Newspaper Page Text
ft Itttlet Sic i1 rfl Stones. wmh in fOL. XI. BUTLER, MISSOURI, WEDNESDAY JUNE 12, 1889. NO. 29 I. red the ing ion pat ters OB me CU8- nth, per 1UE-OCX. r; 11Y ES fro. I a givtt sCour calL RICE. wotf o o THE-:-PLACE TO GO FOR-- CLOTHING -: HATS, CAPS :- -AND- GENTS FURNISHING GOOD -18- A. JB. BLACHERT'8 PALACE HOTEL BUILDING. Why? Because he sells for less in the SWEPT BY A TORNADO. 1 Missouri Village Suffers Greatly From u Storm. Sedalia, Mo., June 8. A tornado dHughesville this afternoon wreck- id the church, Berry's drug store, Ijnes' elevator and several other Moldings, a boy named Smith was leriouBly injured by falliner timber. 'jibe other occupants of the build ing escaped unhurt. Not a building in the little hamlet escap ed injurj. The loss is estimated at 80,000. Hughesville is twelve aOes north of Sedalia on the Lex- liagton branch of the Missouri Pa rt. Warrensburg, Mo., June 8. At 1:30 o'clock this afternoon a severe Jtorm passed over this county, and it Valley City, several miles north- tut of here, it took the nature of i tornado. A Dunkard church, a trick structure, was blown down ifii Isaac Gadberry was very severe 1; injured. A heavy gale raged at Green Ridge d buildings, fences and growing ps were laid low, inflicting con- derable damage, but no one was mured. The wires are down in several places and washouts are re torted. Her Hair Was False. Detroit, Mich., June 10. One of Inmost remarkable divorce suits of 1 century has been begun here. Its. James Phyling recently began etion against her husband, charc- pig desertion and praying a decree fith alimony. Late Saturday night hjling filed an answer, in which he if , get ' IP forth that he fell in love with Fit I man wh is D0W tis wife be" j 08e of her luxuriant hair, and fre- ; Jaently told her so. After the mar age, which occurred a year ago, found that every reference to her I air caused her to become anerry, Tad he noticed that she would never her toilet in his presence. is worried him and one duv he bed upon a chair, looked over m I it "uouiijl oi ms wne s douuoit 111 H disC0VereJ th lw ringlets 1 1 1 f r banging on the back of a chair. woman herself was bald as the i of her hand. Phylim? shrieked i bis wife fainted When she re ared she explaiued that she had her hair in a fire, but no evnla- "Ould satisfy him, and he left I f wife in the possession of their ' fe. taking up quarter himself in -tta rart of the eitv. He savs , ... - . 'cannot liv lwiasuxpriox SURELY rrRFD- 13 1 'X alff vEDrrOR-r,easo inform your read- wtl? 8 Positive remedy lor the above - - By Its timely use thousands ot 11 Jtlrr6" havo been permanently cured. E'adto send two bottles ot my reme 3 t-ntf .any 01 yur readers who have con 1 A? L lbey send me their express lli&"l(ltesl1- Kespectfully. ton o "Ell prfit city. than any other house o CAVE DWELLERS FOUND. Very Interesting Results of Lieut. Schwatka's Explorations. Deming, N. M., June C. Lieut. Schwatka arrived here to-day. His party has beeu successful beyond all expectations in their explorations, and especially in Southern Chihua hua. Here living cliff and cave dwellers were found in great abund ance, wild as any of the Mexican tribes from Cortes:' conquest. The abodes they live in are exactly simi lar to old, abandoned cliff dwellings of Arizona and New Mexico, about which there has been so much spec ulation and so much money spent in investigation. It was almost im possible to get very near them, so wild and timid were they. Upon the approach of white people they fly to their caves or cliffs, by notched sticks placed against the face of the cliffs, if too steep, although they can ascend ver tical stone faces if there are the slightest crevices for their fingers and toes. These cliff-dwellers are sun wor shipers, throwing their new-born children out in the full rays of the sun the first days of their lives, and showing many other forms of devo tion to the great luminary. They are usually tall, lean and well form ed, their skin being very blackish- red, much nearer the color of the negro than the coppsr colored Indian of the United States. Buying a State. Some idea of the enormous profits of the Louisiana lottery may be de rived from the fact that its mana agers have offered to assume the en tire debt of the state, amounting some twelve million dollars, if the legislature will renew the charter of the lottery company for fifty years. Doubtless there will be a fierce con test over the proposition for even in Louisiana there are many people op posed to the idea of the state lending its name and its sanction to a colos sal gambling scheme. But the in fluence and wealth of the company combined with the liberality of its offer will probably carry the day. An Imperative Necessity. What pure air is to an unhealthy locality, what spring cleaning is to the neat housekeeper, so is Hood's Sarsaparilla to everybody, at this season. The body needs to be thoroughly renovated, the blood pu j rified aud vitalized, the germs of i disease destroyed. .Scrofula, Salt I Rheum, and all other blood disor j ders are cured by Hood's Sarsapa- rills, the most popular aud success ful spring medicine. TOO READY WITH THE PEN. I Uncle Sam's Displeasure Incurred by Abnse ot the .MaiN. K. C. Times, Saturday, Jane ith. The time of the United States district court was largely occupied yesterday with the cases of Isaac B ItickaOM and Robt. Moore, the first the principal and the second the accessory in mailing an obscene letter to Lizzie Robinson, a country irl at Warsuw, Mo. The defend ants reside in the country near Brownhigton, and Miss Robinson visited in the vicinity over a year ago. After she returned to Warsaw Isaac Rickson wrote to her asking her to correspond. She refused several letters, when finally he and his brother, William E. Rickson, to gether with Moore, concocted and sent the letter that got them into trouble. It was of such a nature that it could not be read in court and was silently passed to the jury. Isaac Rickson was found guilty, and the case of Robt. Moore is in the hands of the jury. William Rickson was indicted by the grand jury yes terday as an accessory to the crime. Sentence was not passed upon Rick son. William A. Hubble, of Butler, pleaded guilty to writing an obscene letter and mailinj? it to his wife after Having deserted tier. Jle was sen tenced to four months imprisonment in the Henry county jail. An enormous water spout burst on the M., K. & T. railroad between Fayette and Burton, yesterday, and a thousand feet of track was sub merged. A trainman who witnessed tne approach ot the cloua and was near at hand when it burst, says: The cloud resembled a huge in verted mountain. It reeled along through the air with the point al most touching the earth, then it bounded upward several hundred feet :and again falling, the point struck against the railroad embank ment and in an instant the whole cloud dropped on the ground an enormous deluge of water. Several farms as well as the railroad suffer ed great damage from the water. A herd of cattle happened to be near the point where the cloud burst and were all drowned. Superintenden Lyon and General Roadmaster Rock well left at once for the scene of the disaster to learn the extent of the damage. Sedalia Bazoo. Crazed By Grief. Louisville, Ky., June 10. Wm Showers, whose young wife came to a mysterious death about a week ago at Elizabethtown, has become raying mad. He was found in the cemetery wandering around among the graves, and said he has become so violent that he has had to be put in a straight jacket. Mrs. Showers was found dead in herroom,shot tnrough the head, and by many it was be lieved she wss murdered. Point Pleasant' W- Va., June 10- Thursday night two negro desper adoes went te a cabin near the Tur key Run coal mines, in McDowell County, and covering the inmates, about a dozen Hungarian miners' witn revolvers, denianaeu tneir wa ges. One of the Hungarians drew a revolver from beneath his pillow and was shot three times, dying in a short time. The others fled, and the honse was looted by the negroes, who escaped. Two arrests have been made on suspicion. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she wa a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became aiiss. she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gare them Castoria. The People of Golden City Punish a Wild Westerner. Carthage, Mo., June 10. There was great excitement at Golden City this afternoon over the attempt of a strange desperado to take the town. He rode in and began firing right and left, made people dance un der pain of death and poured volley after volley into saloons. gJAf ter terrorizing everybody for 20 minutes the man rode away. The citizens had by this time secured arms and gave pursuit and a run ning fight was kept up for five miles and the desperadoe's horse was iilled. The man captured another horse ioui a farmer and this was killed too and the ruffian was wounded three times. He was nearly dead when he surrendered. He was put in jail. One act of President Harrison's administration we can unreservedly approve is his refusal to act as ex- offico president of the alleged "Na tional University," when it presented its diplomas to him for his signature. It was well done. There is no real "National University" in this coun try. The constitution provides for none, and no alleged institution of that kind has the light to demaud the president's signature to give a fictitious value to diplomas, which if they are not shams, are, with the great majority of American diplomas, open to the suspicion of being hum bugs A terrible casualty occurred last Monday at Leasburg, this state. Wm. S. Lea, the Frisco agent at that place, and Dr. W. H. Parker were joking and scuffling with each other when Lea pointed a gun that he was sure was not loaded at the doctors head and pulled the trigger. To his horror the gun was discharg ed and his friend fell to the floor dead. The bullet crashed through Parker's brain and he died instantly. He was 35 years old and left a wife and children. Springfield Express. Colorado Mountain Resorts and the Springs of Missouri. Missouri Pacific Ry., "The Color ado Short Line,"' has now on sale its summer tourist tickets to the re sorts of Color ad a, Utah and other Rocky Mountain points, at very low rates for the round trip, good to re turn until October 31st. Solid trains are run daily, equipped with Pull man Buffett Sleeping Cars from St. Louis and Kansas City through, without change, to Pueblo and Den ver. Special tickets to Sweet Springs or Pertle Springs, at one fare for the round trip, are on sale at all points on the lines of the Missouri Pacific Railway in Missouri. For illustrated pamphlet of 140 pages, descriptive oi tne resorts, reached via Mo. Pacific Ry., and further particulars, address H. C. Townsend, Genl Pass, and Ticket Agent. St. Louis, Mo. 26-4t Absolutely Pure. 9ot P1S at pjos aq joausaiius'spat iisujpioaatusm iiaionow a jo re 8aoaaiosjoqjpnnvoaiit i;undjotaAjem V -sausAiaiati lap-nod sjqx lsai Koi to anumnai am qiM PIMPLES TO Sf 1I0FLLA. A Positive Cure for Every Skin, Seal) and Blood Disease" ex cept Ichthyosis. Psoriasis 8 ears. !lad, arms, and breast a solid scab. Back covered with sores. Dest doctors and medicine tail. Cured by Cuticura Remedies at a :ost of So I have used the C'utionra Remedies with the best results. I useu two boUU'g f the i'uticura Kesolvent, three boxes of Cuticura, and, oue eake of Cuticura Seap. and am cured of a ter rible skin and scalp disease known as Psoria sis, i had it for years. If would iret better and worse at times. Sometimes mv head would be a solid scab, and was at the 'time I bejtan the use of the Cuticura KerueUies. My arms were covered with scabs from mv elbow s to shoulders, my breast was almost one solid scab, and my back covered with sores varying in size from a penny to a dollar. 1 doctored with all the best doctors with no relief, and used many diflerent medicines without eflect My case was hereditary, and, I began think, incurable but it began to heal from the first application orcnticura. AHCHEU III SSKU.. Melsher. Ohio. Skin Disease 0 Years Cured. I am thankful to sav that 1 have used the Cuticura Remedies lor about eight months with great success, and consider nivself en tirely cured ol salt rheum, from which I have suffered for six years. I tried a number of medicines and two of the best doctors in the country, bu: found nothing that would effect a cure until 1 used your remedies Mrs. A. McCUFUS Morette, Mo. fTM II t f f . i ne orst i;ase oi ftcroiula. We have been selling your Cntlc.ura lteme dies for years, and have the first complaint vet to receive from a purchaser. One of the worst cases of Scrofula I ever saw was cured bv the use of five bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, Cuti cura, ana cuticura Soap. 1 AYI.OK & TAYLOR, Druggists, Frankfort, Kan. Cuticura Remedies Cure every species of agonizing, humiliating, itching, burning, scaly, aud pimply disease of the skin, scalp and blood, w ith loss of hair, from pimples to scrofula, except possibly 1 ich thyosis. Sold everywhere. Price. Cuticura, 5"e,.; Soap, 23c.; Resolvent. 81. Prepared by the PorrKR Daiu and Chkmical Coki-obaiion, iioston. 5t3"Send forIIow to Cure Skin Disease," C4 pages, 50 illustrations, and 100 testimonials. BtyPLES, black-heads, Ted, rough, chapped, imand oily skin prevented by Cuticura Soap. WEAK, PAINFUL BACKS. Kidnev and Cterino Pains and Weaknesses, relieved in ooe minute the Cuticura Anti-l'ain Plaster. New, instantaneous, infallible, 2Tcts. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned C. F. Pharis, administrator of the estate of John Irvin deceased, will make final settle ment of bis accounts with said estate as such administrator, at the next term of the probate court of Bates county, Missouri, to be holden at Butler, in said county, on the Pith day of August, Itsrti. C. r. PHARIS, Administrator. FAR M OF BATES llWt by Southeast Corner of Square, (In room formerly occupied by Grange Store.) CashCapital. D. N. THOMPSON, President, J- K. ROSIER. Vic President E. D. KIPP, Cashier. DIRECTORS. T. W. Silvers, Jno. Steele, M. R. Ltle, J. K. Rosier, J. EVEKINGHAST, D. N. Thompson, Doen a General Special attention given to time -:-. E. D1AG0H-:- -DEALER IN- HARDWARE Al IPLlf-ffi CUTLERY AND CUS. Wm, STEEL BINDEJVS AN1) MOWERS. MINNEAPr "sxfcEL BINDERS, Eagle Steel W my Rakes, Buckeye Force 3umps BUGGIES, WA' JNS. AND CARRIAGES, BARIfrVVIRFj Etc. R. F I. DEACON THE POPULAR ROUTE -TO TEXAS, MEXICO & CALIFORNIA SEDALIA, HANNIBAL, ST- LOUIS AND THE NORTH AND EAST. DOUBLE DAILY TRAIN SERVICE OF Handsome Day Coaches, And PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPING CARS, ST. LOUIS, SEDALIA, AND KANSAS CITY TO TEXAS POINTS, With direct connection for Califor nia and Mexico ELEGANT FREE RECLIN ING CHAIR CARS ON ALL TRAINS Between SEDALIA AND HANNIBAL And on Night Trains- FORT SCOTT TO SAINT LOUIS, Making Direct Connection in Union Depot's with Express Trains In All Directions. For Tickets and Further Informa tion, Call on or Address, Nearest (MO. KAN. TEXAS), Ticket Agent Geo. A. Eddv and II. C. Crocs, Receiver J. WALDO, GASTON MESLER, Gen. Traf . Man. Gen. Pas.& T'kAgt Sedalia, Missouri. 1 UVJ COUNTY, $20,000.00 J. J. McKee A. S. Rosier, E. D. Kipp. Banking OuninesH- deposits and interest paid on same. AGENT FOyR DECKING BINDER TWINE. Butler, Mo -:-