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. 4 | | | | { ( Saives His Views Concerning the Reign _ United States marshals, a view of - no yaluables through the territory; deputy marshals were excluded from | |as those so! ments from the hands they wished | to manacle. When the soldiers had | | gone we came out from the houses’ | of friends, from caverns known only | : Globe-Democrat. Now that the red wave of outlaw- to our hunted band; then we turned | | about and hunted our Lunters. We ry and highway robbery is sweeping | faved one cintive) ctnte | een contd over the Indian Territory, and the | ake as ‘ie es Cook gang is being hunted on all |” wid ft i : ey ee ye , - one alternative—we had to fight. } sides by Indian police and deputy suppose these outlaws in ie ee tory, their leaders at committed some FRANK JAMES TALKS. ot Outlawry in the Territory. the situation as it presents itself to feast, have the mind of Frank James, whose ne placing them ae beyond the pale ciety. When! own name once inspired terror bi tl " é . |botly pursue W etwe. to throughout the state cf Missoun, is ied a eae | their mountain s in the} not aimiss. A stranger would not sus- tes : fi 2 west, and the war will be one of} pect that the quiet, delicate looking 1 7 Be : | man, with piercing grey eyes, who Cpe aee ob: | Tue muthoxtticewilt ie eS arey c7e% get them finally, but aoany al acts in the capacity of cashier during 1 see in the dispatches ihat t! e Cook Kk jman will die in the undertaking. the afternoon at Walsh & Cella’s pool room, on Sixeh street, was none | = yang isin camp bere all other than the noted bandit. Nor|&.-% i ee ld th sires Per Such assertions to men who kyow| > dataam eT Ae what it is to be hunted are vi | the Fravk James of their fancy to the peacea- ble, mild-mannered doorkeeper at the Standard theater. But at both | of these places he is a trusted em- ploye. At his post at the Standard, | collecting tickets, a Globe Democrat reporter found him last night. He glanced at everybody who went in. Every one scrutinized him. That's Frank James” remarked one theater goer to another. “No, it isn’t. He's dead,” was the reply “Besides, he don’t look tough enough.” This conversation came to Frank James’ ears, provoking a slight smile. The rush over, the whilom bandit was asked what he thought about the situation in the Indiau Territory. He seldom alludes to incidents of the kind, and when he does so seems always desirous of changing the subject Having oxce consented to speak about the depredations and the bandits whose names have be- come synonymous with murder, rapine and bloodshed, he expressed himself very freely and showed him- self a close observer of current events. “In the first place,” he said, “the inhabitants are in a fearful state of uncertainty. Commerce is suspend- ed; the express companies will send reconcile monstrous ridiculous, or else go to show | the gang is densely ignorant. ‘I outlaws are to be found by the ini - shals in secret friends and in ut nooks, in hoi {he m Should pursued and pursuer oy meet on the open prairie of the terri | | tory, itis bard to say bow many would be left alive io tell the tale. Some would escape, for I never saw a fight yet where all were killed. | But a prairie fight, whe there is no tree or feuce or shelter, is gener- ally a massacre.” | BUR(ED CONFEDERATE ARMS, A Brass Cannon, Rifles, Bayonets, Ete. Discoyered from an Old Well In Maryland. Cumberland Gap, Tenn, Oct. 29. —This place is all stirred up over the late discovery of a number of arms, ete, bumed during the late war. The story of their resurrection is as follows: “A few days ago a Mr. Martin, an ex Confederate soldier from Lynch- burg. Va., who is now United States storekeeper and gauger, while dis cussing the late war with Col. Cock- erill, and ex-Federal soldier aud President of the Eastern Kentucky Land Company,told him that during the war he and others had, at the order of Gen. John H. Morgan, buri | ed twenty-five eases of Enfield rifles, | several hundred bayonets and pistols, \ the outlaws are dangerous, desper- ate, thoroughly acquainted with the country, and loyal, so far, to each All things considered, they the United States marshals and Indian police. The gang would not dare meet the officers in open contlict, however, anless entrapped or suddenly over- | taken. Besides it is my opinion that the bandits are no longer grouped | togther. They have been pursued | pretty closely of late, and if they} have any sense at all they have scat tered in twos and threes, are pr by their laughing in their retreats, just like five barrels of whisky and numerous lothier. other articles, such as cooking ves- ete All had been placed in a large well 150 feet deep. Col. Cockerill took a force of hands next day and went to work hunting for the well, and succeed in locating it within a few feet of the| corner-stone where the three States | Tennessee, Virginia and Kentucky, | come together. “They located the well, after re-| -| moving several feet of earth, sand, | ete only have the advantage of sels, shovels, axes, tected friends, and are They have so far gone down) > feet, and have taken out sev- | we guerrillas used to do during the jeral cases of the guns in goed con- But these fellows seem to be} 2 determined set, and they will net When the chance of- harness. It! fers they will break some |i8 said that when their last load was point least protected. They will not put in the well the whe en off the wagon and thrown i p | rat dition, some not even rusted; a large | number of cannon bal i sels, four wago: vheels, remain quiet. els, four wagon whee out at ls were tak nd rong | leave the Indian territory, because | : outside of it they are lost They | the other part destroyed. will not be captured nor killed off | the latest things by the deputy marshals in a day nor | | a week, nor a mouth, and the feder- taken out was 2 cannon, supposed to be the one the advertised for tensively a few years ego, and offer ed a reward of $5,000 for. It a brass cannon that was borrowed | the British Goverument. | Among some other articles taken out | is a brass kettle containing a lot of} old coins. The work will be contin-} ued until the bottom of the well is! Government sO eX al government need not expect it } It will take time and money. And while we are speaking of money, it| isa shame and a mistake that the) is from | the right of the reward offered for | the capture of the outlaws, dead or alive. They get little enough at best. and in,pursuit of such a gang as Cook's life is iu continual peril.” “Do you think that the troops could quell the reign of terror!” » “When Cleveland sent troops into Chicago despite the protest of Gov- ernor Altgeld, he remarked that the house was afire. So is the house afire in the Indian territory now, yet no troops are sent into the terri- tory on account of some treaty or red tape or other. The troops would have a great effect in dampening tke ardor of this restless gang. It would scatter them more effectually than I think they are now. But even then the outlaws would not be cap tured or exterminated for a long time. Right after the war General Ewing issued a proclamation placing 1,000 men in the saddle until all the reached.” | Whisky in Coflins. Emporia, Kan., Oct. 30.—An io genious method of surreptitiously | obtaining and selling whisky in Vio- | lation of the prohibitory law came} to light yesterday in the district | court, where Richard Brisco. of Al-| len, an undertaker, was bound over | in $500 to appear at the next term! of court. He had been several times: previously charged with violating | the law, but it was not until yester-| day that his intoxicants were found | He runs an undertaking establish. | ment, and he had his stuff concealed | in the coffias. ed into the Ocone river this after-| oon and was drowned. The act was deliberate, and suicide was the bushwhackers were exterminated.|intention. No cause is assigned, What did we do? We scattered; | except.a possible love affair, in which “went to our friends; laughed a little | he had been rejected. . : E ! diers received refresh-! not being fully guaranteed: in our illustrated cat~ alegue which you can’ obtain free et ours agencies or Dy for two two cent s mail i d y under engine an ir in this section of the THE CREEDINESS OF of harness and saddles in McFarland Bros. the largest and most complete stock To carry A. O Welto Staple: Feed and Provisions of all Kind NUEENSWARF AND GLASSWARE CICARS AND TOBACCO, | cooking ves- Always pays the highet market price for County Produces East Side Square. Butler, Mo- The Times ¢ 1 Rates. Seda Mo., October 31M Parorden meee en of the Carles L. Keck was to day nx South-west y have an excuse for posted on the develop- ments of the interesting political campaign which is just opening, The Times has made a special cam- paign rate of $1.20 for the daily aud Sunday paper, and 25 cents for The Twice A-Week Times until February 1. While The Times is an earnest jand fearless supporter of Democratic principles, it is, and always has been, liberal enough to open its columns to representatives of different politi cal opinions for the discussion of their views. In the columns of The Times the important news of the campaign of 1894 will be set forth fully and fairly. Its news facilities are unequalled by those of any other newspaper published in the South- west At the prices made either the daily or the Twice a-Week edition should be in tue bands of every man who holds to those ecenomie princi- ples for the success of which the | people of the West are contending. ; Athens, Ga, October 31.—James | Liberal terms to agents and post-, Shewen, a Scotch stone-cutter, walk- | masters. Sample copies free. What's the Use ot Talking About colds and coughs in the sum- mertime. You may have a tickliug cough or a little cold or baby may have the croup and when it comes you ought toknow that Parks cough Syruy is the best cure for it. Sold by H. L. Tucker, acest ) iO poe is a double diamond frame gg gracefal in design- It is light and tougl to the we 1 Made under our own supervision, in our own factory, of our own finest cold drawn seamless steel tubing, with every jeint_and part scientifically tested, it is a Worthy backbone for a famous wheel state proved too much for the Fancy Groceres, ‘Wall Paper, Carpets, Paints | WINDOW SHADES, PICTURE FRAMES, WINDOW GLASS vs Supplies of every descript Agency for SHERWIN-WILLIAM CO wo aren ern ee i THE ighest degree and is aud WEIDER PAINTS, the most and econonical paints made. One Block North Post Ofice, reliable cost of Ce EN How the Tariff Harts. The calamity bowlers were confront ed yesterday with a dispatch in their own newspapers from Pittsburg conveying the news that ground is » be broken at once in New Kess- ngton, Pa. for the foundation of a i tin plant, which, when it is complet- _ed,will be the largest tin plate works in States The estimated the works is $300,000 and United their output will be sixty tons of tin see Butler, Mo plates daily. Another concern, the DY W. Drummond Pittsburg Tin Plate Manufacturing ere Company.it was also announced that Tram Robber Hoffman's Latest. at once erect a mili with a capacity Sedalia, Mo., Oct. 31.—C. F. Hoff) of thirty Sa. Tees BOSTON, 2279 man, the Cooper county train rob res the ‘veld tariff cNEW YORK, ber, who was released from the! y all sround z S22 CHICAGO. Howard county jail at Fayette last iw security is established.—N. a HARTFORD. | Thursday by a colored trusty named y, World. |Emanuel Streit, arrived at Kuob- | poster last Sunday morning and} sed himselt off as W. H. Harris H jhiredatwo horse buggy at Hay li stable and was driven to War rensburg by Mr. Hays, proprietor of the stable. ment for breakfast Hoffma a forged check for $10, and a well known Sedalia liveryman the aged Ie see the dless variety of oO jeured tLe cash ou a second forged e ;one fer the t. At 8} © octock Mr Hays left for some point} ‘south of Holden with his patron, | | whow he supposed to be Liveryman | j Harrab j time nothi , of this city, and since that! of the! ng bas been hear |tugitive or of Mr. Hays or his team |The belie? prevails at Kuobnoster > Call ices and the en ‘that Mr. Haye bas been murdered | iby Heffman, who then approprated ‘the horses and buggy inthe hope of | driving through the country and es | 3 jcaping. An Old Rybme Reset. |“AfHliction sore long time she bore Physiciaus were iu vain.” | At last one, a friend sa ; “You'd soou be well lit you would take. as I did, Dr.; | Picree’s Favorite Prescription, tor that is the cure for all the peculiar ailments of women. It is a safe, | simple and sure remedy. It banishes {those distressing maladies that male | woman's life a burden, curing ult | painful irregularities, uterine disord- jers, ipflammatious and ulceration, ‘prelapsus and kindred weaknesses | As a nervine it cures nervous exhaus- jtion, prostratiou debility, relieyes jmiental anxiety and bypochondiia jand reshing sleep.” She | *Favor- is the only remedy | for the delicate derangements and COW BOY and the drive wheels gave wa -upin pr lio MeFarland Bros, the p the tremendous weight. smash-up | horse millinery. rooster, induces took the advice and is well lite Prescription” | Wee ss of females, sold by drug- | gists, under a positive guarantee of of curing in every case, or & 3 Inoney | paid for it returned. Freeport, Iil., Nov. 1.—A mob of 50 men appeared at the county jail | hat 3a get Thomas Beverly land Otto Herbig, charged with the |murder of August Altemeier, Jr. m. to 2 Oe | Plans had been discussed early the previous evening by 300 men at an icehouse in a secluded part of the city. Armed deputies around the{ 'jail served to bluff the mob. | The coroner’s jury adjourned uu- \til 9a m. Friday, when new devel- ;Opments a re expected. Altmeier’s| funeral will take place to-morrow. Hog Cholera in Ohio, ati, O., Nev. 1.—A serious ¢ of hog cholera threatens} ion aud are alarmed oi fifty miles of 00 b of the death of Gottlieb Frue who was devoured las batchelor uncle, | pnati over have died} 1 of the dread disease. Thousands beasts in the wilds of ornia,|more are sick aud many are dying where he has been engaged in min-|hourly. The epidemic is wid ead He and extends through southwestern | bank | 12dian along the northern borders | jof Kentucky and into southwestern | "? | Obio. that will go to relatives in Pettis, | as the! The Weeky_Kansas City Star. | Addresses the farmer as a business | {man and a citizen. Doesn't tell bim eerie of BOW to farm, but how to s and} where and when, and keeps a vigil-| ing for a quarter of a century. left a large sam of money in aud mining claims of great value, Cole aud Mergan counties, deceased left no will Ardmore, I. T.. Nov. habeas SEE vSieas argued to-day | ant eye upon his rights as a shipper! before Judge Stuart to save the life}, producer andetax payer. All the of Silan Lewis. the Choctaw Indian | news, too, and plenty of “good read- under sentence of death and to be!ing” for the family. Now read in| shot within a few days unless the | 100.000 farm houses. Fifty two big | United States interferes in his be- jeigbi-page newspapers for 25-cente:| half. Lewis i t th o any one who sends the Weekly alf. Lewis is one of the men whose | Star ¢y ; subscribers together crime grew out of the political revo-} with ¥1 the paper will be sent one lutions that have disturbed that! year free. couutry for the past several years. | SHANNON & BINKLEY, Judge Stuart refused to interfere in| | wood raised jsiou, and | carrying dark lanterns. A Sound Liyer Makes a Well Man. i 1 or trou- Sick Head e, bad 11 breath, coated ia, Indigestion, hot dry back and between the Us and tever, &c. If you any of these symptoms, your liver erand your blood is slowly your liver does rbine will cure ali ch or bowels ers, ch edicine, Price yttles at H. L. 4S ty ash Haywood. Kansas City, Nov. 1—Twenty | boys, celebrating Hallowees, halted in front of Mr. Haywood’s home in at midnight. Hey- a window and fired both barrels of a shotgun into the crowd. Independence Fiye boys were dangerously wounded. Herbert Anderson, son of J.C. Anderson, a fruit grower, had an eye shot out; ©. C. Childs, Jr., son of C. C. Childs, president of the First N: Bauk, had _ his hand mangled; Frank Anderson, son of A. F. Anderson, a lumberman, had his scalp and face filled with shot; Eruest Wood, son of Bank Cashier Matt B. Wood, was shot in the hand; Tom Kennedy was shot in the abdomen. ional Specimen Cases. 3 S. H. Chittord, New Cassel, Wis., was trouble with Neguralgia and rheumatis: his stomach was disordered, his liver was attected to an alarming degree, ap- petite tell away, and he was terribly re- duced in flesh and strength. Three bottles ot E tric Bitters cured him. ward Shepherd, Harrisburg, IIl., a runuing sore on his leg of eight rs’ standing. U-ed thiee bottles ot Slectric Bitters and seven boxes of Buch- len’s Arnica e, and his leg is sound and well. J Speaker, Catawha, O., had five la Fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bottle Electric Bitters and one box Bucklen’s Aanica Salve cured him en- tire Soldat H. L. Yuckers’ drug store. Heartless Deed. Memphis, Tenn., Nov. 1.—Yester- day at noon Bob Caruthers, a horse trader, while drunk ordered Joe Alexander to saddle his horse which Alex- ander, so Caruthers says, refused. Alexander was in Bruce's livery stable. and Carathers shot him. died this morning. Bystanders say not a word passed but that Caruthers pulled out his pistol and banged away from a dis- tance of 39 feet. Caruthers is in jail. Robbed by Masked Men. Clinton, Io., October 31.—Between 9 and 10 o'clock last night sixteen men, of whom were tramps who had been at work sayibg their anoney by beating their way home, were in a box car. There was a rap for admis- those inside, supposing some one wanted shelter, opened the door. On the outside were four men masked and armed with pistols and Two of the men entered the car and commanded to throw up their ‘fbey then ordered them to in line, and while one of therm sowie and others and were the occupatts hands stand | held the pistol his companions went through the outfit They secured $400 iu cash and two watches. Served onthe Monitor. Decatur, il., Oct. 31.—Henry M. Gossett, a veteran of the jate war, died Decatur to-day, aged 54 years. He was of French descent and was one of the very few sursiv- in \ers of 4 historical naval engagement. He was one of the crew which did such brave work in the death dealing his behalf. Lewis will be shet. | ' a piesera see | Our merebants teli us that they! - | are having trade from beyond Archie | People will come tc a town that ad-! | vertises and one that will sell goods | below that of other towns. Butler jis a great trading point and the jtown has some active wide-a-wake | business men. DREXEL, MO. If you are wanting a well drilled write us and we will see you. 36-3m. Monitor when the rebel vessel, the Merrimec, was knocked out of time. Mr. Gossett’s hearing was seriously impaired in the engagement, and his nervous system received a succes- sion of shocks from which he never recovered. He will be buried with imposing military honors by Dun- ham Post.