The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 23, 1901, Page 1

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D ARMY ENCAMPMEN Attendance.--Election of Of- ficers. ouri department G. A. R., jon at Nevada Thursday, Fri- d Saturday was well attended be old boys in blue had an ex- ttime. The election of officers wing year resulted as fol eH. Hall of Trenton, and onson of Sedalia, were plac- pomination for department nder. Mr. Bronson, in a neat ithdrew his name and urged nimous electien of Mr. Hall. s done and Mr. Hall being es- to the rostrum by Mr. Bron- pted the honor conferred in ful speech of thanks. Hy rl 3, St. Louis, was elected jor Vice Commander. Comrade Mitchell of Nevada, was elect- ‘gnior vice commander; Dr. C.V , Medical director; Rev. J.T. ll, chaplain; Thos. B. Rodgers, ant Adjutant and quarter- e neral. The Piiowing were elected delegates » the national encampment at Meyeland, Ohio: ates. John T. Birdseye, Pe- Bobe. Thos S. Maxwell, H. M. Pollard, Geo. H. Pountain, ©. W. ark, John O’Bannon, Joseph Me- dor, G. W. Edwards, John W. Mar- ‘in, H. 8. Berry, A. L. McBride, Wm. Maynard, R. A. Vance, John B. Cot- ey. Alternates: G. A. Douglass, im. J. Nelson, Jas. Decker, M. G. Netherton, A McKinney, Jas. R. Mill- , H, E. Robinson, O. C. Snyder, J. Ehrhardt, F. D. W. Arnold, Wm. , Nick Morgan, O. F. Carpenter, ob Matlick, Alex Oliver. The oldest and youngest veterans ofthe state attracted much atten- tion. The men were Comrade Henry Dorman of McCook Post No. 34, La- nar,and Comrade Gilbert Van Zandt of Farragut-Thomas Post No. 3, Kansas City Dorman, who is 102% old, served in the third Michi- an cavalry and was wounded. Van Yandt who is the youngest veteran resent, was born Dec 20,1851, and ed three years in the Seventh Ohio Infantry, enlisting in 1862 when but 11 years of age. Rheumatism is conceded to have its origin in a poisoned condition of the blood, and to be successfully trated by Herbine, which acts upon theliver, kidneys and other blood fprifying organs, thereby divesting thesystem of the offending agents. it difficult to buy good horses for the eastern market, owing to the deple- BUTLER. MISSOURI, Horses Come High in Kansas. Abilene, Kan., May 17.—The horse buyers of Central Kansas are finding tion of the farmers’ stock and the consequent high prices. From this place alone fully 2,500 horses of the best quality have been shipped in the last eighteen months. A year ago $75 would buy almost any horse in the market, while now it takes $125 to $140 for first-class animals The $100 horse is a reality in’Cen- tral Kansas for the first time in 92 23. THURSDAY, MAY Revenue Shut Off. Arkansas City, Kan., May 17.— One result of Mrs. Nation’s recent s crusade here is the shutting off of Lives io Chicage and Takes His Meals_ revenue derived from saloons. As a@ consequence the city is now without electrict lights and shy in the matter of needed sewer extensions and water- works equipment. MAN WITHOUT A STOMACH. Regularly. Chicago, May 18.—‘‘Pass the mash- | ed potatoes, please,” said Carl Kru- ger today at his little cottage home. | oe Sa | Take another cup of coffee, too,” | : 4 les are not only most painful, said his wife, as she handed the out also very dangerous, asthe in- yotato dish ax : - flamed nodules are very apt to take gee =a ee wipes Kroera on malignent aetion and eancer of | ® the only in man in the rectum is produced. ‘ They should | out @ Stomach be Se cove Pile Oint-| He went home today from the | ment will ¢ ini inoi i : eure the most obstinite | jinois medical college, wrere he had | twelve years. Shippers scour the|cases. Price, 50 cents in bottles, mae , country and take their purchases as| tubes, 75 cents. For sale by H. L. | is stomach cut out three weeks and far east as New York. One firm here | Pucker. | four days ago. has shipped a carload every two weeks to eastern New York all the spring and made money The far- mers are turning their attention to hersé raising again and there will probably be another surplus in a few year. Prominent Merchants Mortally Wound Each Other. Hermitage, Mo., May 19.—A double | tragedy will likely result from a street duel fought at Cross Timbers, Mo. A feud has existed in the neigh- borhood many years, with dangerous men on both sides. A.J. Sally met on the street, drew their revolvers commenced shooting. They both stood up and fired until fell. Heath was pierced with two balls in the lungs and his right arm was broken. Sally had one arm and leg broken by- bullets and one ball passed through hisabdomen. The men are both prominent citi- zens, Heath being the leading mer- chant of Hickory county. Neither will live. May Be Oil in Missour. K.C. Times. ¢ Kansas City men have organized the Missouri Oil and Mineral com- yany for the purpose of prospecting hee oil near Amsterdam, Bates county, Missouri. This town is located about fifty miles south of Kansas City on the Kansas City Southern railroad. The company has 10,000 acres of land under lease, and claims to have found evidences of oil. For years springs and wellsin this vicinity have been so full of oilas to be unfit for 50 cents. For sale by H. L. limneus Bulletin: Thomas M. abb, jr., was the worthy son of the Rey.-Thomas M. Cobb of Lexington, Mo, and a bright young man, full of promise, who by his natural geniality ad quick intelligence made friends aad won promotion in all cireles and inhis every undertaking. He was ch a youth as would make his par- fats proud to claim him as their thild. Having served his country in # ite Spanish war, he, like thousands of other ambitious and patriotic young men, was induced toenter ser- Vie in the Philippine army, with the commission of lieutenant. A few Plays ago his parents received word #that he had died of smallpox and the thes of his cremated body would be entthem by the war department. Here was a young man worth all the tolonies of the world to his mother; gore valuable to his country as a titizen than 10,000 Filipinos; worth More in cold dollars and cents, if you tan judge a human soul that way, to real interests of civilization than all the trade of the Philippine archi- fora year. Such was he when Was thrown into the scales to buy “world power” and ‘‘make history” the gang of money gluttons who aerunning our country. And what ‘is the result? What was bought with tislife? A little tighter hold on a People we do not want as citizens and compared with the cost of getting it | these for his country; for his ven- Wable father and his family and friends, a handful of ashes. And Lieut. Cobb was only one in a thou- id of just such returns. $100 Reward $100. | The readers ot this paper will be pleas- to learn that there is at least one ded disease that science has been to cure in all its stages, and that is Aatarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the Saly positive cure known to the medical nity. Catarrh being a constitution- 1 disease, requires, a constitutional | Matment. Hall’s Cotarrh Cure is taken Tally, acting directly upon the Wood and mucous surfaces ot the sys- »thereby destroying the foundation disease, and giying the patient ngth by building up the constitution id assisting nature in doing its work. “Sh€ proprietors haye so much faith in Pi carative powers, that they offer One Mandred Dollars for any -case that it tocure. Send tor list of testimon- Address F. J. CHENEY & Co.; edo,O. g@p7Sold by druggis 75¢- Ma trade which is insignificant as use. This leads to the belief that by a little prospecting oilean be found in paying quantities. A Late Warrensburg Banker’s Estate. An inventory of the will of the late John T. Cheatham, of Warrensburg, has been estimated by the executor. It shows 3088 acres of land in John- son county, 695 acresin Ray county, 160 acres in Vernon and 127 acres in Texas. Total acres, 4065. Ten business lots and buildings and two residences. Good notes to the amount of $92,719.0. Cash stock and bonds worth $58,320.96, The value of the entire estate is estimated at $350,000. Besides this there are notes amounting to about $1700, which are considered doubtful.—Dis- patch. Mother and Child. Let the mother take Scott’s emul- sion of cod-liver oil for the two; it is a different thing; it implies a degree of interior strength not ofter found in woman of either extreme. T S. Heath and | at the rate 6 per cent per annum and | their pistols were empted and then] Refunds His Pension. Lancaster, Mo., May 17.—Freder- | f : | as és i J : | from the tomb. Kruger entered the ick Nysandwer, wealthy and respect- | qoorway of ss sted nig . : : Sa rod ed German farmer who lived near | : ee ee here, died on thé 10th instant. home | ‘At | today—every vestige of the horrible | of a the time of his death he was drawing | pain gone, able to walk, and on the| | $17.50 pe ote ine zoveament of | road to absolute recovery. | eash and you don’t help to -5F or A s will wasto-| Neither her eis eo: a day filed for probate before Judge | Bape oor bie wile, nor Histour) pay other people's bills. | Hall. His estate consisted of 420 | children, ever expected that he would acres of the best land in the county | P@8s the portal alive again. and personal property amounting to | When Kruger went to the hospi- $3,000. He nominates six of his | tal he was ina pitiable condition, and | neighbors as executors and direets | . aR them to ascertain the exact amount | the professor of surgery at the vol-| of money he has received as a pen-| lege told him there was a chance, sioner and calculate interest thereon | small one, through the operation Under the care of a trained nurse | | | pun oun ee eng oe capt bis | he gained steadily from the first w ith | government.” | marvelous rapidity. Yesterday for | He wrote the will himself, and his | the first time he partook of solid) relatives are unable to account for | food. For several days he has been ie peculiar disposition, unless that | able to walk about the hospital. ne took this means of easing his con- | science. It is said that the will will | be contested on grounds that at the | time of making the will he was not! of sound mind. Fought For His Life. | | “My father and sister both died of { consumption,” writes J. T. Weather- | Wax, of Wyandotte, Mich., “and I {was saved from the | only by Dr. King’s New Discovery. An | attack of pneumonia left an obsti- | Children who are weak, fretful or troublesome should be given a few doses of White’s Cream Vermifuge. They will then become strong, heal- same fate thy and active, have rosy cheeks, | nate cough and lung trouble, which : an exeellent doctor could not help, bright eyes, will be happy and la - sy ; ppy jaugh- | but a few months’ use of ing all the day long. Price, 25 cents. | -S this won- For sale by H. L. Tucker ! derful medicine made me as well as |ever and J gained much in weight.” | Infallible for coughs, colds and all | throat and lung treuble. Guaran- The nice showers that fell the last Peso age 50c and cde "pe H. | Tucker's drugstore ria rot tles two days have been very aeceptable. | Henry Oliver shipped a car load of | free. hogs to Kansas City one day last week. Mrs. Zoom and son Ernest, made | a business trip to Montrose Wednes- | Se | day last. le The S . 7 os . 1 Si ci v bi Ss Freemont Henton of Spruce, has ; Kansan Who Secended Cleveland's First his new building about completed. | Frank Kretzinger visited Kansas | % i 2 : City last Tuesday. | Fort Seott, Kan., May 16 —A tele- Mr. Stephenson is reported sick at | gram was received here this after- ps writing a | noon announcing the death of Col. z darlan Harshaw spent Tuesday | A. A. Harris, the former democratic in Kansas City. Stella Keen was the Head ae dived in the city f é guest of her father, Joe West, one} eee rer os the CIby Lor an? day last week. | years and was oue of the leading at- J.M. Kretzinger and wife drove | torneys of the state. He died at his over to Butler one day last week. late home in Daluth, Minn. The re- East County Items. COL. HARRIS DEAD. | Nomination. Mr. Coleman of Johnstown. has . ill be t ee ee tac antes been hauling hay to Montrose the eee re rOUE® eS Se RE | past week ment in the family rying ground. | Fred Rich has been visiting this It was Col. Harris who headed the section this week taking pictures. democratic delegation to the nation-| Charley Castor of Rockville. ship | al convention from Kansas in ed acar load of cattle to Kansas } RB : i and seconded the 1901. 1892} nomination of! NO. 29. MIE WOM. —— .. — tal a of ahouse that has aneven Chicago with-j} price throughout. the house that keeps | A cancer had fasten- | of | ed itself upon the organ. invelving | the pri lown 5 i ‘= 4 iatiateall 7 j every portion of it. Like a man risen | ogists ‘ house that sells for READ THE PRICES below and compare them with the prices you have been paying. Good shirts waist silks 4se | 42 inch black jacquard half wool 38 Fine colored taffety silks 64¢ | 46 inch Sicillian black 58e Guaranteed black taffety silks J4e | 46 inch black granite cloth 90e 40 inch black all wool serge $9 | 46 inch tine prunella cloth 98e tSe | 46 inch fine colored granite cloth 85 i woo! 24« 36 inch black all wool se: £0 inch biac Finest line of Skirting Goods Ever Shown, All staple black juard 39e to 5M white, indigo Challies from + 36 inch shirt waist linen all linen 24¢ | blue and fancy calicos at he 36 inch solid colored percalk Sie | Solid colored shirting Fine red seal ginghams 10 id colored outing flannels Se Good red table linen 18e | Good © muslin 3K Good blue plaid table linen t4¢ | Standard LL muslin 4c 54 inch bleached table linen thc) Extra quality he 60 inch fine bleached tablelinen 50¢ | Good bleached muslin De 62 inch fine bl hed tablelinen 7c Hope bleached muslin iM 72 inch satin damask table linen 89c | Fruit and*Lonsdale muslin Bie 72 inch fine satin damask table 8-4 Pepperell sheeting 16e linen Qse 9-4 Pepperell sheeting ldSe 72 inch very fine satin damask All colors in carpet warp on table linen $1.29 spools 90¢ and $1.00 Crash 4'sc to 20c, fine line Amaske ticking ACA 12e Good full standard calico Fancy stripe ticking Ske, 10¢, 124 Good Glouchester calico t'sc | Girdle corsets, all sizes 49¢ All $1 and $1.25 Warner Bros, Corsets for /Oc. Big line of muslin underwear at old prices. val- City Tuesday of last w Mrs. Beard visited Str Cleveland, to whom he referred as day last week. ' the Moses of Democracy. He wasa oe Appleton ¢ cae ue the | confederate soldier, having enlisted area ss boys playec oe ie 1 ganle | in Morgan’s cavalry from Lebanon, of baseball last Wednesday. a = : 7 : A C. H. West went to see his best girl Ky., his birthplace. His residence last Sunday Froxtz. | in Kansas dates back to 1871. ngtown one ; Luxurious people are not very strong by habit, and over-worked people are weak from exhaustion in some of their functions. two is the happy mean; but how two? The emulsion is almost perfluous. Wellsville Wild. Wellsville, Mo., May 9.—This town is having a big oil excitement. Ever since the earthquake three years az0 many wells here and within a radius of fifteen to eighteen miles have been so tainted with oil as to be unfit for use. Louis have leased 3,600 acres of land in the vicinity and made con- tracts for operation on one within thirty days and another with- lin six months. The leases will ex- is not begun. The other eompanies have also taken large tracts and it is ready purchased their machinery. money to invest and the hotels are crowded. jhardly be purchased. Between the many women have plenty of life for never su-/ Western Union Oil company of St.! well! pire at the end of that time if work | claimed that two of them have al-} Many strangers are in town with | Already real estate can Promote Digestion and Cure Dyspepsia. The real cause of so-called Malarial and Bilious Troubles is often a disordered condition of the digestive organs. Nervous dys- pepsia, Indigestion, Catarrh of the Stomach, Heartburn, Acidity and Fermentation, Vomiting, Water Brash, Nausea, Debility, ency, Impure Blood, Irregular Bowel Action, Headache and other complaints, having their origin in imperfect digestion, are promptly relieved and permanently cured by Eupepsia Tablets. j By increasing nature’s supply of di; ive fluids, Eupepsia Tablets make rich blood and create sound flesh, and a condition of cheerful- ness, good spirits and mental brightness is secured. Two Weeks’ Treatment 50 Cents. <* Eupepsia Tablets have given me more relief than anything I have ever taken for dyspepsia.” M. F. McCaw, Cleborne, Tex. “* Eupepsia Tabiets gave bef."* <«Eupepsia Tablets have been a great benefit to me.”” Miss Suz Leatuzeman, Santuzza, Mo. «<] was troubled with indigestion about as bad as ‘ anyone could be and it- gives me pleasure to write | “2 pas Shout Eupepsia Tablets for they have done wonders | ae aE for me. I cancens usly recommend them to; ** My dyspepsia is of long stancing, but Eupepsa anyone suffering from jon.”* Tablets have made me feel better than I have felt Frank Nessrrt, Morse, Kan. | for ten yes.”” W. Hazes, Alma, I. Your Money Back If They Fail. THE EUPEPSIA CO., S23 CiaRK Ave., St. Lours. Mo. Despond- | Fine Embroideries, it will The finest line of summer goods, 5c to 48c. lencines lace from 2c to 25c per yard. |do you good to see them, direct from the importers in New j i York. Shoes. We will save you 20 per cent on shoes of all kinds. We the cheap as | handle only the best lines but sell them as cheapest. Take a look at our shoes. old prices iSc Fine colored $c Best balbrig, ants Cottonad | Jeans pants i- Fancy socks Cass ; Wool pants Trunks from $1.48 t ore pants Good summer The finest line of dress shirts ever shown in you. Suit Department For Special Bargains, Cash or trade for chickens and eggs. prices that will surpris See our Ladies Bring in your produce, scnaaiinnscabartta eA

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