The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 22, 1899, Page 4

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| i 2 | 7 | The administration proposes to} TLER WEEKLY 7 IMES | place all the responsibility of the | 2 dé, DB. ALLEN, |eampaign in the Philippines upon) = =| the sheulders of Gen. Otis. If he! ne vomsichal = sed Eropeietore- __| wants more men the administration TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: |stands ready to grant his request, Tne Waexsy Times, published eyery | and therefore Gen. Otis must take} Thursday, will be sent to any address/ all responsibility for any failure in | oné year, postage paid, for $1.00, lthe campaign. Epiror. Thefbonded indebtedness of Hen- 2,900. Rev. Sam Jones, of Georgia, says that if the farmers would swap their ry county is $ William J. Bryan regards Mr-| Bland’s death es a great loss to the! |the country would be better off. | | This is probably true, and there is | ——————____— ;no necessity of confining the ex- | Tom Reed is over in Europe, and | change to farmers. Ifsome of the) 30 doubt Mark and Mc. would be | preachers would do the same the| pleased if he prolonged his yisit for | effect on the country would be even years. | more gratifying.—Kansas City Jour- The population ef Chicago. ac-|™! sording to the census report of the | sity just taken by the police is said to be 2,058,043. * sountry. The death of Hon. R. P. Bland leaves a vacancy in his distriet which will be very hard to fill. of Adjutant General Bell is being} most prominently mentioned as his probable successor, General Bell displayed great ability and wonder- ful resourse in organizing the state troops inthe short time allotted, and he is recognized over the state as a strong man. According to the Spanish budget just made public the cost to Spain of the iast Cuban insurrection in Guba was $330,000,000 Hf the farmers of this country would form a trust just for one elec- tion and all vote the democratic tioket in 1900 then peace and pros-} perity would reign. A fund to put up a monument at the grave of Richard P. Bland was started in Lebanon Sunday morning and in a short time $909 was eub scribed. William J. Bryan headed the list with a gift or $200 The intention is to raise $5,000 and put & granite monument with a suitable inscription over the grave. Sub scriptions may ba sent to W. J. Diffendeffer of the bank of Lebanon, or to John W. Farris, ex-speaker of the house of representatives, at Leb anon. Kansas Oity, regardless of politics is making a big effort to secure the next national democratic convention. Hurrah for Kansas City and we hope to see her suecessful. Jokn W. Gates, of Chicago, presi- dent of the American Steel Wire trust, is a candidate for United States Senator for Illinois. He hopes to succeed Cullom and starts with Cook county behind him. He'll get there. The first volunteer Orogon troops deing service in Manila, have sailed for home on the transport Ohio. They are expected to arrive about Fuly 12. They left 62 dead from battle and disease as the result of the year’s eampaign. A Screw Loose Semewhere. K.C. Times. It took the United States 114 days to fetch Spain to terms. We haye been pounding the Filipinos 135 days and have not much more than madea few black and blue spots on the enemy. It took an army of 17.- 000 officers and men to settle Spain in Cuba and 3,500 officers and men to do the same thing for her in Porto Rico. Over twenty ships have been employed to carry nearly 40,000 of- ficers and men te Manila. And although Otis has informed the war department on an average of four times a week since February 4 that the rebel armies were “scattered and would not make another stand,” and viding the plums also that the inhabitants rejoice at % deliverance and welcome with en eke _annonnced thet os 2 thusiastic demonstations the arrival ee cake, ‘he 10880 | of our troops,” the insurgents seem University s git of 2 See to be growing in strength and power Shen the Bangers ou ng VALOSES of resistance all the time. After the price of oil and while Mr. Rock- fighting 135 days, Otia does not so- feller gets the credit the people will Gacels iheldiiane itisen nor «eins on Soot the bill. island, to say nothing of the other 1,400 more or less, islands he was sent to place under the “sovereign ty” of McKinley's administration. The Colorade Athletic association has offered a $20,000 purse for a 25-round contest between Bob Fitz- simmons and “Kid” McCoy. The fight is to be for the middle-weight championship of the world. Missouri will have seven republi- can and six democratic census super- visors, ada the republicans wo were hungry for these jobs are awful mad about it and are loud in their abuse of the administration for di- G. G. Vest says if he | were allow- sd‘ to write an epitaph for the tomb- atone of an eastern capitalist, he would inscribe: “Here lies old 25] per cent, the more he made the less he spent; the more he made the less he shaved; great God! can such a soul be saved.” It is estimated that the hail storm which passed over Fort Dodge, Iowa, and vicinity Saturday night, did damage to the amount of $100,000. The hail stones were as large as wal- nuts and in the city of Fort Dodge every exposed window and skylight was broken and stores were flooded with water, ruining stocks of goods. A high wind accompanied the storm and at Gowrie ten cars were blown} from the tracks Near Clare the farm residence of John Low was de stroyed. The family were in the! | cellar at the time and escaped injury There is one class of men whe! but as as a result of the shock, Low will remember the trusts in 1900,/is now a raving maniac. The dam-| without regard to former politcal | age to cropsand buildisgs in the! proclivities. They are the commer-/ district was very great and corn and| sial The tobacco trust/ small grain were pounded into the! sombine alone has threwn out of| ground employment the past week 3,000 salesmen Yet the leaders of the republican party agree that prosper- | ity bas ck the country and| wages are being raised and employ- ment furnished all who want work Admiral George Dewey has been elected a life member of the society Sons ef the Revolution, and has ac- septed the honor. The board of di- rectors discovered his eligibility by tracing his ancestry to William Dewey, who served in the revolution ao Captain Werthy Waters’ company of militia of Hebron, Conn. | travelers Representative Gordon, of Ohio, | talks interestingly of the molec | situation in his state. He saye: | “Whoever thinks the republicans are | invincible in Ohio this year will be badly fooled. There never was a} The stat ment is authorized, that| time when the party was so badly} Sam Coo irman of the state! split by factional dissensionsas now, | democratic comittee, will resign the and if the democrats are awake to chai uary Is of the committee Jan-| their opportunity they will beat Sen- xt. and devote himself ator Hanna's candidate for governor. to the race for the nomination for! I have no idea who will be named as secretary of state. Mr. Cook is at!the democratic candidate, but we Present in charge of the work of or-|/ have plenty ef good material to ganizing the silver forces under! draw from. Ohio is naturally repub- | the direction of the waysand means lican, but the people do not take eommittee of the demeeratic national | kindly to politieal bosses, and they/ eommittee, with headquarters in! are going to show their resentment Shicago. 2 the polls this year.” { aoe for backbones and muscles | i The name! ;, another, surmounting the roll of the j instances were found to be the most There oa day a crying need of a ref- a | be Th N in THE J STOMA | tional Henry C. Payne, who returned from New York to day, where he has been in conference with the Senate Fi- jnance Committee, makes a statement to the Milwaukee Journal that in his opinion a bill will be formulated at the coming Congress that will place ON A GOLD BASIS. | Henry C. Payne Says Congress Will So The Fact Place the United States. Milwaukee, Wis., Republican June 15.—Na- Committeeman SreUSTBE «ithe United States upon a gold | standard basis. His statement fol- | lowe: KENNEDY IS GIVEN SEVENTEEN YEARS. Jury Finds Quail Hunter Guilty of Train Robbery. Hartville, , June 20 —Guilty and seventeen years in prison is the} verdic: that the jury brought in at| 6:30 to night in the case of the state of Mirsouri against John F. Kenne.- dy on the charge of holding up the Kaneas City, Fort Scott & Memphis mail train at Macomb, this county on the night of January 3 last, and robbing the safe of the Southern Express company of $900. The jurors had been out two hours and forty-five minutes. The case had been on trial eleven days, but the actual taking of testi mony occupied but seven. The other four days were wasted in prelimi-| nary skirmishing. Monument to Samea Heroes. Vaneouver, B C, June 18.—Aus- tralian advices say that the officers of the British and American war- ships who have been fraternizing during the recent trouble in Samoa have decided to erect a joint monu- ment te the memory of tne English- speaking men slain in tha various engagements. It is intended to erect a granite momument with the names of the British engraved on one panel ard the Americans on killed with the British and Ameri- can flags intwined. igs Them trom Robbery, Sedalia, , June 16 —Timotby Donnohue, a se on the Mis- souri, Kansas & Texas railway, was waylaid and assaulted last night near Sicher’s hotel, by “Roxy” Roach, John Fitzgerald and “Loppy” Doyle and died thie morning. Donnohue, early in the evening, prevented the men from robbing a drunken man. They enticed him from the hotel, and after knocking him down with a elub, which fractured his ekull, kicked him until citizens and police rescued him The men were arrested. Eyery Cow Was Diseased. Chicago, Ill, June 19 —Germs of | tuberculosis were found in every cow| of a herd of ninety two that were received at the stock yards to-day. The choicest of the lot in several pronounced victims of the disease. jin the worst cases the pulmonary| | organs were one mass of tuberculosia | | bacilli So great was the havoc played in many instances that the| respiratory organs had lost many of | their boyine characteristies Many | | of the infectei cows were from state} | ] institutions For a Gold Standard B Bill. Milwaukee, Wis , June 16 —Henry | C. Paine, national republican com | mitteeman from Wisconsin, who has | just returned from New York, where! | he attended the “sound money con- | ference” made a statement yesterday | that in his opinion a bil! will be formulated at the coming congress | satisfactory to the house and senate | slike that will provide for the plac- ing ef the United States ona gold standard. } in conferenee with |nance Committee members at the | meeting at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, | New York that a plan for the revi-|is no hay and very few vegetables, |} sion of cur monetary system that| will be satisfactory not only to the| | Senate but to the House as well will | finally be approved and that that plan will be formulated into a bill} which will become a law. gold standard basis. inently satisfactory standard men and the tte. of | sound money. man. Million Copies of Havermeyer’s Tru Bingham went home near Pineville last night and calling him to the door shot part ef his head off. The killing was overa The Binghams are promi- |< Riddle came |: woman. nent mountain people. to Pineville from Barbourville, Ky. “It is my judgement, after being the Senate Fi- “That law will provide for It wil . be to eta I do not believe there is any truth in the statement that Senator Hanna} |is going to retire from the chairman- ship of the National Committee. Senator Hanna will continue as chair- I had a talk with him and be- | | lieve this to be his intention. Republican Iam quite sure that TO BE USED BY DEMOCRATS. ust State- ment to be Printed. Washington, D. C, June 16.—The testimony of Henry O. Havermeyer | head of the sugar trust, given before the industrial commission appointed by President McKinley, will be given widespread circulation paign document by the democrats. In his Havermeyer says the protective tar-| iff is the mother of all trusts and re- sponsible for most of the trust evils|- | which efflict the nation. copies of his testimony will be eircu- lated by the demoerats and it is ex- pected to prove the most convincing document of the next campaign as & cam- testimony Trust Magnate One million Middlesboro, Ky., June 15.—Wm. to John Riddle’s ow Old She LOOKS Poor clothes cannot make you look old. Even pale cheeks won’t do it. Your household cares may be heavy and disappoint- ments may be deep, but they cannot make you look old. One never f. thing does ils. it and It is young seventy impossible to look with the color of years in your hair. permanently postpones the tell-tale signs of age. Used according Ao directions it gradually brings k the color of youth. At y your hair may look as it did at fifteen. It th s the hair also; stops om fall out; and cleanses the s. from dandruff. send you t Hair and its Di The Best Advice Free. _ zoe do not < the | placing of the United States upon a |early hour this morning the building | RUSSIAN CROPS A FAILURE s Now Officially Admitted Suffering Predicted London, June 17.—The hope that the dire famine prevailing in seven or eight governments of Rus with a population upwards of 11,000,000, would be ameliorated by the new crops within a couple of months are now dashed to the ground, as it is officially admitted the harvest is practically a failure. Owing to the protracted drouth the crops have been scorched, and in large areas in the south they are not worth the cost of reaping, while the cold in the northern provinces has been add there almost equally damaging. To to the misery of the situation and the beet root, the principal crop in the province of Kieff, has been practically ruined. The whole situ ation promises to end in appalling | disaster. | | Bleyen Firemen Injured, | | Omaha, Neb, June 18.—At | occupied by Alleao Bros wholesale | grocery was discovered on fire. The | blaze started on the fifth floor and} burned doownward, destreying the | fifth and fourth floors and tbeir econ- tents. The damage to the stock is| estimated at $100,000 and is covered by $170,000 insurance. The build-! ing is damaged $15,000, the loss| covered by insurance. During the progress of the fire a magazine filled with powder which tbe firemen were moving toa place of safety explod ed. Eleven firemen, including the | chief, were injured, two seriouely. Two Negroes in Danger. | Fayette, Mo, June 18—The 14 year old daughter of Weod Dough- erty, a farmer living in East Howard county, was dragged from her horse by two negroes and assaulted yes terday. The little girl was riding alone to attend childrens day serv- ices at a nearby church. The ne- groes escaped. Soon after the girl gave the alarm and forty determined men, armed with shotguns and revolvers, are in hot pursuit. Deputy Marshal Slaughter captured Jchn Brown, one of the alleged assailants, and, outwitting the mob, placed him in jail. The mob is still ia pursuit of the other negro, said to be Charles Emry, and if caught he will be rid died with bullets. 39) of rang ribed as begin- west half o r of sectio #) of range north eight rods fying said debt, ALLEN, Trustee, | germs 3) Mnks, thence | ateare ce to the | ° | said letters, or they ms e ied from | any benefit ‘of said estate; andif such claims be | not exhibited within two years from the Of this publiestion, the: barred. This 7th day ot 32-48 shall ae forever we ie GLLES, fe Eat gg thence west | f the +? | ofF date | between the hours vou Can't — Dodge Them Did you ever try to dodge the rain-drops ? Did not succeeg very well, did you? It's just as useless to try to escape from the germs of consumption. You can’t do it. They are about us om every hand and we are con. Stantly taking them into our lungs. Then why don’t we all have this disease? Sinpply because these germs canyét gain a foot. hold in a strgfg throat ang fungs. It’s Avhen these are weak that e germs master, The body must be well supplied with fat. The danger comes when the blood is poor and the | body is thin. If your cough does not yield, and your throat and lungs feel raw and sore, you / should not delay another day’ Se tt’s Emulsion of Cod-Liver Oil with Hy pophose phites at once. It will heal the inflamed membranes and greatly strengthen them as well. The digestion becomes stronger, the appetite bette ‘and the weight increases. Tl! ' whole body be- comes well .ortified and the of consumption cannot gain a foothold. It’s this nourishing, sustain- ing and strengthening power of SCOTT’S EMULSION that has made it of such value in all wasting and exhausting diseases. SCOTT & 4 $1.00, all dru IWNE, Chemi Sheriff’s Sale nd author script clerk of the € rnable at the , me directed net M A Shel- MA real » Wo buthwest >whship quarter of forty-two (42) 1 thereof ns’ may be re- »the highest bidder execution and costa, E. C. MUDD, heriff of Bates County, Mo. Sheriff's Sale By virtue ond authority of a special execution for delinquest taxes issued from the office of the clerk ef the circuit court of Bates a Mo.. returnable at the June term, 14% court, tome directed in favor of A B c ctor ef the revenue of ‘ainst John C Ammons, I have levied and seized uponall the right, title, im terest and claim of said defendant, John€ Ammons, in and to the following, d bed real estate situated in Bates county. M to-wit Fifteen (15) acres, north t northwest quarter of the northeast qaagler of section fteen (15) in township thisfy-elght (38) of range twenty-nine (29),1 Da Monday, July 1899 eee the hours of nine o’clock in the fere- and five o’clock in the afternoon of thet the east front door of the court house, ne city of Batler, Bates county, Missouri, sell the saine or 60 much there of as may be re- quired at public venduetothe highest bidder for cash, to satisfy said execution and costs. kK. © MUDD. Sherif of Bates County, Me. a tleeti ite b t Bates and jay J ioe ss noon and five o'cl oa oO day, for Pp z said Get, cos 4. ALLEM, T

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