The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 30, 1887, Page 4

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—- BER WEEKLY TIMES i. D. ALLEN Eprror- ame ~D. Atven & Co-s Proprietors, De Ee TERMS OF SUPSCRIPTION : MES, published every WEEKLY it be sent to any édaress G , me vear, postage paid, for $1.25- BUTLER MISSOURI WEDNESDAY, NOV. 30, 1887 ~f Congressman Stone publishes a long open letter in the Democrat | addressed to the editor of the Times, in anawer to a short editorial notice ished in this paper of the week in which that gentleman 3} to as having taken Oceanis land case before the Fhe rt to reflect severely / : 4 when mes. We were not pre . éb. Our Mr. Stone made his 8% sndoub informant is agentlem | eiectames eye . uo other ob- ed integrity, who ly i : . //see fair play, ject save the desire 4 Mr. Stone by and who barely kn ee ight. H ‘ verbatim that cay the which we took aap ti 18 Sut did not under- ge oy oe "plication which Mr. sie ‘fhe made in the course ment. Mr. Stone dis intention of reflecting on or its editor. This is per- oe oy satisfactory to us, and we can |) fF truthfully say that we have no i # disposition whatever to persecute him personally, or deal with him as &\ politician save in an honorable manner. We should have made this acknowledgment last week, but his letter addressed to us came to hand too late for publication. ‘“The people of our place are be- ginning to talk politics considera- bly,” remarked Thomas M. Johnson, mayor of Osceola, Mo. “At our coming election there will probably be three tickets in the field, although republicans and greenbackers effect a fusion as they have tofore. W. P. Sheldon, our senator, has come out as a can- ite for lieutenant governor, and ‘énot unlikely that Osceola will we a congressional candidate, as friends of John H. Lucas are ging him to contest the field with J. Stone, the present congress- He will probably do so.”—K. a es. While we are free to admit that ch occurred at the re-union at ton, Ga., recently which was un- Pagest and that much was said hich would have been better un- said, still the facts do not warrant the blood curdling resolutions of Stanton Post and simply show that are blatant fools and hothead- wotists in the south as well as in rth. The union would be bet these origanizations and bns on both sides were done ith and the late war forgot- their places should be or- ns for the development of people and united coun- nd the enactment of better laws Our government. “Let the dead its dead” and live issues py the attention of the present. maper Co., Democrat. wdge E. H. Norton located at tte City many years ago, shortly mr the Platte purchase, and at entered upon a lucrative prac- pf law. He was elected judge very young, and subsequently d two terms in congress, so that not without political experience. a member of the famous con of 1861, and during the war a@conservative union man. He i tf frame the present contitu- tthe state, and first went on WMbreme bench during the Har- Mmeninistration of 1875. He is Lealthy, being the owner of bMcll develop.d lead mines in a 4 s ’ | t pounty, besides valuable agri- lands in Platte county. He & than 60 years of age, grave ignified in deportment, and a mg democrat. It is said that pNorton has indicated that he spt the nomination if tender- _ —St. Louis Chronicle. . ibe for the Trazs the camp was discovered and Dalton | walked toward the entrance. BLOODY WORK. | Continung to Kill U. S. Marshals. The Fifteenth Murdered Sataré¥ in the Cherokee Nation Fr. Suita, Ang. 27.—+ frightful and shocking affray. resulting in the death of three p‘80"8 and the serious wounding * two others, oc- curred in the Ip*#0 territory, Just across the rive trom this city, this morning. Jrted States Marshal Carroll watformed last night that “Baldy” anith, one of the men who murde! Deputy Jack Richardson last? was camping across the riv? and sent Deputy Marshals | yank Dalton and James Cole across | lo arrest him. Early this morning | Just ashe was about to entera volley f shots were fired from the hut, one of which passed completely | dyspepsia; for sale by Walls & Holt, through his breast. He fell to the | the druggists. ground and was at once reinforced | ier x by Cole, who returned the fire, kill-| THE CENTURY MAGAZINE. ing Smith himself, the first man to | appear. Several woodchoppers now | Dalton of frightful wounds. Cole was soon shot through the | arm and leg, one of the woodchoppers shot through the breast and the woman attached to the camp killed outright. After fireing thirty shots, Cole finding it impossible to save Dalton against such numbers slowly retreat- ed. Dalton, almost dead from loss of j blood, was then set upon by the whole party, and while begging pit- eously for his life, was shot through the head and mouth and was killed. Cole reached the river bank among a shower of bullets and escaped, reach- ing this city covered with blood from several wounds. His tale aroused the whole city, and a posse was soon sent to arrest the murderers. Upon reaching the camp a horrible scene was presented. Dalton and Smith lay side by side covered with blood, with both hands tightly grasping pistols, stone dead. A short distance off lay the woman with a bullet through her. One of the wounded wood choppers, trying to escape, was arrested. Blood was everywhere. The rest of the party had escaped leaving everything behind, but the whole country is being scoured and it is hoped the guilty parties will soon be arrested. Dalton and Cole were both brave men, having killed several despera- does in the Nation, and were looked on by United State Marshal Carroll as the men on his force. This makes fifteen United States Marshals attacked and killed in the Indian territory during the past two years. Petrified Remains. Nevada Mail Fourteen bodies were exhumed last week at the Hopkins graveyard in the northwest part of the city, by G. W. McLean and James Boyce and re-interred in Deepwood. All of the bodies had mouldered away and naught but dust and bones were left to mark the places where the dead had been laid to final rest except that of Mr. Burton’s sister Kate, whose remains had become petrified from the waist to the knees. The petrification was perfect, and the limbs were shown life like in | shape and form. The upper and greater part of the petrification was | white, while the lower part had be- come colored, resembling in color our yellow sandstone. It was solid stone, while the remainder of the body had crumbled away. These remains had been buried about twenty years. The grave in which they had been interred was deeper than the others, being about six feet below the earth's surface. There was no waterin the grave at the time of exhuming the body, but Mr. | McLean says there was unmistable|__ evidence that water had been there. John Wanamaker, the great Phila- delphia merchant, recently spoke as follows about advertising: “My plan for fifteen years has been to buy so much space in a newspaper and fill it up with what I wanted. I deal directly with the publisher. I say to him: ‘How long will vou let me run a column of matter through your paper for $100 or $50 as the case may be.’ I let him do the figuring, | and if I think he is not trying to take | more than his share I give him the copy, Ilay aside the profits ofa particular line of goods for advertis- ing purposes. The first year I laid | aside $4,000; last year I laid aside and spent $40,000. I have done better than this, and shall increase that as the profits warrant it. I owe my success to newspapers, and to them I shall freely give a certain profit of my yearly business.” J K. Brugler & Son want all the schoo! bonds they canget. Plen- | cy ot money at the lowest rates. 34tf All physicians recommend Liquor Pepsin Compound for the cure of With the November, 1887. issue, The Centu- Ty commences its thirty-fifth volume with a regular circulation of almost 250,000. The War | Papers and the life of Lincoln increased its poured out of the tent and a bloody | monthly edition by 100.000. battle ensued, shots from his Winchester in spite The latter history | having recounted the events of Lincoin’s early emptying | years, and given the necessary survev of the | political conditions of the country, reaches a | new period, with which his secretaries were | most intimately acquaihted. Under the cap- | tion LINCOLN IN THE WAR, | the writers now enter on the more important | part of their narative, viz.; the early veara of | the War and Pre ent Lincoln’s part therein. | SUPPLE! ARY WAR PAPERS. | following the ttle series’’ by distinguished general, will deseribe interesting features of | army life, tunneling from Libby Prison, nar- | ratives of personal adventure, etc. General Sherman will write on **The Grand Strategy of War.’’ KENNAN ON SIBERIA. |. Except the Life of Lincoin and the War Ar- | ticles, no more important series has ever been | undertaken by The Century than this of Mr. | Kennan’s. With the previous preparation of | four year’s travel and study in Russia and Si- beria, the author undertook a jouimey of 15- 000 miles for the special investigation here re- quired. An introduction from the Russian Minister o! the Interior admitted him to the principal mines and prisons, where he became ; Acquainted with some three hundred States exiles,—Liberal, Nihilists, and others,— and the series will be a startling as wellas accurate revelation orthe exile sys- tem. The many illustrations by the artist and photographer, Mr. George A ‘ost, who ac- companied the author, will add greatly to the value of the articles. A NOVEL BY EGGLESTON with illustrations will run through the year. Shorter novels will follow by Cabie and Stock- ton. Shorter fictions will appear every month. MISCELLANEOUS FEATURES will comprise several illustrated articles on Ireland. by Charles De ig papers touching the fleld of the Sunday-School Lessons, il- lustrated by E. L. Wilson; wild Western life, by Theodore Roosevelt; the English Cathedrals by Mrs. Van Rensselaer, with illustrations by Pennell; Dr. Buckley-s valuable papers on Dreams, Spiritualism, and Clairvoyance; es- says in criticism, art, travel, and biography; poems; cartoons; etc. By a special offer the uumbers forthe past year (containing the Lincoln history) may be secured with the year’s subscription mm November, 1887, twenty-four issues in all, for $6.00, or, with the last year’s number hand- somely bound, $7.50. Published by THE CENTURY CO. 33 East Tith Street, New York. ST. NICHOLAS FOR YOUNG FOLKS. Since ite first issue, in 1873, this magazine has maintained, with undisputed recognition, the position it took atthe beginning—that of being the most excellent juvenile periodical ever printed. The best known names in litera- ture were on its list of contributors from the start,—Bryant, a Beet, Thomas Hughes, Geo: Macdonald, Bret Harte, Bayard Tay- lor, ncis Hodgson Burnett, James t. Fields, John G. WI ittier; indeed the list is so long that it would be easier to tell the few authors of note who have not contribiited to **the world’s child magazine.’” THE EDITOR, MARY MAPES DODGE, author of ‘ Haus Brinker. or the Silver Skates,’’ and other popular books for young foiks,—and for grown-up folks,—too, bas a re- markabile faculty for knowing and entertain- ing children, Under her skillful leadership, St. Nicholas brings to thousands of homes on both sides of the water kuowledge and delight ST. NICHOLAS IN ENGLAND. It isnot alone in America that St: Nicholas has made its success. The London Times says: ‘‘Itis above anything we produce in the same line.’’ The Scotemansays: ‘‘There is no magazine that can successfully compete with it ’’ THE COMIFG YEAR OF ST. NICHOLAS The fifteenth year begins with the number for November, iss7, and the publishers can announce: Serial and short stories by Mrs. Francis Hodgson Burnett, Frank R Stockton, HH. Boyesen, Joei Chandler Harris, J.T. Trowbridge, Col. Richard M. Johnson, Louisa M. Alcott, Professor Alfred Church, William H_ Rideing, Washington Gladden, Harriet Prescott oe Amelia E. Bay. Francia Courtenay Baylor, Harriet Upton, and many others. Edmund Alton will writea series of papers on the *‘Koutine of the Repnblic,’’— how the President works at the White House, and how the affairs of the Treasury, State and War Departments, etc., are conducted; Jo- seph O’Brien, a well known Australian Jour- nalist, will describe ‘‘The Great Island Conti- nent;’’ Elizabeth Robbins Pennell will tell of **London Christmas Pantomimes,’’ (Alice in Wonderland, etc.;) John Burroughs will write ‘‘Meadow and Woodland Talks With Yeung Folk.’’ etc., etc Mrs. Burnett’s short serial will be, the editor says, a worthy successor to her famous ‘‘Little Lord Faun- | tleroy,’’ which appearedin St. Nicholas. | _ Why nottry St. Nicholas this :ear for the | young People in the house? Begin with the November number Send us $3.00. or sub- | acribe thiough booksellers and newsdealers. | The Century Co. 33 East 17thSt. New York. ¥ CU FITS! When I say Cure I do not mean merely to | Re ain kes 2°RUSICaT CEE . AN c the disease of j | | Alifelonz study. I w. Cure the worst cases. Becau failedis no reason for not now Send at once for a treatise anda of my INFALLIBLE REMEDY. and Post Office. It costs you trial, andit will cure you. Ad | H.C. ROOT. MC. 183 Prag BON’T let that cold of yours run on. You think it is a light thing. But itmay run into catarrh. Or into pneumonia. Or into consumption. chal Catarrh is disgusting. Pneumonia is dangerous. Consumption is death it- selt. The breathing apparatus must be kept healthy and clear of all obstructions and offensive matter. Otherwise there is trouble ahead All the diseases of these parts, head, nose, throat, bronchial tubes and lungs, can be delightfully and entirely cured by the use of Boschee'’s German Syrup. Ii you den’t know this already, thou- sands ind thousands ot people can tell vou. They have been cured by it and “know how it is themselves.” Bottle only 75 cents. Ask any druggist. rane q-lyreow. DHIELD'S MALE EarOR A SPECIFIC FOR ’ Wentars Piseases —#*UcH As— rotee cent ena ener ENSTRUATION or ONTHLY SICKNESS. dd cange! Braprizip Reeciartor Co., Atlanta, Ga. Trustee's Sale. Whereas Benjamin Ogle, by his deed of trust dated July rst, 1884; and recurded in the Recorder's oftice within and tor Bates County, Missouri, in book No. 32, page 372 conveyed to the undersigned trus tee the following descrided real estate ly- ing and being situated inthe County ot Bates and State of Missouri, to wit: The south east quarter, of the south west quarter ot Section number Twenty Four, (24) in Township number Forty, (40) Range Thirty one, (31) containing 40 acres more or less which conveyance was made in trust to secure the payment of tour certain notes fu!ly described in said deed of trust giyen tor purchase money tor said land; and whereas, default has been made in the payment of two ot said notes that became due July rst, 1886, and July 1st, 1887, and the interest on the remaining two notes, and by the terms of said Trust Deed, all of said notes are now due and payable. Now therefore, at the request of the legal holder of said notes, and pursuant to the condition of said deed of trust, 1 will pro- ceed to sell the above described premises at public vendue, to the highest bidder tor cash at tne cast front door of the court house, in the city of Butler, county ot Bates and state of Missouri, on Friday, December 16th, 1887. between the hnurs of g o'clock in the torenoon and 5 o’clock in the afternoon ot that day, for the purpose of satisfying said debt, interest and costs. F. M. ALLEN, Trustee Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, Andersun Rogers, and Eliza- beth Rogers, his wite, by their deed ot trust dated May, 4th, 1885; and recorded in the Recorder’s office within and for Bates County, Missouri, in book No. 40, page 52, conveved tothe undersigned trustee the following described real estate lying and being situate in the County ot Bates and State ot Missouri, to wit: Lot two (2) in the north west quarter ot section one, (1) township thirty nine, (39) ot range thirty, (30) containing eighty acres more or less, which conveyance was made in trust te secure the payment of one certain note tully described in said Jeed of trust; and whereas, detault detault has been made in the payment of said note and the annual interest there- on accrued now long past due and un- paid. Now, therefore, at the request ot the legal holder ot said note and pureu- ant to the -onditions ot said deed of trust, I will proceed to sell the above described premises at public vendue, to the highest bidder for cash, at the east front door of the court house, in the city ot Butler, county of Bates and state ot Missouri, on Friday, December 16th, 1887 between the hours of g o’clock in the torenoon and 5 o’clock in the atternoon of that day, for satisfying said debt, in- terest and cost. F. M. ALLEN, Trustee. - FARLANDROS. Keep the Largest Stock, Atthe Lowest arness and Sailery, I) Spooner Patent /ollar! —PREVENTSSECHAFI! CAN NOT CHOKE MORSE . secenccecntve meh CECE ICCA NORTH MAIN ST Where you catget them as reprbented. to selectirom. Good qelity, low prices, Adjusts itse!f to any Horse’s Neck, has two rows ot stitcHwill hold Hames in - place better than any other collar. Prevents braking at end of dp, and loops from tearing USED ON ALL OF OUR HARNESS. SOUIE SIDE SQUARE BUTL{ MO. | WHY NOT BUY Your? Dry Goods BOOTS AND sHOES NTS ANISHNG GODS. A large stock a calwill convince yoyof the fact. i SSPECTIULLY. —j. M/MCKIBBEN. HIDES ARE SCARCE & WANTED i WILL PAY T!8 SIGHEST MARKE} PRICE FOR ALL THE Wool, Greenland Dry Hades, Sheep Pell Tallow, Feathers Beeswaxand Rags offered, in Cé .

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