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i naa nme BUTLER WEEKLY TIMES J. D. ALLEN Ebprror. }. D. ALLEN & Co., Ptoprietors. | "FERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: | The WEEKLY TIMES, published every | Wednesday, will be sent to any address one year, postage paid, for $1.00. | | The Globe-Democrats the chances of carrying Indiana are favor of the democrats. ———— | Only two more weeks to put nails | in the lid of the republican party’s| coffin. Keep ine hammers busy. eee | Democrats of Bates county buck-| Je on your spurs and go to riding. | The majority at this election ought | to reach 800. Atkeson may bulldose his ou the republican ticket but he will} xever bulldose the republican party into voting for him. name Democrats who desire to down the high tariff tax of McKinley and Har- rison, need no urging to go to the polls and vote, they will all be there. The leaders of the third paity made strenuous efforts to get the re- publicans to fuse with them again this year, but it looks like they have failed. We believe that the whole demo- tratie ticket will be elected, if every democrat will refuse all trades and vote the ticket straight without a scratch. So Pierce Hackett wants, justice. if we should give Lim that justice as laid down in the old Mosaic law it would be the very thing he would not want. One nomiuee is as much entitled t> the full party support as anothe and there can be no good reason for saying that part of the ticket will be elected without the whole. The Globe Democrat has begun to figure on the result of the election and the doubtful stater, and this is good evidence that this great paper is looking for another Jand slide to the democratic ticket. Mrs. Win. Winsett left for Chi- cago ou Thursday last to join her husband who is attending medical lectures in that city. They will live in that city until he has completed his course in medicine. There is no good reason why part of the county ticket should be elected without the whole. One nominee is as much entitled to the full party support as another, and if part of the ticket is elected it all should be. —_——__— It isa matter of county history that James H. Raybourn. the peo- ple’s candidate for recorder, was deputy clerk at the time the county court issued the railroad bonds that some of our townships are now paying off, and it is said Ray- bourn spread that order on record. The Union never hesitated to con- demn Judge Sullens for awarding printing to the Tres when he was -a stock holder iu this paper. Mr. Drysdale is a stock holder in the Union and has not only ordered the ‘ballot printed in that paper but also gives him the contract for printing the ballots. If the Democratic and Republican parties had become so corrupt that it was necessary to organize a third party that would be pure, — will Pierce Hackett, Carrol] and W. O. Atkeson, (bosses of the pure party.) explain to us why it is they have been holding numerous secret can- uses in this town with the republi- ean leaders to get them to fuse, and how is it that W. O. Atkeson’s name has been placed on the corrupt re- publican ticket! i Pierce Hackett went around this eounty advising our subscribers to stop the Tries and others not to take it. Now he whines that Mr. Allen will not do him justice. When he did this he over stepped the bounds of political warfare and be- gan an attack on our private business, We make our bread and butter for our wife and little ones out of the publication of the Tives and he at- tempted to boycott and injure that business: What thinks any fair mind. {a namivation for that office. ATKESON’S DISRPUTABLE METH- ODS. W. O. Atkeson was nomivated by | the people's party for cireuit judge | |The republican party did not make | It was | generally understood that Mr. Atkee| son very wuch desired to be endoré-| ed by the republicans. He sot up/ a petition of supposedly republican | voters, praying that party's comunit- tee to place his name on its ticket. | | That committee refused point blank | | to endorse Mr. Atkeson, and it was | supposed by its members aud by all | others, that that settled the matter. Atkeson, however, wauts the office! and he wants it bad. Unknown to} the republican party leaders in But- er he got up a petition to the Secre- tary of State asking that official to} place name on the republican} ticket. Every signer to that petition | his had to acknowledge the same before a notary public, and for convenience | Atkesou pressed A. FP. Hickman, a| notary public, into service and he| went around with the petition taking | each signer’s acknowledgment. This} petition was not filed with Mr. Le sueur until the very last day, thereby | preventing the possibility of a pio-) test from the honest republicans, who would not appiove nor submit} to so disreputable a trick to gain! their suilrage. | To say that the republican leaders were surprised when they learue dl that Atkeson’s name was certified to} the county clerk by secretary of| state Lesueur, as a nominee on their ticket, is putting it mild, but when they learned of the dishonorable | and disreputable methods to secure that result their anger was great. } They immediately went to work to! devise meaus to notify republicans | all over the district of the facts frp ease and adyised that his name b: scratched by every voter and Judge Lay's name be substituted. Mr. Atkeson belongs to a party which pretends to believe in the pu- rity of the ballot; which deplores | corruption in polities and condemns the office-seeker, and yet we see him not only violating all precedents which the old parties had establish- ed, for decency’s sake, that of keep ing the judicial ermine as far remoy- edas possible from the scrambie iucident to a political office, by the nominees of the different parties re fraining from entering the canvass, but he seeks a nomination ou a ticket other than his own by the most des- picable methods employed even by the ward bummer politicians in the large cities. ever Can Mr. Atkeson give one single intelligent reason w hy his name should have been placed upon the republican ticket? Draw a slight comparison between the two candi- dates for this office. When Judge James H. Lay was written to bya friend of his in this city, a promi- neat attorney, who felt an anxiety for his success, to make a canvass of the district, he auswered immediate- ly that he would rather be beaten than lower the dignity of the office by a personal scramble for it. What of Atkeson, he goes a supplicant, fawning at the feet of the republi- can committee, and they contempt- uously kick him aside. Not satisfied with that rebuff he resorts to the trick as indicated above and attempts | to hoodwink and deceive republican voters into believing that their party had endorsedhim. He is con- tinually in the canvass begging aud cajoling voters to get their suffrage. Prominent republicans of Butler are denouncing Atkeson's disreputable methods openly on the streets in un- measured terms, and say that no self respecting republican, who un- derstands the situation. will vote for him. THE WARNER DEMOCRAT. The Record has found one “War ner Democrat,” Andy King, ex-mayor of Nevada, and he publishes the find under the flaming headlines,“Demo- eratic voters desert Stone, like rats desert a sinking ship.” The Nevada Mail gives the real animus of this Warner Democrat's assault on Col. Stone as follows: “In the discharge of his duty as special attorney for Vernon county, | Col. Stone compelled Ex-Mayor| King to refund to the county $4,000 to which the statute did not entitle! him. That is the reason the ex- mayor isa Warner man. It is due| Col. Stone that the real animus of ed man is the measure of justice the ‘Tiss should mete out to him. the matter be know.” So, so! Those arethekind of Demo-|of the state has the democracy | You pay only for the good you get | crate who are “deserting Stone lke rats desert a sinking ship.” There may be a few more criminals in Ver- non County, like Andy King. who will not vote for Col. Stone because in the capacity of attorney he prose- cuted them fearlessly violation of the law. But the honest demo- erats of Vernon cou d of Bates county and of every other county in the state will vote fer Col. Stone. The Record further that “Demcerats have told us they would cast their ballot for Waruer and one the fact that he name twenty democrats in this town- ship would do the same.” The edi- tor of the Record knows this is not true,and the Trages boldly makes the assertion that, class of democrats for = says mentioned could outside of the above mention, Major Warner will not get a demo eratic vote in Bates county. There is no cause for a democrat to bolt Col. Stone for Warner and abundant rea- sons why the reverse of that prop osition should be ture the assertion that as many re- publicans will vote for Stone as there will be democrats vote for Waruer in Bates county and through- out the state. The Record other papers who make such a great to do over some man, who formerly voted the democratic ticket, bolting true, and we ven- and | z Bale jatlarge beea so enthusiastic In localities where democrats have not voted for years they are coming out and attending the meet ings. Look out forthe old-time democratic majority.—Lamar De ocrat. If Major Warner should be elect- Mr. Filley have about ed his friends much governor old and would as 1 gubernatoria in the crater enthusiastic vol- show the at mansion as a snowball and from all appearances d and protuberant active And of an cano the “old” m: with this h as: in is fully ~cquaint great one within the c NES old Missouri.”—-Kansas Col. Dick Dalton estimates thot Stone's majority over Warner will be 40.000 votes. and his knowledge of the campaign affords him excellent | knowledge of making a fairestimat-. ——Kennett Clipper. | The Saline county papers state} that the recent ses | nal court at ion of the crim'- Marshatl made serious | Nine | ‘negroes and threa white persons were sentenced to the penitentiary | reporter of the Democrat: | |News, who interviewed them, is) authority for the statement that they | jare all republicans.—Jefferson City | ‘inroads on the Warner boom and a Oak Peoria Base Burner Wood Stoves. Oak Garland The Celebrated Charter Oak Cook Stoves dioves baal for wood or coal, or Wood i with Wire Franklsn, ; Gauze Todd, >» Oven Box : Doors, ant j i ‘ ‘ Garland Cannon ; = 'and Peorta Stoves. Cook Stoves “oceries, Hardware, Glass andQueensware Schuttler, Studebaker and Moline Farm | Stone for personal reasons, seems to | Tribune. 5 ' Maj Warner will find to his sor- | row that the web footed people he} have forgotten Isaac Isaacs, Esq, but recently secretary of the Repub- lican State League, who has not claims to have found iu southeast ; only refused to vote for Warner but | Missouii ean vote awful hard in tells some very racy facts about the November, and it is safe to predict | wiley Major's method's, which are! that they won't vote for the suave very unpalatable to the Republicans. | Major, either.—Stoddard County aes i Vindicator. Ti. Trves several weeks ago pub-} ee to the effect that a- that ninety-nine | Mr A...erson, of Schell City, was in | Persous out of every hundred that are Butley and wanted to bet $100 ou, asked by the news gatherers “What's Col. Stone's majority in Vernon, the news?” will give the answer) county. From the Rich Hill Trib-; Don’t know” aud these very per-| une we see that W. T. Huddleson/ sons will get as “hot as a little red (everybody knows Billy) was spoil | wagon” if they do not see soie item ing for just that kind of a bet, and in the next issue of the paper which } ash: perused the columus of bis;they knew at Tell the Trves that item caught his eye. He editor of the news. It is absolutely imm diately wrote to the republican , impossible for him to know and se@® post-uaster at Schell City asking for everything that lished an item An exchange s th»: time. happens, aud even particulars. Of course this republi+ if he does you may be able to en | can p m. did what every gool R. P. lighten hiss upon some point con-| M. under Mr. Wannamuker should) cerning the matter of which he is] do, discourage betting. He wrote) iguorint.—Cass Co. Dein Billy that be was unable to find any- H a Hon Joseph Medul. editor of the body who wanted that bet. Nowif) . : : Y S : Chieayo Tribune, the oldest and} Mr. Huaddleson really wauted that! 5 : i binost intlieatial prper in the west, | bet why didn't Le write to Mr devsou, or to some vool democratic friend who would have taken great An | recently delivered an address before ,;the Ameiican Agricultural Associa- a tion of the west, in whieh he used pleasure in bunting Mr. Anderson = 2 aCe these wor's: ‘I understand the Ee oe as tO.| et when lecnymt bai cbeutarmers rut eu Ll say the 1e fe bet as bad as he wants to make eam- of the west and the planters of the south charged ¥500,000,000 a yer on ther goods, for the profit of protected eastern manufacturers, more than is fair prign material he will find uo trou. eS wall the mon oa Major Warner, or Gener rison or both. ble in placis and necessary on The greatest wrong that was com- $e principles of live and let live.”— mitted upon the people of south- Stockton Journal. west Missouri after the war was the es : bonding of the different counties A young Cass county widow cut by republican courts, without giving ue forty shocks of corn last Satur- the people a cent in return. day and and St. Clair counties together with | certain townships in Bates, Henry poss counties, are now groaning under this fraudulent debt. ve three fellows the mit- The way the fel- Cass ten on Sunday. were cut is shocking. — np y Vernon and other Creighton Times. J. H. Raybourn was deputy county clerk: at the time these bonds were issved in Bates county and we! understand wrote up the recods in! the case. Every other man who was | in any manner connected with that great outrage upon the people has | been relegated to obseurity. Will’ the people of Bates county now re- | ward Mr. Raybourn by electing him) to the best office in the county? 1 Pierce Hackett desires us to say that the account about any meeting of his at Mulberry, as published in | the Tres, is false; he makes the re-! quest. of us as he claims that Mr. | Allen will not do him justice. We) believe the Tres was wrongly in-| formed.—Democrat. | The Times was not wrongly in-| Luckily, you don’t have to take! formed. It gave a correct report | it. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets) of Pierce Hackett’s meeting. Our! 3%¢ better. e They’re sensible. They) informant is as responsible a man a ea as can be found in the township and a with all its disturb-' we prefer to believe him in preferen- ance. hey regulate the liver,! stomach and bowels, as well as) ce to Peirce Hackett. thoroughly cleanse them. They’re, — > the original Little Liver Pills, purely Col. Wm. J. mnaking a bold stand up for Missouri. He has made a strong and brilliant campaign and the democratic hosts of the state are anxious to turn out and! give him a rousing majority —Clin-| ton Democrat. From every par hear glad tidings Stone. COPYRIGHT 10917 Hard to take —the big, old-fashioned pill. It’s emg hard to have to take it, too. You wouldn’t, if you realized fully how it shocks and weakens the one i: smallest and the easiest to take.! One little Pellet for a gentle laxa- tive—three for a cathartic. ick | Headache, Bilious Headache, Con- stipation, Indigestion, Bilious At- tacks, and all derangements of the Liver, Stomach and Bowels are promptly and permanently cured. They're the cheapest, too, for they're guaranteed to give satisfac- tion, or your money is returned: cf the state we) from Col. W. J.} Never before in the history | vegetable, perfectly harmless, the bi |Waeons, Spring Wagons, Top Buggies and Ro::d Carts. Bennett-Wheeler Merc. Co. |BUTLER, MO. The Dalton Gang’s Slayers. Coffeeville, Kan., Oct. 20- officials of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railrcad Company are here this afternoon to distribute the 000 that comp of the extermina Six y gives on account of the Dalton gang. They decided to give each of the far sof the four murdered citizens $1,000 and divide the re- mainding $1,000 among five other John Kloebr being one of The relief fund with this citizens the five. contribution amounts now to $10,975. | Catarrh in the head is a constitu- tional disease, and requires a stitional remedy like Hocd’s Sar aria, to eff-et a cure his The with mouth is abruad in tueland = About 2,000 stump speakers areat present said to be at work in this campaign. maa who works Sheriff's Sale. By Virtue and in pursuance of a judgment and decree of the circuit court of Bates county state of Missouri, render tthe June term thereof, Isvz, In acertain an parti tion wherein Mary C Dark and on Dark herhusband, Margaret |. Deaton and James Deaton her husband, WA Wright and J kK Wright are plaintiffs and Malinda Frazee and DL Frazee ber husband, itarriet D Co: and Fred Cobb her husband, diary A Marstaller, Christena Maddy and W'F Maddy her husband CD Denny, Cordelia Denny, James Denny, Malinda Denny, Mile Hill, Alvin Hill, Ella Hill, Harriet lda Butler acd Fred Butler her husUand, Eunice J Wrigi., Newton E Wright and Frank J Wright, are dcfendants, a certi- tied copy of which decree Las been delivered to ime by the clerk of said court commanding me as sheriff of Bates county, Mo., to it the real estate hereinafter described at the Novem ber term Ixy2, of said court. ‘Iherefore, in pu-suance of said judgment and decree 1, 0 W Hartsock, sheriff of Bates county , Missouri, will on Friday, November h, 1892, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and four o’clock in yhe afternoon of that day, and while said cirenit courtis in session, | offer for sale at public suction tor cash, to the | highest bidder, at th | court house in the east front door of the of Butler, the follow- ing described real estate to-wit Lhe northwest quarter of section twent seven (27) and the northeast quarter or t southwest quarter of section twenty-seven 27) | and the south half of the southwest quarter of the pouthwest quarter of section tinirty-tour 34) all in township forty (40) of rang: one (31) in Bates coun Missouri, west half of Jot three [5] of the northwest quar ver uf section five [5] of township thirty-nine 30] of range thirty-one (31] c. W. HARTSOCK, pheriff of Bates County. ° Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and in pursuance of ajadgment and decree of the circuit court of Bates county state ot Missouri, rendered at the June term thereof, in92, ina certain action in partition wherein Jacob R Wright, W A Wright, Mary C Dark and Preston Dark her husband, Mar- garet EK Deaton and James Deaton her husband are plaintiffs and Harriet Ida Butler and Fred Butler ber husband, Alvin Hili and Elia Hill, are defendants, acertificd copy of which de- cree has been delivered to me by the clers of said court commanding me as sheriff of Bates county. Mo., to sell the real estate hereinafter described at the November term. I=¥2, of said court. Therefore, in pursuance of said judz ment and decree I, CW. Hartsock, sheriff of Bates county, Missouri, will on Friday November 25th, 1892, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and four o’clock in the afternoon of that day, and while said circuit court is in session, offer for sale at public auction, for cash, to the highe t bidaer, at the east front door of the court honse in the city of Butler, the following described real estate, to-wit The north half ot lot ix (+ of the northwest quarter of section four (4) except a strip six- teen feet wide across the south side of the east half thereof, also the east one fourth of the north half of the east half of lot six (6) of the nortbeast quarter of section fire (5) alsoa strip thirty-two feet wide across the north half of et half said lot six (6) of section five (5 adjoining the last described tract of Isnd ail in township thisty-nine (Ss) range thirty-one (S1, in Bates coun’ missouri Cc. W. HARTSOCK, Sherif of Bates County Notice of Final Settlement. is hereby given to ers interested in the es’ deceased, that I, J W next term of the Bates county in Bates county, state of Mi at Batler, Mo., on the lith Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and in pu decree of thecirenit of Missouri, render Isv2 Wherein WA W E Deaton and Jal Mary © Dark and Preston Dark her husband, piaintifs and Eunice J Wright. Frauk J! Wright, Newton E Wright, milo Hill, Kila Hill and Alven Fill defendants, a certified copy of which decree has been delivered by the clerk of said court commanding me as sherift c! Bates county, Mo., to seil the real estate he cribed at the November teri, Ist purt. Therefore, in pursuance of sali juigment and decree, 1, CW. Hart-ock, sher- iff of Bates county, missouri, will on ance of a judgment and rt of ates county state atthe Jane term thereof ght, J RWright, Margaret De: A oher husband, Friday, November 25th, 1892, between the hours of nine o’clock Inthe fore- hvon and tour o’clock in the afternoon of that day, and while said cireuit court isin session, oer for saie at public auction, for cash, to the higheet bidder atthe east front door ot the court Louse in the city of Butler, the foliowing described real estate, to-wit The east halt of jot five (5) of the northeast querer of section five (5) the west halt of lot Hive (5) of the northwest quarter of section four (4) the west half of the east half of lot- six (6) of the northwest quarter of section four [4]; the sonth hialfofthe west half of lot six [6! of the northwest quarter of section four [1] the south half of the east half of lot six [6] of the northeast quarter of section five [5, and the West three-fourths of the north half of t half of lot six {6] of the northeast qua of section five [5) except a strip thirty-two feet half of wide across the north half of the east lot six [6] of the northeast quarter of five (5) all in townsnip thirty-nine range thirty-one (3! {in C 291 ates county sMissouri W HARTSOCK, Sheriff of Bates County. Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and authority of a transcript execution issued from the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Isates county, Missouri, returnabie at the November term, I5g2, Of saidcourtto me directed in favor of Missouri State Bank and against Catharine McCoy, I have levied and seized upon all right, title, iuterest and claim ot, in apd to the tollowing described real estate’ situated in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: The east halt of the southwest quarter of section twenty-three (23] township forty-one [41] range thirty-one [31], Sates County, Missouri, I will on Friday, November 25th, 1892, between the hours ot niie o'clock inthe forenoon and five o’clock in the atter- Noon of that day, at the east front door ot the courthouse in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, scll the same or so much thereot as may be required at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash, to satisty saidexecution and costs. C. W. HA*<TSOCK, Sherift ot Bates County. 9 Sheriff's Sale. By virtue and authority of a general execation issued trom the offic of the clerk of the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, returnable at the November term, 192, of said court to me direcved in favor of Missonri State Bank and against J A Powell, have levied and seized upon all right, title, interest and claim of, in and to the tollowing described real estate sita- sted in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: The south haif of the southwest quarter of section seventeen (1/) and the northwest quar. ter of the northeast quarter ofsection twenty ail in township forty-two (42) range thirty ). Bates county, Missouri, I willon Friday November 25th, 1892. between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- noon aad ve o’ciock in the afternoon of it day at the east front door of the court house in the city of Batier, Bates county, Missouri, sel! the same or so mach thereof as may be requir- ed at public vendue tothe highest bidder for cash to estisfy esid execution and coste c W HARTSOCK, {Notice. In the matter ot the Assigned e stae of C. Cotherin, Geo D McNeil, Assignee November Term, 15g2 Bates Circuit Notice is hereby given that on the rst day or December, 1592, I will submi to the circuit court of Bates county, Mo., accounts of the said assigned thereof, amounts n what account, and will! y, having t ligations in that t sposed of said asse d trom said tru theretrom as such assignee and tor re- lease ot bondsmen therein. Dated, Butler, Mo., this Oct. » 1892. GEO D McNEIL, 49-8t Assignee of C Cotnesiv “e 4 ;