The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 20, 1889, Page 1

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TRAMPLED TO DEATH. Jwo Young Men Who Ventured Among the Cattle on Foot. The Way an Old Mix Was Siz ) pox, and stated he had tried it in a ves An old, seedily dressed man en- ! Pages Arbor, 3ic as ue Ray Cheyenne, Wyo.. Feb. 15.—TWo | tered the office of the City Comp- = fod tatustes in = lee H young men learning to be cow-boys , troller with a paper which he desir- tric Sugar Redniig Co. frauds were were trampled to death near the) ed to show Gov. Campbell to see = ae ~ ae sh — Le = * returh to is 7 ab Sweetwater yesterday, and the third | whether it had aay By OT HOt | a lit wit « Olive E. Friend |o only escaped the cattles hoofs by} He ae ee te We oe Wii Howard, y Howard, | 2 « Missouri ce Ole : Pe aul his speed as a runner. All three in-| Rie racance dienanesthi a ‘ Geo. ge Halstead, | county jail fined. el yited their peril by venturing on the [ia ene gee ne range on foot. George and Albert | Avery, brothers, and the sons of a| i6 ordinary greenback, which if resem. | for obtaining a bles very much. It bore in the up | 5 wealthy farmer a See | per left. hand corner, where the | ne ee te pes ics ene O., came out here in December. | yas nite Stata lee Ammerion ace sndictments having been found They had money and expected to | gucrarod-on the grcesl five one | agaiusc them by a grand-jury of New » in the spring. This| |=). : ; buy a range in th ters . | seription “Missouri De! winter they were learning the busi- | ness at the ranch of a friend, anoth-, er Ohio man, whose brief experience Bond’ | York last January. One is issued | nee 20; i = a ._ | for fraud against the sugar company and underneath the usual promise | : a - {and two on complaint of Lawson N- to pay bearer the face value, : : Fuller New York. a poe ee The instrument bore the } Ohlone Gt Hae tmentoes ik s back only to ‘ ee | 2 one of these indictments re- pelmestoceman: Caves beeen? | date 186—, the remaining figure to last August. | be ceppked by he ciate official quisitious were made on the | Gover- Daniel Stockwell, the owner of signing it, but on this the date had | é a the ranch, and the Averys, took ad-| poen left blank. for their arrest on February 1. The vantage of the light snow yesterday} Jt bore the stamp ef genuineness | trouble has been to get all the par- morning to go jack rabbit hunting, | 2 3 | ties within the state at the same at first glance, but a closer examina- |; Mos. Picddwas. 3 1 not knowing the effect that the ime. Mrs. Friedd was in conceal- sight of a man on foot has on range | \ tion showed that while the bond | ment and Howard was at Windsor. | cattle. They strode along in their} nor of Michigan, who issued warrants | spoorful of sugar, mixed with two | children half spoonful—and the dis- | was regular and the same as issued |, 2 iS | Yesterday morning they returned to | heavy boots unti! they were four or during the war, the space reserved | five miles from the ranch. They had shot considerable game, and were within a half mile of Independence Rock, a celebrated land-mark of overland travel in 1859, when they | noticed a bunch of some 300 or 400 cattle running towards them. Their heads and tails were high in the air and they acted asif stampeded. It immediately flashed through Stock- well’s mind that the herd was mak- ing for them and he gave the warn- ing and started to run, throwing away his gun and game. The two boys ran a little way and turned and fired at the oncoming herd. The steers in the lead swerved to one side, but those behind rushed on and the young men went down be- neath the pounding hoofs and were trampled into an unrecognizable mass. Stockwell never stopped running till he had reached Independence rock and climbed to a place of safe- ty. The herd dashed past him and were soon ovt of sight. The re- mains of the unfortunate cowboys were to be buried this morning and Stockwell is reported as to be al- most wild with grief. | Report of Grand Jury. Butler, Mo., Feb. Sth, 1889. We, the Grand Jurors for Bates county, Circuit Court, beg leave to report: That in the discharge of our du- ties, we have made an examination | of all the various county offices, and ; found them without exception well | kept and the records therein well} up to date; and we hereby extend to our officers our thanks for the| consideration shown and facilities | extended us in making our examina- | } | tions. Ve further report that we have | discharged a painful duty, imposed | on us, by visiting adeath trap, known , as the Bates county jail. We found | for the signature bore instead of his name that of “Jesse James, Govern- or of Missouri,” and underneath on the line reserved for the signature of some other state official, was the name of Dick Ford. The owner said that he had bought it thinking that it was a legal tender, and when told that it had no value whatever he seemed greatly disappointed. A Missourian In Trouble. London, Feb. 13.—Luke Emer- son, a Missouri horse-dealer got very drunk last evening and attracted a great deal of attention from therough element in the streets through which he staggered. At a late hour he wandered into Hanway street where he declared that hehad been robbed of a large sum of meney and some valuable papers. Suddenly he drew a revolver and fired four shots into the crowd, wounding two men, one of them seriously. He was arrested arraigned in the police court this morning and remanded for a week pending the result of the injuries of the wounded men. Emerson alleg- es that he fired in self defence, as he feared further violence after an- nouncing that he had been robbed. ONE OF THE LONDONERS SHOT BY THE MISSOUBIAN DIES. London, Feb. 14.—Wiiliam Rob- inson, one of the men shot by Luke Emerson, the Missouri horse dealer has died. Emerson, who has recov- ered from his drunken spree, is still held by the police and will be axam- ed for trial shortly. WHO LUKE EMERSON Bowling Green, Mo., Feb. 14— Luke Emerson, who fired on a crowd in London England, yesterday and killed a man, was brought up in this city and his home is here. His parents are among the wealthiest peo- ple of Pike county, and the action of the young manisagreat shock to them. Luke is a dealer in horses, and was well known inSt. Louis and Kansas City. As he usually carried 18. itin a decaying condition, totally unfit as a habitation for any member | of the human family—guilty or in-! large sums of money with him, he went armed, but was regarded as in. offensive. He hada weakness for { Milan, feeling sure that no criminal action was to be brought, but they were arrested as above stated. As it was late no bail could be ob- tained they remained in jail. How- ard threatened that when they got to New York there would be a sensation greater than had ever stirred that city. Eminently Correct. The secret service of the govern- ment succeeded recently in trapping a verdant country lad of Iowa into an appearance of crime and had him sent to the penitentiary. It would seem that the department of justice of a great nation like this might find some better employment than send- ing decoy letters, with suggestions of crime, to unsophisticated and sus- ceptible youths. Few indeed are the young men who cannot be led to acts of crime by ingenious tempta- tion, and the secret agent or detec- tive who plays his arts upon such deserves the telon’s stripes more than does his victim. Judge Henry and Judge Gibson. Governor Francis late yesterday afternoon appointed Judge John|E ERY NIGHT 1 SCRATUHED W. Henry and James Gibson to fill | Uxil the skin was raw. Body cov- the additional circuit court judge- ships created by the Teasdale bill. NO. 18 FARMERS BANK OF BATES COUNTY, North Side Square, with Franz Bernhardt. A Sure Cure for Smallpox. A physician in Paris, France, gave the following recipe to cure small- hundreds of cases,and pronounced it as infallible as fate, viz: Sulphate of zine, one gran; fox glova (digitalis), one grain; half-tea- tablespoonfuls of water. When thor- ugh!y mixed, add four ounces of water. ed Cash Capital. Dose—A tablespoonful every hour; $20,000.00 J. K. ROSIER, Vice President, D. KIPP, Cashier. ease will disappear in twenty-four hours. | D. N. THOMPSON. President, One lady writes: “I have tried it | 1 in four marked cases of smallpox, | and in less than twenty-four hours | all pain, sore throat, dry, feverish, | DIRECTORS J. K. Roster, T. W. Sixers, - J.J. McKee hot skin and ail were gone, and they | J. EVERINGHAM, = Jxo. 51 . = A. S. ‘haan wiretnred” | D. N. Tuomrroy, M. R. Lyre, - E. D. Krep. i I certainly should have been dere- lict n miy duty to thousands of read- | ersif I withheld the above informa- tio. The prescription can be filled | atimy drugstore. It is simple, and wil do no harm to take it. I hope evay physician will try it.—Letter in Kansas City Star. Does a Geveral Banking Fusiness. Special attention given to time deposits and interest paid on same. PASSAIC STOCK FARM, C. S. CONKLIN, Proprietor. At this stable, situated five miles north of butler, and five miles south of Adrain, there will stand for the season, the following steck. Membrino Chief Jr. 16 1-2 hands high, weight 1250, color bay, black points. Imported to this county from Kentuckey, by Mr.Warnock last year. Perhaps there is not a horse, in the state of Missouri, combining within himself such an amount of thorough troting blood,as this one. Can show a 2:50 gate,and has never TIMOTHY, POWDER Absolutely Pure. ‘his wder never varies. A marvelofpurity oi and wholsomeness. More economica Ss .. pectinaey kinds, andcannet be sold in oe SE eee reatnl perden test 16 hands high, color dark bay, star in the torhead, can show a three minute gplin cans, DES Bakine EewEeR ces 4 gait,without training. A good honest, general purpose horse, and when you want any better pedigree, you will have to go farther than Notice of Final Settlement. Almont, who has 34, in the 2-30 list, Lady Thorn, 2-18, because he is FE Ta aoa cient call ean directly desended from them, and combines all the best blood that has othrs interested in the estate of Margaret produced such trotters as Maud, S, J.I. C. ect., Bater, deceased, that I, Daniel H. Noel, ad- mitstrator of said estate, intend tomake final setement thereof, at the next term of the Bats county probate court, in Bates county, ste: of Missouri, to be held at Builer on the 13thiay of May, 1889. DANIEL H. NOEL, 2-46 Administrator. DON CARLOS. Thoroughbre< Jack, color black, mealy nose, five yearsold, 15 1-2 hands high, and a remarkable fine breeder imported to this county by W. War- nock, Also DON PEDRO. ced with scales like spots of mortar. Cured by theCuti- cura Remedies. These appointments will cause no surprise as they were expected and predicted by politicians and mem- bers of the bar ever since the pas- sage of the bill. Although there were many candidates for the posi- Ingoing to tell you of an extraordin: ae) our Caticnra Remedi fon me. bi erc, when it began to look like spots of mor- tar dotted on, and which came of in layers, accapanied with itching. I would scratch eve: night until I was raw. then th i 2 . | nigl the scales, being formed meanwhile tions there was at no time any spir- | wemeratchedoff sgain. In vain did I consalt all e doctors in the country, but without aid. ited contest. Ihe apppointments | Aft giving up all hopes of recovery, I hap- chad them from my 4: t, and obtained state supreme bench for nearly 12 | oma di red one by one, 'P' y 2 = ese one by one, and have weeks was entirely cured My | { { } i } | i { “| sume the duties of their office by nocent, and in its present condition butfeven when under the influence | unsafe and dangerous as a residence or place of confinement. We there- fore cordially concur in the report of all former grand jurors heretofore made from time to which “the mem- ory of manrunneth, not tothe contra- | ry,” that said jail be and stand con- demned for the purpese for which it was and is intended with a deep and abiding condemns But seeh as ion. it is, we found clean and the prisoners therein whol well fed with pure and food and well cared for so far as is possible so to de. Wa P. Lase. Foreman. of liquor never developed homicidal tendenci He is 26 years old. A hitherto unpublished chapter in the life of Edgar Allan Poe will ap- pear in Harper's March. heroine of this early love episode of gave Mr. Augustus Van ion to write Magazine The old lady who was the the poet's down and enty years oc. for | ihe came to Kansas City where he | disse mad are satisfactory to the majority of Pe rat year Cations Uenwedices ands pet: the bar. Judge Henry was on the sie eenesis ae, See ‘rapped years. After his retirement in 1887 Than taking the Cuticura remedies, and In “Caticura Remedies te all ia my has since resided. Mee d I — ee great many who has James Gibson was mayor of Kan- areas Detaity uethernrane, Raraionee sas City in 1883 and is a well known wi eruptions on their heads and bodies I quot expressin words the thanks to you forlgat the Cuticura Remedies have been to me My body was covered with scales, andI wain awful spectacle to behold. Now my skits as nice and clearas a baby’s. GEO. COTEY, Merrill, Wis. Sit. 21, 1887. F.. 7, 1888.—Not a trace whatsoever of the disee from which I suffered has shown itself sinany cure. GEO. COTEY. practicing attorney. The new judges, as soon as they | receive their commissions, will as- | hearing and determining ex parte proceeding in chambers. They will | not go on the bench until the April \ term. Weannot do justice to the esteem in which Cura, the great skin Cure, and Cuticura Sos an exquisite Skin Beautifier, prepared froét, and Caticura Resoivent, the new blood | Pater, are held by the thousands upon ———$—__—_ thoands ences lives = — made happy - og . | by e cure of agonizing, humiliating. it-hin Sheriff Diehr returned ped: and pimp!y diseases of the skin, scaly | anelood, with foss of hair. Deputy yesterday from Carbon Center, where he had been serving papers for the | _ Si everywhere. | Price, Caticura, ite; ‘ 5 = So, 2; Resolvert, $1. pared by the Bates county circuit court. in the | Per Drug and Chemical Co.; Boston, Mass ~ >: pei ySend for ‘‘How te Cure Skin Diseases.’ ease of Sar+h Ridge ag: R.A. | coges, 50 illustrations and 100 testimonials, Allen. for £10,000 da res caused by tl Rf aa inte hus > the death of plaintiff's husband. | % by the deat = = tiffs husband | CUCURS SOAP. which oceurred about a year ago in! ae . tae SEC ORE H UTERINE PAINS Mr. Allen's coal mine. Plaintiffelaim | : _ = : instantly re! na Plas Caticura, ¢ t 3S black-heads, red, rough, dand oily skin, prevented by : stsameous angi ats lies performed on ut the firstof April last I noticed son red pimpl<s coming out all over my body t nothing of it until some time lat- ie next mitted to serve 20 mares. Jeck, 15 hands high, color black, mealy nose, three years uld, mill de per- T insert this in the Times to call your atten- tion to this stock, knowing that it you see them you will be pleased. In the next issue we will give the pedigree in full. also terms, conditions, etc, Respectfully, CHAS. 8S. CONCKLIN. Gladstone's Weakness. husband buying everything been his habit here in London, and tradesmen who sell him large orders are always prepared to see his wife arrive some hours later bringing back the most of her husband’s pur- chases and insisting on the return of the money. I am told that this ami- able trait has been growing on Mr. Gladstone greatly in the last year cr two, but otherwise there is no possi- ble sign of mental variation—much less impertinent. Mrs. Emma Malloy, the noted temperance lecturer and evangelist, | who gainad such an unenviable no- |toriety in this state through her | connection with Graham, who mur- | dered his wife. was recently married |to her cousin. Morris Barritt. at Port Townsend, Washington Terri- tory. The writer of this knew Mrs. Malloy when no breath of suspicion was ever breathed against her, and when she was a power for good in »y | temperance and religious circles. We doubt not she has been fully as ; much i Clinton / as Mrs. Gladstone has to watch him more closely than ever to prevent her | that | takes his fancy. For years this has OCOXSUNPTION SURELY CURED. To THE Eprron—Piesse inform your reaa- ers that I have a positive remedy for the above thousands ef Cat Off Their Ears. New York, Feb. 15.—The Herald says that it isin possession of a se- cret circular which is being eirculat- ed among workingmen, i indignation at the frequency with which ill-advised strike are ordered and recommending a system of se- cret labor police and labor courte, whose sentences will be rigidly car- jried out. (There are secret execu- tive offices.) Capital punishment is not approved, “but,” it says, “the principal punishment to be inflicted | will be to cut off the ears of bribe | takers and traitors.” | ! Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. } | When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoris. | When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, | When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, | When she had Children, sbe cave them Castoris,

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