The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 1, 1901, Page 3

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8 ee scgeeemeanesiteaiaiietiiaiaiiiaiaati = ~ v.J. TYGARD, President. HON.J. 8. NEWBEBRY, 3.C.CLARK Vice-Pres't. Cashier THE BATES COUNTY BANK, = BorTiSR, Mo. ‘ Successor to BATES COUNTY NATIONAL BANK : EstaBLisHED Dxc., 1870. CAPITAL, $75,000. -f- 3 5 A General Banking Business Transacted Bates County InvestmentCo., : IBUTLER, MO.: Oapital, Money to loan on real estate, at low rates. title to all lands and town lots in Bates county. securities always on hand and for sale. B50,000. Abstracts of ? Choice g Abstracts of title j ‘ furnished, titles examined and all kinds of rea] estate papers drawn. F.J. Tyaanp, President, Jno. C. Havus, Abstractor. How. J. B. NEwserry, J.C. Vice-President. CLARK, Sec’y. & Trout IES OF FUN. 1 one of Ella’s suit- or ‘Oh, I think lots of her, but I don’t seem to suit.”—Har- lem Life. wspaper ecitor once on rece 8. F. Wannock, Notary oo RAR AR RAR RRR RRR RA RRL DDL PLR RL L LL LPIA RBA LA FLA RA RRRAMS TO SUCCEED OREAR. Governor Appoints Thomas H. Wagner Insurance Commissioner. Jefferson City, Mo., July 20.—Gov- ernor Dockery to-day appointed Thomas H. Wagner of Memphis, Scotland county, to the position of superintendent of the insurance de- partment. ~ Mr. Wagner is a native Missourian, 30 years of age. He is not onlya successful lawyer, but has won dis- tinction in the practice of his profes- sion. The appointment of Mr. Wag- ner to the superintendency of the in- surance departinent is construed to mean that Mr. Seibert is to continue in the office of excise commissioner of the city of St. Louis. Superintendent of Insurance Ed. T. Orear will retire from the office Aug. ist and has been tendered the posi- tion of agency director for the New York Life Insurance company in charge of central and southern Mis- souri, with headquarters at Jefferson City, and will assume tke duties of the position immediately upon retir- | ing from office. the complexion, the mind, cures Herbine clears See buoyancy to eadache, regulates the stomach and | bowels, stimulates the liver, and is, in fact, a perfect guardian of the health.Price 50 cents. For sale by H. L. Tucker. Died of Cold and Hunger. Nome, July 10, via Seattle, Wash., July 22.—A tragic story comes from St.Michael. A party of menenroute to Nome recently found the bodies of sixmen at a point near Cape Roman off It is presumed they all froze to death during some one of the terrible blizzards that prevailed last win- ter. The bodies were scatterd at in- tervals—five of them abouta quarter of a mile apart. They were out- stretched upon the tundra and each was found wrapped in blankets. Each had some camp equipment near him, but no food. One of the men evidently had been either wounded or sick, as he lay on acot constructed of a pair of oars andacanvas sheet. It would seem that’a storm must have overtaken themen carrying him. Evidently be- coming exhausted they abandoned him and wandered off, each for him- self, to perish where found. Ifthe stomach, liver and bowels fail to perform their functions regu- larly and naturally, the blood be- comes contaminated with impurities and the whole system is in conse- quence debilitated. Herbine is re- markable for its efficacy in curing the ailments of summer, and the dis- orders prevalent during hot weather. Price 50 cents. For sale by H. L. ~ Tucker. Missouri Town in Darkness. Chillicothe, Mo., July 19.—At @ Meeting of the city council last night it was ordered that the street lights be discontinued after July 25, whem the contract with the People’s Gas and Electriccompany expires. Bonds Were recently voted for the purpose of putting in a municipal lighting Plant, but injunction proceedings Were brought by the People’s com- pany to have the election declared illegal. The case will come to trial at the September term of the circuit court until which time and thereafter until some other arrangements can be made, the city will be in darkness. CAST Yor Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Cipla. Bears the Signature of ! Bloody Deeds in Bolivar. New York, July 24.—A dispatch to Herald from Ciudad, Bolivar, says: “General Kodil, of the Yuruari district, covering the region of the gold mines (Callao, Guasipati, etc), was assassinated last week for political reasons by General Zapata, governor who took possession of the arms of the garrision of Guarascpital, where the assassination took place, armed about one hundred men, with whom he fled. “These to others which have lately been taking occurrences, similar place daily in Venezuela, give some idea of the state of the country. Ignore Kansas City Platform. Washington, D.C. July 24.—Rep- resentative Livingston of Georgia, the ranking democratic member of the committee of appropriations of the house, who is in Washington, to- day discussed the democratic plat- form likely to be adopted by some of the southern states this year. He expressed the opinion that the democrats of Virginia and Maryland will follow the example set by the | Ohio democrats and confine their pfatforms to state issues purely, pay- ing no attention to the Kansas City platform. Mr. the silver issue will be completely jeliminated by 1904, and the tariff question will be the dominant issue in thatcampa Livingston believes How it is Done. The first object in life with the American people is to ‘‘get rich;” the second, how to regain good heaith. The first can be obtained | by energy, honesty and saving; the |second (good health) by using | Green’s August Flower. Should you be a despondent sufferer from any of the effects of dyspepsia, liver com- plaint, appendicitis, indigestion, ete such as sick headache, palpitation | of the heart, sour stomach, habitual | eostiveness, dizziness of the head, nervous prostration, low spirits, ete. you need not suffer another day. Two doses of the well-known August Flower will relieve you at once. Go to H. L. Tucker and get a sample bottle free. Regular size, 75 cts. Get Green’s Prize Almanac. |} Norman J. Colman, former secre tary of agriculture, who has been re- ceiving for the last week full reports on the hay crop from all the agricul- tural domain of Missouri and Kan- sas, asserts that this is the most dis- astrous time that has visited the country for a generation. “The conditions right now are much more dangerous than they were one week ago,”” said Mr. Col- man. ‘The failure of the great pas- tures of the state to feed the stock dependent upon them for life has made the beef unfit for the market. Mutton has suffered in the same way. These products are poor and thin and must be disposed of at a loss to the farmer. “Many farmers are heeding the ad- vice to plant turnips, grass, barley | and even wheat. Of course, the suc- cess of the experiment depends on the promised rain. There is now no re- lief for the pasture grass that was planted early in the season. This has been destroyed. Nothing re- mains but to make an attempt to stem the disaster by sowing asecond supply of feed for the stock.” A Gentle Hint. | In our style of climate, with its sudden changes of temperaiure, rain, wind and sunshine often intermin- gied in a single day, it isno wonder that our children, friends and rela- tives are so frequently taken from us by neglected colds, half the deaths resulting directly from this cause. | A bottle of Boschee’s German Syrup | kept about your home for immediate | ase will prevent serious sickness, a \large doctor’s bill, and perhaps |death, by the use of three or four idoses. For curing consumption, | hemorrages, pneumonia, severe | coughs, croup, or any disease of the | throat or lungs, its success is simply | wonderful, as’ your druggist will tell} you. Get asample bottle free from | H.L. Tucker. Regular size, 75 cts. Get Green’s Prize Almanac. music,” remarked the after his performance a “It seems so,” replied the pular composer; “at any rate, you took a great many liberties with it.”—Phila- delphia Record The Main Thing.—Miss Summer- gal—‘Wrat have you been buying?” Miss Ditto—“A lot of nice nove seashore reading.” Miss Summe What are they?” Miss Ditto—*“T didn’t notice their names; but they're al! bound in green and w go well with Press. THE END SEAT QUESTION. any gown.”—Philadelphia Curious Position Taken on Point in Street Car Etiquette. “There is one point in the discus- sion of the end seat question which should not be overlooked, and that is the mathematical side of it,” said the treasurer of a local theater to a Wash- ington Star man, as he slipped two tickets in a little envelope, and hand- ed them to the man at the box office window with the remark: “Yes, sir, aisle seats, third row, center, for to- night; thank you.” “In the orchestra of the average theater there are about 22 rows of seats, running back usually to V. There are, therefore, but 44 center ige orchestm seats in the house, with twice that number of end seats, mak- ing only 88 of these desirable places on the lower floor, exclusive of the or- chestfa circle. In the latter, there are on an average of about 20 center aisle seats. “In a closed strect car there are but fotir corner seats, and in an open car with ten rows of seats but twice that number of end sea In a ra lroad ll of ear there are * these r make a total of only 156, and average theater will persons downstz ing seats in the cars I have named amount to 124, st 834. Naturally, people want the best they car consider it a man buying a seat should ask for an aisle or an and I do not cons any selfis! whose money is shoved in fice window accompan hem, please.” “It is the same with the end s onthe cars. The persor I these seats are in who cc r,an pecu- re €De cular Bi of purchase. when tl his fare. They ow ter occupying an along to the his place to those who come after! and I fail to obser i t point of princip! seat and an end the difference in left their ch BUSiNESS EDUCATIOD | INCIDENTS LEADING To % ANDY ¢ < saad Importance of the “Three R's’ Em-/| : : 5 4 —s ya : ere Beas COURT OF INQUIRY. > 3 Ar = New York. July 24.—Criti A Combination of Defects That Led Misfortune. = very = disv, at real the Ne somew n his cus worki 1 n me One dav his « red = messeny wrought the “snack” on a tray a placed it at Mr. Adee’s elb + assistant secretary was writing bt sign that he was The messenger iray DEVELOPS BAD TEMPER. Diver Notes of Deep Water. ence ¥ expe that I have al up with the express inte n unscTewe at I came up. ur Secretary Long sent a dispatch to DEAF AND HOT-TEMPERED nd ““) lin to a distance of about 8,000 yards bare at : IGE toward her and Schley ordered her Sys ae ai Pee eS to be turned in the direction opposite di I < on the state paper on i ; PP he has a hard enoughtime. Every- = Sens : to that taken by the Spanish fleet, thing that the expectant mother wh been engagec Strange Effect of Pressure one k, taken by the Spanish fleet. but her which bear the some course was outside that of any other strain, the less similar gay in answer to the Rear Admiral > with t squadr 1898 Adu Ciet | that s SUICIDE OF A BRECKINRIDGE if ¢ Spanish H May Young Grandson of a Former Vice-Pres- Or Ad too =, | learning ident Kills Himselt sco, Cal 26. Lioyd ndson on the late vice-presi- grandson on late Lloyd | really there He start and wf the | with the fi y Wells-Fargo go. Hesaysi ommitted suicide n- |r" ough weather the family home in this j that, as the ity, where he lived with his grand- j keep up wit mother a uncle, Dr. Harry Tevis. | squi A rubber tube leading from the gaa harged that | Itis« | the found told the story of his death. jjet to the bed where body was tiago was ul ssarily slow. and was indication of | jan | Sehley’s force arrived off Santiago -}on May 26, where - |the Yale, the Mir n|Paul. In hi | Schley says that cowardice Despondeney due to nervous truble from whieh the young man had suf- fered for years lead to the suicide. | He had just passed his twenty-third | birth day. He was the of the loldest daughter of the late Lloyd these three vessels was very much re- | Tevis, now Mrs Frederick W. Sharon. duced. He signaled to the fleet proceed to Key West by way of Yucatan Passa ns This signal is made the Schley was joined by and thest ar Admiral Leap s report I son the coal supply of to His mother in Paris with her daughter, Miss Florence Breckinridge and has been cabled of the death of The shock to Mrs. Lloyd Tevis, following so closely the death of her son Hugh Tevis, in Japan, was almost more than could bear, Schley dwelling upon the importance | and her condition verges on nervous c. |of definitely the] prostration. Spanish fleet wasin Santiago harbor. a nt | Schley cabled the department $100 Reward $100. May 28 that regreted he could] he readers ot this paper will be pleas- not obey the order, as it was neces-|ed to learn that there is at least one s dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical raternity. Catarrh being a constitution- 1 disease, requires, a constitutional reatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken nternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surtaces of the sys- tem, thereby destroying the foundation ot the disease, and giying the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work, The proprietors haye so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars tor any case that it tails to cure. Send tor list of testimon- ials. Address F. Cuenty & Co., Tviedo, O. gap Sold by druggis 75¢. is the} basis of a| her son charge that was seeking to evade the Spanish fleet she learning whether on he sary for him to proceed to Key West for coal BOMBARDMENT AT LONG RANGE CITED to AS TIMIDITY. It was found possible to coal the squadron after it had about twenty-five miles westward. Having accomplished this, Schley or- proceeded dered the vessels to return toSantia- go, which they did, reaching there on May 28, and taking a from four to twelve miles off shore On May 31, Schley went aboard the Massachusetts, which with the New Orleans and the lowa, steamed position Negroes Will Return Home. Chicago, Ils., July 26.—The Ala- ma negroes, whose advent yesterday threatened to cause a riot among workingmen at Maywood, whose from the shore and fired at the Cris- tobal Colon for about seven minutes This bombardment at longe range] places they were going to fill, will be 511. | has been cited by Schley’s opponents returned to their homes unless they s ! | as an evidence of timidity. Rear Ad- find work in this section of the coun to dc om a eS K | try: They spent the day camped out —. miral Sampson arrived and took] othe banks of Salt Creek, near ‘ : oe command on June 1. The blockade} Maywood, and were liberally suppli- ed with food by citizens EUVB wi This signature is on every box of the genuine Laxative Bromo-Quinine Taviets the remedy that cures . cold im ome day was thenkept up until July 3, when 8 | Admiral Cervera sought to save his fleet by a dash to the open sea. On the morning of that day Rear Admiral Sampson, on the New York had left for Siboney, where he was to meet General Shafter. The New York tray : TEY |was twelve miles away when the Spanish fleet came into view. Uncle Sam Wants Oats. aes . Mr In the absence of the flagship,| Seattle, Wash., July 26.—Major et wees > .; |Sehley was in command of the fleet, George Rublen, the local quarter- Adee s = : d it | ond it was this fact that started the | aster general, will today advertise back ov head, far across the Zz eae . for bids for the contract to furnish entire controveruy the government with 4,000 tons of rose to upbra WHAT IS MEANT AY THE “BROOKYN’S” oats for shipment to Manila. The ets a : of Raat require that the oats ue ee ee i LooP shall be delivered at either Seattle or Tacoma, at the option of the quartermaster, on or before Aug. 15. Schley was on board the Brooklyn, which, while very swift, wasequipped with comparatively light armor. The Infanta Maria Terresa headed petses sesssssscessoess sees After He Comes can do to help her child she should do. she can gis do this, she self. She should use to improve her physi She ‘should, by all mean: herself with Mother’s Friend. take her the crisis ily and thus making a loop from left to right while the Spanish ships were turning in the opposite direction as they temerged from the harbor. In mak- ing this turn, the Brooklyn crossed | the bows of the Texas. When Rear Admiral Schley’s atten-} One of the greatest blessings im is health, but to health her- RHPLOSLSHLALKLLLLLOSHSS sion, he is reported to have said that | the Texas might look out for herself. Rear Admiral Schley has explain-| jed that he made the loop because he wished to avoid being rammed by the Maria Teresa. Admirable Cer- It will through ea 5 : ‘ es strength nd. vera said that it was his purpose, if i vigcr to the scles. Com- mon sense will show you that the stronger the muscles are, ri- | possible, to put the Brooklyn out of action. | on After the loop had been made, the} e Brooklyn steamed in the direction hs i nai pe $7 rt ofthe American vessels engaged in pain there will be. = A woman living in Fort Wayne, the action. | : ‘*Mother’s Friend did e Allthat Rear Admiral Schley will 1s for me. Praise God for criticism of the | to course of the Brooklin during the battle of Santiago, that she inflicted 58 percent of the damage inflict by the American vessels and sustain- from Hunel, Cal. ad is a blessing to all women who undergo nature's ordeal of childbirth.” Get Mother's Friend at the Y ed 52 percent of the damage i drug store. $1 per bottle. 2 ed by the Spanish fleet THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. book, “ Betore SCISSTSTSSSSSSSSSSS SS SSTSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSTSSSSTSSSSSSSSTITSSSTITSETS ITVS: eeneerenecesececececere Educste Your Bowels With Cascarets Candy Catbartic, cure constipation forever. 0c, Be. If C.C.C. tail, druggists refund money. ‘Write for our free f Bab

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