The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 15, 1902, Page 3

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Lifeboat Sails 1,500 Miles. | Colored, Art Pictures. The first of a series of beautiful colored art pictures will be issued with the next Sunday Post-Dispatch, March 30th, Easter number. The pictures are in eleven colors, size 10+ x16$ inches, ready for framing. F.t to adorn any home. The price of the great Sunday Post-Dispatch, including 14-page magazine, elaborately illustrated, comic section in colors, news sections and this beautiful art picture, regu- lar price, only 5+ ents a copy. Onsale at all news stands or by mail for 3 months 50 cents. Address: Post-Dispatch, St. Louis, Mo. Don't Miss the First Picture, FREE WITH THE Sunday Post-Dispatch. lifeboat containing the first officer and three men of the British ship | Boveric has arrived at Freemantle, | Western Australia, after having sail- ed 1,500 miles‘ to report that the | Boveric lost her propeller when 1,500 | miles from Freemantle, and was in | need of assistance. The Boveric sail- !ed from this port for Natal, March | 21, with remounts and ninety sol- diers on board. CANDY CATHARTIC © We. au ‘Tbe. b0e. Dregs ist. Genuine stamped C. €. C. Never sold in bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell “something just as good.” KEEP IN TOUCH WITH St. Louis and the Work of Preparation for the Great World’s Fair of 1908. a uagnet of mighty | The St. Louis ™ Gerri. 7° Greet Sewenerer Gobe-Democrat ir ies won ruined in the strenucus: efforts to ‘ wake or seve the money tetpurchase them. Tf a woman will risk her health to get a eoveted gem, then let her fortify herself ayaiust the insid- Wouen and Jeweis, Jewels, enmdy, flowers, man—that is the order of a woman's preferences, Jewels fori The Datry Giose-Democrar is without a rival in all the West, and stands at the very front among the few REALLY GREAT newspapers of the world. BY MAIL, POSTAGE PREPAID. Daily, | Daily, | Ineluding Sunday. Without Sundar One Year - $600]OneYear - -. $4 00 | 40 to 60 Pages 6 Months - - - 390) 6Months - - - 2.00) One Year - - $2.00 8Months - - - 1.50|3Months - - - 1.00}6Montha ~ - 1.00 The Twice-a- Week Issue of the Globe-Democrat at $1 a Year. Is the greatest newspaper bargain of the age. at the price of a weekly, world every Tuesday and Friday, Its market reports are complete and correct in every detail ought to be at every fireside in the land. | ions cousequences of coughs, colds ‘and bronchial affections by the reg- ‘ular use of Dr. Boschee’s German Syrup It will promptly arrest con- sutuption in its eacly stages and heal the affected Inngs and) bronchial tubes and drive the dread disease from the system, [tis nota cure-all butitisa certain cure for coughs, colds and all bronchial troubles. You canget Dr. G. G. Green's reliable remedies at wny drugstore, e-o-w Get Green's Special Almanac Sunday, Evtition It is almost equal toadaily It gives the latest telegraphic news from all the .A BOON TO WOMEN. The Dr. Seburmana Chee Cogteal Tablets, A RRe ‘TIVE OF DISEASE. A ut ‘SS PROULIAR ver fall if used strictly according to d'rections, sure, harmless, neat and clean, A tonic Tt has no equal as a home and family journal and Two papers every week, Eight pages or more every Tuesday and Friday. One Dollar fo S “7 ithand cure diseases of the b & Oval 4 \ 1 Vaginal discharges and soreness, irregular and . THE GLOBE PRINTING CO., St. Louis, Mo reed Manes Io ot gr nd te, ene tabi their occurrence. We have received thousands of testi- “IT 18 IGNORANCE: THAT WASTES y Will not eu a a bars TTY Nits st rections are carefully fol . EFFORT.” TRAINED SERVANTS USE ireck upon receipt Of price, WL por Loar er ais bees for 6.00, Send for fre sample, S f - O | THE DR. SCHURMANN CHEMICAL CO,, . [ O HOLLAND BUILDING, DEPT. A. ST. LOUIS, MO DIDIIIIII SI SIIP POO! BE OED ob AGENTS WANTED Lawn Swings and Settees, Hammock Chairs, Camp Chairs and Stools, Troning Tables, Wash Benches, Etc. Agents easily make $5 to $10 Per Day. Will furnish samples at re- duced prices to those desiring agency, Exclusive territory given. Address, A NEW FAST TRAIN AY SERRE PRA EU My Between St. Louis and Kansas City and “ THE BEST LAWN SWING MADB % . learficld esdoz-Tara Sc, tpg Fg OKLAHOMA CITY, DEAL Yu MAKERS DENISON, SHERMAN, DALLAS, Don't pay twoextra when you buy . ‘harness, Deal with the factory. Bete tonics wncieesie ‘rates: ‘Our system of Sera cea ernest onton tegen oe mec foe od an assortmen| west. This train is new throughout and is made up of the finest equipment, provided with electric lights and all other modern traveling conveniences, It runs via our now Red River Division. Every fppliance known to modern car building and railroading has been employed in the make-up of this service, including ra Cafe Observation Cars, under the management of Fred. Harvey. Full information as to rates and all details of ‘a trip via this face piteat Se rey tarnished, y tion, any repre- sentative of the ‘ . FORT WORTH And principal points in Texas and the South- t to choose from such as no other dealer can show. With every purchase weaire the! venga aehs ck Ifit Peak Wee you can retura the vehicle you for future use. THE COLUMBUS CARRIAGE & HARNESS CO., Seven: 1-0. Bes T72 P.0. Bex 64. Northwestern Academy Students Warned by Head of School. Lew Record of These Who Smoke Compels Action in Interest of Boys — Students Must Stop Smoking or Quit the School. Students in the preparatory depart-| ment of Northwestern university at Evanston, lll, are invited to either stop smoking cigarettes or leave the school. There is no uncertainty about the invitation and so thoroughly has it been considered that arrangements have been made to pay back to those who choose the way of the paper pipe the money that they have paid as ad- vance tuition. The matter was very clearly laid be- fore the students the other morning at the academy chapel exercises by Herbert F. Fisk, professor of peda- gogy and principal of the preparatory department. “I have made an arrangement by which your money will be refunded,” said Prof. Fisk. “We do not want you as students if you insist upon smoking cigarettes. Some of the failures in the recent semester examinations are directly traceable to cigarette smok- ing and one young man has been brave enough to tell me personally that he failed bec cigarette: These startling declarations by Prof, Fisk caused: great uneasiness among the 300 boys at the chapel serv- ices and the girls and young women looked first at the principal of the academy and then at the other side of the room, where the boys were seated “One of your number,” continued cigarettes, but I am inclined to think that he is mistaken. Some of you do, however, and the mi ‘ smoker are quite evident. “It is a matter of record that four fifths of the cigarette smokers among students fail s ev or later, Nearly all of the boys who failed in the semester examinations use ciga ettes, This should be evidence enough to induce any boy who will © or the mi i . “It is the testimony of many physi- cians that smoking of any kind is in- jurious to the youth, and I do not boy. No cigarette smoker is in very good standing in this school. “We are willing to help any boy who wishes to stop smoking, and [ask any of you who desire to quit to dome and see me and I will at tempt to help you. Of the 75 boys who stand highest in their classes in the academy only one is a cigar es are cigarette smokers, of you boys to quit the habit at once.” ALL RAIL ROUTE TO ASIA. from California to Russia in Five Years, From ourg by 20 to St. Peters- nence by New York, Seattle, Denver and Washington capitalists, engineers and explorers who have completed Trans- n railroad on April 15. This line, which will be 850 miles in est countries in the world. More in- the certainty of its maki be practically an all-rai Asia. who was for many years connected with the Burlington read, and J. C. Cornforth, of Denver and Skaguay. have spent the past five years on the yroject. buses Are Supplanted bys a New Vehicle, withal picturesque, vehicles ks of a cigarette ette smoker, while 57 per cent, of the 75 boys who stand lowest in their | boosting rates at this time, aecord- T beg Jing to an expert, is that they ‘want Capitalists Promise Parlor Car Trip ail in twelve days in parlor cars, with no more of a water voyage than a 30-mile transfer across Behr- | blame for it and they were not slow it in enormous steel lighters. | to grasp the opportunity. is the trip promised five years length, will open up one of the rich- what will route to D. S. Granger, a Seattle capitalist, Vhe Old Clumsy Two-Horse Omni- Those clumsy and lumbering, but which (CIGARETTES BARRED Seize THE MEAT | Melbourne, Victoria, May 8.—A| OF BEEF TRUST. Step Contemplated by the Federal Authorities. | PROGRAMME OF CONFISCATION Chicago, May 8.—Immediate re- quest for a temporary restraining bill and the possibility that the gov- ernment may ask that goods under shipment be confiscated is the pro- gramme to be followed by the federal authorities in their assault upon the beef packers. A semi-official state- }ment was made by the officers of the likely be filed very early Friday. The confiscation clause which it is hinted jhas been incorporated in the bill grows out of the mysterious relation existing between the packers and the railways and theintimation that the attorney-general proposes to force the issue of the confiscation clause of the Sherman anti-trust act has caus- ed alarm among the packers, United States attorney Betha re- se of his excessive use of turned from Washington to-day, having left there yesterday after sev- eral consultations with attorney- general Knox. He declined to say what changes had been incorporated in the bill as originally prepared in Chieago and diplomatically evaded qveries as to the possibilities of crim- Prof. Fisk, “told me that the major- inal prosecutions growing out of the ity of the boys in this school smoke] filing of the injunction against the alleged beef trust. Aside from ad- mitting that the bill was being print- ed in Washington to-day, Mr, Betha Was non-communicative. He came home doubly impressed with the worth of Mr. Knox asa lawyer and stated that he had been most thorough in seeing that the charges in the bill against the pack in every detail, It was learned that the charges are based on evidence know of any who will not say that [Secured from all parts of the Ameri- cigarette smoking works harm to the | cancontinent. The admission that the govern- ment would demand an immediate injunction to stop the alleged re- straint of the trade by the so-called meat combine is considered to mean that the packers are going to be given the fight for their lives. The motive of the railroads in to give a sudden air of being honest to offset the talk that they have been guilty of paying rebates to the pack ets and conniving with them to help their profits because of large shij - ments as against the little shipper They also saw, according to the Facing annoyance anid possible trouble from the bill to be fined against the pack- ersand also facing an interstate the preliminary work and have ar-| hearing next week in which they will ranged to start the building of the|have to explain why they favored the packers in rates the railways are anxious to make a good impression teresting and spectacular than that is ANOTRER BEEF TRUST PROBING the Auteation of the Grand Jury. is under investigation Louis grand jury. by the St. 3TEAM CARRIAGES IN LONDON. revelations at Jefferson City that diseased meat is sold in St. Louis, Cireuit Attorney Folk to-day pre all the witnesses who testified at Jef | which was refuse , United States to-day that the bill will) In St. Louis the Matter Was Called to Following the sented the subject to the grand jury, | torial in the Comm« A He announces that he will subpoena | Bryan opposes the suggestion that are the wonder of every visitor to London, will not much longer be al- lowed to enjoy a monopoly of Lon- don’s narrow streets. The two-horse omnibus has had its day. Even Lon- don is awakening to that fact. The Strand was invaded the other day in the neighborhood of Charing Cross by a new steam carriage, which looked curiously out of place amid the procession one is accustomed to see there. The new omnibus went down Whitehall to Scotland Yard, where it was inspected for a license. The vehicle is a type of those which are to be placed in service next beef companies. Harness day, “and the matter will be as tho- roughly investigated as have been and Saddlery. Buootes selling diseased and decayed meat in bars in the penitentiary.” Dewey Will be a Pallbearer. ° month. It seats 36 and has a speed and of 15 miles an hour. Another Tradition Broken, xq . ; ; ing hovorary pallbearers have been Surries> Boston is now getting fish from the Pacific, says the St. Louis Post-Dis- patch. Is it possible that the Bos- tonexe have flopped from codfish to Puget sound salmon? , Rear Admiral Sampson. to-morrow: Admiral George Dewey, Rear Admi- Ao Women in Baden Universities. Women are now admitted to the two universities in Baden, but they have not been able-to secure permis: sion to study dentistry. + ’ ginson, Rear Admiral H. C. Taylor, Brigadier Gen. Charles Heywood, marine corps; Capt. F. A. Cook, Capt. Charles E. Clark, Capt. F. E.—-Chad- wick, Capt. Bowman H. McCalla, le “The Spring Song.” In spring, says the St. Louis Star, ® young man’s fancy lightly turns to | thoughts of how much he can get op ‘kis winter overcoat. ‘ the bribery scandals, and I have no doubt but that men who have been | jt it fai St Louis will be landed behind the Malcomb Demanded Money. New York, May 8.—The shooting of Paul Leicester Ford occurred in the library of Mr 37 East Seventy-seventh street. He was sitting at a table when his brother entered the house. Maleomb is said tohave demanded money, The bullet which killed Paul entered lis left breast, piercing his heart. Maleom then |shot himself. The bullet entered his left and pierced his heart, almost fn the same manner as did the bullet that caused the death of Paul. No one was in the room when the shots were fired. A maid was in said Malcom leaned over the tabie at which his brother sat and fired. Ford’s home, at a doorway. She Accused of Forgery. St. Joseph, Mo., May 6.—Geo, W. Shoemaker, postmaster of Albany, and one of the most prominent citi- zens, Was arrested yesterday on a state warrant, charging forgery. The jarrest has created a profound sensa- tion, as the accused is not only prominent socially, but is a stewa of the Methodist church, He ref }to talk about the ease and to- | was still in charge of Sheriff Buckley not having secured bond. A man, supposed to be a political enemy alleges that over a year ago Shoe- maker nevotiated a mortwage onthe school funds, for which he received $1,400, The paper was ueide out in favor ofthe prosecuting witness, bore hissignature, that of two bondsmen the justice of the peace and Recorder Riekard. Tt is charged that these siguatures were forged, Shoemaker has been paying inferest on theloan but, it is allkged that the «man in whose favor it was drawn, has never received the principal Shoemaker, who is a lawyer, has en- gaged the best legal counsel obtain One Dollar Worth s200 Joplin, Mo., May a prominent painter) of this eity claims toown the oldest: American voin in Missouri [tis a silver dol- lar of the vintage of L799, The coin is larger than the dollar now in use and is avexcellent state of preserva: tion. thas been handed down in Mr. Fisher's family and has never seen any rough usage and rings as the dollar of today. It bears the head of the goddes of liberty on) one side and the le with the motto “G Pluribus Unum” on the ot ver. One peculiar thing about the coin is that its value is stamped on the edge, the inseription stating, “One handred cents, one dollar, or one unit.” Mr. Fisher has been offered same authority a chance to increase] $200 for it, but refuses to sell, dividends and let the packers get the a Sent a §50,000 Check to Rome. Rome, May 8.—Shortly before his death Archbishop Corrigan sent the pope a check for 350,000 as a per- sonal gift in connection with Leo's jubilee. It is calculated that the diocese of New York supplies the vati- can with most of the “Peter's pence,” which has been reduced to avout a third of the amount forn ed. Ttisnot likele that the sor of Archbishop Corrigan will be nominated at the next consistory Probably more. than a month will elapse before action will be reached St. Louis, May 8.—The “beef trust” It is therefore probable that a enpi- tulary vicar will be appointed to ad- minister the arcehdioveses, Opposes Daniel S. Lamont. Lincoln, Neb. May 9.—In an eci- to-day W. J. Daniel S. Lamont, of New York, ferson City and all other persons would be u suitable Demovratic can- whom he gan find that know any- didate for the presidency. thing about the operations of the “In all the United States,” writes Mr. Bryan, “it would be diffieult to “This aas become a subject for the find a man less deserving of the criminal courts,” said Mr. Folk to-|"ominetion than Mr. Lamone.” To Cure a Cold in One Day Nake Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab lets. All druggists refund the money ils to cure. E. W. Grove's sig: nature is on each box. . This River is Rich in Pearls. Joplin, Mo., May 9.—W.H. Aikens, an insurance man who recently mov- Washington, May 8.—The follow-|ed to this county from Poplar Bluffs, Mo, says that the north fork of se‘ected to officiate at the funeral of| Spring riverisrich in valuable pearls, In three days he gathered pearls to the value of $100. Mr. Aikens has ral G. C. Remey, Rear Admiral John| made pearl hunting a study for a C. Watson, Rear Admiral F. J. Hig-| number of years and suys that to his knowledge there is no place where pearls a‘eso plentiful as in Spring River. The gems are of high order. Richard Wainwright. S” LOSfThiu .—A D. Fisher, aos = bap a

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