The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 5, 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)

F Scene in Portugal at the Rio Porto Vineyards. YING THE PORT GRAPES TO THE WINERY, ON THE HEADS OF MEN AND WOMEN, NEAR THE VALLE DE MENETIZ WHERE THEY ARE DUMPED IN THE MASHING VATS TO BE TRODDEN FOR PORT WINE. The rugged hills with projecting rocks of brown stone and shale containing a large quantity of iron, make it impossible to use wagons ere hence the grapes have to be carried to the treading vat or larger as they are called, and some are large envugh for twenty persons to ‘tread, which they do dancing to d by the proprietor. geen COLORS ALFRED SPEER, the Pioneer wine grower of New Jersey whose Port Grape wine and Burgandy rivals the world, imported the Port Grape vines many 1s ago, and planted vineyards in the Passaic Valley N. J. The soil jn Passaic county, New Jersey, is identical to that of de’Menetiz. Speer’s New Jersey Vineyards are situated in the Passaic valley below the mountain range and the pes are carted to the winery in the town of Passaic where they are mashed between rollers made of rubber, which do not break the seeds, and made into wine. These grand wines of Speer’s that have mellowed in flavor in the course of years ot ripening, are the choicest wines in this country and can only be obtained by paying a price that is higher than new wines from western vineyards. Mr. Speer deems it necessary for a healthy wine that it be allowed years to mature in wood to yet rid of its coarse parts; with this object he keeps his wines several years in fumigated cellars and frequently racks before bottling or offering for sale. The repttation of Speer’s wines as a valuable medicinal and family wine ex’ends around the world tag~Grocers and Drugyists sell Speer’s Wines and Brandy “A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR- GAIN.” MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES SAPOLI Killed Under Freight Train. URGES EMIGRATION TO AFRICA. | Pleasanton, Kan., March 28.—A 2 i at : stranger was struck by a Memphis Advice'to Negroes Given by Rey. Milton freight train one mile and a_ half Sparks. south of this place shortly after noon i 5 Baitimore, March 28.—The Rev, | Yesterday and injured so badly that he died this evening about four o'clock. He was walking | the track with a strong north wind ored Baptist preachers herelast night | 2! his back and he did not the urged the emigration of the colored | approach of the train until it was race to Afrien. He argues that the | upon him, when he jumped, but could Negro was transplanted by force and | not escape, and the enginestruck him could not thrive as he should until | i! the side as he was getting off and he returned to the land of his fathers | left him by the rails, and that there opportunities for ad- picked up by the section crew and vancement in material matters and | brought to town and medical attend- the science of government would be | #nce secured. He rallied enough to afforded which could never be the for- | tell who he was and how the accident tune of the negro in this country, He said that his name was where the predominance of the white John Parks and that hishome was race was constantly increasing, ow- in West Plains. Mo., and that he w: ing to immi ion on the road to visit a sister who lives After a general the he subject, a resolution was adopted | had not seen for eighteen years. His stating : Milton Sparks, educational agent of at the national Baptist convention, in an address to a large meeting of col- south on hear a where he was occurred Ss three miles south of here whom discussion of sister was notified and he was taken “Let us seek to increase our popu- | to her home, but he died shortly after lation by encouraging the colored | #'Tiving there. race of other countries, such as the West Indies, Cuba and the Congo No Saloon for Jeffries. F State, to immigrate to this James Jeffries, champion, was read- Seat : hink | MZ eB Story by Opie Reed as he sat ince certain congressmen think | vith his coat and vest offin his room the government has millions of dol- lars to appropriate to send us to Afriea, let us ask for $5,000,000 to aid those of our race who may desire to migrate to this country.” jat the Midland. He arose and ‘his chair to the reporter for the Star, and then the pugilist lay on the bed i with one arm resting on the back of, square face peering | over. Jeffrie never loquacious, | but in speaking of the pects for the prize fighter he remark- ed in his clear voice: “T don’t want any saloon business. I wouldn't take the best in the United States if you would give it to me. There’s money in it: but I don’t want it.” Jeffries is by trade a boilermaker, and he says he always has that in gave } and his great, Botha May Succeed Joubert. London, Mareh 29.—The Pretoria correspondent of the London Daily Mail, telegraphing yesterday, says: “General Joubert died of peritonitis. The funeral will take place to-morrow (Thursday). The Pleading with the widow to allow a temporary interment here, with a state funeral. Joubert always ex- pressed a desire to be buried ina Mazsoleum built on his farm. future pros- saloon government is reserve. “Hissuccessor in the chief command For coughs and colds there is no will probably be General Louis Botha, medicine so_ effective as Ballard’s Horehound Syrup. It is the ideal Row commanding in Natal.” remedy. Price 25vents and 50 cents; | atH. L. Tucker's drug store F uneral of H. E. Taubeneck. Marshall, NL., March 28.—The body | of Hon. H. E. Taubeneck arrived from Seattle Sund@y, and the funeral was held yesterday at his father’s home, four miles southeast of Mar- ‘Shall. A.L Maxwell of Lawrence- Ville, delivered the funeral oration, and the father of the former populist Rational chairman made a short ad- dress. The body was interred in the | Mississippi Negro Lynched. Greenville, Miss.. March 28.—The negro, Will Edwards, alias Wing Smith, who murdered Edw. B. John son at Dulaney’s levee camp last ) Thursday. was hanged by a mob to | the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley rail | Toad bridge between Greenville and Leland after being taken Monday S night from the officers aboard a Private graveyard on the home farm. | train Hundreds of people attended the fun- eral. | Even the most vigorousand hearty 7s | people have at times a feeling of ¥ : | weariness and lassitude. To dispel \ AZT excnseg | this feeling take Herbine; it will im- : Wing é oy szveg | Part vigor and vitality. Price 25cts. ; ode ch At H. L. Tucker's drug store. Be ENGLANDS HEAVY LOSSES. ' What It Has Cost the British Army to Drive Back the Boers. London, March 28.—The casualty list shows that the | losses will be very heavy. Mr. Wyndham’s original roseate jestimate that the war would be car- ried through at a cost of not more. than 3,000 lives is bound to be very! much exceeded. Up to Saturday the | British forces had lost 2,130 men killed, while 9,807 were wounded and | .505 missing or prisoners, making a |total of 15.453. To added 1,200 deaths from a grand total of 16 i however, do not the actual weakening weekly | British these must be disease, or These figures, make evident of the British army due to_ illness, hardships and long marches. McDonald, writing Paardeberg, states that the Highland brigade had at the time only 24 offi- cers and 1,600 men fit for duty out ofa total of 37 officers 3,000 men, Hard marching, bivouacks in the open and other trials of the se- vere campaign had reduced the bri- gade’s strength nearly 50 per cent. The 6,000 men that remained of the garrison at Ladysmith are re- covering very slowly from the effects of the siege It may be weeks before they are able to participate in any military movements. Letters are now arriving Ladysmith which show the desperate condition to which the had come when thecity was releived. Only 1,000 men were physically fit to offer any determined resistance to the Boers at the Lord Dundonald arrived. Gen from and from urrison time \ Threatened Schism. St. Louis Post-Dispatch The Chicago Times-Herald will not be ccused of any lack of faithfulness Therefore the fol- lowing extract from rial has the more sign “Before the writer lies a personal letter froma member of President McKinley's cabinet to a prominent and widely read republican in Chicago to republicanism a recent edito- ance : who wrote remonstratively against the proposed Porto Rican legislation In every line this letter breathes the same spirit of arrogant superiority and assumption of infallibility that envelops the republican majority in Washington.” There is hardly a republican news- paper in the country representing the wholesome and patriotic sentiment of that party that does not condemn of the McKinley &d- ministration in the Porto Rican mat- the mad polic ter. Partisan loyalty counts for much, but there isa very distinct reyolt in the “grand old party” against the “mysterious influences’ which to be all powerfulin Washington. seem The Times-Herald is one of many republican papers which are not will- ing to surrender unconditionally to yndicate politicians who ‘for what there is in the gang of are in polities a” Britons Applaud Hay. London, March 28.—Theafternoon hewspapers here unanimously ap- plaud Secretary Hay’s diplomatic achievement in establishing the doc- trine of the open door in China, and say his success is much more consid- erable than hitherto realized. The St. James Gazette remarks : “The United States has conferred a benefit on the whole ized world by securing an agreement on a sub- ject of such vast importance to the prospects of ci peace as well as com- merce.” The Globe thinks there is substan- tialreason for according the final leadership in “This immensely im- portant movement, inaugurated by Lord Salisbury to the United States. owing to Europe’s jealousy of Great Britain, while the contrary, all the great powers will now vie with one another in their professions of friendship for America,” and adds: on “Secretary Hay’s dexterous skill in completing his task has left nothing to be desired.” has | A new postoffice rule into effeet imposing a fine of $500 or one year’s imprisonment on any one who through carelessness or other- wise takes mail not themselves from the postoffice and fails to return it at once. This ap- plies to newspapers, as well as letters and other valuable mail. People when taking their mail from the oftice should examine it before leaving the building. Itis but a moment and will save a deal of trouble. To say that itis the postmaster’s fault will eut no figure under this ruling. just gone belonging to A WOMAN’S PLUCKY FIGHT. | With a Bandit and Winchester She Re- pulses a Posse. man, @ cattle thief and fugitive from justice, won his spurs as a desperado of the first water last night in a bat- tle with the officers on his track. A posse, headed by Constable T. V. Imboden and Villie Stricklan of Dixon, surrounded Kimman and a companion in a house near Coakville is Southern Pulaski county. Kimman’s refusal to surrender the officers charged the house and opened a fusillade. A desperate fight follow- Kimman’s companion, who is thought to woman, proved a game fighter, and handled a Winchester in a style that would ed. have been a have done credit to a western bandit. The pair fought the posse toastand- still, and came off victorious. After exhausting their ammunition the officers withdrew and returned Waynesville for re-inforcements. Con- stable Impoden was slightly wounded in the encounter. Kimman is a member of a_notori- ous band of cattle thieves and barn burners, who have terrorized the law abiding citizens of the Pulaski and Texas county border for years. While on trial at the September, 1898, term of the Pulaski circuit court, Kimman coolly walked out of the court room. Judge Woodside ordered the trial to proceed, and the jury established a precedent by finding a verdict of guilty when the defendant was miles Kimman has never been ap- to away. prehended, and a reward of $200 is offered for his capture. Andrew Jackson’s Neighbor. Alto Ul., March 28.—Mrs Polly Sanders died here to-day S84 years. ham County, N. C., ted with Andrew Jackson during her girlhood. She lived on joining his. She boarded Union diers at Cape Girardeau, Mo., during the civil war, and frequently eluded the guards. sippi Riverand walked toCarbondale, lll., a distance of thirty miles. She could neither read or write, but was Pass, 1 She was born in Roe and was acquain- a farm ad sol- She crossed the Missis and strongest She one of the shrewdest characters in Southern lived here about twenty-five years. Ilinois. Those horrid fits of depression, mel ancholy. low spirits, and sudden irri tability, that sometimes afflicts ever good tempered pecple, is due to the blood being permeated with black bile. Hersine will purify the blood, restore health and cheerfulness. Price 50 cents. At H. L. Tucker's drug store. India’s Lo’ 's in Dollars. Caleutta, March 29.—In address- ing the council upon the budget yes- terday the viceroy, Lord Curzon, saic the loss to the wheat crop, caused by the drouth during the present year. was 40 million to 50 million dollars He added that the loss to the cotton rop was 35 million dollars, while the oil seed crop, usually covering 18 million acres, was non-existent out- side of Bengal and the northwest provinces. The viceroy said it was impossible for any government toanticipate the consequences of a visitation of nature on so gigantic and ruinous a scale. New Racing Circuit Formed. Holden, Mo., March 28.—The secre taries of Harrisonville, Holden, Ne- vada, Rich Hill and Springfield have formed aracing circuit for western Missouri and will hold their fairs and races in the following order: Nevada July 31, Harrisonville Aug. 14, Hold- en Aug. 7, Rich Hill Aug. 21, Spring- field Aug. 28. This will be the 18th annual meeting for the Holden fair. and it has always paid its premiums on demand. RHEU MATISM—CATARRH, BLOOD DISEA ARE Cured by B. B. B.—Bottle Free to Sufferers. It is the deep-seated, obstinate cases of Catarrh and Rheumatism that B B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm) cures. It matters not what cther treat- ments, doctors. sprays, liniments medicated air, blood purifiers, have failed to do, B. B. B. always prompt- ly reaches the real cause and roote out and drives from the bones, joints, mucuous membrane, and entire sys- tem the specific poison in the blood that causes rheumatism and catarrh. B. B. Bris the only remedy strong enough to do this and cure and so there can never be a returnto the symptoms. Don’t give up hope, but try B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm) or 3 Bs. For sale by druggists at $1 per large bottle, or 6 large bottles (full treatment) $5. To prove our faith in B. B. B. we will senda Trial Bottle Free to sufferers,so they may test the remedy at our expense. Address eae BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga. Dixon, Mo., March 28.—Alf Kim-| Upon | | | | | | | laundry soap, or if you d takes the dirt with it. left soft and smooth. = Again Nominated. Athens, Ohio, March publican congressional distriet con- vention yesterday nominated Hon. 28.—The re- C. H. Grosvenor for congress for the sixth time. indorsing the acts of the administra- Resolutions were apopted tion in regard to the Philippines and Porto Rico. Mafeking Bombarded Monday. London, March 29.—A Pretoria dispatch to the London Daily Mail, dated March 28, says: An official dispatch reports a heavy bombard- ment of Mafeking Monday, March 26, which was meet- in progress on ing with a spi A FEW ited response. WILL CONVINCE. Can Be Sure You Are on the Right Track. A Feeling of Security That Any Person Can Be Very Thankful to Have. There is a feeling of security in using row’s Kid-ne oids. A few doses will convince you that you are on the right track. They act quickly and pleasantly; they are not atall bad to take and are conveniently pet up in wooden boxes so that you cancarry them in your pocket and use them while at work You do not have to stop work while using Kid-ne-oids. They have done a great deal of good for a vast num- ber of people here in Missouri. We give you the experience of Rev. M Broaddus, 300 Ault St., Moberly, Mo., says: ‘‘I have been afflicted tor- B The pain across the small of my back extended down into the hip joints and was very severe at | times. I could not bend over readily or straighten up suddenly. I hai other distress- ing and @noying symptomsof kidney trouble which the doctor said indicated diabetis. My pervous system was badly deranged. I heard about Morrow’s Kid-ne-cids and decided to geta package and give thema trial, I used them acro ding to the directions and was great- ly relieved of backache and lumbago in less than a week. My nerves are stronger end I am so much better in all respects that I am en- couraged to continue the use of Kid-ne-oids, hoping for acomplete and permanent cure. I can hartily recommend Morrow's Kid-ne-oids to all sufferers from kidney trouble Morrow’s Kid-nv-oids are not pills, but low tablets, which is a scientific form of pre- paring medi They cure all kidney ail- ments yel- ine weeks’ treatment and sell at fifty cents a box. For sale at all druggists Descriptive bookiet mailed upon request by | Chemists, Springfield, John Morrow & Co, Obie. AULdWOSd GNV ATTENS ‘aan Soop 1}—s! uoveas junOmreS sed euQ 4 ~“Ainjus> 24) JO 3s 2G) 405 VOLLVIDS oovannt VIOTVaNAN WSLLVWNSHY asm> prnogs § HO sqoser 9S a DOSESE pood L:aes st 230g 0061 Do not wash your hand find them rough, hard and chapped. soaps are good for scrubbing floors, but not for the skin. Ivory Soap makes a creamy lather that rinses easily and who/| with kidney | trouble at intervals for the Jast twenty years. | Kid-ne-oids are put up in small wood- | en boxes which contain enough for about two | and face with a common o, don’t complain when you Ordinary laundry The natural oil of the skin washed with Ivory Soap is not removed, and the skin is FLOATS. COPYRIGHT (898 BY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO. CINCINNATE Rare Chance for Poor Women. Walton, NX. Y.. Mareh 28.—A. Holmes of this place recently adver- tised in the Delaware county papers as follows s | have had the bad luck to lose I would like to get some honest woman for a tter how poorshe may be, e plenty. When my wife died she left nice clothes which | want to let a good wife have. Tdraw a pen- sion of $16a month Any woman from 20 to 3. a good home can write to me andl letter. Holmes is being flooded On Sunday | 16 years ofage who wants will answer ber with let- He ters. is 54 years old Mrs. A. ©. Holmes No. 2 died two Holmes her fifth got wee ago was husband. Trustee’s Saic. Whereas, Albert M. Garrisuw and Ruth E. by torir deed Miseourt che understeved trustee the following in book No 157 pi d being situate in ¢ of Misscurt, bed real estate lying a the county o. Bates sna ei to-wit: The east half of the west half of the northwest quarter, andthe west half of the northeast qoarter vf the northwest quarter and the north- west quarter of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section seven (7), in town- ship thirty-eight (38), of range thirty (30), con- taining seventy ‘(70) acres more oF less, which conveyance was ia | trust to secure the payment of four certain notes faily described suid deed of trust, and whereas, made im the payment of the principal of one ofsaid notes and the annual interest on | ali of said notes. and whereas, according to | the terms and conditions of said nows and deed | of trust, h default rendered the whole debt | due and able st once, and the same is now | past que aud unpaid. | Now therefore, at the request of the legal holder of said potes and pursuant to the condi- tions of said deed of trast | will proc to sell the above described premises,at public vendue to the highest bidder for cae! the east front door of the court house imthe city of Butler, county of Bate-, and state of Mi-souri, on Friday, April 20, 1900, between the hours of nine noon and five o’clock in day, for the purposes of interest and costs } Those who dislike carry two | pairs of ordinary glasses, can be fit- | ted without any extra trouble. I will examine the eyes with the aid | of the most improved OPT‘CAL APPLIANCES j FREE OF CHARGE | and if you are satisfied. sell or make you apairat avery moderate ¢ harge | Broken lenses and frames sent me iby mail repaired and returned | promptly | Lalso have a complete stock of JEWELRYQWATCHES, CLOCKS and Novelties | Fine watch repairin work guaranteed GEO. W. ELLIS, g Jeweler to a specialty and Leadir Ludwick’s Drug store BUTLER, MO. In J. F East Side Square, ipimninbeaanoneee

Other pages from this issue: