The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 21, 1895, Page 3

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i i i 5 ACKNOWLEDGES DEFEAT. | EMEMBER h | | there | China is Willing to Submit to Japan’s are hundreds of brands of | Terms. | White Lead (so called) on the Washington, March 12.—Asa re-| Market that are not White Lead, sult of the negotiations between | composed largely of Barytes and Minister Dunn in Japan and Minis.| Other cheap materials. But the ter Denby in China the terms of the | "Umber of brands of genuine peace about to be concluded between | China and Japan are now known | Strictly Pure As} White Lead with little short of exactness. clos hadlestce* QUEENSWARF AND GLASSWARE understood in official circles they are as follows: Se ety tenneen Tegne | are standard ‘‘Old Dutch’’ process and just as good as they were when you or your father were boys : Fou ony ) | .CICARS AND TOBACCO, jAlways pays the highet market price for County Produces East Side Square. Butler, Mo- and China has ceased to exist by “Southern,” “Red Seal,” McFARLAND BROS. Harness and Saddlery, ' of peace the new treaty will grant span extra territorial jurisdiction For Cotors.—National Lead Co's Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, a one-pound can to South Side Square Butler Mo. Staple:Fancy Groceres, Feed and Provisions of all Kinds. ver China, but the latter country | a 25-pound keg of Lead a: | will surrender the extra territorial jurisdiction she formerly held in Japan. Saves time and a1 a and insures the best paint that it is | Second—There will be no exten- sion of Japanese territory on the main land of Asia, but the island of Formosa, a Chinese possession lying off the coast, will be permanently ceded to Japan. Third—The Japanese will by treaty be granted the right to con-| — z tinue the occupation of Port Arthur| HARRY HAYWARD SENTENCED. and Wei Hai Wei tue two great na- val stations leading to the Gulf of Pe Chi Li, for a term of years. | Fourth—The elaims of China that Corea is a dependency of hers shall be forever relinquished, and Corea shall henceforth be independent. Fifth—-The cash indemnity to be paid by China will not exceed $250,- 600,000 in gold. Russia, it is said, will demand that Japan give up all the territory taken from the Chinese. ATTACKED BY A FEMALE PAN- THER possible to put on wood, Send us a postal card and get our book on paints and color-card, free save you a good many d NATIONAL St. Louis Avenue and Ten! t will probably Clark The Murderer of Miss Ging to Hang in Three Months. Minneapolis, Minn, March 12.—/ When Harry T. Hayward, convicted of the murder of Catherine Ging, entered the court yest eaday morn- ing to be sentenced to death, he was leisurely and calm in manner as during the trial, and surveyed the crowd coldly when handcuffs were being removed. Judge Smith agreed to examine the grounds urged for a new trialon March 28, and then passed sentence. He said that he had no doubt whatever that the ver- Terrible Experiences ot ‘two Hunters| dict was a just and righteous one, Near Lake Worth, Flordia. and, while he did not believe in cap- Juno, Fla, March 10.—William ital punishment, it was his painful Curry and John Crawford, young duty to pass sentence in accordance men who have been spending the with the law. “The sentence of the winter here hunting, were attacked| Court,” he continued, “is that you by a panther yesterday evening.|¢ taken to the Hennepin county Curry received wounds which are jail and there confined until, after a thought to be fatal, while Crawford | Period of three months, a time be will lose an eye. fixed by the governor of the state, — The young men were out hunting, | ¥O4 be taken to the place of execu- ; fa eae cia and their dog “treed” a young pan- tion and hanged by the neck until | ore, the conflict has served a good ther, which they shot, not suspect | YOU are dead. ing the presence of the mother pan- Harry listened calmly and sat ther. The young men laid dewn| wn without the slightest show of their guns and began to skin the| feeling. kitten. They bad hardly begun work when the mother panther,which was crouching on the limb of a tree over- head, sprang upon them. The hun- ters were crushed to the ground,and for afew moments were at its mercy. The animal planted its claws in the left side of Curry’s face and tore it open. The unfortunate man rolled over, only to receive a blow from the razor-like claws, which tore open his abdomen, exposing the bowels. In the meanwhile Crawford tried to rise, but the panther struck him in the right eye, almost tearing it from the socket. Crawford, although in agony and half blind, began to strike the beast with his hunting- knife. He dealt it blow after biow| the fight took place over Curry’s| body. Finally the knife found the| panthers heart, and it dropped dead! on the unconsicous Curry. Craw- ford was so exhausted that he could not go for assistance, and the man- MeFarland Bros, the pioneer harness men of Bates county, Mo. They keep everything that horse owners need. Double wagon harness from $10 to single buggy harness, $7.50 to $25; second hand harness from $3 to $15. Saddles of all styles and prices, from the cheapest to the best STEEL FORK “COW BOY SADDLE” made in this country. Bring your old harness and trade in on new ones. McFarland Bros. Butler Missouri. Don’t Crowd. purpose, though everbody will be | 8t- Louis Republic. glad to learn that itis practically) Have you any idea of the number ended, and most people will be satis- | of persons the United States would fied with the terms.—K. C. Times. | sustain without overcrowding the — Se | Wated alhite siniance: population, or even going beyond Don't ba Imposed Upon, St. Soseph, Mo., March 13.—Rey. | the limit of destiny now shown by when you ask for Doctor Pierce's ee: oS e the state of Rhode Island! The last Golden Medical Discovery. Go toa — census of the Pigmy state just gives reliable dealer. He will sell you|#24 Jerry Grider. the first two pas- |” tence s ane Or RcliaiivonivanticaiDha lence ait es |it a population of 800,000. The tors of the two colored churches of | s cyan something else to urge upon you in | the city, left tonight for Jeune etc stacey suniog 1alleas its place are thinking of the extra Jefferson | a City, where they will appeal to Gov- | only 1,250, thus we find that there protit they make. These things pay| Ss See ORLA eae f i them better, but they don't Gaga rnor Stone for commutation of sen- | is an average of 518 persons on ev- about you. tence for Joseph Burries, the negro | Spanos aes HEE CUBS & ‘ None of these substitutes is “just who isto hang a week from next). cc a best illustrate the SUStAIL as good” as the “Discovery.” That They took with them a/'?& capacity of the whole United is the only blood cleanser,flesh build- | petition signed by about 400 colored | States by making some comparisons. er, and strength-restorer so far-|_ | The state of Texas has an area of reaching and so unfailing in its ef- Beeae: g Judge Woodson, who sen-| ~~ me t 5 : | 265,789 square miles; and, fects that it can be guaranteed In tenced him, and prosecuting es Bele aes daneel the most stubborn Skin, scalp or | ney Culver refused to sign the peti- | ie H Rhody.” y la f 1 scrofulous affections, or in every |tion. This afternoon Robert Ander- | od OGY: Lite comioneaow) | sustain a population of 83,523,628 disease that's caused by ® torpid son, another colored man who was!. 3 liver or by impure blood—if it ever | inhabitants—a great number of per- ; sons than the whole fails to cure, you bave y sney | atrested on a charge of larceny, was | a y a your money ‘ a ae country back. jturned into the jail, where Burries | : x | : : ; 5 | peeted tohave in the year 1900. attacked him with a short iron bar! © i | Scatter people all over the whole | land from the Atlantic to the Pacific | and from the Gulf the Friday. were it populated as is exe End ef the Chinese War. land beat him seriously. The conditions which Japan bas} was one of the pri put upon China as the price of peace | against Burries. are pretty severe, but they will be| Reance Has idaaeiors: accepted by the world as just. China | Anderson nal witnesses te | in Rbode Island, and we would have A. O Welton jmain armament consists of four 9.45 *linch guns, British | possessions as thickly as they are|nue,a fashionable thoroughfare, at | CHLY last night he was shot and killed WAR SHIP @OES Down. ! | Spauish Cruiser Riena Regente Founders otf Morocco Officers and Crew Carried All are Lost..-She fold Four Hundred and Twenty Persons. Gibraltar, March 13.—The Span- ish cruiser Reina Regente is believ ed to have foundered off the coast of Morocco during a recent gale. She had a crew of 420 officers and! men boats and semabhore flags are reported to Pieces of one of her have been picked up along the coast near Ceutia and Tarifa. The Reina | Regente, Alfonse XILI. And Lep-! ‘anto are three new second class deck | ‘protected cruisers, of the san i ‘build. They are of 4,800 tons, hav-! jing 12,000 horse power, and were! expected to steam twenty knots | The Regente bad just conveyed! \the returning Moorish mission to| | Tangiers. She left that port March | | 10 for Cadiz, and had not since been | iheard of. The | A from her is causing absence of news! the greatest) |anxiety, and itis believed that she! ‘has been lost with all hands. The jcruisers Isla De Luzon of the Span. | lish tleet sailed today from Algiers jin search of the missing cruiser. | The Reina Regente is a steel-pro tected cruiser and was completed in} | 1887. Her dimensions are: Length | 320 feet; beam, 50 feet 7 inches; | | draught, 19,29 feet. She is of 4.750 j tons displacement, 11,500 horse pow- er, and her speed is 20.6 knots. Her each side for- ward of the superstructure and one on each side aft; six 472 inch guns mounted in broadside. She has an auxiliary battery of fourteen rapid firing aud machine guns and has five torpedo tubes. Her protected deck is 4.3 inches thick on the slope, her conning tower is 5 inches thick and her heavy gun shield 3 inches thick. She has a coal capacity of 1,150 tons. She was one of the three Spanish warships that took part in the great Columbian naya! prade in New York harbor in the spring of 1893, the other two having been Nueva the Espana and Infanta Ysabel. one | rr Sawyer’s Fainily Cure H. L. Tucker. New Orleans, La, March 13.—At a meeting of the sugar planters it has been determined to erect a sugar refiuery in New Orleans. This was done in direct opposition to the Sugar Trust, which controls the re- fineries in this city. The planters camplain that the trust has proved hostile to them and opposed them in every possible way and robbed and despoiled them. The bulk of the money for the refinery was sub- scribed at the meeting and it was | decided to allow no one to subscribe except sugar planters, and to invite jno foreign capital. Try a bottle of Dr i Blown to Fragments. | Denver, Col., March 14.—Since the suicide of Lingg, the anarchist} in jail at Chicago, there hus been no jrecord of such a cold-blooded, plan- ined suicide as that of Alois Foidl, | an Austrian, this city to-day. Foidi killed himself on Logan ave ib |mid day by exploding a dynamite| The} | diameter and four inches long. | State's “WHEN SPRING COMES “PE Recommend Pe-ra-na to All Suffer ers,” Says Editor W.T. Powell, of Clarington, Ohio W. T. Powell, editor of the Inde- pendent of Clarington, Obio. writes that he was taken sick with bron- chitis and catarrhal n a terrmble condition, lungs were badly affected, being so tight and sore he could hardly breathe, and fever, head was coughed almost incessantiy. For iwo aths tried local physicians, ook e¢ medicines and other medicin Took three bottles of Pe- ra-na and was entirely cured. It is needless to attempt to give oaly the vaguest outline of the won- derful success which Pe-ru-ua has with in the curs of catarrb This success is entirely due to the fact that Pe-ru-na eradicates the isease from the system, instead of temporarily relieving some disagree- able symptom. Not only is catarrh met in all stages and varieties cured promptly, but also colds, coughs, bronebit la grippe, catarrhal dys- pepsia, all yield surely and perma- nently, to the Pe-ru-pa. curative virtues of As aspring medicine Pe-ru na is a never-failing remedy. It cleanses the blood through digestion, and ‘gives tone to the whole system by increasing the nutritive value of the food. “Spring fever.” as it is some- times called, which produces a tired out, sleep, feeling, inability to do much mental or physical work, is the result of a sluggish digestion. ‘and no blood medicine will be of any use whatever unless it is able to rectify the impaired digestion. The great popularity that Pe-ru-na has is due to the fact that in all such cases it at once corrects digestive derangements and enriches the blood by purifying this very import- ant source of that vital fluid. Send for book on spring medicines and spring diseases. Also a valuable treatise on catarrh, la grippe, con- sumption, coughs and colds, by Dr. Hartman, sent free. Address The Pe-ru na Drug Manufacturing Com- pany, Columbus, Ohio. For free book on cancer address Dr. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio. Warrant For State Bonds. Jefferson City, Mo., March 13. The Board of Fund-Commissioners to day ordered a warrant drawn on the State treasurer for $409,000, to be used to pay 409 6 per cent fund- ing bonds of the denomination of $1,000 each, due January 1, 1895. Said bonds were taken in by the treasurer promptly on the date of their maturity, and have been carried upon his books as cash, awaiting the passage of the appropriation bill. The board also directed the issuance of a warrant for $24,000 for the payment of that amount of peni- tentiary indemnity 6 per cent bonds, due April 1, 1895, and the treasurer forwarded today his check to the fiscal agent, the American Exchange National bank of New York, for that purpose. Guthrie, Ok., March 10.—As F. J. Jenkins, a farmer living ten miles from this city, was coming intothe in the outskirts of town by an un- 945,766,300 inhabitants, instead of cartridge about an inch and a halfin| known assassin, falling under the heels of his team. K. A. Strout, a Iu other words if the United |entire left side of his body was | farmer, who claimed to be following States could be peopled to their ut-| blown into fragments, pieces being | with another load of wood several most capacity, we could take care of | scattered allabout the neighborhood. hundred yards behind Jenkins, says s The New York World s “tha led an lay there until night. |foreed the war, and she cannot com-|,, / perc a5 a { gled men lay there 8 Hidek France is a country of al 00,000 | a 32,000,000 nlain if compelled to pay not onl: eg) Satan OO CU fall, when they were rescued by eral P i Ey i i sad) are miles. The territory of the | “Bf 7 the expense actually incurred in the : ‘ other purty of hunters and brought ¢ \Varled Siates is about 3.600.000 to el place ° | prosecution of it, but a few millions! 9 : a ate a 4 cong - . * Jf square mules, or ou 3 Curry was found to be frightfully in addition for use in the event of |, 2 3 oo ne : a os teen | 5S 2 “ i t Sas great. france has s 2u- | nearly two- ds be prese “te wounded, and the physicians say| too much peacock gaiety in tke |, san of 38 000,000. Our leds Gs | ee s a ip : : iceT ed . 3 ™ : a coe lation of 33, 5 . ation | ulation of the globe. that the stroke which the panther | future. The indemnity of 8750, Pops i “ss 000,000 is a good desl, but it’s better to pay that than sacrifice everything. The which will thus be brought to a close was unfortunate in its beginning, but is likely to re- It the largest ever killed on Lake | Will secure independence for Corea on conditions that will greatly facili- Worth. \ Lee tate the progress of civilization not Statues of Blair and Benton. jonly in that country, but in the Jefferson City, Mo., March 13 —| island of Formosa, which is the only Major Bittinger’s pet bill to appro-/ territorial acquisition made by the priate $12,000 for the making and | conqueror. It is not improbable that putting in place in the hall of United it will have a strengthening as well States Representatives bronze and dealt him across the abdomen will prove fatal. Crawford's principal in- jury is to the right eye, which will have to be removed here from Illinois, and Crawford is from Peansylvania. The panther is war Curry came sult in great good in the end. asa chastening influence on China, marble statues of Blair and Thomas! moreover, and that is a satisfaction. H. Benutou became a law The conduct the powers of passing the Senate. The probable|Japau as demonstrated in the con seulptor will be Wilson McDonald | flict will of New York. It is claimed that Mr. | advanced po McDonald — ——— Gti the world . s,in addition to this, he is : A eects hailing from St. Louis. j the record of the that —— | made after tke surrender of Port Ladi diseases of Women, Dr Sawyer’ puatice ii seach the ditteuity radically, | Arthur, and the accounts of that tually. It i ¢ Py ' aa ae ei rrener, ttl were probably exaggerated. There. ‘ to day by} as ampaign wa Ke) 70,000,000. France owes | 900,000,000. Our government's ; total indebtedness is about $1,600,- | 000,000. France has scarcely any} : : reserve of undeveloped resources. | congress will surprise nobody. country took the wind so effectually out of the republican tariff policy in | 1892 that in spite of the ridiculous campaign buncombe last fall about | “rectifying a great national mistake "| the republican party will avoid the 3 Aud with all this | rocks of McKinleyism and the issue France uses its own option in paying | of “protection” with cheerful resig- out either silver or gold, and refused | ation. The buzz saw will remain the request of the Rothschilds for | “™onkeyed with and aloce. nid payment on its bonds necessita | Kansas City Star: Mr. Reed’s | | pleasant assurance that there will} be no tariff legislation by tae next The! resources of that kind are almost | Yet French 3 per cents are worth more than 103. while we have just sold bonds ata price which makes the interest rate | incouceivably great. per cent.” DID YOU EVER. 3 ted by the French German war. Jeff The s repuie within ds of a church, public school, | public library, theater, city hall or | court house. | i i = need. | Zano invigorates, stimuistes and builds a St eth : MESES the broken down system. Zano cures mentes Ith and Strength are guaranteedibp} | and nervous debility of men. Sold by H. L. se Large botttes only soc at HL Tueker uckers , time to read a large daily promptly | and keep thoroughly posted. Sample ; he heard the shot, but saw nobody. ; He was placed in jail to day, though Any reader of this paper can get | no evidence against him has been The St. Louis Globe-Democrat Ab solutely free for three months. Read | the offer in this issue and take ad- vantage of it at once. The weekly! = 5 js ? nto: fo. ° Po 1 Globe-Democrat is issued in Semi {| Clintow, Mo, March 12.—W. C Weekly sections, eight pages each, ashman, aged about 60 years, the Tuesday and Friday, sixteen every | largest man in Henry county, died week, making it practically a Semi | at 8 o'clock yesterday morning. He NE : : i 3 y Weekly paper, yet the price is only | pad Cats Ao one dollar a year. In politics, it is) strictly Republican, but it gives all) 2 the news, and is absolutely indispen | volunteer in taeunion army during sable to the farmer, merchant, of | the rebe professional man who has not the: through. Absolutely Free. found. A Man of Weight Dead. years as a justice of the peace in this city He wasa ved all the way 425 pounds ‘only a few months ago. Copies will be sent free on applica- tion to Globe Printing Co , St. Louis A Sound Liyer Makes a Well Mas Missouri i Sakae ng pois Veterinarians | roe ace proper equinal | disorder of prono ver : = waa in | Ithas noequ medicine. Price smallpox and ered of the horees in 75 cents, Free trial bettics at .H. L. Halifax are victims. jisckers drvgst re. 45 iy

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