The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 22, 1883, Page 6

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conrad Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, F. Y. Orear and I. Orear, his THE AMERICAN wife, by their deed of trust, bearing date recorded 19 ates county, March 27th, 1883, and dul; the Recorder’s office of ‘ounty Court Proceedings. THURSDAY, Met pursuant to Present same as yesterday. AUG. OTH. Follow- adjournment. | Missouri, in book No. 29, page 603, con- veyed to the undersigned trustee, in trust to secure the payment of the promissory note insaid deed of trust fully described, the following described real estate situat- ed inthe county of Bates and state of Missouri, to-wit: Lot No. 1, in block No. 15, in the west side addition to the 1 SS : = a eee — ees city of Butier, and whereas, default was made in the payment of monthly install- ments on said note and the premises abandoned by the said F. ¥Y- Orear and wite, now therefore at the request of the legal holder of said note, and by vir- tue of the authority in me vested by the terms of said deed ot trust fully set forth ing accounts allowed: N A Wade, printing T C Boulware, medical on pauper, $10; Burns &Co., goods for pauper, $13 51: goods tor msane poor, $21 35; same Dr. attendance $S2 25; goods tor county officers, $5 10; Sam Garrett, building fence on poor farm $15 So; A. L. McBride, re- pairs and supplies county offices, $4 ——- Levy & Co., | therein, I will, on Thursday, August 16th, 1883, between the hours of nine o’clock in the forenoon and five o’clock in the after- front door noon of that day, at the east ot the court house in thecity of Butler, county ot Bates, atoresaid, sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand the real estate in said deed of trust and this notice described or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay the debt, interest and costs. J C. Clark, Trustee. Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, Walter S. Bowden and J- J. Bowden, his wife, by their deed of trust, bearing date June gth, 1881, and duly re- corded in the Recorder’s office ot Bates county, Missouri, on the said gth day ot June, 1881, in book No. 25 at page 493) conveyed to the undersigned trustee the following described real estate in trust, to secure the payment of acertain prom- issory note iu said deed of trust fully de- scribed, to-wit: Fitty teet off of the west end of block fifty-seven, 57, in_the town of Butler, courty of Bates and State of Missouri, and whereas, said note is past due and unpaid, now, therefore at the request of the legal holder of said note and by virtue ot the authority in me vest- ed by the terms in said deed of trust tul- ly set torth, I will, on Thursday, August 16th, 1883, between the hours of nine o’clock in the forenoon and five o’clock in the after- noon ot that day, at the east front door of the court house, in the city of Butler, county of Bates, aforesaid, expose to sale at publicoutcry for cash in hand ali ot the real estate insaid deed of trust de- scribed or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay said debt, interest and costs. F. M. Allen, Trustee. Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, Reuben Uhl and Barbara Uhl, his wite, by theirjdeed of trust, bear- ing date March 16th, 1882, and duly re- corded in the Recorder’s office ot Bates county, Missouri, on the said 16th day of March, 1882, in book No. 23 at page 465, conveyed to the undersigned trustee in trust, tosecure the peyment ofa certain promissory note in said deed of trust ful- ly described, the following described real estate situate in the county of Bates and State ot Missouri to-wit: The south- west quarter of the nortlieast quarter of section twenty-three, 23, township torty, 40, of range twenty-nine, 29, and whereas, said note is past due and unpaid, now TWREALLD,¢ Are just opening a full line of MEN AND BOYS CLOTHING 65; A Francisco, goods for pauper child $2; Dr O F Renick, one-third salary county physician $15; Wm Leslie, pauper coffin, $6; J S Craig goods for pauper $7; J A Scott, same, $5 85; Dr Adams, med, at- tendance on pauper, $1 40; Barnard & Co., books and stationery, $135 95: R&T A Ennis, same $43 65: JR Jenkins, criminal costs, $25 30; same, cost for county fee bill, $20 50; WF Hanks, certified bill of costs, $180 10; same for same, $12; same for transporting prisoners &c., $51 75; same, cash tor mowing court house yard and cleaning privy, $8 45; same, balance for conveying Furnishing Goods, insane to asylum, $33 25; C T Mc- Farland, county printing $114 05; F M Crumly & Co., stationery for county offices $9 10; Wright & Glo- rious, gutteringon poor-house and goods for offices, $32 57; same, HATS AND CAPS, get our prices and be convinced. North Side of Square, Butler, Mo. And we only ask you to examine our goods Humphreys goods for pauper, go cts; E Pyle, supplies for county offices, $54; W F Hanks, board of prisoners $192- 75; Chas. Endres, board of jurors, $3; Ramsey, Millet & Hudson $18- 50; Dr. E. L. Rice, med. attendance on May Delaney, a pauper, $12; Power & Bro., lumber for bridges, $62 oz; W F Hanks, costs in case of R. H. coal company vs A Nep- tune, $2 50. Appointment of D. H. Simpson and Joe A. Brashear as deputy re- corders, approved. Contract made with S J Ford to paint court house root, windows, &c. Jonathan Kem- per pays school bond. R. J. Starke makes quarterly statement of fees received and clerk hire paid out, which was approved. Road No. 128 ordered opened. Adjourned to eight o’clock to-mor- Not Standing by the Record. ‘The _ protectionists the weakness ot their cause when they attempt to bolster 1t by references to | its properendowment. Every effort | | has been made to render this meeting one of the most pleasant that the So- iety has yet had. The good people of Jefferson City will do all in their} power to entertain those who come. | The hotels have agreed to make re- | duced rates. The ranlroads will car- | iy passengers at one and one-third | A number of em} } raw expose the speeches and state Papers of the government, At the beginning of this century there was neither capital nor skilled labor in the United no early statesmen ot the States. There were developed mines nor available material, and supplies were distant both as time and space, | tare round trip. ; nentex-confederates trom other states these j will be present. Gen, Fitz Hugh | Lee, of Virgima, will deliver the ora- | Such were the facts relied upon then The tact that | tion of the occasion. by the protectionists and the support- j years are accumulating upon the/] ers of the American tem, This heads of the soldiers ot the war] school of economists avowed on all should acmonish them that if they | occasions that their policy was notto wish once more to grasp their old | be continuing ‘Lhey said we need comrades by the hand they must not f protection only during the infan our manufacturing industries. the condition of things is wholly changed. There is a superfluity of capital. Interest is about as low in America as it 1s in Europe. We have the skill, the growth of a hun- We have developed natural resources surpass- too long defer the time. A. A. LesvEur. Secretary. A gentleman named Ford appear- before the County Court last Thurs- day and proposed to paint and repair the roof and dome of the court house for which work his charges are to be $125. The painting is to paid for ($72) at the September term ot the court—the repairing, when the Court is satisfied that the work has been properly done. The Court ac- cepted the proposition and Mr. Ford commenced the work atonce. This is perhaps the best that could have been done in regard to this matter, as the Court has been compelled re- cently, to pay $100 each, to the soci- eties and orders meeting 1n the halls over the Court room on account of damage by leakage.--Hecord. dred years’ experience, ing those of all the rest of the world. The reasons upon which protection- ists relied then whole nor in part. Thatsystem can be supported now upon no other ground than its inherent, universal wisdom. This was not the theory of the men from whom they quote. They are not entilted to the support of the opinions of those who differed radically trom them. Said the early protectionists: ‘*When the country grows strong, when skill has been acquired, when our resources have been partially developed let the tariff be reduced to a strictly revenue basis.’’ Instead ot following this teaching and injunction the protec- tionists say: ‘‘Let the tariff be in- creased, let it be in many of its fea- tures prohibitive—make it perpetu- al.””’) And asa matter of fact the protection given to the strong and be exist still neither in Topeka, Kan., Aug. 14.—A_ big excitement was created here this af- ternoon by Mayor Wilson discharg- ing the entire police torce, with the exception of three, and assuming the duties ot city marshal himself. This state of affairs is brought about be- cause of anempty treasury at this time and about $8,000 of a floating indebtedness now due. The police had only been paid once in six months and they have eight weeks’ salary due them. developed manufacturing industries of the United States to-day is from twenty to one hurdred per cent. greater than was even asked for sixty years ago. Order of Publication. State ot Missouri, } oc County of Bates, }Ss- War Taxes Must Go. The Philadelphia Times, a lead- ing protectionist journal, says: therefore, at the request of the legal hol- der of said note and by virtue of the au- thority in me vested by theterms in said deed of trust fully set forth, { will, on Wednesday September rath, 1883, between the hours of nine o’clock in, the forenoon and five o’clock in the after- noon of that day, at the east front door ot the court house in the city of Butler, county of Bates, atoresaid, expose to sale at public outcry, to the highest bid- der for cash in hand all the real estate in said deed of trust described, or so much thereot as may be necessary to pay said debt, interest and costs. F. M. Allen, Trustee. row morning. FRIDAY, AUGUST IOTH. Met pursuant to adjournment. Present same as yesterday. Fol- lowing accounts allowed: A Nep- tune, fees and mileage $17,66; A Ritchey, same, $17 40; John A Lefker, fees, $15; W F Hanks, at- tendance oncounty court, five days $10. : School bond of TS Bell, tor $350 approved; same of RtJ Starke tor $800 approved. Clerk ordered to extend school tax of 55 cts, on the $100 valuation of all railroads in the county. Account of G. W Morgan for keeping blind man allowed, $2; J G Walker, medicine tor pauper, $3- 95- James T Haygood files new school bond in lieu of old one. Ad- journed to first Monday in Novem- ber. ADDITION TO THE SOUTH SIDE OF ° Trustee’s Sale. Whereas Altred B. Henderson and H. A. Henderson, his wite, by théir deed of trust, bearing date, May 31st, 1882, and duly recorded in the Recorder’s office of Bates county, Missouri, on the said 31st day of May, 1882, in book No. 23 at page 509, conveyed to the undersigned trustee in trust to secure the payment of a cer- tain promissory note in said deed ot trust fully described, the tollowing described real estate situated in the county ot Bates and State of Missouri, to-wit: ‘The south-west quarter of the south- west quarter ot section twenty-seven, 27, and ten acres ott ot the east side of the southeast quarter ofthe sou‘heast quar- TM CUT} OF BUTLER, More 01]. “The internal revenue system was established to aid in paying the ex- penses of the war. The war being over and the war debt more than half paid and the balance funden out of immediate reach, there 1s no longer any excuse for maintaining war taxes. A surplus revenue only pro- motes extravagance, and the way to dispose of the surplus is to raise no more revenue than is needed. The war taxes must go.’’ Certainly. But when it is propos- ed to remoye or reduce the taxes on the articles of necesity which enter into the consumption of every household in the land, the most frugal as_ well the most luxurious, you say, ‘‘No.’’ You are deeply moved, however, by the hard- ships put upon the man who drinks his whiskey and smokes and chews his tobacco. Your representative, Judge Kelley, painted a picture ot the over-taxed poor who dulges his pipe and glass, pathetic enough to draw tears from the eyes as man, in- In the Circuit court of said county, No- vember term, 1883. Jasper Bowman, plaintiff, vs. Marion D. Bowman, defendant. At this comes the plaintiff herein, by his attorney betore the undersigned Cleik of the Circuit Court in vacation and files his petition and affidavit, alleging, among other things, that defendant Marion D. Bowman 1s not a resident of the State of Missouri: Whereuponit is ordered by the Clerk in vacation that said defend- ant be notified BS pen cauons that plaint- iff has commenced a suit against her in this court, by petition and affidavit, the object and general nature of which is to obtain a decree of divorce trom the bonds ot matrimony heretotore contracted with detendant, and that unlessthe said Ma- ron D. Bowman, be and appear at this court, at the next term thereot to be ve- gun and holden at the Court House in the City ot Butler, in said county, on the 5th day ot November next, and on or before the sixth day of saidterm, it the term shall so long continue—-and it not, then on or before the last day ot said term—answer or plead to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken as con- fessed, and judgement will be rendered accordingly. And it is further ordered, that a copy hereot be published according tolaw, inthe Butler Weekly Times a weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates county Mo., for tour weeks suc- cessively, the last insertion to be at least ter of section twenty-eight, 28, all in township torty 40, of range twenty-nine 29 and whereas, said note and interest is past due and unpaid, now therefore at the request of the legal holder ot said note, and by virtue of the authority in me vested, by the terms in said deed of trust tully set forth, I will, on Thursday, August 16th, 1883, between the hours of 9 o,clock in the torenoon and 5 o’viockinthe afternoon of that day expose to sale at public out- 7 to the highest bidder for cash in hand all the real estate in said deed of trust described or so much thereot as may be neccessary to pay said debt, interest and costs. CONTAINING THE MOST Adrian Advertiser. Mr. Page informs us that on last Tuesday while Mr. James North was sinking a shallow well on his tarm, he tound something that resembled oil and upon testing it, found it to be lubricating oil of the very finest quality. Mr. North’s farm is about one- half mile south-west of town, joming Mr. Page’s farm on the west. Adri- an coal, oil and gas are bound to tourjweeks before the first day of the next term of said court. J- R. Jenkins Circuit Clerk A true copy from the record. . Witness my hand and Seal ot the Circuit Court of Bates * county, this 30th day ot July J. R. JENKINS. Circuit Clerk. of a brazen statue, but his heart nev- er warms to the shivering wife and children of the laborer who finds himself, on account of the tanff. un- able to buy blankets and wollen clothing for those who depend on} his daily toil. ‘‘The war taxes must j go.’’ And for what other than war purposes was the present enormous tariff imposed on the articles which enter into the use of every citizen? It was not pretended at the begin- How Watch Cases are Made. Most persons have an ambition to carry | a gold watch case, and yet few people know win; as we already have three com- panies at work, and have the very best surface indications on the north- —"="Desirable Residence ots Administrator’s Notice. ning of the present system ot high | duties that anything but the necessi- ties arising trom the civil war justi- | how a watch case is made, or the vast dif- ference in thequality of them. InaSoLip Goip Warcu Casg, aside from the neces- sary thickness for engraving and polishing, Notice is hereby given, that letters of Administration upon the estate of Benja- min Coats deceased, have been granted to the undersigned by the Bates county Probate Court, in Bates county Mo., bearing date the 24th day ot July, 1883. All persons having claims against said es- tate are required to exhibit them to me tor allowance, within one year trom the date of said letters, or they may be pre- cluded from any benefit of such estate; and if said claims be not exhibited with- in two years from date of the publication ot this notice, they will be forever barr- | ed. 36-at. jJ- N. Brapieyr. Administrator. Strayed. From my farm § miles east of Butler. A dark brown filley, 2 yearg old, with a brand of a triangle shape on right hip. Anyone giving imformation as to her whereabouts will be liberally rewarded. Adress, L. P. Letron Butier, Mo. 26-tf In The City. i i ‘Enquire at this Oftice east, south-west and north-west. Ex-Confederate Association of Mus- souri. The Third Annual Meeting of the Ex-Confederate Association of Mis- | sour:, will take place at Jefferson | | City on Tuesday and Wednesday, | August 28 and 29. All Confed- } erate soldiers and sailors resident in | Missouri, are entitled to member- | ship, and should atte: as ad- | dition to the social n of old | friends and comrades. t! sev- eral questions of intere: i | | ment to be considered. these is the improve t federate cemetery atS a large proportion of the metal is needed only to stiffen and hold the engraved por- tions in place, and supply strength. The surplus is not only needless, but undesira- ble, because gold is a soft metal and cannot furnish the stiffness, strength and elasticity the case permanently The perfect watch with some metal fied the imposition of such taxes as | are still levied. The war taxes must | go, but begin at the nghtend. The | whisky and tobacco tax is the last ot | the war taxes which ought to go. | While we are paying the interest and | principal of the ; c debt, and pay- | “~~ ing so vast an ing so vast an of nsioners, this tax ought to remain, and unless the temper eopie shall great- sve of need” s& srs the soLipity and nd at the same time XE WALF. which saves less gold, s STRENG reduces ly c It seems nge it Ww difficult to Bent Zeon: siee> ¢ dciphia, Ps, James Eom” Evyetone Weick Case Factories, Phila ee

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