensation polities during years, in Iowa succeeding A Good Dictionary ‘tor Twe Cents. A dictionary containing the defini-| tions of 10,000 of the most useful | and important words in the English | anguage, is published by the Dr.| Williams Medicine Co , Schenectady, | N. Y. While it contains some adver-| tising, it is a complete dictionary, | concise and correct. | In compiling this book care has| been taken to omit none of those common words whose spelling or exact use occasions at times a mo-| mentary difficulty, even to well edu cated people. The main aim b been to give as much useful inf: mation as possible in a limited! space. With this in view, where noun, adjective and verb are all obviously connected in meaning, | usually one only has been inserted. The volume will thus be found to| contain the meaning of very many more words than it professes to ex plain. | To those who already have a dictionary, this book will commend itself because it is compact, and convenient; to those who have! it will be One may be secured by no dictionary whatever, {invaluable. ‘writing to the above concern, men- tioning thie paper, and enclosing a two-cent stamp case of Patterson | Tea | nack. | cided the electi vs. Carmack of C Patterson is a prominent gold stand- nessee district, in favcr ard democrat | | | Tho Atchison, Kan.; fire cepart | light $ Charles Colemar, a colerei bar- ; coop HAY IN BATES COUNTY. j ber of Newton. Kan., made a vic ous} 3 See me for prices. Want five to ten car loads of assault with a razor on Des Wilson, ‘ ij ja notoricus negro woman, because ; good oats for which I will pay the highest price. the latter would not accompany him | } to Omaha, Neb. The woman will]? B F J O H NSO N ; 18 »T. , eo ——- “= ie BULLER, MO. The house election committee de- Puss Ficus tal marae man ne Reagents OE couple of years his junior, amd had been married eleven years The! man was not well balaneed mentally, and their domestic relations had not been pleasant for some time, owing to his unreasonable jealousy. A brother of the woman, who lives a distance away, heard the shots, but paid little attention at the time, as he thought Haas was shooting at dogs. Haas wasa member of the Modern Woodmen and affiliated with the Pleasant Hill lodge. The coro- ner has gone to hold an inquest. Their two little boys, 2 and 4 years, were not hurt. slander. Sensational Double Tragedy, Austin, Tex., April 13 —A double tragedy occurred here at 9 o'clock p. m. John Widegrove shot and mor- tally wounded Julius Hansen, then | killed himself. The two young men | were formerly partners in business, and had quarreled. Hansen kept a grocery, and Widegrove entered it but was ordered out, when he drew pistol and shot at Hansen twice, the second bullet passing through the Iatter’s body near the heart. Wide- |grovethen turned the weapon on | bimself and fired a bullet through | his brain, killing himself instantly. Hansen has a family and Widegrove | is a single man. A Beacon of Hope. To those afflicted with kidney or bladder diseases is Foley’s Kidney Cure. J ATrimble, druggist. Search for Bodies at Shawneetown. St. Louis Chronicle, 7th. We live in a country of which the principal scourge is stomach-trouble. Searching for the bodies of the | Tt is more wide spread than any i | other disease, and, very nearly, more dead in the Shawneetown, III, flood | dangerous i began Wednesday afternoon. Upto} One thing that makes it so dan- that time no attempt had been made | gerous is that it is so little under- to recover them, every effort of the stood. rescuers being directed towardthe, f it were better understood _it suffering aurvivore. would be more feared, more easily : cured, less universal than it is now. As the citizens became more calm | So, those who wish to be cured, the estimates of the dead are cut take Shaker Digestive Cordial, be down considerably. It is now claim- | ¢ause it goes to the root of the ed that only 30 are knowa to be Soe _ ce crue — — ei e pure, harmless, curative herbs dead, although it is expected that jand uae of which it is composed, the list will probably reach 50, as at | aro what render it so certain and. at least 20 more are missing. The | the same time, so gentle a cure. work of relief is progressing rapidly! It helps and strengthens the and systematically. The immediate | stomach, purifies and tones up the necessities of the sufferers have been oon druggists, price 10c to $1 provided fer. | per bottle. The water inside of the town fell | ten inches Tuesday night. The | weather is clear and cold. The prop- | erty loss is estimated at probably | $200,900. Some instances of van- | instantly killed his 9 year old daugh- dalism have been discovered. Thoss | ter yesterday. Keegan had been caught in the act are given the | repairing a gun which he was show- choice between leaving the town and jing to a young man named Cook. being lynched. Armed men patrol | He pulled the trigger a number of the place ia boats. Telegraph con- | times, supposing that there was ro nection has at last been established |load in the weapon. The gun was with the outside world. Killed His Daughter. St. Joseph, Mo., April 14 —Patrick | Keegan, of Maryville, Mo., shot and | Educate Your Bowels With Cas-| carets. Hanna's Effigy Riddled in Obie | 2 tion | forever. Springfield, O , April 12 —Senator | M.A Hanna was hanged in effigy ia front of the posteffice at Tremont City. A big crowd shot at the Candy Cathart We IFC. C The Kansas supreme court has rendered a decision in the case of | the state against Nick Mayrath, the | dummy and made the night hideous republican county commissioner of | With their yells. People were greatly Ford county, ousting Office. him from | ¢Xcited over President McKinley's | policy and proceeded to give vent to | their feelings. CASTORIBA, —————_— will prebably never come cff. He i ment received $6,600 worth of new leaves Des Moines May 1 at the! 7 #6 . p33 fire apparatus and now has one of} CLARDY, ELWOOD & CO., eee head of a company bound for the| Klondike. Jefferson City, Mo, April 14.— Capt. George H. Roach, who has been stationed here on duty with| the N. G. M. for seyeral years, left with his family for Columbus, O., where he will take charge of his} former company, the seventeenth infantry, United States army. He left here at his own request, thet he might be with his company in case of war with Spain. A farmer writes toan exchenge es followe: “Every yeer I hear of cater- pillars destroying whole orchards. There is nething cazicr to dispose of. I borea hole in the tree deep enough to reach the esp, fill the hole with sulphur and plug it up. The sap takes the sulphur to ever limb and twig and the caterpillars disap- pear at once. I baye never known a tree to be injured by it and have used it for years.” Dr, Fox Sentenced to ‘two Years, but Will Appeal, Keytesville, Mo., April 15.—Dr. J. R. Fox bas been sentenced to two years in the penitentiary for grave robbing. Dr. Fox purloined the| dead body of Miss Leona from Bell | Cemetery, at Westville on t'e night | of March 7,1895. At the time he| j the most complete and efficient fire departments ia Kansas The Oklahoma democratic terri | torial committee met at El Reno and adopted a resolution favoring afiilia tion with populists, but demanded that the congressman be a democrat A special election will be held in Pettis county April 26, t> vote ona Proposition to es‘ablieh a six mile road district, with Sedalia in the center. It is true wisdom for every- body to take a thorough course of Swift’s Specific just at this season The blood is sluggish and impoverished, and the system is full of impurities which should In of the year. addition to the blood, system so as to appetite and a gen- run-down fe zy in the S. S. so strengthens and be eliminated. thoroughly clear and toning up th avoid lcss of eral spring wasa physician and a druggist at/ Marceline. He will eppeal to the | supreme court. | Frankfort, Ky., April 15.—News| reached here last night of the kill nent farmer of She’by county, by} Horace Keesler, a former resident of | this county, at Bagdad, late yester- day afternoon. The murder w the result of an old feud ling a revolver. Thomas H. Barnes, U. S. district atterney of the western Arkénsas district, died Wednesday night io Fort Smith. George Brumbaugh, oe | Samue! Gompers, President of the SY ‘Wrapper. ' American Federation of Labor, ar. Joe Clinton was found dead Wed- | rived in Kansas City, Mo., to try to }effect a settlement of the long- nesday in the Southern Pacific pas- senger station at Lake Charles, standing differences between the ; : La. | Armour Packing Company and seve His home was in Washington, Ls. | eral labor organizations. I The only Original and genuine French-F, vy Regulator, of Mm: St * aa surpassed as being everycase Sold money refunded. per States and ad: KING HARVARD Germain, Paris. Un- ———e reliable in er positive gusrantes o; Get the genuine. Price I box by mail. Sole agents for the United co, Sv Washington St, Chicago. T-Ty ing of Morgan Bohannon, a promi-| | summer. S.S.S tie Blood jis far ahead of all other remedies |for this purpose. The 12-year-old son of M. Dasis|blood remedy which promptly of Crescent City, Okla., accidentally | Purifies the blood and thoroughly shot and killed himself while hand. /|T¢2Ovates the entire system, tones jand strengthens the stomach, and | | re | mi the oldest | much imy person in Sullivan county, Mo., died | the injuric near Milan, aged 99 | Nature s builds up as to fortify against the many forms of dangerous illness th bound during the hot sum- mer season. It is a very small natter to take this precaution but | th and strength all Swift’s Specific at t It is a real news the appetite. It is the] fe tonic, being purely vege- | ad the only blood remedy |} eed to contain no arsenie, | ur, mercury, potash or other | ral substance, w j h is of so 2 to all who know of tk oald be a: "3 remedy, 00D O09 OOHOOHO9000, c i | a TD iiisasiiiaiiacciis Harness and Saddelry, Fink’s Leather Tree Saddle S. “Take | : - 8. S. and be well all eummer. | 2 z Open RPP Ee ee F.J. TYGARD, HON.J. B. NEWBEBRY, J J.C. CLARK, President Vice-Pres'’t Cash HE BATES COUNTY BANK, BoTLER, MoO. ccessor te BATES COUNTY NATIONAL BANK, Estastisuep Dec., 1870 po Business Transacted, 3 2 | [|JCAPITAL, $75,000. —. A General Banking Bates County Investment Co., > ISUTLER, MO. > ¢ Capital, - = 850,000.27: ey to loan on real estate, at low rates. Abstracts of 4 ti to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Choice ; securities always on hand and forsale. Abstracts of title » furnished, titles examined and all kinds of real estate $ papers drawn. 2 F- 3. Troann. Hox. J. B. Newnenny, J.C. Cans, President. Vice-President. Seo'y. & Treas, Jwo.C. Hayes, Abstractor. S. F. Waunocx, Notary, i PEPPER FPF FRIAR RRA pet ~~ eee eee FEED BARN. Pare : es I ining a first-class Feed Barn opposite La- clede Hotel. Farmers patronage respectfully solic- ited. I want all the —>———_{_{_&—&X£=_————————— G. W. CLARDY, Mayor. J.D. ELLWOOD, Succesore to CLanpy & Baunen, Real Estate, Loans‘ Abstracts, We do a General Real Estate and Exchange Business, and Make a Specialty of Abstracts. We are now preparing a revised list of Lands, for sale or ¢ xchange by us. Bring or send us comp description of your property. If d you are now listed with us, please give us new description and price, Yours for business, N CLARDY, ELLWOOD & CO, § }# McFARLAND BROS. South Side Square Butler Mo. Read and See What we Keep in Stock We keep everything that horse owners need Double wagon harness from $10 to $30. Single harness, $7.50 to $25; eecond band harness from $3 to $15. Saddles of all styles and prices, from the cheapest to the steel fork cow boy and sole leather spring seat saddles. Lap robes, horse blankets, dusters and fly nets. Harness oil and soaps full line of mens and boys gloves. Trim buggy tops new and repair old ones. Bring your old harness and saddles and trade for new ones. We have the largest retail har ness store in the Southwest} and our har ness are all made at home. McFARLAND BROS. BUTLER, Mo. $04 Gs oow HE BEST OFFER EVER MADE BY A NEWSPAPER. | 34 ‘PEELE RI® $1.50. anday Magazine was t Model Magaz ‘ * larg: ght mailed separate! Address 1 St. Louis, Mc THE REPUBLIC, De I rinteaisnessetesemetictionsenanitiaiianimenn sansa

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