The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 3, 1886, Page 7

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h, MeDANIELS, NORTH MAIN ST, | ! | | DEALER IN ba Citiages,, a SPRING WAGONS, &% Etc., Etc. —— +es0o- rpThe Largest Assortment to Select: From in Southwest Missouri.<t-3 somes | leled experience. | the chiet actor in the Unrow tragedy Al the Latest Styles And Patterns on Hand, and Sold at the Lowest Rates ‘age -sse- 001s com* lire manatactor do not p th ghands st from tie Also J scolebratec patent ULHOLAN > SPRIWN This Spring is the best by side bar in the way of turn. ae piating: because it is thie jest riding spring made. couse there is no ; because there is stryngest and @cmeuan ween eNixteenth THE KANSAS CITY Year. a BRIGHTEST - Our 14th premium list scom prising over $32,000 worth ot presents, is now readv. Every subscriber to the Weekly Times at $2.00 a year, when order 1s received be- fore April 30,1886, will receive a premiun, worth, at retail, trom $1.00 to $1,000. Full particulars and specimen copies free to any address. — +0 PRICES FOR SUBSCRIPTION: teins Mol Een2 3338 ‘THE TIMES, Kansas City, Mo Special terms to agents, Aa ideal young magazine. it holds tae Best place among periodicats of its claes.— Becton Journal ST, NILHOLAS Aa illustrated maonshly periodical for ath. oy Sy takes on the % ofeach Fremnne | eember, ore ene advance. Boo Seell P Rewedealers , and the publish- should th andto de- tastes of its constituency; and its Re- the past twelve years during which it it Sie =< iG FEATURES FOR 85-8" ah Serta Story by Frances 1. Burnett. The story she has written for children a tmas Story by W. D. Howells. With yz, ictures by his little daughter. ; Yashington by H. E der, A ‘Revel attractive istortea's rial. tories for Girls by L. M. Alcott. The C ’—in November. f Talk for Younge Folks, ’’by H series forms a gracious and fliting of # child-loving and child helping Te oe tne Great English Schools Rugby Ts. Mlustration by Joseph Penneil. by J. a dge ve rial by James life and enter- tamorous 4 dar tr bon capital school- Boyliood of Shakes ar, by Rosa og = ley. ymin Al Parso: wi Stories by scoros nding Sasann Coot A.Jda . Mille: gd ig ag iaitioc: tee, Boyesen, N: Gladden, If. Johnson H. Butterworth, . oO BS . Spofford, and many others. araehes by ices W. Rollins, Elkford, L. Schwatks, Ed: and others, » shorter contributions. therbeeh ate what the Rural * Magazine for chi 3 department: - Yorker cal hildrena in the world THE CENTURY CO. New York. pw 8 {AF cure T do not mean merely to step them fora thea bave them return again. J miean @ radical ye made the disewse of PUTS, EPILEPSY or FALI- NESG 9 life-long study. J warrant my remedy to Jrorst casus. ecanse others bave jailed ts no fr tot Row receiving a cure, fend a: once fora sada Free Bottle of my tmfaillite remety. Give 2d Post OBive. It costs you nothing f ea mows you DA. HO. ROOT, 183 Peart 84, SEWARD A. HASELTINE, PATENT SOLICITOR & ATT'Y AT LAW Sse autenerey cs tee re a tspended for Fifteen Minutes Brought Back to Life. Santa Fe, N. M., Februarv In the top ner of cells im the T: rritorial and | 23.— ! new Penitentiary there 1. c fined 4 man who has had anunpara He not only was at death’s coor, but seems ¢ ossed the threshold again to life. to have and It is Theodore Biker, | returned which occurred a few weeks ago on a ranch near Sprirger N. M Is here in care ot W ray ak . rden Gable, tor sate keeping until off. h use or comes do his trial comes He very seldom leaves the cel! n trom the fourth | of ¢ Passec nr eves Tt was the brightest thing I ever saw. Tt was tollowed by a terrible |pain up and down and across mv hack, and I could feel my legs jerk do draw up. Then there was a bia 1h n 1 more un til sr x ning. THE ¢ B s ifte iinutes. | Inter H : n to Sprmger, a} yn f yay, and gave the | alarm. tra Gaile and Wil South ran | fron Springer to the spot where Br | ker was and cut him down. A has- v exam jon revealed no trace of | lif , Ud not hear the faint est bext of s heart, nor was his breathing Bur some body suggested that heroic remedy tier, but when allowed to do so, | tor all trontie + whisky, and they mechanically waiks the corridor in| bh gan to pour it down him, and tront of the thirteen unoccupied ceils | kept atu. A doctor joined the party and looks down at the solid) stone | and pronounced the man dead, and floor, forty feet below, as though \ s> he s ito be for several hours. sometimes contemplating such a} Daring that time some of the crowd plunge to death as Maximo Apado- | kept at work at Baker in a rough a, the murderer, tock on the qth of | way, rolling hint over and rubbing list November. Baker 1s a tall, | br tering occasional doses well formed, mild mannered, ta | whisky They were tive man, and gives Inttle evidence | fj by signs of life, of being possessed of devilish pro | tiintst first but soon strongly marked pensities. A faint red mark is visi. | enough to show that Baker was get ble around his neck, and now and! tins hick into this world, hen his wits desert 1 for no up the thread ot hts story ment, leaving life a blank. These ie dropped it, when he was are the only traces of his rough ex | 4 Jing at the end ‘of the rope and Derience on the meht of December | + $s senses: 24, when he dangled at the end ot a “\ty first recollection was being rope tor fifteen minutes, until | inthe c roo ad saving: “*Who Was apparentiy extinct. and he was. | ent, ! There was aterrifi to all appearances, a dead man ivr | sven hours aft ward. | A WOMAN IN THE CASE. The tragedy that led to the h n ing was elaborately written up at tine. In brief. Unrow and Baker | were neighboriag ranchmen. Th: f tmer had a handsome wife, which | he left alone a great deal because of | necessary absence on business. Ba ker looked after her, to some extent, | in her loneliness. Unrow became | violently jealous, and, to make mat ters worse, the men quarreled over the boundaries of their rinches. One night Both had been drinking. They quar- reled and fought at Unrow’s house, and the next morning Unrow was found dead with five bullet holes adjoining they met. in is body. Mrs. Unrow was the only witness to the tragedy. Baker gave umself up, and was put in jail at Springer. Mrs. Unrow under $5,000 bonds. The impression pre vailed that Baker and Mrs. Unrow put up a job to get Unrow out ot the way. About 11 o’clock on the night of December 24 five masked men went to the Springer Jail and compelled the jailer to give up the keys. Thev went to Baker’s cell and ordered him to accompany them. Baker gives the following account of what occur red SENSATION OF A MAN BEING STRAN- GLED. “*I went with them, and at the jail door I began to curse them, when one of them put the muzzle of his *| pi-tol to my ear andssaid: ‘Keep still, damn you, or I'll put a bullet through you.’ T knew him by his voice, and knew he would do it, and I keptstill. A httle turther we came to a telegraph pole. From the cross- bar swung a new rope. On one end was 4 big slipnoose. Thev led under the rope. I tried to stoop down and pull my boots off, as [had } promised my folks I wouid not die with my boots on, but hefore I could | do it the noose was thrown over my head andI was ierked off my fect. My senses lett me a moment, and | is me; then I waked up in what seemed to j be another world. As I recollect now, the sensation was that every thing about me had been multiplied a great many times. It my five executioners had numbers until there were ot them. seems aa in | zrown T saw wh a muttitude of anir Then and and I was conscious that I was ha neck, and thar the knot of the had slipped around under my My hands were loosely tied, and I jerked them loose and tried to catch the rope above me. Somebody caught me by the teet just then and gave me ajerk. It seemed like a bright flash { chia. i tomy ears, like the beatiny oi gongs. Lrecogmzed no one. The i y buck continuéd. Mo nents ot sciousness followed Iu tdays, and T have very ite recollection of the journey here fter Thad been locked up in this prison tor sate keeping, for a long time T saw double. Dr. Sym- ingten, the prison physician, looked like two persons. I was sttll trou. bled with spells of tots! forgetfulness. Sometimes it seemed 1 didn’t know who IT was.’” Tt is a curious phystvlogical fact that betore Baker was hung he had been troubled ‘vith a disease which was entirely cured about two weeks betore the lynching, but since then, without any exposure, has returned with redoubled violence. ACold Day When He Got Left. “Talking about sudden changesin temperature,” said a St. Paul brake- man, “‘let me tell you of a hittle ex- perience I had one day, and I was out on my run and was congratulat- ing myself that we’d get through on time thistmp. We'd had tough times with snow and cold, and I was _par- ticularly pleased with the fine out- look on this occasion ’cause I wanted to get home in time to lead the pray- er meetin’ bein’ as it was my turn I’m a religion man, you see, an’ so vou can place the utmost confidence in what tell you. Well, as I was sayin’, it wasda nice, warm, thawing day, and we were making good time. Pretty soon, though the train stopped miles from any station, and I stepped out to see what the matter was. I noticed that it seemed slightly colder, and I shivered a bit as I stood in the slush and the water looking ahead where the engineer was fixing some- thing about his machine. By the time the engineer had concluded his fixing, probably three or four min utes, I was chilled through, and I wasn’t sorry to hear the bell ringing for starting. I made a move to get on the train, but it wasn’t much of a move. In fact, I was stuck. I could no more move my feet than if the | court house had been sitting on one and the city hall on the other. You see, while I had been standing in that water the temperature bad suddenly fallen so that the water had turned to firm ice, and my feet were trozen fast. The train moved oft without me, despite my cries, and I staid there hours and I massed my prayer meetin’. That beat all the sudden anges I ever heard of, and you can bet it was a cold day when I got} ieft.’ et Bucklen’ a Arnica Salve. The t Salve in the world tor Cats Bruises, Cuts, Uleers Salt Rheum, Fever | Sores, ancers, Piles, Chilblains, Corns, Teter, Chapped Hands, and ai! skin erup- | tions,and postively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pertect satistaction, or money refnnded. Prize | Ret box, 25 cts For saleby. John .G aler Salt cane Gian. Feb. Persons were placed day for 3-—Five rrest to- tted States At- ht—Frank J. & oe under assauiton U torney Dickson last Cannon, Hugh Ca: George Q. Cannon sous ot ; Angus Cannon, nepnew ; James Ruckner and S. A. Tenner. Lndications point to a ma j tured plot to assassinate Dickson. A postal from George Q Caunon was sent to Dickson to day eXpressing horror and detestation at the assault, hoping he would beheve that he had no hand in at, or any condemnation He would have written, but his strength was not equal to the task | | Diekson returned had thoughts Jot countenancing the assault a reassuring Cat { non hever that he entertained and hoping tor his speedv recovery. George Q Can hoped none Non sent word that he of his fiiends would bail Dickson’s assailants, and all bu Kenner are in jail in detault ot suit eties. Better sto, vour cov gh whi s you can. It is worth heeding, thit Park Tinic is the best thing Known tor cou 2 colus Kidney trouvle and weak lo gs. You Yrisk your lise ng. ‘ake it’ while there is yet t me. no 14 1m. A Cautious Thief. Chicago, Feb, 24.—When the cashier at the Grand Pacific made up hrs woekly cash yesterday more ing about S$ o'clock, he put oh | noney, Checks and so forth into a envelope.as be bad de ene every Mor ing for the last ten years, and laid m the desk prior tot into th private office. G »the veut tora minute or so, be tound upon his return that the envelope had teriously disappeared. Beneath at lay the weekly cash of the restaurant which was untouched. The envy lope contained a total ot $1,187, of which $ $205 was in cash. Phe checks and papers came baci amount on the noon mail, out the money is stil missing and is hable to be. 1 is supposed that some person louny ing about the hotel quietly watked behind the railing and took the pack age, as none ot suspected. the emploves ar. ‘Let me write the Ballads of the nation said a wise man “and I cae not who makes the liws,’ This is true, and may also be saie that the discovery of St. Jac- obs Oil,—the conqueror ot pain has been of more value to the world than the find ing ot the comet. A Veteran Commander Gone. St. Louis, Feb, 23.—John $ Cavender died in this city to-day a the age ot 62 years. In the early history of this state he figured as a prominent Free Soiler, and subse quently during the war of the rebell ton he commanded the federal forces of Missouri at the battles of Fort Donelson, Fort Henry and Shiloh, serving successively as captain, mu jor, colonel and brigadier general. At the time of his death he was a member of the Grand Army ot the Republic, and this organization wi!l conduct the tuneral services of their dead comrade: Important, When ne visit or ipa paced ge Hireurdnon Xpressage and lage Hire an we Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Cen- ai ‘ant rooms fitted up at acost of one mil- na liars, reduced to $1.00 and upwards per day. European lan. Elevatsr. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse cars, s and elevated railroad to all depots. Families can live better for leas — the Grand Union = than at any other Grst-class hotel ic tae Hannibal., Mo., Feb. 23.—John Kelly was arrested to-day, charged with torging his father’s name to a grocer’s order. He hada prelim: nary examination ant was sent to jail, to await the action ot the Grand Jury. Dan Kellev, the father, wal testify against bis son and allow him ogoto the Penitentiary, it te court so assesses the punishment. Johnny Keliey 1s a dissolute charac- ter, and has figured in similar cases several times betore. Consumption Cured An old physician retired trom practice, having had placed in his hands by aa East Ind dia m: of 2 simple vegetabie remedy tor the speedy and p of consumption, 1 Asthma 2: Bronct throat andL ung / ti € and radica ! and all ne tested its wond thousands of case maeit nown to Actuated by tree recipe in Geri, Fre nch or English, with tull directions tor preparing and useing. Sent by mail by addressing with stamp naming this paper, W. A. Noyes, 149 Pewer’s Bloc , Rochester, N.Y. no.2-t¥ » | ff your Grocer does not keep them | j AN: = v CANS CURED nantes THE USE OF OP1UN in the acute Sugat ness ais we oss XS oy ory 4® Oe \ wer w eee mela ene cece ugh, onan SLoarseness, Influenza, Hae! 0" = ner Daa eens Pine oer re ocases Fampaioe ren t PARSONS’ =: ese pills were a wonderfal disco’ ve all manner of disease. ye informiation we Bheumatiom, a at one at Mog oe Morbus, 1. 8. Johnson & Co., caret MAKE BLOOD. chore Hike th them in the world. Wil positive: nnd each box is worth ten times the cost of a box of Find out about them and you wilt aiwaye be be thank? Aful. ,One pill a dose. Tlustrated pamphi.t 3 So.d evervwhere, or se! mail for $5c. in stam: INSON &CO., qaitrg St. Boston, <n cart (F 4 ri mato Rens lay yn o ance = aoe is we e' in Bet “Illustrated c ape i Ib. tia’ ese St be t by man = 20. Satan PATTERNS OF ANY SIZES UNPARALLELED OFFER! EMOREST’S THE BES Dekiy newspaper devoted. Sneering discoveries, in- ad OF oll the Magnvines, wie Ilustrated with Original Steet srras ie Deesscae ts dags, T cures and Oil LP y equals that of all ned. Price $3.70 8 bs all newsdeaters norest's Monthly 1 sers “sending the age, will recetwe by r« ne slze and kind they ma Magazine containing the onder ees TWO DOLLARS |! size, cut ne, Of sizes i subscription ¢ ant scettre had Thirty- ‘ight years’ 0 before © from th the Splendid Send twenty cents for cho extvent wember with Pattesp Conpon and you will certainly subscribe for a year and get ten times ite value. W. Jennings Demorest, Publisher, 17 E, 14th St., NewY, Sold by all Newsdealers and Postmasters, is ous Whe Wisk tu dis “O.. Office ScientTiric AMERICAN, wt Leoaunay, New York Nich. divi ed Pp ey NY. CERTAIN CURE FOR a pai Positive Proois f fell a rice In In ole oe J NY. STRONG'S PECTORAL aeons ae arity of t dete joreee PAT SELECTED SHORE | MACKEREL © IN PAILS. stops the hair fa meets plssic. yor. wad Gr. sizes'ne Dreegioahs i send $1.25, and we will send Paii by Express, prepaid, to the nearest | Railroad Station. 2 re and the Stomach, Liver working order. = aad Colds fore it. dt builds wp the heal YE you suffer Debi TRASK FISH CO. coming agents. No risk, quick sales. on.g0orT, B42 Broadway 8t0.V.

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