The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 14, 1891, Page 1

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| d VOL. XIII. - Missouri State Bank OF BUTLER, MO. CAPITAL, $110.C00. Receives Deposits subject to Check, Loans Money, Makes Collections and | tion to conflict with any other. The does a General Banking Business. DEPOSITORY FOR COUNTY FUNDS. In the Keal Estate Loan Department. Make loans on Real Estate on long or short time at lowest rates without delay. STOCKHOLDERS’ Allen, Mra. Levina Koulware, TC, Physician Burk, Monroe Farmer rd, J N Farmer DB » Lale = tt, ae Farmer ryner, Margare! Celt, H. B. Farmer Coleman, Sam’‘l L. Carathers, G@ A Farmer Christy, J M Physician Clark, Robert Farmer Courtney, J M Stock Dealer Deerweagter, John Farmer Davis, J R Foreman Timxs office! Levy. Sam Dr Morrison. C McCracken, A erié, John Pharis, C F G DeArmond,D A, M C Evans, John Farmer Reeder, Oscar Hickmen,G B Furniture dealer Smith, Jenkins, J R Cashier Kinney. Don Ase’t Cashier Goods & Clothin; Farmer Miller, Alf Farmer McCracken, Robt Farmer Owen, M V Farmer Ph Grocery rocery Powell, Booker Farmer Datcher, C H Prof Normal Sch Pigott, H H Bank Clerk Rosier, J M Farmer Sleybeck, Ea GL Liveryman aks Srephee . Starke,L aty circuit cler Turner, Mrs WE Capitalist Tucker, W E Dentist ler, W B Farmer oris, Frank M Farmer Vaughan, J M Capitalist Wyatt, H C Lumber dealer Wells, Wiley Teacher Ww RG Farmer Wolfe, Pattie Walton, Wm E Cashier Wright, TJ Capitalist Weiner, Max ts & Shoes Wm Farmer. Farmer Everingham, J Physician Radford, Chas R Farmer Walls, §T Physician Freemam, Carolineand Eliza Reisner, J W Insurance weenie NL Physician Fowler, Isaac Sallens, J L Banker Williams, R V Farmer WM. E. WALTON President J. B. JENKINS cashier BOOKER POWELL vicu-President DON KINNEY asst. cashier The Garland is the Best. IT EXCELLES ALL OTHERS. FEETE SY It is made of the best matenial in the market; it has the heaviest steel jacket; it has ae extra heavy fire pot; it has au ash pan; it has cold air flues‘it has an automat ie damper, it is more hamdsomely ornament ed than any oth r, it has the heaviest nickk it. wil’ weigh more than any other of the same size, jt will keep fire longer, it will take less fuel, it 4. will last longer. ~ ba bhaa It is Guaranteed to give better satisfaction than any other heating We handle a full line of PEORIA WOOD HEATING STOVES, And the Celebrated CHARTER OAK COOK STOVE, With the wonderful wire gauze oven door. HARDWARE, GROCERIES, TINWARE GLASSWARE AND QUEENSWARE. Bennett, Wheeler Mercantile Co, BU'TLER, MO. trimmings, stove on the market. A FiEND STRUNG UP. To the Farmers of Bates and Cass | Counties. Everett. Mo., Sept. 21, 1891. To WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: This is to certify that I suffered a total loss on my barn and contents | on September 2nd 1891. Under pol- icy No. 932335, issued June 21st., 1891., by the German Insurance Co., Freeport, Ill, through Calhoun & Harrison, at Carthage, Mo,, they | Hanged Just in Front of the Boyd New Opera House. Omaha, Neb., Oct. 10.—Over the | ha’s most beautiful place of amuse- ment, naked as when he came into the world save for a fragment of a have this day settled in full for all blue blouse and the shoes he wore, lows and damage amounting to $1, | Swings the body of Joe Coe, a negro 150, and I can heartily recommend | of 20, the victim of an angry mob of the German to any and all who wish | incensed citizens. good, safe insuranee. I can also | THE WRETCH’S CRIME FIENDIGH. recommend Calhoun & Harrison, of Carthage, Mo., State agents. Also, I can fully recommend John F. Her- rell, special agent at Adrian, Mo., for said Company. I know them to be men of their word, and pay just as they agree. Itisa gratification to me to be insured with a company whose agents are so honorable and } upright in their settlements. I shall speak a good word for these men whenever I. bave an opportunity. I am Faternally yours, Last Wednesday Cove called at the house of Mr. Yates on North Eigh- teenth street, saying he was a gar- Mrs. Yates allowed 1. Not long af ld, < bage inspector. him to enter the y ter little Lizzie Yates, 5 years 0 eame running to the house, sbri ing in agony and blood streamir from her person. She had been bra the police and he was captured Thursday hiding iu a hay mow not T. B. Pratues.| far from the scene of his crime. |The w. C. I. U. of the cit | His identification was complete and {he was held without bail to await R. S. Catron, Notary Public, ac} trial in the district court. To-day knowledges all kind of papers. 29-tf \the child died. | electric trolley wire in front of Oma-} {and keep them closed. The business | | jointists to keep open aud hired an | attorney tu detend them. | developed that there is no city ei tally ravished by the negro. His dis- | dance under which Mre. Paxton has eription was soon in the hands of! power to close the joints so every-| s TO STOP PENSION GRABBING. | \n Organization ot Soldiers tor That Purpose in Washington. Washington, D. C., October 8.— The society ef Loyal Volunteers has! been organized in Washington. It | | ix not the intention of the organiza- | | founders are Grand Army men who believe that the time bas come for ved aetion against the dishon | vrable fo stur ® of the pension busi- ness. The movement, as ‘set forth in the purposes of the organization ‘18 purely patriotic and philanthro- pic, and is opposed to one of the best organized, well managed and wealthy syndicates of money makers lin the country—the pension attor- neys. One of the objects of the society is te destroy the pension attorney's business. If the people do not now rally to the support of this effort of | the old soldiers to relieve their hon- or from the mercenary stain that is being put on them by the sophistries and industries of the pension attor- neys they should hereafter pay, without a murmur a demand for more and larger pensions that may be made. “Impairment of earning capacity” is declared tobe the only just basis for pensions. It is further set forth “that the weakness of every com-| pany, regiment, battalion aud divis- | ion was inthe shirks, cowards and | | vice-destroyed men who incumbered | its muster rells, devoured ite sub- sitance and crowded honest but dis-! abled men out of the hospitals.Such men do not hesitate to-day to live on the generous gratitude of the poor | through payments made on the pen | sions obtained by fraud or at the ex- pense of honor. Men of the same! type are to day the leeches and evil! | doers of society.” -We demand,” says the founders, | “that the pension legislation of the past of the future shall be revised ! that the honor, as well as necessi. | ties of the soldiers, sailor and those immediately dependent upon them, shall be fully recognized and jeal- j ously guarded ” | This movement starts off strong. It is significant fer the reaction | which has set in against excessive pensiening. cance A Horrible Thing. | Lamar Missourian A boy, afflicted with fits, died at] | town, some time Saturday night. Iu av old cabin practically unattended by any save a fellow pauper or two, one of whom was an idiot. the unfor- jtunate lad died, and early Monday morning. as we learn, the lewer por- tion of his face and part of a cheek were found to be eaten away by rats. | Had the mutilation occurred after | jdeath, this chapter would be suffi- ciently dark and forbidding; but, hor- rible to relate the sombre shadows are but intensified by the conjecture amounting almost to belief on the part of some, that the poor boy was living, when the rats got at his face. We are told that, on Monday after- noen, when Dr. Stone viewed the corpse, there were signs of blood around the edges of the bites, which fact but adds strength to the latter theory. The farm is kept by a Mr. | Clark, whose cerdnct in this matter should be rigidly investigated. | | } | A Woman Mayor's Troubles. Wichita, Oct. 9.—The austere rule of Mrs. Jennie Paxton, mayor of Kio- | wa has at last ledtoan open rupture. Yesterday a petition signed by al- most the entire business community was presented to her, asking her to retire from office. Kiowa, an old cattle town, has al- jways been known as liberal, and much of its business has resulted from the patronage of cow men. Mrs. Paxton’s race for the mayoralty last spring, though made for the avowed purpose of closing the sa- loons, was regarded as such a huge | joke that little attention was paid to her, and she slipped in by a few votes. Ever sinee her election she has kept up a warfare on the joints, and early this week she deputized a ; special squad of police to close them | men then yot together, told the! | Prison lynching and the Italian af jtime of ' DETECTIVE O MALLEY RELEASED | No Case Made Against Him in the! Jury-Fixmg Matter at j New Orleaus. | New Orleans, La., Oet. $.—Dem-, inick O'Malley, the detective who/| figured sv conspicuously in the Hen-} nessy wurder trial, and wko was! supposed to Lave beibed the jury) and thus precipitated the Parish | { } { fair, was tried to day under the in- dictment for jury bribery found | against him at the Hennesy trial, | and discherged as the state had no evidence whatever against him, the | only evidence it offered being ruled out. | The news created quite a sensa-| tion, for au immense majority of the | people belicved that O'Malley was a jury fixer, that he pribed the jury in| this case and that there would be little trouble to prove it. At the | the disturbance here in| March the feeling against O'Malley | wus more intense than against the supposed assassins. The committee; of Safety ordered him to leave the city, but he refused to de so. After the lynchiug at the Parish Prison, the mob marched to O'Malley's of fice tolyuch him, but a friend bad given him timely warning aud he es caped a few minutes before the crowd broke in. Had he been caught | then or within a few days afterwards he would have been summarily dealt with, but although be was hunted high and low it was impossible to find him. To the surprise of all and before the excitement had cooled down O'Malley put in his appear- | ance. He had heard, he suid, that the grand jury had indicted him and he came to stand trial. There were some whispers of lynching, but his boldness and courage saved him The bribery trial against him was 'postpoucd several times, but came up finally today, when the state abandoned it and entered a plea of nolle prosequi. It was popularly be- lieved that there would be no difti- culty in convicting O'Malley, and this ending of the case was a consid- erable surprise to all. O'Malley al- j ways insisted that the indictments aguinet him were found simply to justify the lynching. To do this it was necessary the charge that the jury bad been bribed, and as he managed the case for the Italians | the bribery was fixed on him. It is probable that now that O’- the poor farm, four miles south of | Malley is out of danger from the jlaw he will have something to say of the Henvesy murder and the Par- ish Prison lynching. “I have been asked to keep quiet” he said to-day and allow the matter to be forgetten. I will not be vin- the matter stand. Missouri’s Finances Excellent. Jefferson City, Mo., Oct. 10.— The state board of fund commission- ers met to day and made a requisi- tion on the state auditor for his war- rant on the state treasurer for $190- 000 to pay for option bonds of the state called for redemption Novem- ber 1. A warrant for $2,245 to pay fractional interest on the bonds re- deemed from July 1 to date was al- so ordered drawn. When this lot of bonds 1s taken up the reduction of the state debt since January 1, 1891, will be $1,450,000. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, ae County of Bates. Le In the circuit court of Bates county. Misso: ri, in vacation, August l4th, 1591. “The staf o Missouri at the relation and to the use of Os car Reeder, collector of the revenue of Bate: county in the state of Missouri, plaintiff, vs. W. 4, Stephens and the unknown heirs of O’Brien Guinn, defendants. Civil action for delinguent taxes, Now at this day comes the a herein by her attorneys, before the undersigned clerk of of Bates county in the state of Missouri, in vacation, and files her petition and a! it, stating among other things that the names of the heirs of O’Brien Guinn are unknown and cannot be inserted in the peti tiod herein that they are the owners of said land, and derive their title by inheritance. Whereupon it is ordered by the ssid elerk in vacation, that said defendant be notified by publication that ES has commenced a suit against them in this court by petition and affidavit the object and general nature of which is to enforce the lien of the state of Missouri tor the delinquent taxes of the years 1838 and 1889, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $8.36, together with interest, costs, commis- sion and fees, upon the following described tracte of land situated in Bates county, Mis- souri, to-wit: The northeast qu: “of the northeast quarter of section th isl} township forty {49] range thirty-one (71), and | that unless the defendants be and appear at ihe next term ofthis court to be begun and holden inthe city of Butler, Bates county, | Missouri, on the first Monday in November, | i891, and on of before the sixth day thereof, if It soen! i} thing is wide open again | Mrs. Paxton is in a recticn, and it is hard to forete!l the! outcome. | the term shallso long continue, and if nc then before the end of the term, d said peti be tak, tion according to 1 as confessed and according to the prayer of the above described real es thesame. Anditis furth: lerk aforesaid that a co) “A ; last insert fore the first rt m the record. my band s clerk aforesaid with seal of said court hereunto affixed Done at of- ‘ice in Butier on. this the 14th day of 1. JOHN C. HAYES, + STARKE, Cirevit Clerk. Deputy Clerk. A By OF BATES COUNTY, Cash Capital. _ $50,000.00 D N. THOMPSON .....................- .- Presidest J. K, ROSIER «+ Presid E. A BENNETT E. D. KIPP.. br. J. EV NGHAM T. W. SILVERS sees Attorney DIRECTORS. Jaage Clark;Wix, Farmer and stock raiser. R J. Hurley of R. J. Hurley Lamber Company. J. K. Rosier, Vice-President - nd Farmer. M.S. Kierse;, Farmer and Stock raiser E_ A. Bennett, of Bennett, Wheeler & Company and 2ud Vice-President. P.-E. Emery, Real Estate Investor. M. G. Wileo ‘armer and Stock Raiser. T. Ww. . ‘*Butler Carriage Works.’’ D_N. Thompson, President, farmer and stockraiser. John Steele, Farmer and stockraiser. J.J. McKee, Farmer and stochraiser. E.D. Kipp, Cashier. Receives Deposits subject to check, loans money, issues drafts, and transacts a general banking business. Your patronage resnectfully solicited. Mutiomsin Misery. | SKIN DARK AS COAL. St. Petersburg, Oct. 10.—Senator | eat ees Eczema Afflicts a Well-Known Gen- Baronoff, estimates that no fewer | et J than 32,000.000 of peasants in Rus-| tleman. Pitiable Subject to Look Upon. Suffered Terribly. sia are now destitute and must be | provided for, for the next ten months. | Whole Body Covered. It will require 320,000,000 bushels dictive, but Ido not propose to le Ata of grain to feed them. The American church in this city has started a subscription list to re- | lieve this mountain of misery i Prince Korsakoff, the head of a great family, lives ou Kooswort bread as an example for his servants and others to follow during the na- tional affliction. | | THE PARISIANCLOAKCO, Buy your Cloaks where you can! sive 40 to 50 per cent. We are the} |Cuticura manufacturers aud will $1.00 to $2.00 save “you | ou every garment you buy of us. | | We offer the following bargains. Childrens School Cloak $3.25 Cheviot Reefer Jackets. .3.75 | worth €.00 | Seal Plush Jackets......7.75 worth 10.00 Plush Sacques......... His i worth 15.€9 i The largest exclusive Ci in the west. 108 & i110 MAIN STREET- we Write for Llustrated logue. Mailed free. a \ oak House ; Cate- | Notice of Final Eotden at day of Nor 47-4 | Given up by San Francisco Doctors. Might Have Saved $600, as He Was Cured for $6 by Cuticura Remedies. Ihave many times stadied over what Cuticu- ra has done for me; it has restored me to good health and Rappinees, for betore I tried Cuii- curs Remedies I was given up by all the doc- tors in San Francisco; but if] had only taken a certain gentleman’s advice and tried Cuti- cura Remedies sooner, I should certainly pare itiable saved from $500 to $600. I was a most subject to look upon with eczema, an ed terribly. I was almost as dark as my instep up to my knees on both 1 after that it broke out all over my poll 2 alter using half a dozen seta of Caticura Kem- edies I was perfectly restored to good health. and have enjoyed the same ever since (Which is for over two years.) A great number of peo- ple visit my establishment. and J have told hundreds of people what Caticurs has done ror me. but have thought that I ought to write | and let you know, so that you can refer anyoue | in this county to me. Loule Johnson. Proprietor Marine Boat Heuse, Sausalito, Marin Co , California Resolvent The new Blood Purifer, internally (tocieanse the blood of all impurities and poisonous eie- ments and thus remove the cause), and Cat’- cura, the great Shim Cure. and Cuticura Soap. an exquisite skin beautifiar ey (to clear the skin and ecalp, and restore the hair). cure every disease and humor ofthe skin smd blood, from pimples to scrofuls. Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, Svc. ; Soap, 25¢.; Resolvent, $1. ‘Prepared by the Potter Drug and Chemical Corporation, Boston raSend for *‘ How to Cure Skin Diseases,’” BABY’St's and Scalp purified and beautified by Cuticura Soap. Absolutely Pure MUSCULAR STAINS and paine, back ache, weak kidneys rheumatism and chest pains reliev- ed inone minute by the Cuticara Anti-Pain Plaster. The frst and only instan- taneous Pain-killing pain p F. Poultry, Buiter, Eggs, We make a call for all your pout’ try at the very highest market price’ in cash. Butter & Eggs Taken in any quantity and cash paid for same. Farmers we want your goods and are willing to pay for them. Bring on your Poultry, Butter and Eggs. And get the cash, Headquarters at A. L. BRIDE & CO. Hickorynuts Wanted! Hannibal Poultry Co, 35-1m By James Smith. trator of said estate. in’ nt thereof, at » OR the sta ‘MS, Administrator.

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