The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 9, 1905, Page 2

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we & Pi ' rele nla THOSE LIBEL SUITS. Itis said that Sam Cook will ly bring suit in Randolph counts cir- evit court against the Globe Demo erat for $250,000 damages f 1 published against him in the past BULLER WEEKLi TIMES J. D, ALLEN, Enbrror. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: The Wsextr Times, published eyery Tursday, will be sent to any address/ year, Henry Julian has already aah stage paid, for $1.0 ° hy m > at ne vear, oostage paid, for $1.00 broughtsuit against the Kansas City ste it i nid Maror FOR CONSTABLE. olan, and it is oak ex-Maror and Ve are authorized t ounce jcandidate fur the Demoer somi W. 0. RADFORD nation for governor, James A Reed candidate for conatable of Mt. Pleasant town- “ a : i poy canbett tothe action of the wemocratic | willsue the Star and the Post. Dis peda sssciinr oe —___|pateh. Senator Morton is reporte: TORTIE OF me PEALE, to have recently said that libel suits We are authorized to announce ; de gies B, F, JETER against metropolitan papers in Mis 85 a candidate for Justice of the Peace of Mt.) souri would be brought within the Pleasant townrhip, subject to the action of the Democratic primaries, saturday, March 11,/ year for amounts aggrez one 1.05 ee . : = million dollars. [tis a notable fax that the city papers have been tak- FOR COLLECTOR We are authorized to anueunce : . per Kil. B, CHILDS ing unwarranted livense wiih the asacandidate for collector of Mt. Pleasant} names of public men. Oa the flim- yject to the action of the demo- ratic convention, FOR ASSESSOR, siest pretext, and on evivence that n reputable prosecuting officer would ee coats . yeeeny 43 think of basing a prosecution before asa candidate for assessor of Mt, Pleasant] the courts, these papers have held towne eet to etic p e De . . crate pltnery, Staron itth i008, 0 Pe cup public officials up before the pub lic, when if what they published was true, they were criminals and ought hide cry recon to have been in the penitentiary. asacandidate for assessor of Mt, Plearant] While the rights of the press and free Senile primasy, Misteh ithe 308. —— speech ought not to be abridged, a newspaper should not be permitted Seventy millions in gold have been | so slander a public officer, and when exported during the past fivemonths | ghey do they should be taught that and there is no new silver coinage to] they must be fortified with proofs to take ite place —The Commoner. substantiate every charge or suffer Nota bit of railroad legislation ig | the penalty. A man who by a life of to come from the present congress, devotion to duty, honored and - The ratlroads have the government, spected by men for his integrity, not the government the railroads,— should not have his character and Post Dispatch reputation blasted by the evidence of some moral leper or irresponsible A well-defined plan has beenformed | gensationalist, Men in high places by western Congressmen and Sena-|are not above legitimate criticism, tors to obtain an annual appropria-| and {tis clearly the province of the ton of $5,000,000 for the improve-| newspapers to point out any short- ment of the Missouri river. comings, wherein the public service is neglected or {njured, but a paper that leaves the realms of the ligiti- mate and publishes a mess of stuff to confuse the public and reflect upon the official, for partisan purposes, should be punished to the fullest ex- tent. FOR ASSESSOR, Congress adojurned without doub- ling the president’s salary. Mr. Roosevelt will have to getalong with $50,000 a year and fuel, light, rent and servante free, in spite of the in- crease In living. eee : iy eee —— oe THE POOR TRUSTS, wo diametrically opposing forces. He signs a rescript promising popu Commissioner of Corporations in lar reformeand then before the ink is] te Labor Bureau, James A. Garfield, cold issues a manifesto at the in-| 88 finished his investigation of the stance of reactionaries which kille| beet trust and makes o report that the effect of his reacript. ought to be very satisfactory to the quae gentlemen composing the beef com- A despatch from New York City | bine, but of very startling nature says: St. Louls financiers are|*0 tho balance of the country. He in the clty engaged ininterest-| finds that the poor fellows who have ing capital for the constuction | thelr capital tied up in that buei- of an ‘electric railroad between |0¢88 are only realizing from 14 to 2 St. Louis and Kansas City. 1¢ 18]Percent per annum. Of course Mr. promised that electric railroad trains | Garfidld’s report doesn’t gointosuch will be running in an air line between | insignificant detuils of the why when St. Louis and Kansas City in about| beef was the very top notch to the two years. consumer, the price to the producer - = - was the very lowest in years, Nor Post-Dispatch—In Kansas where | how the Armours the Swifts, the the Standard Oil Trust had no oppo- | Cudahays and others of the combine sition it sold oi] for 12 cents: where | have been enabled to amass tremen there was opposition {t sold oil at 4. | dous private fortunes while building This is a very pretty example of|up packing industries that control what monopolies will do whenever the meat market in this country on they become strong enough. less than 2 per cent of earnings on And the Post-Dispatch might have | the capital invested. No ove believes ' added: Herein Bates county, Mo.,} but what Mr. Garfield was honest in where the Standard has no opposi-| his findings. He couldn’t be the son sition, it charges 20 cents. of his {Illustrious father and be other- —_ wise. But the feeling is prevalent in Senator R. W. Morgan, a Republi-}the minds of the American people can, announced at the opening of the | that Commissioner Garfield has been jointconvention of the Coloradogen-| given a big chunk of the “bune’”’ by eral assembly, on Monday, that he} the beef combine. It further demon- has been offered a bribe of $1,500 to| strates, what is known to all men, vote for Alva Adams, governor, in| that it requires more than mere hon- his contest against Peabody. Mor- | esty in an official entrusted with the gansaid that $750 had already been | responsibility of protecting the peo- given him, and he turned that} ple from the encroachments of the amount over to the district attor-| trusts. It demonstrates beyond a ney. He charged that the bribe was|doubt that President Roosevelt offered by James M. Herbert, vice-| made a serious mistake in the selec- president and general thanager of the | tion of a Commissioner of Corpora: Colorado Sonthern railroad and/| tions and that the sons of great men postmaster Daniel Sullivan, of Crip-|do not always possess the ability of ple Creek. Governor Adams says he | their parents. Mr. Garfieldistotake believes the charges are made for'| up the investigation of the Standard Political effect, and that Morgan/Oil company in the state of Kan- came to his office and promised to|sas. We have no doubt, judging vote for him, without solicitation. |from his success in throtling the SSS beef combine, that his finding will be Prot. Ives is making dignified, | hat the Standard 1s a badly abused | sour! manly campaign for County Superin- | corporation, that {ts losing money tendent of schools, He is visiting as qj) the time and its efforts to assist far as possible every section of the| humanity at a tremendous pecuni- ‘county 4nd meeting the voters. He ary loss is not appreciated by an un- te entitled, as nominee of the party, | grateful public. to the enthusiastic support of every ——O Japan boys under twent; Democrat in the county. His quall- acronee Ris tae soe bagi fications and fitness for the office a rigidly enforced law. This proba- commends him to every voter who| bly accounts for the splendid nerves desires the schoole’ best interest. | of the Japs.—Ex. When only one ofce ts tosleetmeny| Threatened severance of trade re people are indifferent and failto go} jations between the United States y f ~~} to the polls. If they would stop to] and Germany because of lack of recl- consider the xchools comecloser|procity arrangements causes an to our bacon than any otherinstitu- share of the matter at Washing tion, aud we are vitally interested in | *”- — keeping them up and raising themto| Senate bill, establishing a normal ‘the highest standard of efficiency, |b onse and goes they would not neglect to turn out| srnor for his signature. A similar “atthe election and vote for theirown ' measure was vetoed by Gov. Dockery ie years ago.—Nevada Mail. ort-/| } or iibels | cara oa to school’ at Webb City, passed the’ SStéay tern of this court to the gov-| A. P. . Cashier Short in Accounts Arrested. Glebe Democrat. A. F. Mispagel, former cashier of St. Charles Savings Bank, who was | found $80,000 short in hi- accounts! following an examination of his books Inst November, was arrested here yester‘ay and taken hack to! St. Charles, where be fornished al } bond of 12,000. Miepayel had secured a position | juriug the past week with a large retail grocery concern ia this city, | and was at work when arrested by Sheriff Hines of St. Charles. The arrest was rade on information filed by Prosecuting Attorney T.C. Broer- er of St. Charles, coustituting charges Mispagels bond was signed by Capt H. B. Donker, Frank Boezzenberger and L, Schoenberg, all of St. Charles. nel is cited te appear in court Chotles Monday. Mispagel who is well known in St Chariesexplained his alleged shortage at the time of the exposure by claim- ing that loans he had made to friends and the frequency with which he was called upon to act as security for some of them were responsible, Daniels In Cockrell’s Seat. Washington, March 7.—Senator Daniels now occupies the seat held for so long by Senator Cockrell, Senator Martin, also of Virginia, occupies the old Veat seat. Senator Stone profits by the exchange of places and has moved from the rear row to the seat formerly held by Senatof Daniels in the middle tier on the Democrat side, Senator Cockrell’s seat, although it carries the number ‘ 18,” is one of the most desirable in the chamlter. Henry Clay occupied it for years and it was held also by Jefferson Davie. Senator Vest sat for the greater part of his four terms to the right of Senator Cockrell. But ae the illness which finally caused his death grew upon him the lass months of his ser- vice, Senator Vest exchanged bis fron\ seat for one farther back in the chamber which he could more easily reach in hiscrippled condition. Thus Senator Martin secured his front seat. CHEERFUL WOTMIEN. Despondency is a thing of evil and evil results, Worry produces noth but wrinkles and wretcheiiness, Let the reader put up a little note on her bureau on her desk, and at the head of her bed, just two words, Don’T WORRY. Worry is the greatest foe to the happiness of say Rowse. An anxious, despond. ent face, a fretful, complaining voice, B will make every 7 one uncomfortable. ” A woman's nerves ® “are more truly the i cause of worry than outside troubles, The nerves are to a woman’s body the telegraph system, which surely warns her of any trouble in the feminine make-up, , Dr._ Pierce, dur. ing a long period of interest in the land. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Minshall, who own the J. W. Harrison place just north of town, gavea dinner Tuesday in honor of the 90th birthday of Mrs. Hebecca Minshall, mother of Mr. Min- shal. Notwithstanding her great age Mrs. Minshall is yet hale and hearty. She settled in the Columbus neighborhood in 1839 and has lived in the county ever since. Her hus- band died in 1879 and for the last 16 years she has made her home with W.M. burg 4 up entirely of roots and herbs, without the use of alcohol, cured over ninety per cent. | r¢) a prescription made of sych cases, After using this remedy for many years in his private Bogie! he put it up im a form that would make it easily procurable. $500 REWARD.FOR WOMEN WHO CANNOT BE CURED. Backed up by over a third of a centu: of remarkable and uniform cures, a record such as no other remedy for the diseases and weaknesses peculiar to women ever attained, the proprietors and makers of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription now feel fully warranted in offering to Pay $0 for any case of Leucorrhea, Female ness, Prolapsus, or Falling of Womb, which the: cannot cure. All they ask is a fair an reasonable trial of their means of cure. They have the most remarkable of cures made by this world-famed remedy ever placed to the credit of any prepara- tion especial! designed for the cure woman’s peculiar ailments, Sick women, especially those enfferi fom ene, a et ene antes are invit consult Dr. Pierce etter, 5 lence is held as erictly pe and sacredly confidential. BR. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. : Order of Publication. saat area | anty of 2 In the Circuit court of Bates county, Missouri,’ May term, 1905, in vacation March sth, 1905, J. wr Choate, plaintiff, ve. Geo. C. Wells, defendant. : Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein by his attorney, T. W. Silvers, and iuappearing from the petition and afidavit heretofore fil among other things that defendant, Geo. C. Wells, isa non resident of the state of Mis- E4 your time to save from EER 5 eetity ie at 5, F re > a fp 9GGG GS SS 9999999 SG9SSSSSNSS5SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS9S9 Dr. Whereupon it is ordered by the clerk in vacation, Phat said defendant be notified b: lication that plaintiff hascommenced s suit Riainet ‘him in this court, the object and gen- eral nature of which is to collect a note dated March lith, 1895, by the de- fendant and made able to the plaintiff; which note was given 942.50 ‘with interest ae tel oo A ej which note is ee plaintin’s Toon of sad rioedeates arte en came this town. = i 3 4 g g g a Here’s a fortune for you. and no risk of loss. THE FRISCO OIL AND GAS CO. TIus 480 acres of land in the center of the Oil and Gas Belt of Kansas. This Company owns and controls its own Land. --No paying for leases pass within a short distance of the property. Everything goes at wholesale prices. goods are all first-class and new. Now is $6 to $7 on a Riding Cultivator, —FROM— ~ $10 to $120n a Riding Plow, —FROM— $10 to $15 on Wheat Drills, From 25 to 60 per cent on all small goods $15 on BUGGIES, DRIVING WAGONS, &c. Now is your time to get a fine Sayers & Sco- ville rig at wholesale, have less than a dozen left now and they are going fast and you will never have another chance to get them at these prices, nor the Implements either, in . 7. J. WILLIAMS. FIGURE IT OUT FOR YOURSELE FORTUNES ARE BEING MADE IN KANSAS OIL! Not 10 per cent but 100 per cent Giant of Oil-Fields. or royalty and eaeh and every share of stock sold gives the holder an No dead loss to any body. A well has been drilled ' Before election Republicans prom- ised great things provided Missouri would let go all holts and drop itself into the Republican column. The Republicans have been fighting ever since over @ division of “pie.” The Missouri State Republican—the offi- clal state organ—now concludes that “Republican Missouriis a misnomer,” and that “the mysterious stranger is nshall end wife —Warrens- | headless.”"—Nevada Mail. practice, found that) CVS POO @O OOOO O DO Ww COPS OSSSSSSY Closing Out | pare eee Quit Business. My Rau ad vam teeta SoooeaoooooooooooSooooooooooSSSoSSSSSSSSSSSSS recently on this land for water and struck oil at a depth of 85 feet, in sufficient quantities to cover the water. Eleven wells have recently been drilled at Bronson, from six to seven miles north-west and only one dry well; and a number of other wells in the surrounding territory which places this tract of land in the center of the surrounding wells, ; The gas pipe line between the Bronson district and Fort Scott passes within one mile of the Frisco Oil and Gas Company’s holdings, The proposed oil pipe line between the Chanute district and Kansas City will Taken into account the location, prospects and favorable surroundings, we firmly believe we have the best proposition ever offered. There is no royalty to be paid to the landowner ; there is no risk of the stock depreciating below 50 per cent, because the value of the land is worth at least that amount. We are offering stock in this conpany to the people of Butler and Bates County for a short time only very cheap. Frisco Oil and Gas Co. Order of Publication, STATE OF MISSOURI, In theclroultcourtefB ~ in the cirouit court of Bates county, Mo,in vaca- tion February 2nd, 1905. syst The State of Missouri at the relation and to theuse of C. E. Johnson, ex-officio collector of the revenue of Bates county in the state of Missouri, plaintiff, ve. U. G. Park,C. A. Allen, The Walton Trust Company, defendants, Civil action for uelinquent taxes Now atthis day comes the plaintif herein by her atturney before the clerk of the circuit court of Bates county, in the state ot Missouri, in va- cation and files her petition and affidavit, etat- ing among other things that the above named detendant, U. G. Park, is & non-resi- dent of the state of Miesouri. Whereupon it is ordered by the clerk in vacation, that the de- fendant be notified by Rablication that plain- tf has commenced a suit against him in this court by petition and affidavit the object and general nature of whichis toenforce the lien of the state of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of the year 1903, amounting in the aggr gate to the sum of $157 together with interest, costs, commissione, and tees upon the following de- scribed tracis of land situated in Bates county, Missouri, to wit: 40 acres, the north half of the north half of the northeast quarter section 3, township 40, range 32, Bates county, Missouri, and inat unless the said defendants be and appear at the next term of this court, to be begun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, on the first Monday in May, 1905, andapn or before the third day thereot, and ple; to sald petition according to law, the same willbe taken as confessed and judgment rendere« accordiag to the prayer of salQpetition, and the above described real tate sold to satisfy the same. And it is further ordered by the clerk afore- Pod C8 ry opt be sgt the UTLER WEKKLY Timgs,a weekly newspaper printed and published in Bates ‘county. Mise souri, for four weeks successively, the last Ineertion to be at least thirty days before the fret day of the next term of said court. A true copy of the record. Wit- {seat) nese my hand as clerk aforesaid with the seal of said court hereunto sfix- ed. Done at Oftice in Butler on this the znd day of February, 1905. J, A. PATT! a Ciroult Olerk. 19--4th C.M. Barnxter, Deputy Clerk, Order of Publication, STATE OF MISSOURI, revenue of Bates county, in the state of Mis- tif, ve. F. V. Hamilton, defendant. Hon sy Sone arn by Ww erein ttorney the ‘kK of the at in the state of Missouri,

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