The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 10, 1901, Page 2

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at Sati hmm ON NRE HE APPEAL FROM CUBANS. Tariff Reduction Desired on) Reciprocity Lines. Great Demonstrations Held Somultane- ously on the Island. Havana, Oct. 3.—Gov. Gen. Wood to-day issued an order formally dis- solving the constitutional conven- tion, with the understanding that if its services are again desired he will issue the necessary call. Thesalaries and allawances amounting to $15,- 000 ceases to-day. The members of | the convention were allowed trans- portation expenses to their homes, A very large demonstration of Ha- yana bankers, manufacturers, mer- ehants and other business men waited upon Gen, Wood at the palace this afternoon and presented to hima plea for the reduction of duties on Cuban products on lines of reciproc- ity. It is estimated that between 10,000 and 15,000 persons took part in the demonstration. Similar dem- onstrations occurred in many other parts of the island. A general holiday was observed and telegrams from every municipal- ity supporting the plea of the Ha- vana merchants were sent to Wash- ington. The annexation strongly in evidence in sentiment was the demon- stration here. A letter, signed by numerous bankers, indorsed the government of intervention, compli- mented Gen Wood and asked the United States to make Cuban’s cause their cause. DEMONSTRATION AT SANTIAGO. Santiago, Cuba., Oct. 3.—Upward of 8,000 men, representing every ele- ment of Santiago, responded to-day toa call issued by the chamber of commerce inviting them to partici- pate in a demonstration organized to present to the military govern- ment a memorial urging a reduction of American duties on Cuban sugar and tobacco. All business was sus- pended during the demongtration, which was the largesteverseen in the city. Lieut. Henry ©. Whitehead, 10th United States cavalry, who is tempo- rarily representing the commander of the district, wired the memorial to Gov. Gen. Wood, in Havana. The people are coming to under- stand that industrial conditions de- pend upon Cuba's relations with the United States, and the opinion was generally expressed to-day that the demonstration was but the first ex- pression of a sentiment which would soon result in the formation of a strong annexation party. Large delegations from all parts of the province participated in the demonstration. Eva Sanderson Dead. Rich Hill Review, Oct. 3d. It has been a long time since this community sustained such a shock as was caused by the aunouncement this forenoon of the death of Miss Florence Eva Sanderson, youngest daughter of Mrs. T. D. Sanderson, and a universal favorite in this com- munity. Miss Saunderson died about 9 o'clock this morning, with scarcely a symptom of fatal illness present and no warning whatever to relatives or friends. She was a teacher in the south side school, and up to last Saturday was in customary health, but had not taught this week. Her ailment was not deemed at all serious until just prior to her death. Reared from infancy to young wo- manhood in this city, she was known and loved by all, and her sudden tak- ing-off in this manner can not yet be fully realized by her friends and ac- | day’s issue of the | first issue of the organ of the anarch- article says in part: ae imbs of the people. he was a soul could find world of ours, a soul impractical, in- expedient, lacking in caution (accord- ing to the dictum of the wise), but daring just the same, and I can not publican convention is increased or help but bow in reverenced silence be- fore such a soul.” emptory O'Neill instructing him to prevent the delivery Goldman in Chicago at the present] Western Union time. short of the Any justification the ment may need for the prevention may be found, Mayor Harrisonsays, in the fact that Miss Goldman’s pub- licappearance now would be likely to provoke some breach of the peace. application for admission of his pa- per, the Free Society, second-class rate, which he was oblig- ed to do after temporarily suspend- ing publication, he was told that he|/Should have been delivered in time would have to make formal applica- tion in Washington. given to understand that the Wash- ington authorities would undoubted- ly bar his paper from the mails. Service of Thanks Bring an Offering funeral will be held to-morrow conjunction with the opening of the triennial convention of the Episcopal church thanksgividg service in Grace church | Sneed, at which the missionary offerings of | Sedalia; George V. the women’s auxiliary, amounting to $104,295, ceived with heartfelt expressions of] Among those here to attend the fun- thanks. devoted strictly the announcement committees decision on the proposed | Captain Sneed was born at Danvil'e, amendments to the constitution was} Ky., and was graduated from Cen- begun and continued with earnest-| ter college at Danville, of which edu- ness until evening. American farmer is obliged to sell in free trade markets and to buy in pre- tected markets where competition is shut that have been made fer the purpose | ASSASSIN BOLDLY PRAISED. President Roosevelt on Trusts. | In his speech at Minneapolis on ig Labor Day, President Roosevelt said: mma Goldmann ict eaicrs amet “More and more it is evident that | President. thestate, and if necessary the nation, | Chicago, Ill., October 2.—Praise of | h88 Zot to possess the right efsuper- | Assassin Czolgosz and denunciation of President McKinley characterize | the article by Emma Goldman in to- Free Society. the great corporations which are ite creatures, particularly as regards the great business combinations which | derive @ portion of their importance | from the existence of some monopo- listic tendency.” Mr. Roosevelt was then vice-presi- dent and as such bad little influence in shaping the policy of his party. Heis now president and in a position ists since the assassination. Her “Never before in the history of gov- ernments has the sound of a pistol shot so startled, terrorized and hor- rified the self-satisfied, indifferent, contented indolent public has the one fired by Leon Czolgosz when he struck down William McKin- ley, president of the money kingsand trust magnates of the country. “Why this howl of a hired press? Why such bloodthirsty and violent from the clergy? Why vs of the mob, the de. to give force and effect to his views on the trust question. As the Chief Executive it is his duty to enforce the law as he finds it. Ifthe present Attorney-General willing to earry ont his instructions he can de- mand his resignation and appoint a new Attorney-General, He can give fie mas raving no excuse for a failure to enforce the mand for rigid laws to curtail free- law. Whe he was exercising au dom of speech and the press? Now thority in New York City, he took the that the impossible has happened, | Position that a law ought either to that even America has given birthto| be enfarced or repealed. It is to be the man who struck down the king| oped that he will take the same of the republic, they have lost their| Position now. : heads and are shouting for vengeance| Not only is he in control of the Ex- upon those who for years haveshown | & utive Branch of the government, that the conditions here were begin-]|but he has a Senate, House and Su- and as not is utterances ning to be alarming and until a halt|Preme Court in political harmony be called despotism would set its with him. If existing laws are not heavy foot on the hitherto relatively sufficient, he has the power of recom- mendation and can propose meas- vision and control as regards the! THE TEXAS RACE WAR. Sheriff Curtis Says Will Not Return. Dallas, Tex., Oct. 3 —The race war | in Harrison county is reported to} have subsided. All the white posse | have returned from the hunt after |Tom Walker, who assassinated Juli- jan Atwood, the white planter. City | Marshal Curtis of Marshall, county jseat of Harrison county, said over the long distance telephone: “Bynum Hatley, the white planter, who is accused of being the leader of the mob that whipped the negro Muchelroy to death, has waived a preliminary hearing and was admit- Certain Negroes | similating the To od and i ting the Stomachs and Bo p | Feomntes: Digestion fot ness and Rest.Contains neither ted to bail in the sum of $5,000. iets it - , a : if Opmum,Morphine nor Mineral as not room on the bond for Nor NARCOTIC. allthe men who wish to go his surety. a Every good white man in Harrison : county was willing to signit. Idon’t| Bunpe af Odi Br SOREL. | know what became of Tom Walker, ! ars who killed Julian Atwood The } ee posse that was hunting for him say ee they got tired of the chase. No on | ae expects him ever to be seen in this — i neighborhood again. I don’t know Aperfect Remedy for Co:. | where the negro Bonner is, either. tion, Sour Stomach Diarrhoea | He may be with Tom Walker. | Worms Convulsions Fevers! ou “Several other negroes have left j ness and Loss OF SLEED. li the county and there is no record of Tac Saude Signature i ii where they have gone to. They are Lichie. NEW YO RK. Ato months old 5 Dosrs—-3 35Cr NTIS not backin Harrison county. Things have quieted down and we don't look for any more immediate trouble.” The opinion here is that the reports Idid not know Czolgosz, but from | @F¢8 sufficiently severe to give to the his attitude and behavior | feel that] People the protection which he ad- a soul that| ™Mits to be needed. It will be inter- in this cruel)¢8ting to watch the new President and see whether the hostility to trusts manifested by him when he was lay- ing his plans to capture the next re- in pain, no abode lessened by the responsibilities of the oftice to which he aspired.—The Com- Mayor Harrison has issued a per- | ™OM€T- order to Chief of Police Must Pay for a Dead Horse. Io., Oct Telegraph Co., Her advertisement that she| 1893, did not deliver a message ad- dressed to a veterinary surgeon in 4.— Because the in of any lecture by Miss] Ottumwa, will give publicly the lecture which Czolgosz said first incited him to the] time for the doctor to go to the Red- commission of his crime is declared | Tick race track to render professional services, itis compelled to pay forthe loss of Bravo, a finely-bred Wilkes stallion. The animal belonged to L. C. Hen- dershat, an Ottumwa attorney. The horse, it was shown, died for lack of medical attention. The was fought through the courts for eight years, and the Supreme Court decid- ed to-day in favor of plaintiff, giving him judgment in the sum of $1,675. Thecourt held that as the veterinary was within easy reach, the message by the chief executive to be “little xtreme of impudence.” police depart- case To-night when Editor Isaak made to the mails at for him to go at once. He was also Follows Wife to the Grave. Sedalia, Mo., Oct. 2.—Captain John M. Sneed died last night a few hours after his wife’s death and a double at the Broadway Presbyterian church. The pallbearers of Captain Sneed hie be his five sons and one grand- son, as follows: The Rev. Frank W. of St. Louis; W. S. Sneed, Sneed, St. Louis: R. C. Sneed Sedalta. San Francisco, Cal., Oct. 3.—In of America to-day was a Harry Sneed, Smithon: was presented. It wasre-jand Lee Montgomery, eralare Mrs. J. C. Thompson and Collins, George P. B. Jackson of St. Louis, and Mrs. Vest, of Sweet Springs. The sessions of the convention were | son, to business. After{and wife, of the standing] George G. cationalinstitution Senator Vest and other noted men were graduates. During the civil war the deceased was captain of company D, fortieth enrolled Missouri milita. He was for @ number of years master of the Mis- Sturgis (Mich.) Democrat: The out by protective tariff laws that five negroes and one white man are dead as the result of race conflict is correct. EXACT COPY OP WRAPPER. Reaiont the ene Thief. Springfield. Mo., Oct. 2.—The thir- - > ty-eighth annual session of the Na- ’ a stabs sais Two Negroes are Lynched. tional Anti-Horse Thief association was held at the Metropolitan hotel] Shelbyville, Ky., Oct. 2.—Jimbo here to.day. Missouri, Kansas, Ili- Fields, aged 16. and Clarence Gar- nett, aged 18, both negroes, were noisand Oklahoma territory were re- presented at the meeting. The membership of the order was|ing for the alleged murder of Willie reported approximately as follows: Aart, a printer, who was stoned to | Missouri, 2,000; Kansas, 10,000: Ili-| death on the night of Saturday, Sep- nois, 1,200; Oklahoma, 10,000. tember 21, last. The negroes were The growth of the association in|t@ken from the jail and swung from Oklahoma has been very rapid of the Chesapeake and Ohio trestle just lynched here at 2 o'clock this morn- CASTORIA >t Infants and Children, TON. ne Kind You Have Always Bought the Signature Bears 5 In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE CENTAUR Missouf Pacific Railway Time Table at Butler Station, NORTH BOUND. No.6 5:56AM No. 4... “12:06 P.M, | No. 10.. 10:35 P.M. No. $12 Local Freight...... 12-86P. Ml. $14 Stock Express (does not carry passengers) 3:53p.m, SOUTH KOUND. | No.9 5:08 A.M No. 5 1227 PM, No I 942P M, | No.8)! Local Freight... 2:20P.M, INTERSTATE ‘DIVISION No. 849 Depart 7AM | No. 8% Arrive 11:89 M. late owing to the increase of the| beyond the depot and within 500 population of that country and the] Yards of the yard. The mob’s work | was done quietly and quickly. About 1:30 o'clock this morning number of lawless characters found there. The order now seeks to sup- press all kinds of crime, as well as|the mob appea running down The | manded the ke ritual of the order was revised to-day | fused to surrender them and made more The na-| Of the jail were tional officers for the next year are The anda as follows: few minutes later were hanging from President. Fielding Scott, St. Paul, | the trestle. Kan.; vice-president, Hart came to wee, Prentice, Ill.; secretary and treas- Lebanon, O., and urer, J. B. Culbertson, Sterling, Kan, | death was employed The next annual meeting will be held | the Shelbyville Sentinel. at Guthrie, Ok., October 21, 1902 s, but the jailer re- The doors horse thieves. elaborate then battered down. prisoners were removed Shelbyville from at the time of his George E. Dee- as a printer on Suicide’s Insurance. Root Slated for Premier. Topeka, Oct. 1.—Harry M. Barber, New York, Oct. 3.—In an interview | @ Douglass county farmer, commit- given to a reporter at Boulder, Col.,| t¢d Suicide sometime ago. His wife, to-day, Secretary Gage is reported as Helen Barber, asked the Knights and saying that Secretary of State Hay | Ladies of Security to pay her the will soon resign from the cabinet on | #3-000 life insurance which her hus- account of failing health and that he] band carried in that concern. The will be succeeded by Secretary of War lodge refused to pay it on the ground Root. ; that Barber committed suicide Mrs. Mr. Gage is in the mountains en-| Barber obtained judgment for the joying a much needed rest after the|#™ount in the Douglas county dis- mauy trying ordeals the death ofthe| trict court and the lodge to-day ap- president forced upon him. He did| Pealed the case to the supreme court. not state when the change in the cabinet would occur, but gave it out as positive that it would take place. The interview quotes the secretary of the treasury as saying: “Secretary Hay is getting tired of the business esthonor. He is very sensitive. how- ever, and it hurts him, after he has '& worked hard, to be misrepresented, eartooned and lampooned. He isin- dependently rich. He can do as he wishes, go wherever he desires. He has a few very intimate friends and He is a man of strict- quaintances. Arrangements for the funeral are not yet completed, but the hour has been fixed for 2:30 o’clock to-morrow afternoon and the services will most likely be conducted by Rev. A. B. Woodruff, of the Episcopal Church, who is expected to arrive from Kan- sas City on the 12:29 train to-mor- row. of enabling the favored manufactur- ers to charge whatever price they see fit for their wares. This is only an instance, but it comes right home to every farmer, and it is hoped they willremember it on election day when asked to continue in power the party which has passed the protective tariff laws and under the administration of which this great scheme of legalized a robbery has been built aE: Soldier Got Four Months. | ee it eS = Plainfield, N. J.. Oct ee Honesdale (Pa.) Herald: The Doyle, formerly a member of Com-| scheme of protection and paternalism pany L. twenty-eighth infantry, | has reached its climax in the trust. United States volunteers, has been | And the system of imperialism has sentenced to four months in jail for! saying: “‘The shooting was good for McKinley; he ought to have got it long ago, and Roosevelt will get it some day.” Doyleshowed discharge papers to prove that he had bee. in produced two of the most contradic- tory and petti.fogging decisions that ever proceeded from our supreme court. Surely it is about timethata party which started eut with such souri state grange. he would rather enjoy Iffe surrounded is very much like the blossom- cpa eeraaks by agreeable companions and his ute aesaer oni Third Year of Boer Struggle. books than attend to the tiresome upon the care bestowed upon and changeless routine of the office s parent. of secretary of state. I should not be surprised if ne would soon with- draw. Ifso, Root will probably be his successor.”’ London, Oct. 2.—Within two weeks eeres ee the war in South Africa will have en- tered upon its third year, and in the face of a recrudescence of organized operations by the Boers and of the impossibility of carrying out Mr. She Took a Ray tetiasew Brodrick’s promise to reduce the war expenditures by sending homesome}| Topeka, Kan., Oct. 4.—Probate troops the government organs are| Judge Fagan to-day was nonplussed again becoming restless when Lafayette Smith, a boy 16 Thereis a mystery surrounding the | Years old, and Clara M. Harvey, a operations and the whole situation | ¥oman41 years old, appeared before in Nataland the denials and evasions | him for a license to marry. ofthe war office concerning the al-| “You are too young to marry leged friction between Mr. Brodrick | will not give you a license,” was F< and Lord Kitchener form the su | gan s retort to the lad. but the fat of editorial protests on all sides. er of the bridegroom, who was pre ‘ jent, and who, “Fagan supposed, a witness, remarked: “Ye thisis my boy and I wan plenty of g and take ge little one to tely sure ess labor they | | Mother’s Fi riend and Works Cold. | marry. tops the C off the; store, @1 per bottle. high resolves took account bearings. As for the party in th state, don’t mention it. the Philippines two years. He be- longs in Lowa. of its | Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets The ceremony was performed anc jcure a cold in oneday. No cure. no! thee ouple left without any explana-! Ipav Price 25 eente tions. THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ed at the jail and de- | E. C. Vanpenvoonr, Agent K. C, Pittsburg & Gulf Time Table. Arrival and departure of trains at Wor! KTH KOUND No. i Kansas — 12 op. No.3 Sel souTn aputeps No. 2 Through Port Arthur Exprese,2:41 Bp. m No. 4 Siloam Springs Express. 12:2hp Kemember this isthe popular short line be- tween Kansas City, Mo.. and Pittsburg, Joplin, Mo , Neosho, Mo Sulphur Sprin, “4 Ark., Siloam Springs, Ark., and the direo route from the south to St uis, Chicag and points north and northeast and io Deny: Ogden, San Francisco, Portland end pot west and northwest. No expense bh q jared to make the passenger or is line second to none tn the weet ‘on =e, the new line H Gen’) Paes Agt Kan Payne, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office over Nichols’ Shoe Store, Fast Side Square. Residence on Ohio street, nd door east of West School building, south side. 6-tf DR. W. J. McANINCH, jVETERINARY SURGEON Scientifically treats all domestic ani- mals. Office at Gailey’s Feed Yard. eteda Mo. DR, E S. BALLARD, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Trimble’s Drugstore, West Side of Square. J.M. CHRISTY, M.D. | S.A. ROE, M.D. Diseases of women and } Ear, Eye, Nose and Children a Specialty. § Throat Specialist. DR- CHRISTY & ROE. Office The Over Butler Cash Depart- ment Store,*Butler, Mo. Otice Telephone 20. House Telephone 10. T C. BOULWARE, Physician and + Surgeon. Office nortasidesquare. Butler,Mo. Diseasesof womenand chil en aspecialty. DR, J. T. HULL DENTIST. Parlors Over Model Clothing Co. a4} to Hagedorn’s TABLER’S BUCK EYE PILE OINTMENT CURES NOTHING BUT PILES, A SURE and CERTAIN CURE é known for 15 years as the BEST REMEDY for PILES. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS ‘ aaa <6., BT, LOSES. Entrance. same t stuMo. north side FARMERS! / peste AGENTS W wi inTeD | « 2 wo OO per eam: TOWNSHIP = F* RIGHTS for sa CHAS."M. EVANS ©.W. Cor. 6th anc € = edcrene as UE + ly

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