The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 11, 1900, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Actually Retrograded, Washington, D.C. Jan. 4.—H. B. Frissel, principal of the Hampton, Va., Normal and industrial institute | appeared before the industrial com- |}mission to-day. He spoke of the ion of the negro people and industrial conditions FCASTORIA | For Iniants and Children. ‘Tee Kind You Have Aiways Bought ‘ cone in the south. ing, he said, and in many sections the condition of the negro is better than in slavery days. The farmers are unable to break away from the | lien system of crops and wages are | small. iewutifud 2 yout Although the south has spent | $100,000,000 on public education for negroes, one-third of the race has actually | is where retrograded, and one-third it was at the beginning of | the war, and the remainder have ad- vanced. Negroes, he said, have been taught that their salvation will found | through political means rather than \ by hard work. be Wives in Tanganyika are consider- eda luxury, and in Zululand they cost from $150 to $800, but on : & CO., CHICAGG $2.75 BOX_RAIN CCA) | the Tanganyika plateau one can be CIA $5.00 watTenrevo’ | had for five or six goats. One goat Cagthised. ont | equals fifteen to thirty cents. ‘|Save Your Money. | One box of Tutt’s Pills willsave | many dollars in doctors’ bilis | They willsurely cure all diseases ofthe stomach, liver or bowels. No Reckless Assertion For sick headache, dyspepsia, malaria, constipation and bilio- usness, a million people endorse TUTT’S Liver PILLS ind Overconts at frou Address, & CO., CHICACO, TLL | relialie. —2aivuc.? 247 aaa cut for an attack of If the Damp and Ch trate, look SCLA‘/CICA. St. Jacobs Oil will penetra’ But deep as the quiet its r. Sciatic nerve is, So That the People May Know THE NEW KANSAS CITY TIMES. The recent change in the management of THE KAN- SAS CITY TIMES has made such an impression on the minds of the thinking public of Kansas City that it seems but fair to let our friends know what we are doing. By the infusion of new blood, the employment of new energy, the backing of ample capital—under the person: A. Lesueur, Secre- tary of State of Missouri, as Editor-in-Chief—it is the determination of the present management to make THE TIMES the greatest morning paper that enters the Southest territory. With this purpose in enlarged and placed under competent direction, more Associated Press news is printed than by any other y Paper, a most efficient staff of corre- supervision of Hon. A. view, every department is Kansas City spondents is being established, and the finest service which modern ingenuity can produce is placed at the disposal of the TIMES patrons. If you want to get ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME from up-to-date sources through the only met- ropolitan democratic daily in the Missouri valley READ THE KANSAS CITY TIMES. The Kansas City Times Company. 4 THE GREAT REPUBLICAN The St. Louis PAPER OF AMEDbICA. Globe-Democrat. Turice Every Wreek. 20% Eight Pages | or More Each Tuesday and Friday. | ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. No other paper gives THE NEWS so promptly, so fully, so aceu- rately. No other paper prints so great a variety of interesting and instructive reading matter for every member of the family. No other paper is so good, so clean, so cheap. And get this sterling Republican UBSCRIBE NOW newspaper, this peerless Home Journal during all of the important national cempaign of 1900, and until after the election of the next president. It is indispensa- ble to every citizen, and ought to be in every household. SaMpPLe Cortes FREE. Address - GLOBE PRINTING CO :0:———_ The Great Newspaper of the world. Almost Equal to a Daily at the Price of a weekly. The Daily GLOBE-DEMOCRAT is without a rival in all the west. and stands at the very front among the few really great news- papers of the world. The small farms are rapidly increas- | ON THE FIRING LINE. Dr. Harry Allen Writes to His Mother, Mrs. Dr.W. H. Allen, of Rich Hill. Casiar, P.1., Nov. 17, 1899. My Dear MoTHER: Iam now on the firing line with company G and C,of the 35th. Lam at present surgeon in charge, hospi- tal steward, corps man and cook, ouly four men inthe hospital though, and nothing to cook but and tack for bread, 80 not much to do. Every oncein a while the insurgents open up on but never reach the town; the patrols are too strong for them. One native brought in last night, cut up badly; the (ladrons) robbers caught him. I fixed him up and sent him to the rice coffee, hard us guard house until Maj. Short. com- manding 2nd Bat., could see him. One of my old friends, Dr. Barney, passed through at daylight this morning for San Antonia, with the {th cavalry. Heate breakfast with me, that is he helped me cook it. I will have a cook to-night from Aryat. Tell father | have 500e¢rs Bismuth sub., about 200 tab Phe nacetiumn, 500 quinine Sulph, one bottle chloride of lime, four bandages, some cotton and a pocket case hypodermic, and am 70 miles from Manila. Theroads are so bad we can’t get supplies. I can do anything with what I have I made a syringe this morning out ot xamboo; will go out and dig roots to-morrow. T >it is poor, but the floors in their houses would be worth little fortune at all mahogany and ebony. country, everyone a home I have a beard and mustache, you I had to quit writing yesterday as there was quite a fight H. and a Philipi have two should see me. bet ween Company no outpost and more in the hospital. I have not heard from you since I] left Vancouver. nd my to this regiment, I may receive it some . Lknow you would enjoy seeing this town—not just now—amidst fly- we mail ing bullets. Goodbye, [am as well as could be expected—do not like the mud and rain, and if this is dry, God pity us in the rainy season. Ido not know how here, nor how soon I can write. to all, your loving son, Harry. long I will be Love Ladies Can Wear Shoes. One eize smaller after nsing Al en’s foot-Esse & powder to be shaken into the shoes. It maker tight or new shoes feel easy; gives in- stant rellef t+ corns end banions It’s the xureatest comfort discovery of the age. Cares swoll n feet blisters and callous spots. Alien’s Foot-Fase is a certain cure for ingrowing nails. sweating, how act feet At all druggists and shoe stores ‘Trial package FREE by mail. address, Allen 8S. Olmstead, LeRoy, N. Y. Hume Items. Rev. Mayee preached at the Chr ian church Sunday, morning and evening. D. R. Covert is quite sick. Walter Caywood — has from Pittsburg, Kan., wheré he has been in the employ of the P.& G. R. R. Co. Frank Covert has returned from the mining districts of Arkansas where he has been doing some assess- ing on claims held by the Hume Min- ing Co. which they consider very val- uable. H. P. Jones of Galena, Kan., spent the holidays with his family. Hume merchants enjoyed an im- mense trade during the holidays. The directors of the Hume bank held a meeting Tuesday to consider the advisability of reducing their cap- ital stock. C. H. Seniors spent Sunday and New Year at Harrisonville. Mrs. Seamon’s, mother and sister of Fulton, Kan., have spending a week with her. Mrs. McLaughlin and children, of New Franklin, Mo., are spending hol- idays with her parents, J. J. Mes- singer and wife. The cash business is gradually growing in favor in Hume, several ofthe merchants are now contem- plating adopting the cash system in the near future. Those who have already adupted are well pleased. Deputy Sheriff Childs was in Hume Saturday on business. $100 Reward $100. Yhe readers ot this paper will be pleas- ed ;to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that i-~ Catarrh. Hali’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical raternity. Catarrh being a constitution- al disease, requires, a constitutional treatment: Hall’s Cotarrh Cure is taxen internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous sirtaces or the sys- tem, thereby destroying the foundation ot the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution returned RaEY Daily, | Sunday d assisting nature in doing its work. Including Sunday. | | Without Sunday. Edition. The proprietors have so much faith in 1 year. $6.00 1 year... 2 36 to 60 Pages. its curative powers, that they offer One 6 months. | 1 Magasin ante $2.00 | Hundred Doles. fos, any Gane that it 3 : 6 months......... 1.00 | tails tu cure. nd tor list of testimon- spas : jals Address F. J. Cusxey & Co BY MAIL, POSTAGE PREPAID. Tuiedo, O. g@p7Sold by druggis t75c. MISS PARKINSON’S SUCCESS. Paris Comment on Her Singing at Mme. Marchesi’s Jubilee. | K. C. Star. H The Paris Figaro of Dec. 14 had | interesting mention of Mme. Mar- chesi’s jubilee fete and of the of Miss Elizabeth Parkir of Kan- sas City, who is a pupilof the famous instructor of prima dennas. A lit- eral translation of the article fol-| lows: “Marchesi day before riods of he showed us at her fete, yesterday, the three pe- artistic activity. Mme. Krauss represented the first period of the conservatory at Vier which De Murska. Fricei, d’Angeri, Proska, Tremelli, Bontec- belong hoft, ete.; Mme. Horwitz represented the period of teaching in Paris. to which belong Calve, Melba and Eames, and, lastly, the two singers of the future, Miss Parkinson and Mile. Doria. very much praised by the public, and who promise to walk in the footsteps of their predece sors. “To the names of the illust people who were present may idd ed the ambassadors from Italy and the United States, the Barons Dec zesand Mendestedt. Sir Lady Campbell-Clarke, Counte f Baron Saint-Amani, Mme. der Dumas, Baror More than letters arrived during all parts of the world Marchesi receiv etc. trated card of pari Americar ambassador ar ned by the ambassac const 1 1 many prominent persons inthe Amer. ican colony in Paris, congratulating the eminent prof who had brought out so many an ce- lebrities. Marchesi received cards of congrat- ulation from the Academy of Cecile in Rome, from the Academy at Florence and the Philhart i ciety in her native town. Frankfort precious souve- St. also a great nirs and magnificent boquets of flow- many ers. “In conclusion, never to be forgotten.” The little German cape Miss Parkinson in the Massenet’s “Werther.” sang with Mme. Blanche and Leon David. tenor from era Comique. was presented to her by Mme. Mathilda Marchesi. Qn the eard pinned to it w words: “Accept from me tt brance of your first —Mathilde Marchesi.” it was a soiree worn by seene from which she Marchesi the Op- pe in remem- p onthe stage Miss Parkinson is a daughter of Judge Parkinson. She is not mor than 20 years of A sister, Miss Mary Par'! her in Paris. A Boon for Safferiug Homanity For constipation, indigestion, nervousness weakness luse of sleep, loss of sppetite or weight, Dr. Thurmond’s Blood Syrup ie gusranteed to cure you. Sold by HL. Tockerr. Pingree’s Session a Failure. Lansing, Mich., Jan. 4.—The house adopted a resolution today to ad- journ finally on Saturday. The sen- ate will concur. Nothing has been accomplished by the special session. asa majority of the senators are opposed to the tax- ation and other measures urged by Governor Pingree. The house this noon killed the municipal street rail- way ownership joint resolution. The vote was 53 ayes, 36 noes. It r- quired a two-thirds vote to pass the bill. We Will Give You a {f you will show our publicatio friend: Wedon’t waut -ou to anything The watch is made by known American firm, in two sizes. children’s sod adults’ nicke! or gold pisted hunting case and fully guaranteed. Send z cents for Nenlars. Overland, 3% Park Row, New ‘ork City. $4 Watch mm to your sell them = well- Chairman Sam B. Cook, of the state demoeratic committee, has an- nounced that he will call a meeting of the committee about the 26th of Feb- ruary to fix the time and place for holding the three state conventions. The national committee does not meet until February 22 to fix a time and place for holding the national convention, and hence the late date of the meeting of the state commit- tee. Mr. Cook reaffirms a former statement to the effect that at the meeting of the state committee al- luded to he will tender his resigna- tion aschairman. He has been urg- ed repeatedly not to do so, but it seems nothing can change his deter- mination.—Ex. Ja Gripe, Pam Or discomfort, oe prea: in testi — b mpt, eee nee you take Hood’s Pills Sold_by all druggists. 25 cents. IT ne ITAL, $75,000. AP 7) Capital, furnished, titles examined papers drawn, ¥. J. TrGanp President. Jno. C. Hayes, Abstractor. MN SLE EES MEELIS! CEA ERLGELAI OLAELLE PPE LPP ) f | rst not Americ than $40,000 of in money present day. The mem- bers of the ri Italian families > alone exce Giuliano di Me- i, on the o« Medici and Borgia we asion of a tournament in Florence, a costume $15.000. Lucretia Bor- 1 the oceasion of her so of Este con- -s of which each cost 100 d ts Charles the d coat Upon paign the earried not less than 400 boxes fille with articles of his wardrobe. Jewel ry worn by a fashionable woman of | ~dible when full ledge such weight ht if the fair The bri- was orn: those days is almost ir it is borne in mine that : of that it could stand upr court costume was wearer was not inside of dal dress of Maria Medici mented with 32,000 pearls and 000 diamonds CASTORIA. Bears the Signature of The Great Presidential Campaign of 1900 The wars of America have, hereto- fore, settled affairs of state. Great questions of policy, of national mc- tives and national conclusions hay been answered as soon as the battle ared away, and the victor realize tory he war with prec ssors. It not unswered questions. but has created probh Spain is which may not be solved lightly These problems are beit wated by the political partie ‘fore they can be definitely settle the ballot box it is necessary that the | people be informed in regard to the situation. The result of the campaign of 1900 ! will make a broad mark upon the page of history. it will doubtless es- tablish the policy of the great repub- lic of America for a quarter of a ce! tury. Itis vastly important, there- fore. thatevery citizen shall study the situation through that best of mediums, a great newspaper. The most reliable newspaper, the best newspaper is The Semi-Weekly Re-| public, which affords a comprehen- sive view of the political s tuation in allits bearings. It publ shes the new news. The Semi-Weekly Republic is a democratic paper. but it offers to its readers the news regarding all the political parties, and this without prejudice. It is a fair newspaper. Tes telegraph and cable news service has been proved to be the best em- ployed by a modern newspaper. Its special features are unsurpassed. It is the newspaper for the reader who has not excess to a daily paper. News features, art and literature combine to make the Kepublic’s Sun- day Magazine a specially attractive weekly magazine. The half-tone il- lustrations printed in this magazine surpass anything ever attemptad by a newspaper. These products of photography are worth the p-ice of the paper. Special articles by trained writers on the news and the subjects engaging the public atterton are prepared for the Republic's Sunday Magazine. A distinctly useful and attractive feature of this magazine is the fashion department. Always reliable and up with the times, the ladies find the fashion pa: ea delight. indeed. The Republic’s suaday Mag- azine ss aad to every member of the family. The subscription price of the Semi- Weekly Republic is $1 per year. The Repubiic Sunday Magazine $1.25 a year. Both papers are now offered at the very low price of $1.50 for one vear. To secure this low rate both ‘must be ordered and paid for at the same time. Address all orders to The Republic, St. Louis. Mo. It Will Care You While You Wait, If you fuffer with that horrible caterzh in bead, loss of smell or taste. caterrhal con- . Dr. Tharmond’s Ce- samption, or terrh Care is soid socure, nopsy Price Sc gad 81 00 per Dottfe st H. L. Packer's. HON.J. 58. NEBWBEBRY, BoTILER, Mo. Successor te BATES COUNTY NATIONAL BANK. EstasuisnEp Dac., 1870. + Money to loan on real estate, at low rates. title to all lands and town lote in Kates county. securities always on hand and for sale. ‘ Hox. J. B. Newseeny, Vice-President. | | unlike its | PLS Vice-Pres't. UNTY BANK, A Genera! Banking Business Transacted Bates County Investment Co., ISUTLER, MO.> 850,000. Abstracts of Choice Abstracts of title and all kinds of real estate J.C Cran, Seo'y. & Treas. 8. F. Wannock, Notary. if $ § For the Weak and Aged. j The best thing for weakly persons and in- Valide is Speer’s Port Grape Wine. His Rur- | gund and Claret Wines are ased at dinner b the best society people in New York an Wasbing‘en. To Congress For Good Roads. | a urg. Pa. Jan. 2.—The most ir tstep which the league of Wheelman has yet taken for sox roads is about t “l resident Keenan vr for the Congress of a million dollans of improved ut United States resentative Graham of essional dis- father the measure iS TURIA. y he K Have Always Bourht Chinese Kill a Missionary. Pekin, Jan. 4—The Rev. Brooks jofthe church Missionary society of E wid, stationed at Ping Yin, in (the province of Shan Tung, was capt- ured in that vicinity and murdered Dec 3 by members of a seditious so- ciety called “Boxers.” This society {has been active lately, destroying jmany villages and killing native Christians. The governor of the provinee bas dispatched foree to | the place of the murder, | There are large furniture stores in rg and Pretoria, and the of their | houses furnished in the most modern tyh | Johannest | better class Boers have In L8SS the imports of wood- fen furniture alone were valued at $1,112,000 | THE EVIDENCE COMES. — From All Parts of the City and | and From All Kinds of People. | Testimony Is Daily Gathered in Behalf of Morrow's Kid-ne-oids and Liy- erlax. No preparation ever placed before the people of Butler has gained such a high reputation as Morrow’s Kid-ne-oids and Liveriax. The statements of Missouri people sbout these meg- | icines are remarkable. Geo. King, manufacturer, who resides at 110 Jule street, St. Joseph, Mo., has used these medicines with remarkable results and speaks as follows: ‘‘I have been afMficted with liver complain for s long time; [am naturally of s bilious temperament. I had malaria is my system and was very bilious much of the time. i bave taken liver pills and other liver remedies but nothing relieved me antil I eom- menced to take Morrow's Liveriax. I felt much better after taking the first dose and com- tinued to take it until that tired languid feel- ing left me snd iam full of animation and as lively and vigorous asever. Malaria has been driven out of my system, and my liver seems to perform its factions. Liveriax is splendid. I took a few deses of Morrow’s Kid-ne-oids for their tonic effect and Iam so well pleased with the result that I will continue to ase them right slong. I will heartily recommend Mor- row’s Kid-ne-oids and Morrow's Liveriax.’’ Liveriax are small red tablets which eure constipation and sell for 25 cents a box. Morrow's Kid-ne-oldsare sot pilis, but yel- low tablets, whieh is a seientific formof pre- pering medicine. Kid-ne-oids will positively care sil kidney silments. They are pat a wooden bexes which eontsin enongh for sbeut two weeks’ treatment and sell st Sfty centss box. For eale st all drag stores. Descriptive beokiet mailed upom request by Jeba Morrow & Chemists, SpringSeid, Ohio ‘ ru « ra | Cnamuiog hy aby a=

Other pages from this issue: