The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 25, 1909, Page 6

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Sa et D? PRICES CREAM Pure, Healthful Grape Cream ol MPRIG CREA Tartar Powder No Alum No Lime Phosphates Adrian Journal Notes. J. H. Wilson died at his home in Gleanings From THE TIMES East Boone township, Saturday, Nov. 13th, 1909, of kidney trouble; aged 69 years, 2 months and l5days. De- ceased was born in Missouri, and had Judge Ballard is feeding 125 head ag ti Bates county breed of cattle on his farm in Spruce to +’n- boys and 4 girls. The children are, ship. Mrs. 0. B. Pace, Mrs. David Roach, The town of Hume, in the south-| Mrs, 0. W. Askew, Mrs. James Cor- west part of the county, ison aboom. der, Albert and Evin. Bishop Rodertson, of St. Louis,| J, W. Mansfield and Inez Askew will preach a Thanksgiving sermon at were united in marriage at the home the Episcopal church. of Elder Aaron Showalter, Wednes- Gent West returned Friday from a day, November 10, 1909, at six o’clock business trip through Kansas. He p. m. Elder Showalter performed says the mossback Republicans down the ceremony. there are still betting on Blaine. November 5th being the fifty-eighth Ben Bigstaff and Ashby Hamilton birthday of J. B. Stillwell about twen- returned home Saturday from the | ty members of the Junior League of National Stockman’s Association at’ the U. B. church of which he is Su- St. Louis. perintendent, gave him a surprise E. A. Ewing and bride, Will Mills! that night. and Miss Luella Dickey, Zib Williams} William Whitlem and Miss Sarah and Miss Nellie Warnock, .Fletcher| Thomas were united in marriage at Warnock and Miss Lizzié Powercom-|the home of the groom, this city, posed a gay party of pleasure seekers Wednesday, November 17th, 1909, who spent the day last Friday at Rev. W. S. Weir acting as officiating Horseshoe Lake. clergyman. On Wednesday afternoon the 19fh at 5:30 o’clock E. A. Ewing and Miss Much County. Ella N. Williams were married at the i home of the bride’s parents, Mr, and Sheriff Folkner of Johnson county Mrs. J.T. Williams, Rev. Davis, of WS here again to-day with a patient the Christian Church, officiating. for the Nevada Hospital for the In- sane. The sheriff of Johnson county A Scalded Boy’s Shrieks has made more visits of this kind to horrified his grandmother, Mrs, Nevada than any other sheriff in the Maria Taylor, of Nebo, Ky., who state. since the first of. the year wae ~~ all Posen ge iron Sheriff Folkner has taken twenty- wou ie, Bucklen’s Arnica Salve tw ients to the State Hospital wholly cured him. _Infallible for ayo se pPrepieayethon vs inncaliyin LOOKING BACKWARD. Columns a Quarter of a Cen- tury Ago—Nov. 26th, 1884, Insanity in Johnson Old Guard Dockery. Every few days we read in some ’ ? Republican or Assistant Republican A Confession of a Colorado Bank paper a sneer at the expense of Gov. Dockery and the “Old Guard,” says Robbery By the Outlaw. =e Clinton’ Democrat. Would to Lamar, Col, Nov.—Henry Starr, Heaven there were more Old Guard the bandit, surprised a courtroom ¢x-Governors such as Dockery. full of spectators here by When a man spendsa lifetime in guilty to the charge of having partici- Congress, rounds out as chief execu- pated in the robbery of the bank at tive of his State and then proceeds to Amity, Col., last spring. make himself a genuinely useful pri- Since his capture some months ago | vate citizen, it proves that there is Starr has insisted he was innocent | something to him. and that an attempt was being made; Read the following from the Gal- to convict him on his past record. He latin Democrat. said he had reformed previous to the ‘“Gov. Dockery completed the grad- Amity robbery. No evidence was ing of the county road from the Rock heard. Starr’s wife and baby were Island overhead bridge to the Grand in court, and Mrs. Starr wept bitterly River county bridge on Tuesday last, when her husband pleaded guilty. and the township board is now get- Starr’s baby was named after ex- ting matters in shape to furnish rock President Roosevelt. to macadamize the road. — “The grade is said to be one of the Henry Starr is the last of the free best, if not the best, ever made in and wild class of clever desperadoes, this county. When the rock is put fearless, murderous and cruel,’ but 00 the dump it will be “a thing of | not without a flavor of dashing brava- | beauty and a joy forever" and above |do and a leaven of romance. He is a ny ordinary stage of high water. fit follower of the James and Young-| “Mr. Dockery is negotiating with er boys, a precise duplicate of that| the officials of the Wabash in an en- earlier boy bandit, “Billy the Kid,” |deavor to induce the railroad com- and an able successor to his distant pany to grade‘ and macadamize its kinsman, Tom Starr, an Indian des- tight of way from the county road T | STARR ADMITS HE DID IT. | | thrillers of other days not so long the depot. past. | “He is also trying to persuade the panions led him into his first crime, | of way where the county road crosses the selling of whisky to the Indians, | it near the residence of Joseph Luke- But the genius of Starr was destined |hart. It is hoped that he will be suc- for a more thrilling field than the sessful in both efforts. pétty bootlegging of delectable “fire |» ‘Under the Governor's supervision water.”” In 1891 he and companions, the gulleys alongside the road from said to have been his brother, “Bill,” the power house to the overhead who was later caught and hanged for | bridge are also being cleaned out, the murder, and his sister, Belle, robbed | brush attd debris removed and the | the express office at Nowata and figd toad rounded up so that the water |with the spoils. This adventure im- will be drained off on both sides thus ful good your Peruna has done for me. SPLENDID BUCKEYE. WOMEN Remedy, Pe-tu-na, Now Has Best of Health. Mrs, Victoria M, Pickel, 130 E, Mound St., Columbus, Ohio, writes: “T have been using Peruns for catarrh, having had a very aggravated case, so Miss Nora Kelley, R. R. 1, Box 121, London, Ohio, says: “I write to thank you for the wonder- | mediately placed him in the outlaw |category, for it was followed closely by the murder of a deputy United States marshal, Floyd Wison. Wilson and another marshal named | Dickey set out after Starr and follow- | ed him into his haunts on Wolf | Creek, only to find him gone. They pursued him to X. U. Ranch on Cali- fornia Creek and came up in time to see him leaving. Wilson got a horse | and set out after the fleeing outlaw, | Dickey. following some distance be-~} hind. Wilson finally caught up, and | Starr dismounted. Then followed a fight in which Wilson was killed. | Starr escaped on Wilson’s horse. The killing of Wilson was the be- ginning of the most bold and desper- ate holdups, bank robberies and mur- ders since the times of the Jameses. | In surprisingly rapid succession bandits, said to have been led by |Starr, fell upon the Bentonville Bank | at Bentonville, Ark., the Chelsea rail- | road station, the Missouri, Kansas & Texas train at Pryor Creek, Ok., | stores at Nowata and Choteau, Ok., the bank at Aldrich, Mo., and the Caney Valley Bank at Caney, Kan.,| the last of which finally proved the | undoing of the outlaw. Three thou- | sand dollars was obtained at Aldrich | preserving the macadam.”’ The Best Food for Workers, The best food for those who work | with hand or brain is never high priced. The best example of this is found in Quaker Oats. . It stands at the top among foods that supply nourishment and vigor, without taxing the diges- tion, and yet it is the least expensive food one can eat. This great food value and low cost make it an ideal food for families who want to get the greatest. good from what they eat. Laborers, factory or farm hands, fed plentifully on Quaker Oats will work better and with less fatigue than if! fed on almost any other kind of food. All of these facts were proved and very interesting information about human foods were gathered by . Pro- fessor Fisher of Yale University in 1908. You'll find Quaker Oats in reg- ular size packages, large size family packages and harmotically sealed tins, Gompers Won’t Lose Pay. Toronto, Ontario, Nov.—The Amer- ican Federation of Labpr, in addition to indorsing the attitude taken by President Gompers. in the Buck’s Stove and Range Company injunction proceedings, voted to continue the salaries of Gompers and Secretary Frank Morrison and to compensate Vice President John Mitchell, who is not a salaried officer, during their terms of imprisonment, in case it is eventually decided they must go to perado, whose ‘exploits were the near the “Calf Pen’’ school house to| other internal trouble for twenty-two years. Two years ago I began to take Peruna and I only took about three bot tles and to-day I can say I am a well In the early '90s, when Henry Starr Rock Island road to pay the cost of] person.” was still a boy in his teens, evil com-| grading and macadamizing its right Could Not Eat Without Suffering. Mrs. H. A. Weaver, Somerset, Ohio, writes: “I can safely and truly say that Peru- na has been a blessing to me, “IT had catarrh so badly that { had lost the sense of smell) and taste, “T had stomach trouble so bad that I could not eat anything without sutfer- ing afterwards. “My friends advised me to try Peru- na. I bought one bottle and was greatly benefited by it, and so I bought one-half dozen bottles, and will say that I am completely cured of stomach trouble and catarrh. “I cannot say enough for Peruna,” Pe-ru-na Brought Appetite. * Mrs, Selina Tanner, Athens, O., writes that Peruna relieved her of stomach trouble and brought her a good appetite. “J was,a sufferer from kidney and| bad that it clogged the nasal organs, When I did get the nasal organs opened, the mucus would drop into my throat and make me very sick, “A friend advised me totake Peruna, and after using four bottles I was cured, “I have no trouble now, and am happy to say that I am enjoying the best of health and attending to my lodge du- ties, being a member of the Rebecca Lodge of Odd Fellows. “I would recommend Peruna to those suffering with the same obnoxious trouble,” Catarrh for Several Years. Mrs, Alice Bogle, 803 Clinton St, Circleville, Ohio, writes; “T want to inform you what Peruna has done for me. “T have been afflicted with catarrh for several years, I have tried different medicines and none seemed to do me any good until I used Peruna, I have taken six bottles and can praise it very highly for the good it has done me, “T also find it of great benefit to my children.” Pe-ru-na An Honest Family Medicine LOEB oUSsTS SEVENTY- NINE CUSTOMS MEN. TR. omen e Sugar Investigation Leads to Wholesale Dismissals of Federal Fmployes. New York, Nov.—Collector of the Port William Loeb Jr. announced the removal from the customs service of seventy-nine employes and attaches of the weighing and other divisions of the customs service here. Among those dismissed are James F, Vail, formerly deputy surveyor of the weighing division; James P. Hyland and Joseph O. Carroll, ex-foreman of weighing divisions. Secretary MacVeagh, in Washing- ton, announced that there will be no further grants of immunity in the in- vestigation. He made this clear, ex- plaining that he received this assur- [teri when he was in New York con- ferring with Collector Loeb and) Real Estate Transfers. Warranty Deeds. Borney.-E.Koeger..to.J.R Hawkins | 120 acres sec 14 East Boone twp $4000. Edward Stockdale to Alta McCaus- land 40 acres sec 25 Deer Creek twp $3200. Grant Shaw to James Hampton 112 acres sec 7 and 18 West Point twp $5000. f Isabella McCollouch to Robert Mc- agg 60 acres sec 43 New Home 1. Andrew Jackson to Albert Findley lot 8 blk 18 Papinville $25. Martha A Davis to B G Davis lots 22 and 23 block 26 also lot 8 blk 27 Amorett $500. . W A Jones to Lederer lots 1 and 2 blk 10 Rich Hill $150. - Lewis Mulkins to Mary A Shirk lot 35, 6,7 and 8 blk 134 Rich Hill 1300. \ B C White to J C Davis part blk 17 burns, scalds, cuts, corns, wounds, bruises, cures fever-sores, boils, skin Johnson county is not known and the eruptions chilblains, caer hands. sheriff is unable to account for it— Soon routs piles. 25c at F. T. Clay’s. Nevada Mail. —How to be well dressed all the time. Some men are well dressed only while their clothes are zew. From that time until they buy another (4 o new suit, they look seedy, care- less and shabby. : Might just as well be well dressed @i/ the time. This AN costs no more if you wear N All-Wool Clothes bed retort res reasotl, ‘Aad 4 {and $2,000 at Caney. After the Caney robbery a suppos- ed friend of Starr betrayed his where- abouts, and six heavily armed offi- cers entered his room in Colorado Springs. Aftera struggle, in which the officers were nearly overpower- ed, Starr and one of his most desper- ate companions, ‘‘Kid’’ Wilson, were taken captives. The money was found in the room. Starr was re- ‘| turned to Arkansas and. convicted of the Bentonville robbery. He was jail for contempt of court. They will be paid at the rate of $5,000 a year. In a resolution adopted thanking Toronto for her hospitality was a paragraph declaring that ‘‘the free- dom ‘of speech, which we have’exer- | ed. p cised-without judicial restraint based others. Collector Loeb, theSecretary said, assured him that there would be no further occasion ‘for it; that they had accomplished’ what was needed Amsterdam $525. Isabella McCulloch to Adaline Caton 60 acres sec 4 Osage twp $1. HG Davis to Mary E Clayton lots by the immunity previously promis- The three weighers who confessed 22 and 23 blk 26 also lot 8 blk 27 Amorett $100. ; Sarah Bullock to Anna McLood 79 on superconstitutional and self-arao-|to the authorities, and whose evi-|acres sec 15 Spruce twp $10. gated authority, has been more in dence has figured so largely in the AM Young to F L Smith 239 acres conformity. with the fundamental |investigation, have not been-disturb-| sec 12 Deer Ceek $1300. He Sues H. S. Priest For $19.500. / St. Louis, Nov. 20.—John A. Gil- ing people, free speech and free press|main so far as the Government is than is possible at present in the| concerned. But Mr. MacVeagh point- United States.” ed out that it was questionable wheth- It was decided that the reports and | er they would care to continue in the concerning the injunction proceed- tion ‘as a handy textbook: for the trades unions of the country:” =< ~ | principles of a free and self-govern-|ed in the service, and they will re-|. F L Smith to Rosa Voglea-239 acres sec 12 Deer Creek $14280. W H Witherow to C L Witherow 40 acres sec 22 Homer twp $1675. Hiram Vail to bald spe

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