The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 29, 1898, Page 6

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A Missouri Pacific Railway Time Tabie| at Butler Station. NORTH BOUND. SOUTH BOUND. > OM M. A.M. M, No. 811 Local Freight... 1 INTERSTATE DIVISION. No, 349 Depart oe No. 350 Arrive io A Agent E. C. Vaspenvoort, K.C Arriy Pittsburg & Gulf Time leparture of trains at Worland. Freight, tae ees m. | Port Arthur Express S0UTH BOL 2 flatly No. & Fr. ight daily except Sunday | No 25 0 | 16 Freight, dally expect Sunda 4 Port Arthur Express, daily,.. 901 p.m. ~ Remember thisisthe popular short line be- tween Kansas City, Mo.. and Pittsburg, Kan., Joplin, Mo , Neosho, Mo., Sulphur Springs, Ark., Biloam Springs, Ark., and the direct route from the south to St. Louis, Chicago, — points north and northeast and to Denver, Qgeden, San Francisco, Portland and pointe rest and northwest. No expense has been ared to make the passenger equipment of is line second to nene in the west. via the new line H.C. Orr. Gen’i Pass. Agt., Kansas City, Mo. CASTORIA. Bears the ae Kind You Have Always Bought —" TWO TALES OF LONG LOVE REWARDED. New Orleans Man, After Ten Yeers, Finds His Long Lost Sweetheart, A Connecticut Couple Married Whe Loved for Twenty Years, New Orleans, La. Sept. Word has just been received that Peter Hofferth is returning from Newark, N. Y., with a bride, whom he had loved and sought for 10 years, and whom he met at last on an elevated railroad train. Twelve years ago Peter aud Mies Regina Holdreth were lovers in Germany. He was 18 and she was 15. To better his fortune Peter came to America. He was success- fulfrom the start and eventually settled here. For two years the yousg lovers corresponded, but suddenly Regina’s letters ceased to come. About a year ago Peter went to Germany to visit his mother, and while there he learned that Regina had left her native country for Amer- ica 10 years ago. That was about the time that her letters to Peter ceased to come. On bis return home he stopped in Newark. While riding on an elevat- ed railway his eyes fell upon a young woman who occupied a sest on the opposite side of the car. Peter studied the woman’s face for some time and was convinced that she was his long lost Regina. Peter waited until the woman left the car, and then followed her to the street. When he spoke to her Regina recognized him at once. Asaresult of the meeting they are married and réturning on the} steamer Louisiana. 22.— New Haven, Conn., Sept. 22.— The marriage of Miss Margaret Golden and William Dixon, just cei-j} ebrated at Westville, has the roman- tic features of a novel. | when mere children, | Miss Golden and Dixon were | sweethearts. Everybody in West-| ville knew William Dixon to be an| industrious fellow, and when the en- gagement wus announced the resi-| dents were pleased. | But an unfortunate incident oc curred that separated the couple for | more than 20 years. Miss Golden’ a| parents were aging fast, and she de-| cided that it was her duty to stick | to them and care for them in their} old age. Dixon wandered away | from Westville to Windham county, but the love still lingered for his old sweetheart. Some time ago he looked up M Golden and found her in the old homestead in Westville, where he used to visit her years ago Dix- on declared that he was ready to make Miss Gelden Mrs. Dixon, and the prop ion being acceptable to the former, arrangements were made at once for the wedding. They were married, and now Mr. Mrs Dixon will make their home in Leb- anon. Years ago, still and 2 WO Millions a Year. I and buy again, {ef The people of the ng Cascarets Ca he rate of two million boxes of yesrand it will be three. million before New | rear’s, It means merit proved, that Cascarea, | Are the Most delightful bowel regulator for) everybody the year round. All druggist l0cts 2c. Sec a box cure guaranteed, Table. | the Attorne | Springs, Ark | Fourth Ithnois Regiment unfit tor Duty | State that the conditions in the camp ABUSES AT HOT SPRINGS. The Government Asked to Control the Prac- tice of Drumming Doctors. Washington, Sept. ecretary Ryan of the Interior de-| partment: W. J. Little, superintend }ent of the reservation, who has been | 99 ing eg jin Waehiogten for several days, and} y General are busying | | themselves to devise some means by | which they can put an |stop to the business of the quack | i octors and their drummers at Hot The outrages of the quaek doctors at Hot Springs were, it seems, first brought to the atten- inmediate |tion of the interior department by inspector Will J. Zevely of Missouri, who was sent to Hot Springs by Secretary Bliss to make a general investigation of the conditions there. In his report to the department Mr. Zevely says that the most dan gerous thing at Hot Springs is the practice of these quacks. It is their custom to sead out drummers, some of whom meet strangers on trains a hundred miles from -the springs They ply their trade quite openly The drummer makes it a point be fore taking the victim to the doctor to ascertain relatively his financial standing, then to advise the doctor as to this watter, and the man is duly fleesed. They perform mock eperations and give medieal advice, charging outrages prices, where pos sible, for their services. A story is told an old farmer of Kansas who came to the springs for rheumatism. At first the doctor told him bis only trouble was rheu matism. The man was given a pre- scription and instructed him how to take the baths. His attaek of rheu matism yielded readily to the cura tive qualities of the springs, and he was soon rid of hie trouble. In the meantime, however, the doctor and the drummer, who had firat thought their patient was a man of very lim ited means, learned that in reality he was well-to-do They made him believe that he was suffering from a mysterious disease and an operation was performed, for which he was charged $200. The question which the department has been consider ing is as to hew the outrages com mitted by these quack doctors can be prevented. The question of juris- diction on the government reserve» tion has never been satisfactorily answered. It is proposed to ap point agoveroment commission who will see that a remedy to this abuse is discovered. Try Allen’s Foot Ease, 4 powder to be shaken into the shees. At this season your feet feel swollen, nerveus and hot, and get easily tired. If you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen’s Feot Ease. Itcools thefeet and makes walking easy. Cures swellen and sweating feet, blis- tersand callous spote. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and gives rest and com- fort. Try it to-day. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores, sample sent FR cE. Address Allen 8. OlmStead, Le Roy, N.Y. EIGH’? HUNBRED ILL. Belleville, Ill., Sept. 21.—Advises from Camp Cuba Libre, Jackson ville, under date of September 18, are not much improved. The writer says 25 men are sick in Company D The rations are said to be always unfit to The food and water are said the same, and the water drink. |to be the causes ef all the sickness in the Fourth Regiment Out of } 1,200 men, only 400 it is claimed, | for duty. The balance | ho eee or off on furlo are in t he} ough, here to day, \in the remote | Chickasaw Nation. gleman, a is laecscunied the Douglas school, typhoid fever. down with He enlisted in Oom | pany B June Miss Enagleman jleft for Jacksonville Monday. Pri-! vate Fred Miller, of the pany is also seriously ill. A. A. Miller, left Wedne Jacksonvil 26 demon is a specific eold3in the ction has been as the result of con- A morbid mbrare in the cured by this treatment. It has been fully that Ely’s Cream ‘Balm fo r nasal catarrh a head. This d achieved only tinued successful condition of the m nasal passages can be purifying ard heal Sold by draggis i for by > Warren et, New York. it prea ds over = membrane, is absorbed and relief ! is immediate. a EverybodyjSays So. s Candy Cathartic, th cal discovery of the 50¢ most'wonder- | Pleasant and | peroning the taste, —— ¥ and positive- | ly on the Kidneyy, liver and bowels, cleansing | the entire system, dispel colds, c: headache | | fever, habitual constipatson im bi liousnese. Please buy and try a box of C..C. C. today; 10, 25, Scents. Sold and Guaranteed to cure by all druggists, | fully guarded. } er. A School! Girl’s Tt is important that Mothers who have daughters of school age should w: health more carefuliy than their The proper development of th is of first importance. After the confinement of the room, plenty of out-door e2 be taken. It is better that c learn their a, b, c’s, than that by over- study they lose their hea All this is self-evident. Everyone mits it—everyone knows it, but everyone does not know how to build the health up when once broken down, even the best physicians failing at times. The following method of Mrs. Stephen Barnes, whose post office address is Bur- ney, Ind., if nightly applicd, may sav your daughter. When her daughter Lucy was at that critical girlhood age of twelve years ske grew weak and nervous. “Previously she had been a bright. healthy young girl,” says Mrs. Barne “She was diligent and progressive ia her studies. “Tt became necessary, howe to leave schocl. “She was overtaxcd menia’ physically. “Her nerves were at such a tension that the least noise irritated her. “She had continual twitching in the arms and lower limbs and symptoms cf St. Vitus’ dance. “Her blood was out of order she was thin and pale, almost lifeless. In tirce school ad- for her sicians atten _ Was apparent. t toxes she was entirely Ferfect health, strong, | — Ficl in the above mpesed of vegeta cirectly on the :s that it shculd be Fink Fiils build up the Lfe giving elements the various organs, stim- ctivity in the f ms and thus dri Offers a Human Sacrifice. St. Joseph, Mo., Sept. 21.—A wild Scene was witnessed in the crowded waiting room at the union passenger station tenight when Mrs Alice Maxwell, aa artist, who came here a few weeks ago from Clarinda, at- tempted to offer up a human sacri- fice. Mrs. Martha Young, of Atwell, Kan., was holding her 18 months old baby inher lap. Mrs. Maxwell seized the child, fled and attempted to stab it with a pair of scissors she had concealed in her bosom She shout ed that a human sacrifice was neces sary to restore her reason. The passing crowd rescued the child in time to wave its life Mrs Maxwell was arrested. She is 40 years old and was confined for a period in an Iowa asylum mother of the litcle one is prostrated Are you lacking in strength and en- ergy? Are you nervous, despondent, irritable constipated ani generally run down 1n health? If so, your torpid, and a few doses ot Herbine will cure you. Herbine has no equal as a health re- storer. H L Tucker- Long Lost Son in Army. Terre Haute, Ind, Sept. 21.— Thomas Anderson, formerly iu the Internal Reyenue service here, has) been made happy by learning that | * his son, whom he thought to have been killed a few years ago while attempting train robbery, is alive and in the regular army in Cuba William Anderson, his son, ran away from home and was nct heard of again until there came a report that he and two other train robbers bad been killed in a western state Murders andis Murdered, Admore,I.T, Sept 21—Ab rible tragedy, news of which reached occurred near Center, northern part of the A. B. Harden, while drunk. shot and killed his young wife as she was leaving church and also attempted to kill her moth He was prevented by farmers, r| who bound the murderer and started with him to Center, where there is a jail. The party was overtaken by J. A Page, the dead woman's father, who shot and killed Harden Bethleber M. A. Talb meet Co iment, of w ber. In the jam at was pushed under ground to pieces the an engine and CASTOR IA | For Infants and Children. ~ The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of j in The | j the state | ef the iber term, Isys, lin favor of W. J prtha Mc _~ and Kittie a ed npon all the t and against Railey, I have l right title, interest im of defendants, Bertha Melride and K. Raile to the following described real es Bates county, Missouri to-wit Lots three (8) and four (4) block one hundred and two (102) in the city of Rich Hill, I willon Wednesda ovember 16, 19s, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- oon and five o'clock in the afternoon of that at the east tdoor of the court house, in theeity of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, sell the same or so much thereof as may be re: quired at public yendue tothe highest bidder fer cash, to satisfy said execution ~ Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI} County ofBates, — § In the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, im vacation, September 20, 1898, The State of Missouri at the relation and to the use of AB Owen, ex-officio collector of the revenue of Bates couaty in the state of Missouri, jain- uff, vs. HG Mceliravy and Kosa Lects, de- fendants. Civil action for Now at this her attorney linquent taxes plaintiff herein by ersigned clerk of the circuit court of Bai nty in the state of Missouri, in Vacation, and files her petition stating among ¢ things that the above named de G. Mellravy and Ross > of Missouri the clerk in Vacation ified by publication 1 a suit against petition the object and is to enforce the lien of felinguent taxes and 1845, amount- sum of $2.32 amission and cribed tracts of insouri, to-wit: » Went side f Missouri, said defendante be erm of this court to ien in the city of , Bates ,on the first Tr y after ay in November, and on y thereof, t andif not then t 1 plead tosaid pe v same will be taken as udgment rendered according to i petition, and the above de- i 0 satisfy th that saic that plain them in th general nat of} years ing in the aggregate ether with erest upon the following the prayer of scribed re And | said v LER WEEKL ed and pubi four COLD 'v HEAD the nasal pease, Samation, heals and protects t. Res! * jurious drag. rae si dc wt druggist or by m. ELY BROTHERS, 0, trial size % Warren &t., N.Y. The Dreaded | a en eee RE Ie SEE HON.J. B. NEWBEBRY, Vice-Pres § F.J. TYGARD Pres 2 THE BATES GOUNTY BANK BATES COUNTY NATIONAL BANK, Estasiisuxp Dec 187) ~ A General Banking = Business Transactedy Bates County InvestmentCo,, BUTLER, MO.: Capital, SS0,000, ney to loan on real estate, at ow erates. Abstracts of ids and town lots in Bates county. Choice ays on hand and forsale. Abstracts of title es examined and all kinds of real estate papers drawn. 3ARD B. President. C. Hayes, Newr Vice v.35. Ts ERRY, President. Jw Abstractor. S. F. Waunocx, Notary, PREP PPP FA EAN RARARA errrEnrwrr = _—~ ‘it Gun the ext wear. Saas, » Butler Academy will Open the Next year, Sept. 5th, 98 ENTIRELY NEW MANAGEMENT. ARTHUR Borroy, Normal Department Missouri Uniy County Schoo! Commissiener Bates Co, ——— COURSES. Shorthand, Book keeping, Type Writing Elocution, Teachers Normal, Business, Art. Four terms 10 weeks each. A skilled Faculty of Ten Special Tuition $7.50 to $10 per Term. Separate college home for with the Principal. E. A. LUDWIG, Butler, Mo. 8 RARARA LUDWIG Michigan University Instrumental Music, Vocal Music, Preparatory, Collegiate, University, Call on or address, McFARLAND BROS. Harness and Saddelry, Fink's Louther Tree Saddle South Side Square Butler Mo. Read and See What we Keep in Sie We keep everything that horse owners need Double wagon harness from $10 to $M. 37.50 to $25; second band 5. Saddles of al Styles and prices, from the cheapest tothe Single harness, harness from $3 to $1 steel fork cow boy and sole leather spring Lap robes, horse blanket, dusters and fly nete. seat saddles. Harness oi! and soaps fullline of mens and boys gloves. Trim buggy tops new and repair old ones. Bring your old harness and saddles and tradela new ones. We have the largest retail be ness store in the Southwest and our bet ness are all made at home. McFARLAND BROS. BUTLER, Mo. > Kansas City Times ——a ale Pills Jriginal anc os n = Sa —_ ae se WESTERN IN LOCATION AND SENTIMENT. A Daily Paper Devoted Entirely Western Interests —Read this Offer to Readers. Consumption to the American pe rticulerly with thweet—the Ee * fr tbe —_ mptio i serse of the wee by emp setip: a be in sending—the | ne in overlooking the gemorens | He bason fle ip his American d Ea epean tat oratorics testimeoniais of ex- j perience from those cured, —- im all parte of tae Don’t delay until too late. add Slocum, M.C.. 98 Pine street, New York and when writing | ‘the Doctor, please giv: and postoffee sddress, and mention readi: this article ia tee BurLep WammtrTines. Tis 1.0 imes 1 yes Address KANSAS City TIMES. reas City,

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