The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 12, 1892, Page 1

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Bid VOL. XIV. BUTLER, MISSOURI, WEDNESDAY OCTOBER IJ, |892. Che Butler Weekly Cimes. NO. 47 Missouri State Bank OF BUTLER, MO. CAPITAL, $110,000. Receives Deposits subject to Check, Loans Money, Makes Collections and does a General Banking Business. DEPOSITORY FOR COUNTY FUNDS. In the Real Estate Loan Department. Make loans on Real Estate on long or short time at lowest rates without delay. STOCKHOLDERS Allen, Mrs. Levina Boulware, TC, Physician Burk, Monroe Farmer Ballard, J N Farmer Brown, Lula Bartlett, Edmund Farmer Bryner, Margaret Chelf, H. B. Farmer Coleman, Sam’! L Farmer Caruthers, G@ A Farmer Christy, J M Physician Hannah, W D medical student Slayback, Ed Farmer Hardinger, W N Farmer Smith, G L Liveryman Hickman,G B Furniture dealer Starke, L B Deputy circuit clerk Heath, D'B Turner, Mra M E Capitalist Jenkins, J R Cashier Tucker, W E Dentist Kinney. Don Ass’t Cashier ‘Tyler, W B Farmer Levy.dam Dry Goods & Clothing Voris, Frank M Farmer Morrison, © H Farmer Vaughan. J M Capitalist Miller, Alf Farmer Wyatt, H C Lumber dealer McCracken, A Farmer Wells, W iley Teacher Ciark, Robert Farmer McCracken, Robt Farmer West, RG Farmer Courtney, J M Stock Dealer Owen, M V Farmer Walton, Wm E President Deerwester, John Farmer Pharis, John Grocery Wright, TJ Capitalist Davis, J R Foreman Tim«s officePharis, C F Grocery Weiner, Max Merchant Dutcher, C H Prof Normal Sch Powell, Booker Farmer Walls, Wm Farmer DeArmond,D A, M C Pigott, H H Bank Clerk Walton, G W Farmer Deerwester, Frank Co sch com Rosier, J M Farmer Walls, J T Physician Eyans, John Farmer Reeder, Oscar Farmer Whipple, N LU Physician Everingham, J Physician Radford, Chas R Freemam, Caroline and Eliza Reisner, J W_ Pension Clerk Francisco, S P Lawyer Sullens, J L Banker president vice-president cashier asst. cashier J. R. JENKINS DON KINNEY WM. E. WALTON BOOKER POWELL Virginia Items. ' Geo Hughes & Son have fitted | up a blacksmith ship in first-class id is in pei -- en = ee = airs - hag | Pleasure of listening to e Hon pty ler am wbite cle Ealler ae | W Graves of anit who addressed the Deepwater Stone and Cleveland club at the Deepwater church on the night of Oct. 4th. Mr Graves is }guitea forcible expounder of the tariff law and is indeed au eloquent | jspeaker. The democrats of Deep- | water township turned out in full | blast; the toreh light procession at least half mile in length; this looks | like business. Capt Martin was | present and made a few remarks which was good and pointed and we believe did much good Hon. J. W. Choate present; and made a very nice talk bu: be- ing at home he did not deem tt prop erat that time to It} looks very much like the democrats | Johnstown and Spruce Twp Items. It is still dry and warm; stock wa | built a residence on bis farm 3 miles north of town and will move to it ....In the case of J W Nance vs. | Elmer Garner, and costs....T McGuire is visiting WF Smith fora few days....J W McFadden is visiting relatives in Peoria, Ills....Uncle Israel Nestle- rode sold his prize mule to R T Ju- dy for $50....Wim Duvall wants to sell ten head of 2 year old steers... Born, to the wife of Wm Isaacs, of Foster,formerly of Virginia, a girl.. Wm Smith of Dryden ranch, wants | 1,000 or 1,500 bushels of corn; also a good farm hand....Mr Wadkins received $475 insurance on his house Nance was fined $5 was also say much. } against them, had attempted to raid DALTONS WIPED OUT Four of the Outlaw Band Slain in| a Fierce Battle With the Peo- ple of Coffeyville, Kas. THREE CITIZENS KILLED. One of the Hrothers Mortally Wounded and Two of the Town Now Dying. Tae Desperadoes Meet Tieir Just Des- serts In a Bold Attempt to Rob Two Banks at Once. Coffeyville, Kan., Oct. 5.—The Dalton band of outlaws, the most notorious in the west, was wiped off the face of the earth here to day, but in the battle which resulted in their extermination thre good citi- zens were killed and two fatally wounded. The desperadoes, who had grown bolder as they thought that they were above all law and that the of- ficers of the country were powerless the banks of this their old home when they met their fate which they so well merited, but which they had heretofore escaped. Had they con- fined their efforts to train robbery they might now be alive, but emu- lation of the James boys proved their deaths. This was their first attempt at bank robbery and their! last piece of outlawry. BOLD RAID ON THE BANKS The six outlaws came into town] together on horseback about 9:30 o'clock and leaving their horses in an alley, walked rapidly across the square and four entered Conden’s bank and two the First National. | At Conden’s bank the desperadoes le were told by Cashier Ball that the! time lock would not be open until | 10 o'clock, so holdiug their Win chesters on Ball and Teller Charles | Carpenter, said they would wait, | |berid of the gang here. Great ex- citement prevails aud if the other! man is found he will dealt with. The large rewards for the capture of the outlaws dead or alive will, if the citizens’ wishes are respected, go the families of the murdered citizens. Allof the money was recovered to a cent and turned over to the banks. EMMET DALTON CONFESSES Emmet Dalton has made a partial confession that his gang was the same that robbed the Pacific express ear onthe M. K. & T. railroad at Adair station in the Indian territory lass July and committed other dar- ing robberies. He stated that he was an own cousin of the Younger boys and until he knew that the oth- er boys were dead he refused to say anything, but when their dead bodies were carried up to him for inspection he identified them as Bob and Gratton Dalton, Tom Evans and Jack Moore. He shed tears as he gazed on his dead brothers. The names he gave to the two latter men are not the names they were known by in this section, but they were their real names. These are withheld from the public for good reasons. be summarily The news was immediately tele- graphed to Parsons shortly after 10 o'clock, and general superintendent Frey, of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas railroad, with his special ear in which were thirty or forty trusty citizens with Winchesters and shot- guns, came to Coffeyville to assist jin running the desperadoes to bay. They found on their arrival that there was but little work for them to do, as the plucky inhabitanis at Coffeyville had wound up the ca reers of the desperadoes. Praine City Items. Seeing nothing from here we will send a few lines....W T Kemper and wife, B W Hornbuckle and wife, Mrs S E Hornbuckle and J D Horn- buckle are visiting friends in Cedar county....W H Hammer started taking meanwhile the money in the! for St Louis Sunday evening.... ....Orville Brown is clerking for MecFadden,...Carr Dudley, wife and two sons moved tu Worland. Mr D and sons will workin coal.... Geo Crooks is improving....Mrs Amelia Bradley has moved to Rich Hill and will work at dress making ....Grant Main is making good mo- lases. He has our thanks for a mess ....People wanting coal can find it atthe Miami....We are glad to state that Mrs E Nestlerode is up and around again....Chas Woody has returned from Kansas....Sam Dobbins sowed six acres of wheat ....Mr Jackson lost a fine horse last week....Misses Emma Rine hart and Stella Thompson had a pleasant cart ride Thursday....Mr and Mrs Hilton were visiting at Jas Hedges last Tuesday....Mre H P| Nickell went to Columbia to see her daughter, Miss Maggie, who is at-| tending school....Miss Bertha Car ver is quite sick....Maloneys boys of Deepwater were alive and at work {Let the good work continus.... Teak ; Mrs WL Durand and Miss Emily Messrs Geo Wells and Herman Max- | ey left Friday for Quincy, Ills, to} lattend school; success to you boys | ...Our old friend and citizen, Chas Wainscott of Polk | county is visiting his father in-law, | fellow Uncle John Evans of Shawnee | | township and other relatives in this | section. .It looks very much like the | u. Ls were going to carry Georgia at | this writing, don’t it, as it has gone | | democratic by 70,000 majority; how | Every democrat in Spruce aud Deep water township should hear Hon. DeArmond speaks at the church one | mile north of Spruce P O on th 2] night of October 13th; the proces- | sion will be headed by the Jobns- | town band and it is expected to have 150 torch lights in the march.... | How does it sound to hear that Judge | | Gresham is to support Grover Cleye- | | land and Stevenson....Bates coun-| peared George Crbine, a merchant, i} jand Express Agent Cox shot at one two who took in the First National./was visiting here last Sunday... Here were Cashier Ayers, his son| Miss Mollie Trammel of Coleman, Bert and Teller W. H. Shepherd. j Texas, is visiting her auut, Mrs A They were forced to give up the | Kemper. ---Miss May Barrows 2 : ;ecommenced her school at Mission money in the safe, which was hastily | p, anch Monday....Messrs Bartz shoved in bags. ‘and Wehnes are building a fine resi The Daltous theu forced the three dence one mile south of town for out of the front door and followed | Judge Fix....Mrs G W Sunder right latter then. ; Wirth has opened her fall stock of oe eM TEE ; jtmilliuery....Miss Rena Hornbuckle CITIZENS AND OUTLAWS BATTLE. | who has been visiting her sister in The alarm had in the meantime | Stockton, for the past three weeks been given and as the outlews ap-|is home again....James Cox of Ta- borville was in the city Thursday. . Miss Fannie Hornbuckle left for Rich Hill Monday morning ...Mrs Maddox entertained a number of friends Monday evening..... Mrs killing Cubine. Mary Woods is reported quite sick The robbers in Conden & Co.'s} Mr and Mrs AS Kemper madea fly- bank shot out of the window, hit-|i2& trip to Walker Sunday. ...The : ladies of this city enjoyed themselves ting Ayers and Brown. jatacapet rag tacking at the resi- Both robbers ran back through! the bank when they were met by Baldwin and fatally wounding him | of them badly wounding him. The outlaws then returned the fire day evening; all sewed dilligently until a late hour when refreshments dence of Mrs John Wehnes Wednes- | . bert Ke Ren! have plenty coal for sale... Charles | : t Garner's barn burned last week; loss | ty will redeem herself this fall by | $1,200....‘Lhe ladies of this town- | ¢lecting a full democratic ticket... | ship invites the hunters to leave | Will Jackson one of our band boys | their whisky at their homes instead | is attending school at Appleton City of giving it to the boys.... William | ----Dr John Choat will speak at Durst is building a barn. ...Mrs Al-| Walnut some time next week; the Dr ser and little duughters, of | is a grand speaker, an able expound- Butler, visited N M_ Nestlerode last | er of the issues of the day. week....S D Woody has built an) Gov Syorr. addition to his house. NELs. ; We havea great variety in styles | | and shapes,it would be impossible to Norice—I am prepared to handle | describe them, so we invite you to all the poultry that comes, and pay , come and see them, for seeing 1s be-| i lieving. the cash for it. C. F. Puanis. M. & J. Evays. | | Highest of all in Leavening Power.— U. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. Baking ABSOLUTELY PURE | —— |which city marshal Connelly was| | gang fell from his | wounded about two miles from town ; The sixth and last | pursued at latest accounts. The) Miss Ida Padley is quite sick with | man who got away is supposed to) typhoid feyer....Mrs Voshell, a be Allie Ogee. This is the old home| worthy old lady. died at her -home naturalization papers, put them in of the Daltons and it is peculiarly | near Kisnerville, on last Thursday./his pocket and walk away. ‘appropriate that the world should| She was laid to rest in the Butler} graver question ever existed. The citizens being thoroughly arouse by this time, were after them | hot and heavy and after a fight in! killed, succeeded in killing the four | desperadoes named and and mortal- ly wounded Emmett, who lies in a! room here. He will die before morn- | ing, if not in one way then another. ; A LIVERY MAN'S DEADLY AIM. | Jim Spears, a livery stable keeper | with his Winchester killed three out- | laws in as many seconds. This cre- ated such a diversion that other cit-/ izeus were exzabled to get close) enough to killanother of the robbers. | i pursuit and one more of the bandit h orse mortally was still being were served; Mrs W is a charming hostess...... The young folks all | spent theevening at the residence of JB Durand Wednesday even- ing all enjoyed themselves with games until they were ushered into} the dining room. where an elaborate supper was spread; Mrs D and daughter Jessie know how to enter tian....Quite a number of young folks from here attended the ice cream supper at the residence of Highly Maltbie at Papinville, all re ported a good time....The Prairie City Union Sunday school is prepar- jing to attend the S S convention at | Hudson, October 13th. Letir D. Double Eranch Items. | The two remaining robbers dropped! Considerable frost a few nights | govern nent. jtheir pluuder and mounted their ago....Put up your heating stoves, }cansto again control the house j horses, but a posse was quickly in| winter is coming....Get ready for'representatives and they will pa the picnic ou next Friday near Lone Oak....Quite a number from this ‘neighborhood attended Big Show at Butler last Sati OF BATES Cash Capital. HAM...11) Solicited. cemetery John Hall who has been spending a few days in Kan- sas City, returned home on last Fri day....Come out and hear DeAr- mond speak on next Friday ....Mr. Crabtree made a nice little talk to the boys, at Double Branch ou last Saturday night....We will correct a mistake we made last week ble Branch instead of Willow Braveb. The meeting closed at W. B. on last Wednesday night...... The Double Brauch school is progressing nicely under the efficient mauagement of H. E. Speece, of Butler......Corn cutting and threshing is about over in his neighborhood....Mr. George Dungan, the new mail carrier, has treated himself to a new buggy.... Little Myrtle Hall is ou the sick list In the death of Mr. Wayland Pleasant Gap has lost one of its best citizens....Mrs Hammers of Kan- sas, will return to her home in a few Gough is quite sick...... Laranas Bently will ride in a new cart here- after. ...Several ladies attended the speaking at Double Branch on last Saturday night Mes. Kisner, of Kansas City, is visiting friends in this neighborhood. ...Mr Jessie Starr and wife, of Colorado, are visiting friends in this vicinity... Mrs. Ed Brown received the sad intelligence of the death of her sis- ter, Miss Ollie Meek, which occurred in Colorado....Mr. and Mrs. Sho- walter will leave soon for Eldorado Springs to visit friends...... Gough will move to his new farm soon. Litre Jessie. Maggie Cockrell on the Force Bill. “I would to God that the republi- can party had not disgraced this na- bill. It was a confession by a great party that after it had risen to al- most unparalleled grandeur, this jcountry had nct accomplished its was a failure. jwas this ithe world. A beautiful spectacle for the nations of It was insult to the American people. democrats and republicans alike. It was not aimed alone at the south but at the great cities of the north also—at St Louis, at Kansas City, at St. Joseph at Chicago, Boston and New York. It would place the power, both civil and military in the hands of ax pulous partisaus, appointed by un scrupulous men to corrupt and in i timidate the toiling millions of this jeountry. Of all measures this is 'the most odious and atrocious. Talk ‘not about the tariff. silver or state Permit the republi an the force bill then Every his li owner ec v eign-b trausacts a general Banking business. The! protracted meeting will be at Dou- | days....The little child of Charley | tion by the introduction of the fore | |purpose and that self goyernment | FARMERS BANK COUNTY, $50,000.00 .- President Receives Deposits subject to check, Lones Money, issues Drafts and Your patronage respectfully a en ie eel | hope and know that every democrat will realize this and vote straight. We want 3,000 majority in St. Louis |and I feel sure that I will be able to (congratulate you upou your giving it after election.” 1n Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. | When she became Miss, she ching tp Castoria { When she had Children, she gave them Casterts Before and After ‘Taking. Before the McKinley law was | passed the party of protection scor- eda plurality of 23,000 in Michigan, | 22,000 in Illinois, 31,000 in Iowa,’ , 27,000 in Nebraska aud 21,000 in | Wisconsin After it was passed these states went den:ocratic by plu- iralities ranging from 1,200 to 28,- {000 Before it was passed the re- |publican plurality in Kansas was | 80,000 and Minnesota 38,000. After )it was passed the plurality in the former state was 9,000 and in latter ‘less than 3,000 Before it was pass- 'ed Massachusetts gave Harrison 30,- | 000 plurality. | After it was passed | the state elected a democratic gov- ernor by 9,000 plurality.—New York | Herald. A train load of cattle went through 'a burning bridge near Sr. Joseph, | Monday and all the animals were !burned to death. The stock was | valued at $4,000. ONE MASS OF SCALES | Afflicted 3 Years by Dreadful Skin and ' Blood Disease, with Intense Pain and Loss of Hair. All Other Remedies Fail. Relieved In- stantly and Cured in Four Weeks i by the Cuticura Remedies. | _I have a few words to say regarding the Crr- cura Remepres. They have cured me ix four weeks’ time from a Skin and Blood Disease winch I have had for over three years. Ateertain tines, my skin would be very sore, and always bept | cracking and peeling off in white ecales. J | Weather my face was one mase of scal | in the cold air the pain wae intense | almost bring teara t being in a poor cond | have tried every kn mended to m ii very little bet Rexenres, 1 ec first application gave al few ks’ time for what Cuticura Remedies Effect daily more great cures of h eases of the skin, scalp, and b remedies combined. Ccticuna, the Cure, and Cursctka S0aP, an exquisite Pari- fer and Beautifier, externally, and Cuticuma Re- SOLVE! the new Blood Purifier and greatest of medies, internally, cure every species of urning, scaly, and blotchy cie- od, from infaaes te. ben the best phypwi. a pimples to ecro! claus and all other remedies rywhere. Price, Cuticcna, He.; Boer, ¥ENT, @1. Prepared by the icaL Corporation, E , rough, chapped acd Tha SOAP. 3, black-beads, red oily akin cured by of November,. W. ENNIS, ‘ay < Administrator.

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