The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 15, 1899, Page 8

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Pai eaten eek The cakes of be used or a stout thr to tv let use. For wse ft inser, absolute 4 WORD OF War as the ‘Ivory’, ” they Ask tor Soap are so shaped that they general purposes, or divided vo perfectly formed cakes for nut to, Ivory Soap is a quick y safe and pure. presented to be ‘*just as good liar and remarkable qualities of any white soaps, rfeits, lack the sist upon getting it. 3 GY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO. CINCINNAT) —————— Dead Man at Throttle, Milwaukee, Wis., June 8. —Engin- | MANILLA BEEF PRAISED. eer John T. Gregg of the Milwaukee | q Cargo Kept in Cold Storage Over Eight and St. Paul road died suddenly in this cab yesterday morning about two miles east of Fox Jake. His death was not discovered until bis fireman had spoken to him once or twice and received no response. Ths engineer was atthe time sitting on his seat, swith his*hand on the throttle. When the fireman discovered the condition of the engineer he stopped the train and called the conductor, and the remains were taken to the caboose and brought to Beaver Dam. Death is supposed to have come from heart disease. Mr. Gregg had been in the employ of the road for twenty years and lived with his family in this city. We Will Give You a $4 Watch if you will show our publication to ‘your friends. Wedon’t want you to sell them anything. The watch is made b. well- known American firm, in two al Idren’s al alts.’ nickel or gold y hanting ei and fully guaranteed, Send 2 cents for particulars. Overland, 34 Park Row, New ork City. Sarprise tor the Minister, Spokane, Wash., June 3.—April | 30 last Chas. J. Dahlke, a revivalist, fully carried out. and Mrs. C. W. Funk disappeared | never furnished a finer from Hillsboro, Kan. Dabike left a| wife and four children, who have since heen cared for by the county. | The woman left a husband, a pros- perous grain merchant. Last night Mr. Funk walked into church in this city, seized Dahlke, handcuffed him—having first been specially deputized—and took him | transportation of frozen meat, ' handling meat in cold storage such |a length of time and in such quanti Months. Washington, June 7—The War Department has received through the courtesy of the New York central cable office an article pub- lished in the Manilla Freedom of \ April 22, regarding the preservation of beef. It follows: “Major William H. Anderson, chief commissary, states that the REVOLUTIONARY PLOT iN HAVANA. Irreconcilables Have Prepared a Plan to! : | {has just accomplished a remarkable) Destroy Fereign Investments Unless In- | dependence Be Declared Within Two Years. New York, June 8.—In a private letter received today by the New York Herald from a distinguished Cuban, now a resident of the United States, is a mest sensational state- ment about the plans of the irrecon | cilable Cuban leaders. The writer is conservative and is in a position to know what is going on at present in Cuba. The information is as fol- lows: “The latest story from Cuba,which I have every reason to believe, it having been told me by a prominent Cuban, whose intimacy with the leaders in Havana lends authority to the statement, is that the former reyolutionary element has decided to make a virtue of necessity and gracefully, to outward appearances, accept American intervention. “At the end of two years, hew- ever, if Cuban independence is not acknowledged and the government transferred to the Cubans, the torch is to be applied from one end of the island to the other, by which means all foreign investments will be de- stroyed. “When it is considered that the wealth of Cuba is dependent on its agricultural development, chiefly cane and tobacco, and that a fire brand seriously applied in a cane field would cause the destruction of thousands of dollars of value ina single night, the enormity of the plot becomes apparent ” Are you lacking in strc and en- ergy? A nervous, irritable enerally run down 1n health? If so, your tarps ar ae a few doses ot I 1 Herbine has no e storer. CIVILIZING CHINESE. army storage ship, Duke of Suther- land, has just finished its delivery of fresh beef to the commissaries. This vessel reached Manila under command of Capt. Colter, Septem- ber 16 1898. It’s cargo of frozen | beef had been taken on in Australia | a month previous, so the beef issued |to the soldiers yesterday morning | had been in cold storage for over 8 months. The United States army, has certainly created a record in the for ties has never before been success- Soldiers were quality of beef than that furnished yesterday, | which was as wholesome and fresh as the day it was prepared over in » Australia. Freedom representatives have often shared the soldiers dinner in the trenches or in camp, and the beef is sued was always excellent in quality and flavor. Oa some occasions the to jail, where he remains unable to | steaks eaten from the end of a bayo- secure bond. Mr. Funk says his wife was first hypnotized by the re vivalist and then drugged. He has! forgiven the woman and will take | He! her back says he will insist on Dahlke. We Makea Sone 2S Dr Thurmond’s Catarrh Cure is th tarrh cure made that is sold—No if yousuder withcatarrh and ¢ Afitfails to cur Sold by to Kansas with him. ory Short. e only ea- No} ide in uit will indians as the Mourners, Vancouver, B. C, Juns 7 —The} burial of Bishop Durien, who for 22) years worked among the natives of British Columbia, was the occasion of a remarkable scene. Surrounding the bier were 5,000 {odians, chanting a the native guttural torgue, their bodies in unison to strains of music, tion in the rear of the cataf erucitixion of Christ tigure death song ia swaying easured an eleva Ique the while on represent lowered fro ians dressed in v characters. biblical napolis, Ind., Cline, 69 years old, ‘on an old sol- dier, to-day received notice of a lerge increase in his pension He immediately started anxi ly down seward the city to inform bis friends | when, upon reaching Washington | street and Summit avenue. the ex- «itement proved too much for him and he fell dead of heart disease. prosecution of | | net were equal to any that money |eould buy in the luxurious grill rooms of tho most fastidieus clubs.” Does Coffee Agree With You? If not, drink Grain-O—made from pure | grains. A lady writes: ‘The first time I made Grain-o [ did not like it but sfter using it one week nothing would induce me to go beck to coffee.’? Itnourishes and feeds the system, ‘the children can drink it with great | beneiit. It isthe strengthening substance of | pure grains, Get a package to-day from your grocer, follow the directions in making it and | you will have a delicious and healthfal table beverage for old and young. 5c and 25c. | | \ Woman Shot by a Burglar. | Norris City, Ill, June 8 —Masked burglars entered the residence ef D. P. Gott ia this city, between 12 and 1 o'clcek last night, and secured about $175. Ina scuitle with Mrs. Gott for possession of her money, one of the burglars shot her through the head, killing her instantly. Bleodhounds were sent fcr as soon |as the crime was discovered, and are now on the trail Like the Italian Matia, Santiago de Cuba, June 7.—Ru- mors are current that an organiza-| tion similar to the Italian Mafia ex- ists here among the Cubans, with the assassination of Americans who are offensive to the interests of the society as its object. Itis believed by many that some of the recent | mysterious disappearances of the Americans were due to this organi- zation. Natives Put to Death and Town Burned by British—Imperial Authorities Eager to Placate the Powerful Invader. Vancouver, B C., June 8.-—Passen- gers by the Empress of Japan give a graphic description of the rebellion in Kow Loon. When the Empress passed up the coast from Hong Kong, the passengers saw the smok- ing ruins of many villages burned by the British asa warning to the rebellious Chinamep. Seventeen thousand natives were| then in did affairs shape themselves on May 16 that the Hong Kong volunteers were called tothe front. Tie Chi- nese were chased from yillage to village, with no show of resistance and the villages burned. A British surveying party, while surveying the route >f the Yannan railroad through China, were attack- ed and roughly handled. They fired their pistols once in the airas a warning, then eharged the mob. One Chinaman was killed and ten wounded. All the Chinamen they couldcapture alive were handed over to the prefecture with a demand that they be punished. The heads- menu were sent for while the English waited, and before they could retire their forces, the prisoners’ heads rolled into the baskets.” by Russians. Victoria, B. C., June 7.—Kobe papers of May 16 contain the news| that the fate of the party of ecient- ists, missing for more tban a month, has been disclosed. The party had landed near Tezang, on the Lioa Tung Peninsula, to pursue their investigations of earthquake phe- nomena and mountain flora, when they were saade prisoners by a party | of Russian cavalry and shot as spies without the semblance cf a trial Their photographic and otber scientific apparatus was destroyed. | There were eleven professors in the Massacred and Tokio. | The Japanese authorities | make a thorough pote a tee will helps the team. Saves wear and expense. Sold everywhere. MADE BY STANDARD OIL CO. insurrection, and so serious} party, one German savant, and ten! ; | Japanese, whose homes were in Kobe Girl Does Detective Work. San Francisco, Cal, June Bertha Stedman, a 17-year old girl, detective feat. She was correspond- jent for a emall weekly paper, when a woodchopper. known as French Pete, mysteriously disappeared some time ago. She believed that the| | man was killed, and, with the aid of her father, followed up a number of clues, with such success that Sheriff | Taylor of Marion county, acting on} | her information, has arrested James) Dier on a charge of murdering the | man. foothills, reports that these men which ‘‘removes”™ sons whenever it is thought neces- against Dier is said to be strong. very Gus Stewart, one of our best far- when in town Monday, and while here gave us an idea of salting cattle. He says he always puts the salt en the backs of the cattle instead of on the ground. By so doing the salt works through the hair and forces the cattle to lick themselves, which keeps their hair nice and glessy. Should there be any wolves in their backs or vermin on them the salt destroys them on short notice. He claims that he has followed this plan of salting fer fifteen years and always has nice healthy cattle. He says when he starts into the pasture with a sack of salt every cow begins licking its back.—Mt. Vernon oe Doctors Say; isand Inte rmit tent Fevers revail in mi tricts are invariably a ied by asmatic dis- ccom} nents ¢ Bowel and Liver The Secret of Health. Stomach The liver is the the ree os inism of wheel” in mec man, and whenitis out of or¢ the wh le system becomes ¢ ranged and disease is the re Tutt’s Liver Pil! Cure all Liver Trou s deed of trust orded in the for Bates county, Miss Stedman, who went into ee |camps of the woodchoppers in the | have a system of justice of their) own and form a sort of Matia society | objectionable per-| sary. The evidence she has collected | mers of near Wildie, called to see us} } { The Nichols-Shepard Separator » cat tv. ‘thas so | Write for large free catalanal that pictures and explains every part of the Nichols-Shepard Sepa. rator and the Nichols-Shepard TRACTION ENGINE. NICHOLS & SHEPARD Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Branch House nt KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI, with full stock of m TOOOSOOBOOOOC: “WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES.” GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF SAPOLIO pee 20 Lal FREE USE IT a ns to ship yon or of o 4 High note Se wing Piockt “ ap cents for our Originators of MONTGOMERY WARD ACO. Michigan Ave. _,& Madison St., Chicago. Tne Catalogue Business. McFARLAND BROS. age 104, conveyed to - following descri- art kK the unde ned trustee the bed real estate Iving and being situate in the county of Bates and state of Missourt, thwest quarter of the section thirty-six ( (a2 f range rena) forty (40) acres more orless, wh ich con- yance Was made in trust to securethe pay- ment oftwo certain notes fally described in said ceed of trust, and reas, default has of the annual tes: and whereas, southeast ecording to said notes, and dee t such default ren- dered the whole debt due and payable at once and the same is now past due and unpaid. Now therefore, at the request of the legal and pursuant to the condi- I will proceed to sell at public vendue , 8t the east front ty of Sais to the highest door of the court hou county of Bates, and state ot Missouri, Fric June 16, 1595, ours of nine o’clock in the fore- e o'clock in the afternoon of that purposes of sat debt, 5 z 88) | interest and coste CA. AL 2a-4t T: Order of Publication. STATE OF MI County of In the circuit co of Bates county, Misscuri, in vacation M 1899, Adam Luchsinger and Thomas Streif. partners under the firm name of Luchsinger & St » plaintifl, ve. Charlies D Murtield and F A Murield, de- fendants. Now at this day comes the plaintiffs herein by attorneye anc file their petition and affi- it alleging among other things that defend- | ants, Charles D F.A. Murfeld are not resi Whereupo tion that s ordered by the clerk in vei efendants be notified by pu intiffs have comm sgainst them in this court by at! ment the i general nature of which is to ent by the defendants to the to plaintiffs, aod that unices ‘the eaid defen “a ante, Charlee D Murfield and F A Murfield be and appear at this c Bt the next term of, to be begun holden st house in the city of Butle as confes: Harness and Saddelry) Fink's Leather oun South Side Square Butler fio. Read and See What we Keep in Stet | We keep everything that horse owners pi $10 to $8 second hand Saddles of all styles and prices, from the cheapest to Double wagon harness from single harness, $7.50 to $25 harness from $3 to $15. steel fork cow boy and sole leather spri seat saddles. Lap robes, horse blankel# dusters and fly nets. Harness oil and 80 full line machine oils and axel grease. Tri buggy tops new and repair old ones. Bri your old harness and saddles and trade {al new ones. We have the largest retail ba ness store in the Southwert and ovr ness are all made at home. One bund and thirty sets on hand. Come, inepect get our ‘99 prices. We will surprise you. MeF ARLAND BROS: BUTLER. Mo. accordin An hereof be Br the 5th day of J of Bates county, date of said letters, 0 from any benefit —— f butier, bates county, ri, o@ | Jane 1th | offer for sale the above * | public anction for cash to satisfy the debt, int said sale. Batler, Mo., May 2%, 15%. Friday Jane léth, 129, between the hours of nine o'clock in the fo: noon and Sve o'clock in the day, for a of satisfying said de interest, a 2-40 C. A. ALLEN, Trustee.

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