The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 28, 1886, Page 1

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| The Butler Weekly Times. OL. VIT1. | spring To-morrow evening, April 29th, » will display the grandest line fmerchandise ever shown to the blic in this vicinity. | Every lady and child will be pre- snted with a handsome Souvenir hich has been specially made 9 the occasion. \ | i We will close our store at 4p.) .and reopen at 7:30. Everybody cordially invited. Respectfully yours, SAML LEVY & CC ibly for Parkinson but Really for Stone. Advance. Battling with Bandits. San Antonia, Tex., April 22. A few nights azo the Dolores silver mining camp inthe state of Nuevo Leon was attacked by a large and 22.-—— . | The spontaneous expressions ot} fatitude, which drop from the lips those who have been placed under gations to another tor substa~tial ,are at all times proper an! nmendadle ; and having been the Meipient of just such favors, it is natural that Wade of the Bates ty Democrat should ardently aim his adherence to the cause Hon. W. J. Stone. Instead of Woitig this, however, in an open, a and unreserved manner, the Democrat has ostensibly espoused the cause of John D. Parkinson. We My ostensibly tor it is evident to every intelligent reader of that paper that its pretentions ot loyalty to the "tause of that gentleman are as hollow tad insincere as duplicity itselt. ‘Such a course of procedure, to say the least, places the Democrat in a Post ludicrous attitude—an attitude _that can only be regarded as the un- “Mistakable evidence of hypocrisy. : Self Sacrificing Sisters. : Detroit, Mich., April 15,—A case ol strange distress has come to light for the purpose ot robbery. The wall which the bandits scaled. J. Bogusch, superintendent of the mines, and W. S. Todd, the en- \gineer, both Americans, rallied a {hundred or more Mexican miners and charged the bandits, but were repeatedly driven back. The battle lasted an hour. The camp was finally saved by the arrival ot Arcalde Garcia with a posse of fitty citizens from Valecillo, at whose approach the bandits re- treated to the mountains, haying failed to secure their expected booty. Five dead bandits and eleven wounded were left behind. On the side ot the miners none were killed, but a dozen or more were injured, some fatally. Captain Todd, the engineer who participated in the battle, arrived here this evening direct from the scene. The wounded bandits were severely | President | complis } it | Bank; President of the Walton & | as a clerk; first employer was Wm. | H. Trigg, of Boonville, Mo., native desperate band of mountain bandits | camp is protected by a heavy abode | R.} .» K.C. & C. 0 = Tiernan Places Twenty Million Bonds in New York City. —=—-=s It is now understeod that Francis | Tiernan, President of the St. Lours, | Kansas City end Colorado, has ac | I 1to New York, as to place a - The mort- 20.000,000, 18 | with R. V. Amencan iv, otf New! ction ending, | ts to bet ght against nen it is difficulr to | it it only verifies the prolonged litigation has | ned to the St. Lours, Kan- sas City and Colorado project. Mr. Tiernan ts still absent from the city. Harry E. Drew, the contractor, who brings suit in the United States court tor $100,600 damages, is also out of the city, but willreturn this morning. A large amount of work has been done on the line, and there 1s con- siderable material on the ground, | and all of it has been received in the name of Harry E. Drew, the con- | tractor, while A. M. Billings holds the stock owned by Mr. Tiernan eas security for cash advanced, and it is doubtless the intention ot Mr. Tier- nan to secure funds sufficient to lift} that obligation. A lively legal con- test is almost inevitable, and rich developments are promised.—Globe | Democrat. sureii- ict that been oy BUTLER. Butler was burned during the war ; commenced rebuilding in the spring ot 1866; population estimated at] 5,000; first city in the state to use| the Brush electric light for street lighting. Its wealthiest citizens are: | 1. Wm. E, Walton; banker; esti- | mated to be worth $175,000. | Assessed real estate, $22,000, xes, $300; wealth consists of real ate, bank and other stocks, also 18,000 acres of land in Kansas; selt- accumulatea; cashier and_ largest stockholder in the Butler National | | | | es | | Tucker Land Mortgage Co., which controls $1,000,000; started in life Missourian; democrat; was county | clerk of this county for four years; is opposed to the suspension of coinage of the silver dollar; in Butler sixteen | vears | 2. J. Everingham; physician and surgeon, estimated wealth $45,000 Assessed, $11,000; taxes, $200; wealth consists of bank stock, real | | estate in Missouri, lowa and Kansas; }inherited $4,000; balance self-ac- | | cumulated in practice of medicine and surgery for over thirty-one years ; | served apprenticeship at printing and telegraphing; of English birth; re- publican; has held several city and township offices, and was senior surgeon of 1st brigade, 4th division, 15th army corps; doubts the propri- ety of suspending the coinage of s:l- ver; in city thirteen years. 3. F. J. Tygard; banker; estimated wealth $100,000 Assessed at nominal figures, as property 1s mostly in corporations ; wealth consists of bank stock in Bates ;County National, Rich Hill and Adrian Banks, coal lands in Bates and Barton counties, Mo., coal min- ing and other stocks and real estate ; selt-accumulated; president of ‘the Bates County National and Rich Hill banks; 1s regarded as a sate, conservative business man; Vir- giman; democrat; says the greatest trouble with the people of the west is the scarcity of the silver dollar; \ | carned to Valecillo, where they will "lathe House of the Good Shepherds } be executed. Mathis city. The institution 1s one the most deserving of Detroits in charities, being devoted to iming of fallen women. The Sisters in charge have severely suff- ¢red tor weeks past trom the want of proper food, stinting theinselves Of their scanty store that they might| 5 be able to suply the other inmat | Their Privations from cold have been intense, there having been Snehre on the premises since Gold weather set in, pthe kitchen steve. Which thes surd the story the Cameron and Randall have an understanding about confirmations. He says Cameron’s » ail creditable ap- pointmems whether of Pennsylvania men or not, and that he is doing just about as he would under a repubhi- position app es. so nion says of Ser home that he 1s a demo- ew hool, but he is dared without & murmur savors of] m t progressive ideas and is well » Christian fortitude, and a} ple of the state asa Spintseldom met w asures|usetul and eff nce, {served for several terms. The Washington correspondent of | the Philadelphia Times declares ab- | F t member of the Will be taken at once tor their assist: lower house of congress, where he favors limited coinage ; in Butler six- | teen vears. 14. Samuel Levy, merchant; esti- | mated wealth $100,000 Assessed and taxed mostly in cor- | porations in which he 1s interested ; | taxes, $200; owns largest dry goods | and clothing house in Butler, with branch at Adriaa, Mo., lands in Jas- per and Pemiscot counties, this state, | past 18 connected with Kansas City, | lar of the dads; in the city twenty | Erastus Sheppard, convicted of con- BUTLER, MISSOURI, WEDNESDAY APRIL owns real estate in Missouri and Ar- kansts ;wealth self accumulated ; real estate dealer, and tor a few years Fort Scott & Gulf Railroad as right- of-way-agent; born in New York ms was once member of county board of supervisors; republican; opposed to suspension of coinage of the dol- years.—G] obe-Democrat. NOTED COUNTERFEITERS. seen ag Prominent Southerners Implicated by a Criminal in a Gigantic Scheme. —++9-~o—— New Orleans, La., April 22.— spiring with Aufdemorte to detraud the government, testified in his own behalt to-day in regard to his early lite as tollows: **When I was 12 years of age, I was employed in a counterteiting establishment which was owned and operated, among others by Charles H. Leonard, re- cently mayor of Galveston, Texas, and at present one of the most prom- inent citizeas of that city. Interested with him in that business were the mayor of New Orleans, city officials, chief ot police, judges and limbs of the law. Then the judge ot the criminal court fur the parish of Or- leans was a partner in the establish- ment, alsoa prominent lawyer who now occupies a judgeship in Balti- more. These people were engaged in counterfeiting Mexican coin, United States bills and money of every tion. The Mexican money was manufactured down stairs and the United States, etc., were turned out up My position was that of messenger for the estab- lishment, and as such I delivered the counterteit nioney the banks of the city and the city officials. Thou- sunds aud thousands of dollars ot this money was manufactured and cir- culated here and elsewhere through- out this country and Mexico, It was while I was in the employ of this establishment that I became acquaint- ed with the art of counterfeitii Many of the persons engaged in the business in the times to which I al- lude have Jett be 1 them sons and daughters who move in the highest social circles of the Crescent City— ladies and gentlemen of prominence and the greatest respectapility, For this reason J do not propose to make known the names of the persons for which I first worked in the counter- feiting business. AM my hfe it has been my misfortune to suffer for and bear the brunt of other persons’ mis- deeds, and my whole life has been one of continued sacrifice.”” descrij stairs. to Cc jas Struck Big. Last evening at a depth of two hundred feet, gas was struck in the new well on the Stuart farm in im mense quantities. The volume is said by competent judges to be great- er than that in the first well, while the volume ia the first well is grow- ing stronger instead of less, From these two wells now issues 200,000 feet of gasdaily. This demonstrates beyond all doubt the tact that the Marmaton bottoms are just full of natural gas ot the finest quality, and insures the grandest future for Fort Scott. Three or four large manu- tactories ot different kinds are now ready to come here, and this new more.—Fort Scott Tribune. With bright eyes, yet gray, lusterless hair. Parkers Hair Balsam will restoe lack or brown prematurely lost, stop its talling, Don’t surrender your hair with but an effort to save it. no 14 Im el Trustee’s Sale. his wife, by their deed of trust dated April 9th, lsst, and recorded in the Recorder’s office within and for Batescounty, Missouri, in book 32, page 325, conveyed to the undersigned trus- tee the following described real estate and _per- sonal property situate in the county of Bates and state of Missouri. to-wit: Lot No. five (5), in Block twenty-five* (25), ir also in Kansas; two brick business houses and fine residence in this city ; self-accumulated; opposed to sus- pension of coinage of silver dollar; ten years in our city. John W_ Hannah, hotel proprie- tor; estimated wealth $75,000 Assessed $40,000; taxes, $245 live ste and real esta the Palace e ranch in I ot Iinoi 5: ve pub ay, May 22nd, 1886, 2 rit — between the hours of 9 o’clock in the forenoon 6. Rufus G. twell, real estate | and 5 o’elock in the afternoon of that day, foi * } ce - the parposes of satisfying said debt, interest | dealer; estimated wealth $50,050 | cons. Pe 0 home Assessed $32,000; taxes $200; | the Town Company’s first agdition to the of Rich Hill; alsoone W. W. Kimball piano, } Style eight (8), numbered 6 stool and spread, said pi | cover being the same property Dotson ef Walton & Hu T, which conveyan was made in trust to are the payment of 0: certain note fully de id deed of t and whereas, default has been made in the ment of said note, now long past Now no and stool and ty bought by John } aid. sTustee. development will guaiantee a dozen | Whereas, John Dotson and Fannie Dotson, | 4, also one piano due and un- eTefore, at the requst of the legal to the con- 28, 1886 Root Sg (ROS Are an Article we are interested in, Buying our stock direct FROM MANUFACTURES Having been in this BUSINESS FOR YEARS, WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY. all C and see us S. JL McKIBBEN. u PA RS { Order of Publication. BIA: BALSA STATE OF MISSOURI, 88. County ov Barrs, In the Cireuit Court of Bates county, June term, 156. ioebe R. Beaty, plaintiff, * 8. Mary Beaty, Zachariah T. Beaty, Isaac Wil- bur, et al, defendants. Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein, by | her attorneys, DeArmond & Smith, before the | undersigned Clerk of said Court in vacation and files her petition and affidavit, alleging, amon, other things, that defendants, Zachariah T. | Beaty and Isaac Wilbur, are not residents of the State of Missouri: Whereupon it is ordered by the Clerk of said Court in vacation that said defendants be noti- fied by publication that plaintiff has commenced asuit against them in this court, by petition, the object of which is to foreclose a mortgage executed by defendants, Mary Beaty, Zacha- riah T. Beaty, Isaac Wilbur and his wife Mary laints. The feeble and sick, strug- ‘and slowly drifting towards pases recover their health by of Paxken’s Toxic, but detay 1s dan- it in time. Sold by all Druggtsts in t $1.00, eee HINDERCO The safest, surest, quickest and best cure for Corns, nions, Warts, Moles, Callouses,&c. Hinderstheirfur- | Wilbur (now dead), Stephen R. Beaty (now ‘ Givesnotrouble. Makesthe | dead) and his wife Emma Beaty, and Margaret ‘orns cures when e J. Beaty, to the plaintiff, Phoebe R. Beaty, and Ise. Hiscox & the defendants, Rachel C. Beaty, Emma Beaty, Elijah L. Beaty, John C, F. ent and Ellen La Follett (then Beaty), bearing date Janus 3, 1874, acknowledged February 8, 1874, an recorded in Mortgage Book No. 21, at pages 133, 134 and 185, whereby said first named parties mortgaged the following described real estate in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: The south half of the northwest quarter, end the northeast quarterof the northwest quarter, except a strip ten rods wide off the west side thereof, in section No. 20, and the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section No. twenty-nine (24), all in township No.40of range No. 39, which said mortgage was made tosccure the payment to said mortgagees of certain | money re ceived by said mortgagors out of the jestate of one Flijah Zury Beaty, which was | coming to said mortgagees under theprovisions | of the will of seid Elijah Zury Beaty, and under | which said mortgage the plsintiff in her said petition claims as a.balance due to her in the stumof eight hundred dollars with interest thereon from January Ist, 1883, at the rate of | six per cent. per anni@m, and further asks that said real estate be sold to satisfy eaid debt and interest and costs of this action, and that unless . PATTEENS OF ANY SIZE. UNPARALLELED OFFER! EMOREST’S THE BES Of all the Magazines. Lliustrated with Original Steel Engrave ings, Photogravures and Oil Pictures. Each copy of it demo: em ‘2 Monthly Magazine,” etm , 1624, will contain A Coupop ion of any pattern that number, io ize and kind they may select, ining the order. NLY TWO DOLLARS SER the said Zachariah T. Beaty and Isaac Wilbur per year including twelve full size: cot Paiy and sagas | De and appearat this Court, at the next term th ndid Holiday Numbers. thereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler, in said county, on the seventh day of June next, and on or before the sixth day of said term, if the same ehall so long continne—and if not, then on or before the last day of said term—answer or plead to thepeti- tionin said cause ,the same will be taken as con- fessed, and judgment will be rendered accord: ingly. g ‘And be it further ordered, that a hereof e Sp ‘Send twenty cents for the current number with Pat Send Sremey cents, ths cry eubscribe for 8 year and get ten times its value. W. Jennings Demorest, Publisher, 17 E. 14th St., NewYork. Bold by ali Newsdealers and Postmasters, ———_— | WANTED for OR. SCOTT’S | be published, according to law, in the Butler beautiful Electric | Weekly Tiuzs, a weckly newspaper printed Corsets. Sample free to those bee | and published in Bates county, Mo., for four weeks successively, the last insertion to be at least four weeks before the first ésy of the next term of Circuit Court. J.B. dowry 3 Ct Clerk. A true copy from the Record. Witness on § {sear H coming agents. No risk, quick sales. Territory given, satisfaction guaranteed. Address DR.SCOTT.842 Zroadwey St.,N.Y. hand and the Seal of the Cire Court of Bates county, this 12th day of April, 1386 SEWARD A. HASELTINE, y of APFil, 1886. uae PATENT SOLICITOR & ATT’Y AT LAW, SPRINGFInLD, MO. Correspoadenes sted prose (Associated at Washington, D. sa RS = Trustee’s Sale. Whereas. John W. Cole and Mary J. his wife, and John Ellis, who declared hii single and unmarried, by their deed of —_ meelf dated April 2nd 188%, and recorded in = Recorder’s office within and for Bates coun- Fy eeneo undersigned trasise tue following de ” AQUICK, PERMAN NT, CERTAIN CURE FOR integers ene ie ee te Ta opFailing —— eros ‘Tg seaponon of Bates and state of Missouri, to- igo: wit: wiger o The north half of the northwest quarter and the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section thirty-five (35), and that part of the southwess quarter of section thirty-five (35) day lying north of the Marias des Cygnes river H im, slough, and the sout quarter of the } be | northeast quarter of section th’ -four (34), all | ge \S6Detke men or ladies, in each; ™ county Address P. W. Ziegler & Co Chicago, il! air | in township forty (#9) of range y-three (33), *=A month and board for 3 live contsining te all two hundred and ten scres ore oF less. Which conveyance was made in trust to fe- » cure the payment of one certain note fally de- se in said deed of trust; and whereas, de- faul been made in the payment of said note and the accrued interest tuereon, now long past due and unpaid. Now therefore, atthe re- quest of the legal holder of said note and pur- » the conditi of said deed of trust I will ito sell the above described premises 8% vendue, to the highest bidder for cash at t front door of the court house, in the Butler, county of Bates and stste of puri, on Thursdav, April zgth 1886, our 9 0’ clock in the forenoon n the afternoon ofthat day, for of satisfying said debt, interess JAMES M. TUCKER, Trustee. ERSON, HEND 606 & 608 WranooTre St., KANSAS a Begzlar Gradzate in Mes . 17 sre praction | the '12 in Chicago. Authorized to Garonle, Nervous ad § ‘ext range TheGREAT TURKISH RHEUMATIC CURE $500 for any -e scowery india. Karescbe nema tever and pa:n statement of care

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