The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 24, 1898, Page 4

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¢ atte eR BUTLER WE seashore rc nina A can me J. D. ALLEN Eprror. - D. ALLEN & Co., Ptoprietors. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: The Weext.y Times, published eyery Thursday, will be sent to any address! hed struck the ceuntry? one year, postage paid, for $1.00. WHY WE ARE THANKFUL Upen this day when the people of | this the greatest, strongest and best | can triumph the Hoo. Chauncey I. nation upon earth are offering up| Filley has once more been solemnly thanks to the Ruler of the Universe | excommunicated from the republi-| ings during the past year, a slight retrospection | die personal to ourgelyes for that period | Leagu of come of the for His manifold and an enumerati many blessings thankful might not be uvinteresting. To our business w as never before in its history. To our large subscription list of one year ago has been added over one thousand new names. Our advertis ing patronage has been liberal and aur job presses have been kept busy Tae Tiss has passed its twenty first for birthday and is eutering upon its bwenty-second year. From a little four page, patent outside paper, printed ona hand press, of limited circulation, it bas grown to eight, ten and twelve pages, all home print, printed on a modern cylinder press, tan by a gas engine, with a bona ide circulation of over 3,000 sub- scribers. In a few weeks we will add another improvement in a modern Salder, which will cut and paste the leaves as it folds them. We are not alluding-to these things in a boast- tul spirit, but merely recording facts as they exist with We do take a pride in our large sirculation and well equipped oftice, but only such as any successful man feela in his business which has grown under his own individual embellishment. exertions and manegement from a amall beginning to a substantial basis. We wish to extend our hearty thanks to all our subscribers and patrons for their liberal patronage, and respectfully solicit & continuance of same, promising on our part to keep Tue Trves up to its present high standard and endeavor to further improve it in the future Hon. S. B. Cook, chairman of the democratic state central committee of Missouri, has returned to his ome in this city. During the last $wo or three months Mr. Cook has devoted his entire time to the duties of his office and has a right to be proud of the result in grand old Missouri. Messrs. C Seibert and Conklin all believe in thorough organization, and, with all others who assisted, deserve great credit for the magnificent work done during the campaign in Missouri. These gentlemen were painstaking and persistent in their efforts to bring out a full democratic yote and the results show that their efforts were along ivtelligent iines. Mis- souriis a rock ribbed democratic state and will so remai The re- publicans might as well spend their time and money somewhers else.— Mexico Ledger. Of unusual interest to every reader of this paper is advertisement eise- where in this issue of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, unquestionably one of the greatest of American newspapers. That peerless paper oan now be had by mail, every day, including the big Sunday issue, for only six dollars per year, and at that price, it is certainly within the reach of all who desire to read axy daily paper. The Weekly Globe Demo- cratis issued in semi-weekly sec- tions of eight pages each, making it practically @ LARGE SEMI-WEEKLY, issue is just “the thing” for the far. mer, merchant or professional man ve prospered a Boss Filley 18 Stubborn, Chicago Chronicle. jhas been before. For Mr. Filley, though he is read out of the party | once in six months at least, contin- juea to amble around St. Louis with | his historic hat tilted over his left jear, directing the operations of the | ward workers as if he was in full odor of sanctity. Not only that, | but he openly reviles that supremely orthodox person, the Hon. Richard ;C. Kerens, in language that 18 at | times too energetic for publication. Hence we may doubt whether the rescript of the Merehants’ League club will at all influence Mr. Filley’s conduct. It may be that he is like the eel that is used to being skioned or that he refuses toadmit that he has been skinned at all. In either case we venture to predict that the canonical republican organization in Missouri will have to excommuni- cate him again at the end of six months. Hesimply refuses to stay excommunicated. Let tt Be DeArmond. In the organization of the politi cal forces of the new congress it is suggested that Mr. DeArmond of Missouri, be made the leader ot the democratic wing The suggestion iga good one. The Missourian is the man for the place. He is pol ished, serene and forceful. He is magnetic and masterful. He isa born loader of men, and is not given tothe making of mistakes. Mr. Bailey of Texas, is a good man, and a strong one, but his record during the war session of the present con- gress brought out the fact that he is imbued withan element of timid- ity and a lack of virile progression which disqualify him for leadership. Mr. DeArmond possesses all the necessary qualifications, and he is the man who should b> honored with the position.—Miss Valley Dem. and Journal. True And To the Point. A silly and demoralizing practice is that of bidding for the county themselves are often responsible for this practice. In order to keep the once, the officers argue, they can be bids are asked. If bids are asked on doing certain printing, why should they not be asked for hold ing office? Let the law be amended to permit the governor to advertise each year for persons to fill the va- job of offica-holding to the lowest bidder. Such a plan would be as sensible as the common custem of asking bids on publishing county work. The proper thing for news- paper publishers to do is to decline all temptations to cut the rate.— Walter Williams. Trata Robber i Killed. Barstow, Cal., Nov. 20.—The firet | and almost equal to the average | section weat-bound Santa Fe train! daily, at Oae Dollar a year. This No 1 was stopped two miles west of | Daggett early yesterday by men seated on the tender of the engine. who bas not the time to read a daily | Engineer Bunrell was confronted paper, but wishes to keep promptly and thoroughly posted. It is made up with especial reference to the wauts of every member not only giving all the alsoa great variety interesting and instructive reading matter of all Kinds. Write fog free sample copies te Globe Pr: e Co, St Louis, Mo. There are sick with fever Honolulu. news, but the The United States battle ship/| Wisconsin will be launebed at San) Brancisco November 27th. he family | erican soldiers | by two 45-caliber revolvers and or- dered to stop. The robbers order- ed Engineer Bunnnel!l to carry a twenty-pound bag of dynamite to the express car Messengers Hutchinson and Blakely appeared at the door of the . | @Xpress car, armed with guns. The rovvers ing the fired at Blakely, who locat- by the flash of their guns, returned the tire, killing one robber. The dead man’s left eye and all one side of his head was torn away. The their escape. is re ‘ ' = vr Four cotton wills et Augusta, | EKLY TIMES Georgia, shut down Monday on} account of a strike of the employees Candidate Initiated in Mysteries of Live! |The strike was caused by a reduc-| tion in wages of 8 to 25 per cent.) Thres thousand operatives walked out. Does this look like prosperity In celebrating the recent republi-| | can party with bell, book and can-/ This time it isthe Merchants’ club, the orthodox republican | | organization of St. Louis, which has which we are | performed the ceremony, and we} may well doubt whether the edict will prove more effective now than it printing. The country publishers| RESULT OF A LODGE PRANK. Wires Receives a Shock. lodge in that village. he was blindfolded and given several tempting to avoid it. One of the initiating team, seeing the wire, gave him a little shove, which unfortunately proved sufii- cient to throw him off his balance and he fell hands down upon the battery itself, receiving a shock whieh rendered him unconscious After working over him for two hours and finally reviving him it was limp and loose and in this condition it has remained ever since. ing phys event the sufferer can not live. Beats the Klondike. Mr A C Thomas, cf Marysville, Tex, covery than has yet been made in the Kiondike. For years he suffered untold agopy from consumpti accompanied by hemorrhages, and was absolutely cured by Dr. King’s 0, cougt gold is of little value in compari with this marvelous cure; would have it. even if it cost a hundred dollars a bottle. Asthma, bronchitis and all throat end lung affections are positively cured by Dr. King’s New Discovery for consumption Tria! bottles free at H. L. Tucker's Drug Store. Regular size 50c¢ and $1. Guaranteed to cure or price refunded. son South on a Yacht. New York, Nov. 18 —On the yacht Oneida, Captain Robley D. Hvans, Grover Cleveland and their host, F. C. Benedict, the banker, are sailing to the south They left Indian Har- News, Key West, Santiago and | Pones on a two months’ eruise. Captain Evan; will take the party | to the marine battlefield where Cervera’s fleat was destroyed. Mr. Cleveland has taken fishing tackle and expects to estch big tarpon in Florida waters. Mr. Benedict will other fellow from getting the work, | they offer to do it for leas than the/| legal rate. If rates can be thus cut | rious offices of the state. Let the| in our new territory. Pet Deer attacks a Young Boy. Sedalis, Mo, Nov. 21.—Buford cut again and each time thereafter | Bradley and bis brother, Brooks Bradley of Sedalia, aged 7 and 13 yesterday by a pet decr on the farm of Captain Jobn A Ware, northeast of Sedalia. The deer knocked the younger boy down and commenced pawiog him with his hoofs and goring him with bis antlers. “ When the lad was rescued by farm hands the flesh had been stripped from the boy’s legs, while his groin had deer’s antlers America’s Greatest Medicine is other robbers stampeded and made Hood's Sarsaparilla, Which absolutely Impure blood, from The pimple on your Face to the great Scrofula sore which Thousands of people Testify that Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Dyspepsia, Malaria, Catarrh, Rheumatism, And That Tired Feeling. Remember this And get Hood’s And ooly Hood’s. reepi Consumption Moline, Ill., Nov. 18.—Dr. Wm. | P. Sensibaugh, a dentist of Port | Byron, just east of the city, is ina) !serious condition as a result of | pranks played upon him while being | initiated in a frateroal ingurance | moment that consumpti ever strike you a sudden blow. During the initiatory ceremonies | slight shocks from a live wire. The | bandages over his eyes having be-| come loosened he sought to outwit | those who were having fun at his} expense by locating the wire and at-| The suddenness you have a hen Better stop t it is yet creer the eandidate was about to evade You can do it with discovered that his right arm hung] A wesk ago the doctor was strick- | en with an affection of the pneumo-} gastie nerve. Since then he has | been kept up mainly through elec-|} trical treatment. One of the attend-} ns says that paralysia of | of suffocati@n is re cure is hastened by pl Dr. Ayer’s Cherry the nerves is threatened, in which | t over the Chest. A Book Free. is found a more valuable dis-| Throat and Lungs. Write us Freely. New Discovery for consumption, | sandcolds He declares that} INDICTS QUAY AND SON, Balted Stutes Senator « Serious Crime, Philadelphia, grand jury to day presented to the ¥ court true bills of indictment against United States Senator M. S. Haywood, ex state Captain Evans and Grover Cleveland Go! returned by grand jury are five in number. spiring with Jobn S. Hopkins for junlawful uss of the purchase and sale rious corporations bor Thursday bound fer Newport | o¢ i otocka of 3 for the account, benefit and profit of M. S. Quay. igdictment charges M.S. Quay with kins to unlawfully buy and seli stoc seid Hopkins People’s bank. The third ir jamin J. Haywood, M. S. Richard R Quay with conspiracy to] convert to their own j of the public m | December 1, 1896, when Haywood was the state look out for business opportunities | ‘ment charges Ben uey of the state on ; a years respectively, were attacked will: the ‘use of the The fourth bill Quay avd Benjamin J. Haywood with conspiracy, together with John S. Hopkioe, William Livsey, William B. dart, Heory K. Boyer, John W. Morrison, Samuel M. Jackson and Charlies H. McKee, 1898, unlawfully to use, and did use to make profit, certain large sums of public money of the commonwealth which had been deposited in the People’s Bank by the several state Of those names Messrs Quay, Liveey, Hart, Boyer and Mor- rison, Jackson and Haywood, had been state Cures every form of | sach other in {and a native of Ohio. He graduated | on March 28, been fearfully lacerated with the |land’s first term the order named The fifth and last bill charges| Benjamin J. Haywood, treasurer, with unlawfully loaning $100,000 of state money, which. it is 8 alleged, went to Richard R. Quay, Drains your system, |and also with receivin benefit from the depo | money in the People’s bank | Mordecai, 2n old wor oy Williams, witha |others, were in the Pearson cal | Thursday night, and when Porter E. Stone came in eds revolyer and hot three timee, the last shot pass- jing through his ft lung was arrested and placed in jail. There are many rumors in regard to the trouble, but the facts could not be learned.—Chinton Eye. curred in this locality lately. 5 RAS) Se es e TWO FEET Are not ail there is in a pair ¢ making, shoe strings, thread, peg ai leather inner and outer soles and counters, these all R° with every well regulated pair of shoes. Of course these things ARE BETTER In some shoes than others. There are better uppers and trimmings used iu a $3 00 shoe than there is in a $100 shoe, you expect it. We are sel] s this week—shoes for aj] sorts—ehoes for business m s for workmen (and more THAN ONE, Working men wear better shoes than business men) shoes for loctors, druggists tel r any other feet, for big feet, for wide feet, for nar. tow feet. for long feet; shoes for long fellows with ehort feet, and short fellows with long feet if ONE Stop to think about :t, it a good many pairs of shoes to fit so many different shaped feet, but we can do it most every time The line we are giving a push Is A line of Men's Boats at $1.50, Kangaroo calf shee at $1 00, $1.25 and $150. Wehave them > » mercha s for ema 00 and $2.50, and Women's ea : | “i in all sizes. There is a echeme in the shoe pushing to make NG i more comfortable these cold days. You can figure it out Ry nless your head is 2 A WOODEN ONE. Brysdale & Itveasling. . S.—Our shoemaker is gaining favor. Try him! SOS Se Sa VS SS Se Great Fire in the Ozarks, sects Macomb, Mo., Nov. 20,—% | Man Who Lost Ins Lip in Cuda Gets | largest and most destructive oo gration that bas swept the 0 Mountains since 1884, is sweep Vashingtor, D. C, Nov. 18.—/ toward this town It atre Commissioner Evans, of the pension | many miles north and parallel office, notified Secretary Alger to-day | the Memphis Railroad. The Siz Per Month. |that Jesse T. Gates, of the 2nd) foliage has rapidly fallen since United States Artillery, who lost! and it is supposed to have been partof bis upper lip in the West! by sparks from a freight engine! gp, has been awarded ecope of country thirteen miles of the/isin flames. Miles of fences, Indian camps the first pe Spanish war. chards, plantations, farms and on on account The president and the secretary | pastures, fields stocked with of war each took an interest io the | and other animals and many old case. Gates called on them in per- | tlers homes are in the path of son soon after the close of the war) fire. Whole neighborhoods bu jand convinced them of the merits of | to the scene, but found them his case. tetally unable to ebeck the Gates will receive $17 per month | gration. They hurriedly turned and this being inadequate, a private; the liye stock and deserted they pension bill increasing the pension | ises. ‘The altitude being 1760 ak ’ probably will be introduced in con-|sea level and a terrible soutty gress. wind prevailing, great destre Claims on account of the Spanich| imminent. ‘This city will proba war are now coming inrapidly. T bs destroyed total on file to date is 1947 for war | service and 178 for raval service, ex-| Jobo D. Rockieller bas made cusive of claims of the battleship | other generous proposition to Maine victims. | Chieago usiversity. He says ifthe trustees of that inetita GENERAL BUELL DEAD. j other sources Ly» will add two j lion: more. Dr. Earper, th Veteran of Mexican and Civil Wars Succumts | ident, anacuaces that the two | lions ra : tt to Long Iliness. = four Rockport, Ky, Nov. 13 —General | 0" ” . > A he end Don Carlos Bueil, one of the conspic- | What « magn nal foundation of the rent addi uous military officers of Kentucky, died at his home, Airdrie, in this (Mublenburg) county, after a long illness He had for seyeral weeks been aware that the end was near and had made a!l arrangements for the disposition of his effects, even expressing the wish that hie remsius | be buried in St. Louis | General Buell was 80 years of age | | tion. —Jefferson City Tribune from West Pointin 1841. He served | in the Mexican and Civil War:, in | ple who are now in their graves wou the latter being chiefly noted for | alive and well to-day if they had heeded ; A the first warnings of those troubles w! his work in Kentucky, where, after | jead to consumption and death. the war, he laid aside bis sword and weve tonen en eres conan of the became identified with this State as | organs of breathing, will surely an not al . consumption, if they & permanent resident. He was al signs of it. Then there 2 cations of the approach of consum| democrat in politics and was Pension | £2‘'° as night-sweats, emaciation, or wate isvil i .| ing away of flesh from bad nutrition, w! Agent at Louisville during Cleve. bo - weak lungs, bleeding lu obstinate coug’ a Old Woman Held Up in Daylight. oe Joplin, Mo, Nov. 18 —Mra. J. G. pb, was held noon yes terday by bighwaymen and robbed up near Carl Junction a which she had just received quarterly government pen- sion money. The robbery cecurred about noon YP on the public road and the robbers made good Officers, farmers and miners bave been @ vigorous bunt for them all Mrs. Mordeeai is 66 years old and is dependent upon her pension for her support. Other highway robberies have ce- r escape, although Unfailable—Dr. F | for constipation and t iousness. ane = aisha can secure two million dollare fi ollars will be added vinent of the iveral The descet is certain from! weak the other ind Ninety-cight per cent. of all the cases of D

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