The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 14, 1895, Page 3

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AINT cracks It |eot of Captain Thomas H. Hires’| house for repainting that has been | of the first floor cells. The bricks| painted in the first place with cheap | and mortar under seven cells were| ready-mixed paints, than it would removed leaving a thin crust of | to have painted it twice with strict- | cement under each cell cot. A tun-| - pure white lead, ground in pure | ye} was then made crossing beneath Sta le 5 Fanc Groce res inseed oil. the corridor coming out in the jail io) 5 yard. “On the night of the escape as | they came from supper, brother! Dick changed cells with the general | unnoticed by the gaurd. Strictly Pure White Lead forms a permanent base for repaint- ing and never has to be burned or scraped off on account of scaling or cracking. It is always smooth | and clean. To be sure of getting broke the crust of cement in their cells, dropped into the tunnel, cume | strictly pure white lead, purchase out into the yard, scaled the fence | any of the following brands: lover each others backs, using roped Alw Vs pays “ ” » |bed clothes to drop on the otber|“"° "SS FS? Southern, Red Seal, laide. Each of the seven left » dum “Collier.” |my on the cot of the cell. . ; “a _ | cape was first discovered by | a rope on the wall. at first that State convicts had es caped. They were called out. the| roll called and then found all there. | A burried search was then Produces The es It was thought made of {the cells of the prisoners of war. |The seven cells on the | were found vacant. | “I was standing by Warden | Marion soon after, as we were called | A New Story of How He Got Away | out in the corridor on the first floor. | From the Ohio Penitentiary - | Merion said: ‘Morgan, I am glad the Columbus, Ohio, March 6.—The|Seneral did not escape. I would) Columbus Dispatch to-day sent a{rather all the rest got away than | is Branch nth Street, S lower floor GENERAL MORGAN’S ESCAPE. es Fink’s Leather Tree Saddle reporter to John Radebaugh, on jhim. Let's go up and see the gen | nd y ve reacbe. ¥ ¥ Swan street, to get information eral.’ When we reached Morgan’s about the men who led the horses eeli and Merion saw brother Dick car which | there in his place he exclaimed: ‘My |God, the general has escaped!’ There was no mistaking his surprise aud Besides lutely none but Morgan’s men knew attached to the funeral carried Lincoln's remains through the streets of Columbus, en route from Washington to Springfield, Lil. Mr. Radebaugh at the time was| chief clerk to the United States as- sisting quartermaster, the late Colo- nel Raymond Burr, located in this city. Speaking of various matters about the war, Mr. Radebaugh gave an account of the escape of General Jobn Morgan and his thirteen com- rades from the Ohio penitentiary, saying Secretary Stanton ordered their release. Stanton said Morgan was being held in a felon’s prison in violation of the rules of war. The Confederates were threatening re- taliation. Stanton sent a secret order to Governor Todd to release Morgan. The situation was explained to Todd. It was feared the public could not be made to understand the circum- stances. There was intense feeling against Morgan among the people. Radebaugh says “Governor Todd cailed a Colonel Young, his military secretary, War- den Merion of the penitentiary, Colonel Barr, the quartermaster and myself.” It was decided to alow Morgan to escape. Merion was to manage the escape. We were pledg- ed to secrecy. Morgan and his men understood the subject and walked out of the front door. Some of them were taken in a wagon to West Jef-!T) the first stages of the disease ferson, to take a train for Cincinnati. Pe-ru-na is a sure cure; in the later I, myself, met John Morgan just] stares of the disease Pe ru na can outside the prison and weat with |}, relied upon to produce great | told him to the depot, where he took the | ponotit, | vonsiernation. abso- of the plan of escape till all were gone. “The citizen's clothes worn by the} general were sent him by Colonel Bob Hollins, the race horse man of Cincinnatti, for whom the general had done a kindness in racing mat- ters.. None of the prisoners of war were subjected to the indignity of wearing convict garb, though their heads and faces were shaved. They were allowed to receive suits from friends, and also to write letters under the supervision of the author- ities.” Money By The Peck. DK. HARTMAN. Said Ina Recent Lectare On Chronic | house Catarrh and Consumption. Gatarrh of the lungs is, ordinarily, known as consumption; also cailed tuberculosis. In the catarrh has usually found its way into the lungs by the gradual exten- | dents of Forbes, whom they brought sion of the disease from the throat |? this city and locked up. They through the bronchial tubes. Con.-|#'so captured a full set of counter distance east of the town of Forbes, eighteen miles north of this city, and captured Joseph ‘Tribble, Ed- ward Frieburg and John Reiubart, all well-known and prominent resi conference with these cases of all cases of neglected chronic ca- jand nearly half a peck of spurious tarrh.Every one who is afflicted with silver dollars. The dollars purport chronic catarrh is liable to be attack- : os ed with ‘consumption at any time. ;such good quality that it is almost impossible to detect them from the genuine. After being arrested Trib ble made a full who to be of the issue of 1593 and are of confession and also the were confederates, train for Cincinatti This was about | eases produce a permanent cure. All jsome 1 10 o'clock at night. I suppose Gov-!those aflieted with this dread dis ernor Sodd either destroyed the! ease should begin at once the follow- a order from Stanton or concealed it | ing treatment: onths past the counties north have been flooded with Ars (of this ci and the govern service had been un Last night Tribble were at Forest among his personal effects. I am | the den. After all other means have been , the only person living who too part | tried in vain; after doctors have pro- in the affair.” 'nounced the case hopeless andj City It has always been believed by] friends have given up ino despair; the s maby persons that Morgan bought | after the patient bas lost all faith |* his wav out, and Warden Merion and the incessant care of attendants | was greatly censured by the public,|geems futile, still there is hope in| Luscious Products. but an investigation under official] peru na. Send for a free copy of | Lyscious old wines from the Specr’e authority cleared his skirts. The) Pamily Physician, No. 2, a complete Oporto Grape Vineyards, Passaic wanner of the “escape” and all the | trestise on chronic catarrh, coughs, |J., are being largely orderd by f clreumstances seem to indicate that) colds, la grippe and consumption. |! in London, Dres it could not have been accomplished | Address The Peru na Drug Manu- biieee prea oes as as originally reported. Mr. Rade-| facturing Company, Columbus, Obio. Pg eee becca baugh’s reason for making the affair} Por free book on cancer, address public is that he will soon pass away, | De Marines (Columban Ohio. and no blame will now be attached to men who set Morgan free. | vassed a large amount of They became i en and Paris, superior to A Silver Mine Near Holden A dispatch from Holden to the Louis adies—For diseases of women, Dr Sawyer’s Pp les will reach the dittenlty radically St. i ¢ While digging a well o1 | positively and effectually. it is mild but | Sie aie and ina large per cent. of | Who will be arrested to-night! For | youthful ’ East Side Square. Butler, Mot McFARLAND BROS. Harness and Saddlery, MeFarland Bros, harness men of Bates single buggy harness, $7.50 to = hand harness from ¥3 to $15. St. Joseph, Mo . March 8.—United | | States Marshal Smith and a force of | | deputies made a raid tonight on the ; of Joseph Tribble, a short | i | | | Feed and Provisions of all Kinds. CICARS AND TOBACCO, the highet market vrice for Countv South Side Square Butler Mo. the pioneer Mo. county, Double wagon harness from $10 to $293) mantic story, in which stern parents ppointed guests are | second Saddles of all stylesand prices, from the cheapest to} Bring your old harness and trade in on new ones. Wrecked LaPorte, Ind, March 38.—New Carlisle, 14 miles east of this city, Vault ited by cracksmen last night The sleep- ing ened by a loud explosion, and a rapid exchange of shots between the robbers and the night watchman An entrance had been forced into the bank of Service & Sen, and the vault Llown open, the vigilance of ge was awa! | the watchman preventing the looting sumption is the natural termination , «ters tools including moulds, dies | ficials refuse to give tigures. | the broken down of of Europe. ; Globe-Democrat of Mon | RADEBAUGH'’S STORY DENIED. eftectaal. Sold by H L Tucker. his . five miles south of this / Lexington, Ky., Mch. 6.—Captain | Potosi, Mo.,March 6.—F. M. Paul, city, on Hil, aie of Nebras Charlton H. Morgan, brother of living six miles north of Potosi. !fouod what is believed to be General John Morgan, who, with his committed suicide yesterday by cut 1" Paying dt ntities. The as the RKlo; only bav few months ago. ting his throat from ear te ear. The know Tn ’. Morgan. was in; bos : other brother, R. C. Morgan act was done ia the presence of his the sale the Obio penitentiary up to the time daughter, and was caused from de- of the general’s escape, when shown | spoudency. Radebaugh’s statement about said: ustein place, gov- That ble: there were 8 Care for Headache ercment connivance, story is impo enty of Morgan’s meu in the peni tentiary, thirty five in single cells on} the first floor and the same number} on the floor above. Brother Dick : had a cell on the first floor afd the} sites cures by general on the second floor. A tun-| to the hence maid nel was made with knives stolen from | Dee estes ony B the tables; a hole was cut under the| Tucker's Drug Store, j the croup | to know -| that when AM j ' Kansas City with a stop over of the safe. The robbers had pre- viously stolen the horse and buggy of Dr. MeDor sued, made their escape into Michi- The safe contained a large amount of deposits. The bank of- 1d, and, though pur- gan. — + Part in Every Seat. Kansas City, March 7.— entered the Liberty street church yesterday and Kan, miscreants when the congregation arrived for prayer meeting last evening they fouad every seat, chair and pulpit genero baubed with fresh paint. A bucketful of the fluid had been poured into the organ. The meeting was adjourned to a class room. Zano invigor: mulates and builds up Zano cures mental ofmen. Sold by H. L. and nervous deb: Tucker The Independence Sentinel says the Salt Lake Mormons go on a trip East they always go by check and come to Independence to press foot on the sacred soil of the temple lot. Colonel Calvin James, the *Barbe- cue king” of Platte county, is dead. He lived near Easton and in the | grove near his home was riggeda | fall set of roachinery, ovens, etc., necessary to barbecues. He was known all over the Platte Purchase. ng been made a! A specimen of the | Perfect Health. jousnes dred disea s, anabsolute cure :| TUTT’S Liver PILLS | iworked hard i“Mamma, They | keep everything that bLorse owners need. ‘Child Remains Impated 24 Hours! room on the frst floor and sunk to | | often costs more to prepare a | the arched tunnel running under all " t O n Paris, Tex., March S —Deputy| Sheriff Sam Wood, just returned, from the northwestern portion of the county, reports a horrible acci- dent at T Bul had just finished boring a 10 inch well, gertown. Gee 20 feet deep, and removed the auger, | when his 15 months-old child tod- g through the yard dragging a stick, dropped it in hole and innocently stepped in after it, the falling over 20 feet and becoming impaled astride the stick Hundreds of nei and set to w by digg feet ors assembled rescuing the child ve square hole a few depth and t was 4 p. m. when the ch in, and scores I night and next day ;until 3 p. m., before it was rescued, | vied astride the pole Phe cries Mamma, come take me |out,” were heartrending, and were | kept night m A cup of at intervals during the! gled with cries for water ilk was let down and the | child had presence of mind to take} and drink it | When reseued it was unconscious | and exhausted, but will recover, al-! tho ugh itis paralyzed in the lower} mpaled so long. Locked ina Vault. go, Mareb 7.—-The breach of | suit of Ds ph operator, D Gardner, a} | sy trade operator, has developed a ro- | big iron vaults, an imprisoned bride- + groom and dis | mingled in charming confusion. jand the like in an office very near the board of trade, where young 'Stone is employed in his father’s office. The young people met often d id did th t—or would McFarland Bros. wiv’ 2te cue e Butler Missouri. | the senior Stone had not interfered. | The wedding day was set, lthe court bill, the guests and the bride was ready, 80 says arrived but the neccessary groom did not come. The guests went home, and next day, Miss Gardner declares, young Stone came to ber with a peculiar explanation. His father, he said, had discovered the proposed wed- jding, remonstrated, and, finding the | young man obstinate, pushed him jintoa large office vault and kept i him locked up until the wedding | hour was safely passed. Miss Gard- |ner could not see the joke and sued | young Stone for $10,000 for breaeh jof promise, in the hope, she says, | that her former father in law appar- jeut will have te foot the bill. Stone | Sr, admitted in an interview to-day | that he bad prevented the marriage, | but emphatically denied that he bad locked his son in a vault. silver demo- | cratic party is wrong and entire) |misleading. The ‘old’ democracy is la silver coinage party, and those |members who have faithfully held to |this printiple are simply troding the {old narrow | The idea of “ne beaten path, refusing to be led into the broad way of gold mono metalisin that leads to destruc- ition. Bi tone Bryan and those wh 1 firm together onthe demo- jeratic demand are soldiers of the old guard and are not organizers of either a new party or new idea.—Jeff. City Tripune Shot His Brothers, Newkirk. Ok, March. 5.—About 9 o'clock. this morning Curtis Cole-} man, living six miles east of here, brought the news to our town of the killing of his brocher, 14 years old by Cyrus Cowat, who fatally wound- ed the other broti through the lu er, shooting bim g Cyrus Cowen, | was arrested and put in jail. The trouble was over a claim of thirty acres lying iu the Arkansas river bettor Mayes & Son were also arrested for being nmplicated in the affair. Due dicine. Price ttles at CH. L. i clothes were | tive miles inst George} W. Stone, son of a wealthy board of | Daisy Gardner is a very pretty | the best STEEL FORK “COW BOY | girl, who takes stock quotations and | SADDLE” made in this country. A Fearfal Accident. Wiliam Richards, ajfarmer liv near Otterville, while clearing ber from a part of his farm Wednes- day, started large fires to burn the brush. While engaged at this work his little five year old daughter,who ventured was fire, too el She be running. e frightened and began Her mother attempted to eateb her but could not do so. The child exhaustion. Her off and she died yesterday after having fell from burned under* gone terrible suffering. Mrs. Richards’ clothes took fire and she was badly burned‘on the right thigh and side Mr. Richard's hands burned. also were also Mrs. Toby, of this city. who is a sister of Mrs. Richard, received word that she could not live and she weni to Otterville on the noon train to be at her sister's bedside.—Sedalia Bazoo. Shot his Pather-in-Law. Seneca, Mo, March 7.—The Ser- eca res Tudian ation, Territory, southwest of this city, was the scene of a fatal shooting this morning in which Alex Zane, a citi- zen of the reservation, about 50 years old, was instantly killed by his sen- in-law, ry Wallace The diffi- culty arose over the boundary lines of some land owned by the contest- and the killing to-day is the result of an old fued of long standing, Wallace having been an objectionable son-in-law to Zane Wallace offered to give himself up, but was referred to the officers of the territory. ants Milligan Agam Sentenced to Hang- Perry, Ok., March 7.—John Milli- gan, the murderer of Gabe and Han- nab Clark, who has been twice sen- tenced yesterday to hang Wesdnes- day, March 13, and it is very prob- able that time that Oklahoma will! have a hanging, which will be the first legal banging in her history. Milligan was brought before Judge H. W. Scott and resentenced to bang on the above date, he having been respited from January 11 Act- ing Governor Lowe. How’e This! We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- ward tor any case ot Catarrh that can- not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props. Toledo, We the undersigned, have known F J. Cheney for the last. 15 years, and be- neve him perfectly honorable in his business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations mace by that firm. West & Truax, Wholesa Druggists, ‘Toledo, Ohio. Walding, Kinnan & Mar- vin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, QO. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internal- | ly, acting directly upon the blood and } mucous surtaces of the system. Price 75¢ per bottle. Suld by ail druggists. | Testimonials tree. 12-17 Bob Ingersoll particularly severe on the New Jersey clergy, at Hoboken, because they attempted to stop his lecture and had police on was nach or bowels } hand to arrest him in case of blas- | phemy. “There is pot a criminal ‘lawyer in the land,’ he said, “who accepts a preacher as a juryman, be- cause he knows that priests have uo idea of justice tempered with mercy.” | The punishment for seoffing at the Bible in New Jersey is a fine ;of $200 and imprisonment at hard labor for a year.—Jefferson City | Tribune. John Brown's Fort. Harper's Ferry. W. Va. March ¢ | —The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad company. which is making extensive ‘improvements here, took the land | upon which is the old landmark and place of historic interest, the John Brown fort, is erecting a monument to murk the spot. The monument jis of native marble and stands 25 feet high on a base eight feet equare. The sbaft and base are rough hewn and artistic and the base bears the inseription, “Jobn Brown's Fort” Absolutely Free. Auy reader of this paper can get | Lhe St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Ab- solutely free for three months. the offer in this issue aud take ad- vantage of it at once. The weekly Globe-Democrat is issued in Semi- Weekly sections, eight pages each, Tuesday aud Friday, sixteen every week, making it practically a Semi- Weekly paper, yet the pri one doilar a y In politi strictly Re an, but it g Read is only j promptiy | and keep thoroughly posted. Sample | Copies will be sent free on applica- tion to Globe Printing Co., St. Leuis 48 +7 | Missouri.

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