The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 22, 1902, Page 7

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: LUXURIOUS WOMEN’S CUB. | Did You Ever Use DR. TICHENOR’S ANTISEPTIC. St. Joseph, Mo. July 23, 1901 —, medicine chest iseomplete without it sample of Dr. Tichenon’s Anti-! D.E. KING tie produced such favorable re- | Blairetown, Mo. Dee. 18, 1900. that I have kept alarge bottle! I used the sample of Dr. Tichenor’s itever since. It is af extra-ordi-! Antiseptic and found it very guod remedy for toothache and neu-: for cuts, burns, &e., especially for It saved several valueable | nail punctures. H. P. McCutchen. Is for me that were affiicted with | Ozark, Mo., March 6, 1900. esto Provide Sumpta- for Those Who | y Own Living, | Earn the ee | A’rather curious scheme for provid- ing a residential club in the west end of Loudon for women whe are work- ing in various pr sgt on foot. Three well-known mil- lionaire: re ted in the ture, which is to be called the tieth century club, The plan is to provide a comforta- essions has been ven- twen- oup. I most seer ncaa Have used Dr. Tichenors Antisep | ble, eve luxuries, home for those J. sane | tic on cuts and bruises and found it nae i a9 fees as pace “ates St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 16, 1901.1) an that is c'aimed for it. e . i és : Keeps ave used Dr. Tickenor's Antiseptic | wounds in healthy condition and fa my household for several years) jealing rapidly. Also found it good ith gratifying results. No family! for colic W. W. Linlock. Always for sale by ), A. TRIMBLE Or write to Sherrouse Medicine Co. New Orleans, La. for free sample. houses in Stanley gardens, west, have been thrown iuto one and beautifully decorated and furnished, Each mem- ber of the club is to have her own bedroom, with the room, ling room and lounge for after-dinner coffee and afternoon tea, The members will dine at separate small tables, - After dinner they from three large windows into a beautiful 1 den, with flowers, French ute gar- step out 7 $e: ahaa Se | comfortable seats, The charge for F.J. TYGARD, HON.J. 8. NEWBEBRY, J.O.CLARKE, ; these luxuries will be only half a President. Vice-Pres’t. Oashier guinea weekly, while is pence a day will cover the cost of meals, inclad- ing fish, eggs, bacon, toast, rolls, ete, for breakfast, and a late dinner, with soup, fish, a choice of at least four Joints, game when possible, pastry, pudding and cheese. A grand piano has been presented one of the promoters of the club. e club is not a cha tended to help working women. oters do not desire any profit, more than four per cent. should be earned on the investment the ; money will be spent on the club, the event of the scheme proving a | THE BATES COUNTY BANK, BUTLER, Mo. Successor to BATES COUNTY NATIONAL BaNK - EstTasiisuep Dac., 1870, CAPITAL, $75,000. -f- Bates County Investment Co., ° IBUTLER, MO.: A General Banking Business Transacted Capital, = = 8GO,000. financial success similar clubs will be established all over London, Money to loan on real estate, at low rates, Abstracts of fey ic Miretesonabttcn title to all lands and town lots in Bates county, Choice ‘ NAPOLEON RELICS. securities always on hand and forsale, Abstracts of title { " . furnished, titles examined and all kinds of real estate Remarkable ok taeet papers drawn, General Are ad for Mets . J, TY@ARD, Hon. J, B, Newsrrry, J.C, Ouanx, ‘ . ‘Proadent, Vice-President. Seo’y, & Treas, repetitan are Museum. che adap oh abiae aaa shiclliNbeahuneretonld {]} Several remarkable relies’ of Napo- RAR RAPA RAR LR PRAP RRAPDPDPDPR RRL APLPDDR RLPLOPPLACARAPAS Voor Honaparte were removed from — the other day and inspeeted by groups of interested employes of the apprais- ers Gepartinent, Resting in a velvet mal box wus the death mask of ‘the great French emperor taken by Dr, Francis Antommarchi, who atten ted him at the time of his death on tre island of St, Helena. In addition to the mask the collection in- lined gany eludes a case of silverware presented by Marshal Bertrand to Dr, Antom- marchi, Then there isa rope care ried by Napoleon in his campai There are two pretty miniature aqua- one a portrait) of Empress the other a portrait of Mime, e Murat, hidden from the world in the heart of the Andes for many years, and their All West Indian Islands Said to Be| existence was unknown, They were recently intrusted to Morgan Hart to bring to this country, Mr, Hart has \ ; just arrived at New York with his fa- Chicago, II, May 14.—The next} ther, Charles Burdet Hart, United serious volcanic eruption will befrom | St: minister to Colombia, As soon Mont Conseguina, Nicaragua, ac-]% | re sete heus ae Neti the ; Pare oxes Mr. Hart intends t ender ev+ cording to the prediction of Henry} Pts Mr. Hart intends to tender ¢ " “derything to the Metropolitan museum H. Win dsor, who has made an ex-] of art for exhibition: hausti ve study of the proposed inter or : ‘i oceanie canal routes. Mr Windsor KILLS S x ELEPHANTS. Meat products worth $11,000,000, } PY, | who is editor of Popular Mechanics, | Remarkabte the talk of his need of protection is | three years ago predicted the erup- simply a very threadbare campaign | tion of Mont Pelee. At that time he fake. said: ey : aris is digesting the bi The sort of “protection” the cat- UTR ey sidiys SMa P “The earth’s crust can not long} ppant story in her experience. ig tle grower gets in the home market | withstand the strain under theisland | count Bourg de | © from the Beef Trust is illustrated én of Martinique and some day there is | state ona scienti rr the current news. The combine fixes | going to be an outburst from Mont | "#! Africa in sanunsy, 10. arbitrarily the price to be paid for . sued his researches for many months P es Pelee that will cause devastation un- without any-notable event. One day cattle. When it advances the price 7 of beeves $1 a hundred, it puts up the equaled except in the destruction of! he went forth in search of big game. price of beef $2 or $3. When extor- Pompeii.” Just at the moment when he had be- Mr. Windsor agrees with Prof. Heil-| 8" to despair he perceived ly oe tionate prices for meat lead to a prin, of Philadelphia, that all the elephants looming up be rim, check in consumption, the combine does not reduce the price of meat—it . ‘ ; Hardly had he prepared to fire when West Indies and the strip of land} another charged out of the thicket at stops buying cattle, as it has just done. The “protecctec” farmer is | betiveen the continents of North and | him. South America are in the region of} The viscount, nothing daunted, fired } forced to hold the cattle, while they », are “eating their heads off” and to weakness and may sink into the two shots at the first, two at the sec- , sell them at whatever price the com- . " ond and plumped a volley into the sea because of the great cavity being] third, killing all three. His deeds of pine chooses to fix when it needs igt- The Cattle Grower. NICARAGUA IN DANGER. These relics have been To The World’s suggestion, first | made on April 16, that Congress should hit the Beef Trust by at once repealing the duties on cuttle and meat, various Dihgleyite newspapers ery: “What! Would you deprive the American farmer of protection.” Considering that the American armer sold abroad last year animals the value of $52,000,000, beef oducts $120,600,000 and other Volcanic. RK rd Which Is Atiribate man of Fra Vis- is Wis sent by the ssion to equatos He pur- o3 ring.jaccompanying the viscount quickly eeruan Nickraens, eye Me. Wind relieved him of his emptied weapons sor, eventually would be consumed and passed him another Joaded one. by Mount Conseguina. formed within the earth by the con-] valor did not end there. ‘Three other tinued voleanie eruptions. A canal| elephants then appeared, The six men \nd this is “protecting the RN. Y. World. Then he attacked the three others with Along a valley formed by the flow|such deadly effect that they suc- of seas of volcanic lava from oppo-|cumbed. ie Thus in Jess than four minutes Vis- site sides through earth that almost count Bourg de Bozas killed with his continuously trembles from internal} own hand six mighty elephants. disturbances, and in the midst of vol- a oct oad |. Piles are not only most painful, ~~ but also very dangerous, as the in- flamed nodules are very apt to take Bishop use of a musie | will be able to- shade trees and | y. but is ins) The On malignent action and cancer of the rectum is uced. They should _cured. Tabler’s Buckeye Pile meut will cure the most obsti- ate cases. Price, 50 cents in bot- tles. Tubes, 75 cente.—H. L. Tucker. transithmian canal,” he says: ~The more the supreme importance ‘of naval power is emphasized, the heavier the burdens of taxpayers Must become. The cost and main- nance uf a single battleship is enor- . The great powers should get and agree to reduce their Why shoule they be Post-Dispatch. tia jis. conceded tohaveite ; condition of the ost successfully of almost weekly occurrence. 1 a ‘ a 5 / never cease. Should the canal be built, earthquake.” % ae ee * been forced ping- Thies heed Be dots» 708 Because it le ur: the canoes from which still spout ashes and flames, lies the route ‘of the| bacco pipes now pervades the sacred “No atmosphere of Westminster Abbey ev- longer ago than 1835 the, inhabi- tants of all the surrounding country | js the result of un innovation started fied in terror from the disastrous|the other day, when Archdeacon Wil- eruption of the voleano of Conse-| berforce invitew the workmen who are guina. Earthquakes there now are there are grave fears that it would only be a question of ‘time when it would be obliterated either by volcanic eruption or an Smoke at Religious “Worship. The odor from 100 ill-smelling to- ery day instead of the sweet incense one might expect to find there. This making the abbey ready for the coro- nation to spare 20 minutes from their dinner hour for religious worship. He The topography-of the earth which | gave them an ounce of tobaceo each, was formed there by volcanic erup-|telling them they coule sit still’ an tions is still undergoing radical changes of formation. New hills are made and new valleys result from the internal disturbances that seem*to smoke during the service and muke themselves happy. So each day at noon the men sit on the stone benches and smoke while the services proceed. ‘Triais Surgeons have performed an opera- (tion on Emperor William’s face, says , the Chicago Record-Herald. For the Woes of Society, w has fallen, exclaims the erald. New York so- me MOURNS FOR GOOD OLD TIMES. | Potter Tells Yale Students | That Me plicity ef Few Generations Ago. rn Life Has Lost Sim- Bishop Henry C. Potter, of New York, during t simple address in Battel chap- el, says a New Haven (Conn,) dispatch to the New York Herald, told the stu- dents of Yale that modern life has lost of age, to its infinite detriment, viewed from the standpoint of humanitarian- ism. Artif ity has come-into con- trol, not’ only in commercial interests, he said, but has invaded the artistic in- terests, and seems likely to become a substitute in philanthropic endeavors for the sympathetic and close interest that was ennobling in the old-fash- ioned charity. “Almost all in our commercial pur- suits and even in many artistic pur- suits,” said he, “tend to-day in a dif- ferent direction, Weare in danger not only of overeapitalizing money, but of capitalizing mind also, so that at Inst the thinking will be done by only a handful of men “And an artifi society tends not only in the direction whieh | have in- dicated, but it tends more and more to isolation, In our fathers’ communi- ties there could not be illness ina house without drawing sympathy and help from those in the next house, ; There could be no gr sorrow in any home withent receiving the sympathy j of the vil reaching out to that family to soothe and to share; but with jthe piling up not only millions in our population, we are drifting further and further apart.” SCHEME TO SAVE POSTAGE. the simpljcity au few generations rousands but Cireulars Sent (o England by Amert- It seems hardly credible that busi- ness circulars of firms in the United States should be sent to En | mailed at London te add United States for the pur; ing pos vet this is the actual fact, This curious state of hi and tohe s in the of save airs is said to Liverpool by at treasury instructions te the eustoms © been reveated dered to seize large consignments of j cireulars United agents, in bulk, half-penny they are dumped back int: ottice, to be carried back to America in the mails Under the laws of ¢ postage rate sent by business men in the States to thei These firins re Phey are then stamp is placed oneaeh and the Liver: Liverpool ve cirenhirs ddressed. a pool post at Britain the shalt for such cireul | | ‘ | fa penny for two ounces to all coun- ries in the postal union, but in the United States the postage is twoeents, It is there- fore obvious that business firms whieh send out thousands of ¢ can save money | equivalent to one penny tars a week shipping them in freight to Liver- pool and then having them sent baek to the United States, WOES OF SMALLPOX JOKER. bulk a a low ri Makes n Street Car F of Feel Uncomfortable for a Wh and Now It Is His Turn, le “Retter not sit near me,” said Wil- liam P, Carroll, of Mount Vernon, toa man named Gilford ina Second avenue car at New York the other day. Gif- ford moved, asked Carroll what caftsed the blotches on his face. “I am going to a hospital,” was his answer. Then there was a panic. Gifford told Policeman Gleason, ger, that Carroll seemed to have smallpox. Carroll did not deny that such was his disease, and Gleason had the car stopped at Twenty-sixth street and held all the passengers pris- oners until an ambulance and health board physician came. Before they came there was a blockade of street ears and great excitement. Carroll was taken in the ambulance and the car ordered to the barns for fumigation, but later the railroad of- fice was notified that Carroll did not have smallpox. dnd admitted playing ical joke. He was taken to Yorkville police court, where the mag- istrate told him he was several kinds of a fool and sentenced him to three months’ imprisonment in default of $300 bond for good conduct. His scared and outraged fellow passengers were foaming with rage and threatened to sue the railroad. Other pasesnger also a passe Mummy a Bone of Contention. Whether a certain mummy case contained all that was mortal of a princess of the Incas is the question which the court of appeals at London has been called on to decide. The London and Northwestern railroad has asked for a new trial in an action in which it has been called upon to pay £65 damages for injuring, while in transit, a mummy said to be that of a member of the royal family of Reru. The company contends that the mummy is not a mummy at all, but only an embalmed body of some per- son who died long after the conquest of Peru, and that legally the plaintiff can have no property in a corpse. Level of Black Sea Changed, The recent earthquake at Shemak- ha, in which thousands of persons were killed, has had a curious effect: on the level of the Black sea and the Caspian. Ridges of rock have ap- peared at points where the chart formerly marked fathoms of water. As a result of this the harbor of Krasnovodsk, from which the central Asian railway starts, has been ren- dered unapproachable by large vee- + Too Apparent. The English millers, says the Chi- Reeord-Herald, will make no at- j tempt t furnish proof for those who ) argue that the consumer does not pay the tax. pare co nn a Tariff vs. Trusts, By Jupee Joun H. SeLiens. When trusts are formed, aud go into operation Prices are raised for lack of competition, The government stands, as a wall at their back. And says to the foreigner, keep your goods back The head of the steel trust is one Mr. Schwab, . He lays his pluns deeply the masses to rob: He raises the price of steel and fills his coffer full, And then he tours Europe to tackle John Bull, Our infant industries have grown so bold, They may have forgotten that they are so old They turn ont their wares, and ship them to Rome, And sell for less money than they charge us at home They bleed us in hardware, and put up the bl On everything else from a nutmeg to a mill They seek a new course by furnishing funds To run the campaign and boom their owt wus They go into the Senate and then shut the door And put up the prices higher than before And then send out word that prices have raised, Because of their trust being so depraved They have ruled us so long they have now got the To buy up the plants whieh to them seems funny, They build up the rich by tearing down he poor And eall it prosperity, though we have to pay more money ‘The trusts and the party has got so very thick That if you cross one the other soon gets siek The trustyput up the money and the party makes the lav, And it all works together without a single thaw The system is wrong and gives.cause for complaint, While the government looks on as silent asa saint And sees the masses robbed for the benefit of the few, And then cries prosperity, when its only among the few They have abandoned agriculture, and left the poor to root And will not pass a how unless the trusts to suit They pass ironclad roles and cut off discussion, For the masses to get justice seems out of the question He forms his trust toappease his lust, Phe world looks on in amazement. He rules his father And then seeks larger eng and also bis moter, gements, MORN IM tow he TT nifroni thie tmail Because they cannotanswer them, they dexclade tt Before we insert liberty in our islands and our home, Let us stop to consider the downtall of Home. ESTHER DOWIE DIES WHIL! FATHER PRAYS Which way does the crescent moon turn? To the right or left? What color are your employer's Th next desk? eves? eves ot the man at the Daughter of “Elijah I a University Writedown, offliand, the ficures on Student Succumbs to Burns, Chicago, May 15.—Esther Dowie, daughter of “Doctor” Alexander Dowie, proprietor of “Zion,” died | last night of burns having suffered for hours while “Elijah IP prayed over her. Miss Dowie was vrs old, and a student at the university of Chic go. Yesterday morning her clothing caught fire froma gas jet and her} head and face were horribly burned. | Nurses placed salve on the patient's wounds, as the Dowiedoctrine allows of the use of medicine externally. Meanwhile the “divine hurrying to the bedside from his new city of Zion, at Wakegan, On his arrival the attendants were excluded from the room and Dowie sank to his knees in prayer. His supplica- tions lasted allday. He refused to cvase even to take the nourishments which his followers would have press- ed on him. The patient was uncon- scious much Of thetime. Shedied at) (yilaren who an eonk. fretful or Y o’lock in great agony, having re- | troublesome should be given a iew turned to consciousness a short time | doses of White's Cream Vermifuge. before. They will then become strong, At the inquest to-day “Doctor” healthy and active, have rosy cheeks, . ie | bright eyes, will be happy and laugh- D owie was the first witness. Hefre- lingail the day long. Price, 25 cents. quently broke down under his, grief. | —H. L. Tucker. He declared that his daughter's night robe had been burned from her body | atid that vasaline had been rubbed | From the Youth's Companion. on her by Deacon Speicher’s orders. | Speicher has a license to practice medicine. He declared that during the after- noon the patient’s condition had bec ome serious and that Dr. Camp- bell, a medical practitioner, had been sent for to consult with Dr. Speicher. Cam pbell, the witness said, had said | Atrained nurse, watching at the there was little hope. Dowie declar- | bedside of Mr. Kipling during those ed that when Esther regained con-| 1 oments when the author was in the — she asked him to pray for | ost critical stage of illness, notived her. Atno time, he said, had she | that his lips began to move. She asked for medical attendance. The | bent over him, thinking he wished to jury = » ted eo death | say something to her, and heard him was due to burns accidentally recelv- | murmur that old, familiar ptayer of ebildhood days: “Now L lay me down to sleep.” “I beg your pardon, Mr. Kipling,” | the nurse said, in an apologetic whis- per, When she realized that Kipling did not require her services, “I thought you wanted something.” “Ldo,” taintly observed Kipling. “I want my Heavenly Father. He ouly can care for me now.” | the face of your wateh.. The odds are that you will make at least two iis | takes in doing this, Your wateh has some words writ- tenor printed on its face seen these words a You have thousand times, | Write them out correctly. do this. the case of your watch? Few can Also, what is the numberin | How high (in inches) isa silk hat? How many teeth have you? What are the words on a police- man’s shield? How many buttons has the vest or i shirt waist you are wearing? How many stairs are therein the first fight to your house? lead the street to the front door of your house jor flat? What is the name, signed in fae- healer” was How many steps from simile, on any S1, 82, 85 or $10 bill youever saw?) You've read dozens of those nates, Cau you remember one? Kipling’s Faith. Not long ago Bishop Brewster, of | Connecticut, told something of Rud- yard Kipling, which shows his simple yet robust religious faith. Although specially addressed to the young | men of Yale university, the story is one which may well be remembered | by young men in general, What Do You Know? From the Washington Times, Here are some questious about things you've seen every day and all your life. If you are a wonder, you may possibly answer one or two of the questions offhand. Otherwise not. What are the exact words ov a 2 cent stamp, and in what directionsis the face on it turned? In which direction is the face turn- ed ona cent? On a quarter? Ona dime? How many toes has a cat on each fore foot? On each hind foot? |‘

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