The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 7, 1902, Page 3

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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. Fit to adorn any home. The price of the great Sunday Pest-Dispatch, including 14-page magazine, elaborately illustrated, comic section in colors, news sections and this beautiful art picture, regu- lar price, only 5 cents a copy. Onsale atall news stands A High Diver Leaped to Death. Detroit, July 23.—Alexander Smith made a high divefrom the main mast of the sehooner Maria Martin, lying at the foot of St. Aubin avenue, this afternoon. It was ninety feet from his perch to the water and in the de- scent he lost his equilibrium when about twenty feet from the water. He struck on his side with terrible or by mail for 8 months 50 cents. Address: Post-Dispatch, St. Louis, Mo. Don't Miss the First Picture, FREE WITH THE Sunday Post-Dispatch. KEEP IN TOUCH WITH St. Louis and the Work of Preparation for the Great World’s Fair of 1903. The St. Louis The Great Republican Paper of America. The Great Newspaper Great News?" Globe-Democrat The Darty GLose-Democrar is without a rival in all the WWest, and stands at the very front among the few REALLY GREAT newspapers of the world. BY MAIL, POSTAGE PREPAID, Daily, | Daily, Sunday, * Including Sunday. Without Sunday. Edition. One Year - $6.00| One Year - - $4.00 40 to 60 Pages. 6Months - - - 3.00/}6 Months - - 2.00} One Year - - $2.00 8 Months - - - 1.50|8Months - - - 1.00|}6Months - - 1.00 The Twice-a-Week Issue of the Globe-Democrat at $1 a Year. Is the greatest newspaper bargain of the age. It is almost equal toadaily at the price of a weekly. It gives the latest telegraphic news from all the world every Tuesday and Friday. Its market reports are complete and home and family journal and % correct in every detail. It has no equal as a ought to be at every fireside in the land. Two papers every week. Eight pages or more every Tuesday and Friday. One Dollar for one year. Sample Copies free, Address THE GLOBE PRINTING CO., St. Louis, = To “IT IS IGNORANCE THAT WASTES EFFORT.” TRAINED SERVANTS USE SAPOLIO DEAL ‘wwe MAKERS Don't pay two extra when . and harness, Deal with factory. our pen zon ty ale ‘rates, Or aystem of ing direct to customers is saving thousands of dollars to carriage buyers in every corver of the ‘try, We quote thesame rates to you that we would give the largest wholesale jobber, and we you an assortment to choose from such as no other dealer can show. ‘With e' purchase we give the tguarantee. Ifit is notin ie Ape satisfactory, you cap retura vehicle to us and we will pay freight charges both ways. fe can also Save two Profits a. ~ made our factory famous for't! alr hig _ wait until your need is more pressing; write have the catalogue by you for future use. THE COLUMBUS CARRIAGE & HARNESS CO., Columbus, 0., P.0. Box 772. St. Louis, Mo., P.O. Box 64. Write to nearest office, je. Don’ to-day and No, wat Buggy. Price $89.30 quarter top. No. 21 Single Strap @ Price $9.90 Cohunbas, Buggy Harness, AGENTS WANTED Lawn Swings and Settees, Hammock Chairs, Camp Chairs and Stools, froniag Tables, Wash Benches, Etc. $5 to $10 Per Day. Will furnish samples at re- duced prices to those desiring agency. Exclusive territory given. Address, Clearfield Woedea-Ware €e., CLEARPIELQ, ‘PA. force and failed to come to the sur- {face. Smith wasa young man with considerable reputation as daring igh diver. The body was recovered three hours later. CANDY CATMARTIC 108. ‘an Be, be, Deeesiots. Genuine stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell “something just as good.” Women and Jewels. Jewels, candy, flowers, man—that is the order of a woman's preferences. Jewels form a magnet of mighty power to the average woman. Even that vreatest of all jewels, health, is ruined in. the strenucus efforts to make or save the money to purchase ithem. If a woman will risk her health to get a coveted gem, then let her fortify herself against the insid- ious consequences of coughs, colds and bronchial affections by the reg- ular use of Dr. Boschee's German Syrup It will promptly arrest con- | sumption in its early stages and heal ‘the affected lungs and bronchial tubes and drive the dread disease from the system. It is not a cure-all | but it isa certain cure for coughs, | colds and all bronchial troubles. You {eanget Dr. G. G, Green's reliable remedies at any drugstore. «-o-w Get Green's Special Almanac. A NEW FAST TRAIN at SS Between St. Louis and Kansas City and OKLAHOMA CITY, WICHITA, DENISON, SHERMAN, DALLAS, FORT WORTH And principal points in Texas and the South. ‘west. This train is new througbout and is | made up of the finest equi;,ment, providec | with electric lights and ail otber moder srayeling conveniences, It runs via our now vompleted é Red River Division. Every appliance known to modern car building and railroading has been employec in the make-up of this service, including | Café Observation Cars, | ander the management of Fred. Harvey } Bull information as to rates and all details o j a trip via this new route will be cheerfully { tarnished, upon application, by any repre , tentative of the “TA BOON TO WOMEN. | BAHAMA A. TABLETS | The De. Seharmann Che- IAN, They never fail if used strictly ascording to directions. They are safe, sure, Rarmless, neat and clean. A tonic and alterative to the sexual organs. They preserve the health and cure diseases of the Vagina, Womb & Ovaries. All Vaginal discharges and soreness, irre; pressed Menses, loss of on and tone, Are used not only to cure se8 #¢ diseases but to their occurrence. We have received thousands Of test. monials, We guarantee ‘BANAMA OUR GUARANTE! TABLETS” todo just what we recommend, and offer @ reward of ONK HUNDRED DOLLANS (6100.00) for any case they will not cure as re- commended, provided direct ’ | * SAHARA TABLETS” are bold. by sil dtagglots or reas Sretet ool ictee Sane ne or et bass THE DR. SCHURMANN CHEMICAL CO., HOLLAND BUILDING, DEFT. A ST. LOUIS, 10 McFARIAND BROS, . | o Antiseptic Yagioal Tablets. A RE~ MARKABLE PREVEN. [Tite Or pistasen a A SURE ct E | DENKABKS — PREULEAR YW TO WONT FOS ats MRS. LODGE’S HAT. How the President's Wife Came te Wear It When Sitting for Portrait. It is not often that a woman in this day and time can boast an immortal piece of headgear, and it is probable Mrs. Lodge, wife of the United States senator, is the only woman in this country who has this distinction. Mrs. Lodge's hat figures as a promi- nent feature of the Chartran_ por- trait of Mrs. Roosevelt now in Paris and which will later hang upon the walls of the white house. It happened in the most natural manner imaginable. Mrs. Lodge ac- companied Mrs. Roosevelt for her first sitting for the portrait and at the time Mrs. Roosevelt wore a black hat and her long, black visiting coat, the latter to cover the white silk dress in which she had decided to sit for the portrait. The artist liked the outer garment and hat effect so much he prevailed upon Mrs. Roosevelt to give her sittings in hat and coat, using the white house grounds and the executive mansion as a backs, ground. vs The hat worn by Mrs. Roosevelt | was a trifle small and the artist, casually commented the fact. Mrs. Lodge wore a large black pic-| ture hat and the exclange was quick- ly made, Looking from the portrait to the hat of Mrs, Lodge at the tea given by the French when the portrait was first: shown the public, some of their friends dis covered the exchange of hats, and ingly commented on the hat be- coming a feature of the future his- tory of the white house. VICTIMIZED GENEROUS JEWS. on ambassador Austrian Boy, Who Ruised Money to Save Parents from Jail, Was Fraud, funds mon was The Jews who contributed raised to send the boy, Sehnurr, back to Austr said his family w nacharge of murdering rinning to think that they have been vietimized. th appe pers in the form of ¢ have been reeeived from s about the er charge cd in some of story mu th Jewish pas er suid to imprivoned relatives, ¢ A boy ent back, as that was the only proof? the family’s innocence that the A m government would ae cept. Sympathetic Jews at once be gan an agitation to send the hoy t« Austria. A mass meeti ng was held in , houge, and the freshmen RA 1] STUDENTS KS. Girls and Their Escorts Kidnaped and Forced to Dance. Sophomores at Northwestern Uni« versity Turn the Tables on the Freshman Who Stole the Lan- terns Decorating the Lawn. Dancing to ragtime and singing gongs not of their own choosing, two young women and two young men, members of the freshmen's class at Northwestern university, at Evanston, IIL, entertained the sophmores, who had kidnaped them, for an hour one night recently, apologized for their own riotous misdeeds, and were per- mitted to depart. Both classes held meetings during the evening, and the rivalry resulting from their sessions ended in the kid- naping. The sophomore party was given at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon gathering was at the home of C. T. Hinckley, 2651 Sheridan road. The freshmen disband- ed early, and they determined to go to the fraternity house and see how the upper class men were enjoying them- selves. They found the lawn around the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house covered with lanterns and the men and women promenading. The freshmen concluded that the lanterns could easily be dis- pensed with and the sophomores forced to seek further amusemen the house, Around in the sh freshmen, men and women, and at a signal they rushed into the grounds and took down all the Jap- anese lanterns, At the time the most of th mores were in the house. They heard the shouts of the freshmen, and left the building in time to see the uncder- elass members running in Hinman aves nue, The sophomores lost no time in following, and gave pursuit for sev- eral blocks, until at the First Methe ist church, Chureh street and Hinman avenue, the freshmen disappeared, The sophomores gave up the chase at the church, and waited in the shad- ows for the return of the freshmen. Nearly all the underclass were satisfied by the trophies they had seeured, and did not return, but four, bolder than the others mined to see how the sophomores over the attack, The fre w e sopho- members deter: felt men Miss Polly Little, Miss Herta Gurme Joseph Weefe and 0. M. Rogers, They were walking slowly, when, as th were sely Alpha Ep- pasesd the church, and carried to the silon fraternity house. They were then forced for an hour to entertain the soph First ey ma mores, an East side synagogue, at whieh $300 was raised to pay the boy's ex- penses, This was further inereased by subseriptions gathered in the stores and even in the tenements, The hoy, it was said, sailed three weeks ago. A letter has been received from 1. S. Fuchs, editor of the Austrian paper saying that the whole tale was a piece of the grossest deception from begin- ning to end, TO STUDY AMERICAN SYSTEM. M, E. Sadler, British entor, Comes to This Coantry for Ideas, M. FE. Sadler, director of inquiries and reports for the Board of educa- tion forEugland and Wales. his rived in this country. Mr. Sadler is deeply interested in the plan of Al- fred Mosley, the E cupitalist, to sent a various countries te study t on edu- cational aff ion will jermany. Mr. Sadler then come to this country ing here probably late in October. Each member of the commission will write his personal views aid all will be publ ’ “The example set your Ameri- can monewved men has had an im mense influence in England,” said Mr. Sadler nd has led some of our lead- ing ists to take an interest in educational matters and to devote me of their money to making Eng- sh schools and educational instita- effective. I consider the commission proposed by Mr. Mosley one of the most interesting moves in this direction that dertaken. tions more s yet been un- WOULD WED MISS ASTOR. Lord Deresby, Son of Countess of An- caster, In a Tenative Suitor, Miss Astor, the daughter of Wil- liam Waldorf Astor, is being chap- eroned again this season by the countess of Selkirk, who also has charge of Princess Sophia, daughter of Dhuleep Singh, the descendant of the grand mogul, from whose grand- father Great Britain took the Keohinoor, as well as a vast fortune In return the government is now al- lowing the princess $2990 a year. Miss Astor is only occasionally seen with the countess of Selkirk, as she goes about chiefly with the coun- tess of Ancaster, who has a marriage- able son, Lord Willoughby Deresby, for whom the Ancasters would like to capture a multi-millionairess. Miss Astor, however, has inherited a good deal of her father’s self-cen- tered disposition, and will make her ‘Own Choice of a husband. May Not Keep It Loaded, There is comfort in the thought, says the Chieago Inter Ocean, that for »bvious reasons Hetty Green may not keep loaded the pistol that she is per. mitted to carry. Well Named, The Lesser Antilles, says the Chi cago Tribune, may beconsiderably less ater the disturbance is all over, a speech in way of ¢ vy for the action of the freshmen demanded Then the prisoners give the sophomore class yell, and complimentary things about ond-vear men and derogatory things gy Ww and made, sal the see about the first-year students. Songs and faney dances were given. The other members of the freshmen elass learned that four of their num ? her been kidnane the sophomore party. was gathered ¢ the p the first-vear stu the sophomores, ¢ soners were left perpendicular, although the _|ground caves in as the tlames proge ress, CASTORIA. Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of Ldn ,J understood in this country protects Secret Refining Process 24.—Colone] George A. McFarlane, of Honolulu, has given information about the plans of the Federal Sugar company recently formed with fifty million dol- lar capital, and C.'A. Spreckels, youngest son of the sugar magnate, as president. Mr. McFarlane says that by a secret process invented by Spreckels the cost of refining will be greatly reduced. “Spreckels,”’ said Mr. McFarlane, “ean refine sugar at less than $la ton. He will establish refineries in allthe big cities from Philadelphia to San Francisco and in Honolulu. His plan is also to unite with the sugar beet growers of the West.”” CASTORIA. Reare the Ea Kind You Have Always Bought Signatare Think the Earth is Burning. Sanj‘Franvisco, July ¢ ¢ Beaumont, Tex., July 24 —The ex- treme southwestern part of Louisi- ana is greatly excited over the sight of the earth apparently burning up. Near Creole postottice a fire has been burning for three months, with noth- ing visible but the earth to feed up- on, and has now eaten a path a mile long and six feet deep. There is no oil found in the més borhood, and no one has detected signs of a large y i fireissimply burning away at marshy dirt, It makes a strong black smoke that rises to a considerable height. The banks of the burned space are gas deposit. all appearances the It is a nice thing to bean American in & great inany respeets,—butin-the purchase of American-made goods it is better to bean Englishnian, The citizen of the United States pay The Londoner buys for wire nails, the same brand for $1.90, At the same time he can take a coil of wire: rope for $5 for which we pay #12 We pay $100 for an American type: writer and he owns it for $55. A sewing machine which costs us $40 costs him only S17 That is the rule with all our manufactured pro ducts. The American his woods at the door of bh for double the price whie! 3.000) miles y H maker sells is factory he rotection isks 8 ay two classes: The American manufae- turerand the English buyer.—Nevada BUY STEEL IN G Goverament Contractors Se mission to Purchase Porcis The navy dep the scheme of it , tractor whe wi material in Germany. f steel structures f. nae deportment have be tl difficulty from the f these « it they h sti the compl is cor ings periods sy vuless the defeetoon tl tractor is not resy » for the d lay there will be a large fine imposed on each builder One of the contractors who is con- structing a btildi nt the New York navy yard has s {the problem for himself by iw steel of a Ger man concern, He found that he eould get the work done in a few weeks whereas the nnsylvania steel ple would not undertake to deliver material before January 1. The contractor makes his inspee- tion abroad. That is, he employs a firm in this country which makes a business of inspecting material, and who has representatives abroad, and the sworn report of these inspectors is accepted by the navy department, which, however, reserves the right to verify the reports by its own inspec- tion when the material is delivered in New York. NIECE OF M’KINLEY TO WED. Bride-to-Be Is Miss Sarah Dunean, Who Refused to Live at White House, Cards'sent to immediate relatives announce the coming marriage of Miss Sarah Duncan, niece of President Me- Kinley, who refused to live at the white house and be the belle of Wash- ington society, when urged to do sq by her illustrious uncle and aunt. She is the daughter of Capt. and Mrs. A. J. Dunean, of Cleveland, and she is to marry George Herbert Winslow, of Pittsbutg. She was attending school to fit herself to be a teacher, when her uncle urged her to.go to Washing- ton to live. She insisted on finishing her education and became a teacher in & girls’ school in Pennsylvania. Post. = £ To al Up-to-Date fidiags, Joplin, Mo, duly 24—A wedding ceremony was performed ity Yesterday by Justice in” which two full blood Choctaw Indians from Quapaw, |. T., were the co tracting parties. The brid beautiful yc squaw of | ige, and the om nb Two yotng members of their tribe J accom pe m. ‘They would not tell their reason in com to Joplin i to get married It ig t wht the Indians eloped Stops the € Works off the Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets eure a cold in oneday. No cure; no pay. Prive 25 cents Ships in Harbor Sunk. Tuscon, Ariz., July 28.—A destruc. tive tornado passed Guymas, Mazat- lan and other towns on the guli of California. Three public and many other buildir were wrecked at Guaymas and three vessels sunk in the harbor. The Romero Rubio, a larger steamer, was dashed ashorein the harbor at Mazatlan and fivelives lost. The storm was general in Sonora. Mr. (. A. Caskey. the lowa man who purchased the Messiuger farm south of here Tuesday brought in the prize corn of the season and cbal- lenges the world to beat it. The ears are over 12 inches in length, large and well filled with kernels of eorn fully matured, ready to gather. . It was planted May 10th, and made the record of two months and nine days. The corn is on exhibition at the Telephone editorial rooms to show for itself, and we are willing to recei ptMr. Caskey’s word for the rest.—Hume Telephone. Health for 10 Cents, A lively liver, pure blood, clean skin, bright eyes, perfect health— Cascarets Candy Cathartic will ob- tain and secure them for you. Genu- ine tablets stamped C.C. C. Never sold in bulk. All druggists, 10¢.

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