The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 16, 1891, Page 6

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Color Line in Baltimore. Sultimore, Sept. 2—Harry T. Pratt, a colored youth, was te-day uppointed to a three years’ scholar. Maryland institute of art and design by counciluan Cum- ward. The serene was made under ship in the ce. colored, of the eleventh 1 the contiact between the city and the institute, which gives to eacWonert ber of the council the privilege of student each appointing ove year The colored appointee is 16 years @ farmer boy, old and a son of Lewis Pratt, presi lent of the young men’s progressive Coustantly told that his s not hang right. republican club of the eleventh ward. Councilman Cummings says Pratt evinced a decided drawing, has talent for | Mr. Joseph M. Cushing, president | God-like Daniel was more of a of the board of trustees of the insti- Success at cod fishing than haying. | tute, said that the appointment was | a surprise to him, ag it would be to) the entire board, as the appoint- ment of a colored pupil had not been contemplated. | “When the contract was made with the city,” he said, “nothing was said about confining the appointments to white pupils, as it was not antici pated that any but white pupils would be appointed. Idon't know what action the board will take in the matter when it comes before them at the next meeting. An Old Book. Geo. R. Jackson, the guusmith und repairer on Washington street, is the possessor of two books, valu- ed as family heirlooms and instruct- ive as relics of antiquity. They bear | the dates of 1577 and 1613, and are filled with written remedies for all diseases. The handwriting is plain but after the style of the fifteenth century, to which is appended an index, demonstrating in its it was valuable for reference. | ! | day This | index says: ‘This is the index of two books for King Charles ye First His book.” If these volumes were possed of speech, what a history they could write. According to Mr. Washington, Sept. %.—Judge Jackson’s best information, they |Thomas M. Cooley. chairman of the were captured by Cromwell's sol-|TIuterstate Commerce commission, diers from the palace of Charles I, after which he was sentenced to death and decapitated Jan. 30, 1649, on a scaffold erected in front of the banqueting Louse at Whitehall Lon- don, England. The volumes are well preserved. Years ago Mr. Jackson's ancestors became possessed of this book and they have handed it down from gen eration to generation. Possibly they were soldiers under Cromwell and participated in those perilous times when unhapjy was the crowr- ed head.--Clinton Democrat. Sentunt Three “Rustlers.”” Helena, Mont., Sept. 3.—There have been many complaints from Eeastern Montana lately by cattle- men of the stealing of stock. In- spectors are now busy at the ae ping points, so the “rustlers” as the thieves are called have a good chance to ply their trade. Down in Custer county, about eighty miles from the railroad cattlemen have ta- ken the matter into their own hands | Jack Moore, who came in yesteday, says that just before he left home a cowboy came to his ranch with the | news that Jerry Thompson, a noto- rious rustler, and two companions had been caught changing brands oncattle and were all hanged to the same tree. We understand that Lee Chiswell, | himself out in ties of S. S. S. are now widely known jand it enjoys wonderful popularity | as a spring medicine. It is perfcetly adapted to the delicate system of a child as it is to that of an adult. It works wonders on those who use it| as a tonic, as an bleod purifier. strength and heartiness to sick and feeble. It is adapted to the yvery young | reviver, feeble or the broken fight occurred last night at ed dance in West Atchison in whieh | several people were knives and razors being used freely. Some people e born with gold- en spoons in their mouths. The property Il<ft by the late Sir Wil liam Sutton owner of th ‘ Isestimated at The heir to the mous child over estate just uf age Is a } only borr the time he Lec the fur- tune will be among the greatest Old stories of men of former gen- erations are often revived. This one for instauce: Daniel Webster when was greatly annoyed one het day while Laying by being | splendid pal ythe did} He tinally hung it up on an apple tree and stretching the shade said: “I | guess it hangs right now.” The | IT WORKS WONDERS. The tonic and alterative proper- alterative aud as a It gives health, the aud the very old It YenGws builds up the down stem Atchison } Atchison, Kan . Sept. groes Use Razors. &§.—A free a color liy carved: A woman named Jamison was stab bed in the right breast and her con dition is precarious. The police ar rested eight persons and they were | all fined this mornmg. The man who stabbed the Jamison woman es- caped. The fight was started by two women who were infatuated with the same young man. Judge Cooley Resigns. When seen by a reporter to-day at Ann Ar- bor, Michigan, he states that his reason for his failing | health. Although not by any means in a dangerous condition, the sever-) al relapses which he has suffered during the past two years have ren- As to his future plans, they are as yet He will take a much needed rest with bis family | in Aun Arbor. It is his {utention to abstain from all study or POEL | whatever. | has tendered his resignation. resigning is dered such a course necessary. not determined upon St. Joseph and Independe uce men | have organized an expedition to go} to Arizona and search for the ‘Lost | Vegas,” a mine of fabulous richness | which was worked a century or two | ago but the location of which has} been for a long time unknown. Be- | jfore investing any money in the! scheme these gentlemen might learn | something to their advantage by | corresponding with Mr. David F.| Weir of Kansas City. Mr. Wier has lately been} searching for lost and | hidden treasure has succeeded ir | accumulating a rich store of valuable | experience and faded hopes. Louisville, Ky., Sept. 8.—dJ. K. | Sullivan was thrown into Green riv- er near South Carrollton and drown- | ed by Dick Kieth, who built-a fence for him over which they quarreled. Sullivan was sitting on the bank |when Kieth pushed him in. Sullivan was a prominent tobacco buyer and the brilliant editor of the Lamar)was vice president of the Centre! Democrat, refuses to believe that | there isa vein of coal, in Morgan| county, seventy-two feet in thicknes Now, Lee, if you won't take the, word of Judge Callison, one of Mor- gan’s most prominent and reliable citizens, for this statement, all have to do is to pay usa visit, and you shall see it with your own eyes. The coal is nine miles southwest of Versailles, fand has been visited by inent railroad menand 1 ew York.¢ ethe proi ators fror spee Kansas City and The titl coal property is n settle Lee. no forty-seven Versailles Leader. r large centers valuable courts for ways ab There is a httle agreeable greement in the Butler family. general believes that Shakes wrote his own plays while Mrs. Bute ler is a firm believrr in the theory! that Bacon wrote them. SERNAETOR ERROR more OM ane taser you | City depositbank. Cape May Point, Sept. ¢.—Presi- dent Harrison, Lieutenant Perker, George W. Boyd, Charles Coffin of Baltimore, and Congressm i E. Rayburn startec Mr Me Ay Rayburn’s ya add dressing t ng th W. A. | Noyes, So Powers’ Biock, ep tamase 291 rent Sy SERN CeCe = So | been too intimate young girls of | any more they | gry spells, and fin kles, Oppression, The Hon. Kansas } Jeremiah Simpson of s been a democr y Another Ameri Is Mrs Lon- don. whose ise and many pricel-ss art” are sights to see Dragged From tie P rain Jefferson, Tex., Sept. 4— j sation was created in ein socie- ty last night by Rev. Jon Bolton of the M E. Church South, taken colored), being faormn the pulpit by} about one dozen female members of his church and throwu cut of the! They charge that he bas with one of the} is congregation and he tried to pres ach | window. warued hin The belligercuts wore arrested an dj on trial to-day were fine —- ' Heigth of Cruelty. 6 | eceive the} mpathy ile often ly ailing, To swithol € unfortur ates is and dropsy is just tl neryouse rad ac his Restorative Nerv Fine treatise on etses and mary Sold and About two thotis: people were! the farmers and laborers | Bowlng Green present at unies picnic held at on Saturday. jand H. Martin the gathered hosts. Dr S. W. Back- ner, John Giveus, John W. Robert- son and C. E. Given were chosen; delegates to the anti subtreasury | convention to be held in Bt. Louis on | the 15th inet Albany, N se Sept. 9 —Mrs. Le- larg] Stanford has donated property valued at $100,000 to the seciety for the relief of orphan and destitate children in this city. ‘SCHOOLS of Valet Md AULL FEMALE SEMINAL uO MILITARY Trane ‘OR CATALO! ner eee Re Republic The St. Louis | | il | Now Issued | Twice-a-Week, | ts Tuesday and Friday, | 12 to 14 Pages a Week For $1.00 a Year Sample Copies Free — —_ LUMBER! H.C. WYATT & SON. Hon. Richard Dalton | : Williams addressed || : ease Order of Pablication. ST ATE OF MISSOURL tif herein by betore the Tt of Bates her stern: undersi, county, ted clerk of th issouri, HEADACHE “While You Wait, BUT CURES NOTHING ELSE. aS resident of the it ie ordered by t niant be Y Ras 3 court ature dject of which fs to set “NEW FIRM? NEW GOODS? Havi ed the stoc percha Grange store co . GROCERIES & f desire to say to my maby plenished the stock and fitt shape and I would be glad to have all my old friends call and see me. PRODUCE OF ALL I will guarantee my prices on store in the city. ‘Tr’. Tu. i F ve that enc a bax: ‘has D zunufactured only by Freem 3o., &t. Louis, Mo. Send 6 ce a R. R. DEACON, TLER, MO Cures scalp ‘Wecand $livat Linu Hit DERCOR supe eo pan. 5 is | GRATEFUL COMFOR EPPS's COCOA. BREARE AST. “By athorough ktowledge of the eataval | laws which goverh the operations of digestion | and nutrition, sei by a careful application of the fine Prope! 3 of Well-selected Cocos, Mr Ep pe had provided our breakfast tables with a | delicately “avored be verage Which may save | us Thany heavy doctors’ bills It is by the ju- dictves use of such articles of diet that a con- | ion mag be gradually built up until gtrong enough to resist every tendency to dis- Hundreds of subtle maladies are float- ing around us readv to atta wherever there | is @ Weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame ’’ —Civil Service Gazette.” Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half-pound | tins, by Grocers, labeled thus: JAMES EPPS & CO.; Homapathic Chemists, London, Eng H.L. FUCKER, (Suecessor to J. G Walker) DRUGGIST. | La ‘Save money by calling on us for rices on LUMBER. LATH, SHINGLES. PAINTS. Building Materia — Our n HIGH GRADES ——~-And ‘LOW JPRICES Dealer | Drugs and Medicines be | | 1 | | | ‘ mt THE OKRA A LOChi A fh: reariod female weaknes: A PLAIN TALK EVERY LADY CAN TREAT HERSELF. $1.00 FOR | OME MONTH'S 5 TREATMENT. 0. B. Stomach Powders, *! PREPARED BY— O. B. Kidney J. A. McCILL, M. D., & CO., 2 & 4 PANORAMA PLACE, CHICAGO, ILL. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUCCISTS. SHER, Wholesale Agest, 67 QO. B. Pile Remedy. ©. B. Catarrb Cure. ALONZO G. FI! GENTLE | THE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY? | $4.08, Ns | 5 Daily Trains, 5 contract of 1 tered into by aac fendant on th cure a div triage heretofore between said plaintid as — dav o from said de fendant haying att Ween plaintid and detenda i and from whom said defendant h never been divorced, and that unless th woods known as the John U. Seo: ad appear at this cour: . this court next term thereof, to be sun and holden at the court house in the of Butler in said county on the second di ember 1@ neat, and on or betore the x sixth day of said term, if the term shall so tou inne—and ifnet, then on or before the act day of said term—anewer or plead to the petition insaid cause, the same will be taken as contessed and judgment will be s ndered accordingly ' ay be it further or- £ ered that acopy hereof be published, accord- friends that I have re- ing tor taw im the Butler: Weekly Gisier, a eekly uewepaper printed and published! in Bates county. j the last insertion to be at least fiftean days | before the fires day of the next term of the cir- wit court. OHN C. HAYES, Cireuit ¢ lerk k of meisting of ed up the store room in A true copy of the record Witness my hand and the seal of | lexar) the cirenit court of Hee county, Srd Vv of Septe Tr, Invi. KINDS WANTED. ; #2 SOHN C HAY ES, Circuit Clerk. goods to be as low as any | eee ee ibs «= Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, 7 County of Bates In the Circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, in vacation, Angust 19th, Isv1. The state of Missouri at the relation and to the use of Os- car Reeder, collector of the revenue of Bates county in the state of Missouri, plaintit, vs John Umstedt, Elizabeth T Bullock and the Call and see me. PETTys. unknown heirs of Joseph M Tackett, deceas- Ask my agents for W. L. D jas Shoeg ed, defendants If not r place ask your Civil Action for Delinguent Taxes logue, secure the Whereas, on the bith day of July, Iso, the eal. 1 rein by her attorneys, & Te TARE NO =t BSTITUTE. at Se xe y adersigned clerk of the cir upty In the state of Missouri, in Vacation, filed her petition and aftidavit stating among other things that the names of the above de- fendants, the heirs of Joseph M. Tackett ceased, ote unknown, ® r names cannot be inserted in the petit herein that the derive their interest in said land by inherit- ance Whereupon it is ordered by the said clerk in vacation, that said defendants be no- Ulied by ation that plaintif! has com- menced 8 suit againet them in this court by petition and atidavit the object and general nature of which is to enforce the lien of the state of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of the years Iss6, 1587 and iss, amounting in the accTegate to the sum of $31 6s, together with interest, costs, commision and fees, upon the following described tracts of land situaved in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: The west half of the northeast quarter of section thirty- one (51) township forty-two (42) range thirty- and that unless the said defendants ppear at the next term of this court to nand holden in the city of Butler, WHY IS THE. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE EMeEN hoe, With no tacks or wax thread t; made of the best fine cali Bates ¢ Missouri, on Monday in and because we make more shoes of this | Novemb anion or before the sixth day grade than any other manufacturer, an equals hand thereof uif'the term shall so long continue, snd if not then before the end of the term,) and plead to said petition according to law, the sume will be takeu as confessed and judg- ment rendered according to the prayer of said petition, and the above described real estate sold to satisfy the same. And itis further or- dered ty the clerk aforesaid that a co} py hereof be published in the Butler Weekly Timms, 9 Weekly newspaper printed and published in Butler, Bates county, Missouri, fer four weeks successively the last insertion to be at least fifteen dave before the fret day of the next term of said court A true copy from the rec- ord Witness my band as clerk aforesaid with the seal of said court hereunto aMixed. Done at office In sewed shoes costing from $4.00 to $5.00. 0 Genuine Hand-sewed, the finest calf fe shoe ever offered for $5.00; equals Freach | Imported shoes which cost from $3.00 to to giz00. and-sewed Welt Shoe, fine calf, nfortable and durable. The price ; same grade as cus- sting from $6.00 to $9.00. ers, 30 Ft © and! seamless, smooth inside, heavy three sol sion oige One pair will wear a year. 50 fine calf; no better shoe ever offered at this price; One trial will convince those Who Want a shoe for comfort and gervi 23 a 82.00 Workingma y strong and durable. a trial will wear no oth DO and $1.75 school shoes [skat} Boys’ erywhere; they sell L a Fr me its, as the Increal Butler on, this the loth day of August, svi ing sales show. 4 ¢ . 83.00 Hand-sewed shoe, best JOUN € HAYEs, dies 30°, stylish; equals Fren By LB. Sranke, Cireuit Clerk oe shoes costing from $1.00 to $6.00, 41 Depaty Clerk i ie 0, $2.00 and $1.75 shoe for | Miss ‘are the fy tr Aine Dongola. Stylish and durable = Caution. See that W Douglas’ name aud price are stamped on the bottom of each shoe, r AeA oa W. L. DOUGLAS, Srockton, Mass. O.ader of Publication, STATE OF MISSOURI, Fold by Max Weiner (iis crbae. 4! {An the cir cult court of Bates Missouri, in vacatton, Anguet Mth, state of KANSAS CITY and OMAHA COLORALO SHORT LINE TO Missouri at the relation and to the use of Os- car Reeder, collector of the revenue of Bates county ip the state of Missouri, plaintiff, vs. W. A. Stephens and O’Brien Guinn, detendante. Civil action for delinquent taxes. Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein hy Ler attorneys, before the undersigned clerk of the circuit court of Bates county in the state of ' : Missouri, in vacation, and files her petition al Talns and affidavit, stating among other things that unknown and cannot be inserted in the peti- tiod herein that they are the owners of said land, and derive their title by inheritance. TOU Whereunen itis ordered by the said clerk in vacation, that eald defendant be notified by publication that plaintiff! has commenced @ javit the object and general nature of whieh enforce the lien ot the state of Missouri tor the delinquent taxes of the years Ines and I=s9, amounting in the aggregate to the eum of wo, together with interest, costes, commis sion and fees, upon the following’ described souri, to-wit: The southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of secrion thirty-one 131] |townehip forty (40] range thirty-one [31 thet unless the defendants be ‘and appear at ihe next term ofthis court to be begun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates county, In@i, and @n or before the sixth day thereot,€ the term shallso long continue, and if et then before the end of the term, and plead to sail petition according to law, the same Will be taken as confessed and judgment rendered eccording to the prayer of taid tien, and the unknown heirs of the names of the heirs of O’Brien Guinn are Ae againet them in this court by petition and tracts of land eituated in Bates county, Mis- Missouri, on the first Monday in November, the above described real estate sold to satify Kansas City to St, Louis, i THE thesame. Anditis further ordered by the clerk aforesaid that acopy hereof be publish- j edin the Butler Weekly Visine, a weekly newspaper printed and published’ in Butler, Bates county, Missouri. tor four weeks suc- cessively, the last insertion tc be fat least fif- teen days before the first day of said court. A true copy from the record. Witness my hand as clerk aforesaid with seal of eaid {akaL! court hereunto affixed. Done at of- fice in Butler on, this the 14th day of PUEBLO AND DENVER, PULLYAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS Kansas City to Denver without change | August, inv. JOHN ©. HAYES * | By B. Starke, r Cireuit Clerk, H. C. TOWNSEND. | “ peter ae General Passenger and Ticket A’gt} oo ae a acme a LOUIS, MO.| MAYOR'S PROCLAMATION. | of the reeuit of a special ele arlous wards oft september on OF rejece fied voters of ist for one, or send two for sample box and circular. Done at my office in Bat € 4th day of September, ir: Missouri, PACE, Missouri Cones. L v. Ww. GRAV ES, City Clerk ‘Wasbissten Gt, Oulsge, Be |

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